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+Project Gutenberg's The Poetical Works of William Collins, by William Collins
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Poetical Works of William Collins
+ With a Memoir
+
+Author: William Collins
+
+Commentator: Sir Harris Nicolas
+ Sir Egerton Brydges
+
+Release Date: August 31, 2009 [EBook #29879]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK POETICAL WORKS--WILLIAM COLLINS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Katherine Ward, and the
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration: William Collins Ætatis
+
+ Quos primus equis Oriens afflavit anhelis
+ Virg.]
+
+
+
+
+ _THE_
+ POETICAL WORKS
+ OF
+ WILLIAM COLLINS.
+
+ _WITH A MEMOIR._
+
+
+ [Illustration: _Perennis et Fragrans._]
+
+
+
+
+ BOSTON:
+ LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY.
+ 1865.
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS.
+
+ Page
+ Memoir by Sir Harris Nicolas v
+ An Essay on the Genius and Poems of Collins, by Sir Egerton
+ Brydges, Bart. xliii
+
+ ORIENTAL ECLOGUES.
+ Selim; or, The Shepherd's Moral 3
+ Hassan; or, The Camel Driver 7
+ Abra; Or, The Georgian Sultana 11
+ Agib And Secander; or, The Fugitives 15
+
+ ODES.
+ To Pity 21
+ To Fear 24
+ To Simplicity 28
+ On the Poetical Character 31
+ Written in the Beginning of the Year 1746 34
+ To Mercy 35
+ To Liberty 37
+ To a Lady, On the Death of Colonel Ross, written in May,
+ 1745 44
+ To Evening 48
+ To Peace 52
+ The Manners 54
+ The Passions 58
+ On the Death of Thomson 63
+ On the Popular Superstitions of the Highlands of Scotland;
+ considered as the Subject of Poetry; inscribed to Mr.
+ John Home 66
+ An Epistle, addressed to Sir Thomas Hanmer, on his Edition of
+ Shakespeare's Works 78
+ Dirge in Cymbeline, sung by Guiderus and Arviragus over
+ Fidele, supposed to be dead 87
+ Verses written on a Paper which contained a Piece of
+ Bride-cake, given to the Author by a Lady 89
+ To Miss Aurelia C----R, on her Weeping at her Sister's
+ Wedding 91
+ Sonnet 91
+ Song. The Sentiments borrowed from Shakespeare 92
+ On our late Taste in Music 94
+
+ Observations on the Oriental Eclogues, by Dr. Langhorne 101
+ Observations on the Odes, by the same 118
+
+
+
+
+MEMOIR OF COLLINS.
+
+ "A Bard,
+ Who touched the tenderest notes of Pity's lyre."
+ HAYLEY.
+
+
+No one can have reflected on the history of genius without being
+impressed with a melancholy feeling at the obscurity in which the lives
+of the poets of our country are, with few exceptions, involved. That
+they lived, and wrote, and died, comprises nearly all that is known of
+many, and, of others, the few facts which are preserved are often
+records of privations, or sufferings, or errors. The cause of the
+lamentable deficiency of materials for literary biography may, without
+difficulty, be explained. The lives of authors are seldom marked by
+events of an unusual character; and they rarely leave behind them the
+most interesting work a writer could compose, and which would embrace
+nearly all the important facts in his career, a "History of his Books,"
+containing the motives which produced them, the various incidents
+respecting their progress, and a faithful account of the bitter
+disappointment, whether the object was fame or profit, or both, which,
+in most instances, is the result of his labours. Various motives deter
+men from writing such a volume; for, though quacks and charlatans
+readily become auto-biographers, and fill their prefaces with their
+personal concerns, real merit shrinks from such disgusting egotism, and,
+flying to the opposite extreme, leaves no authentic notice of their
+struggles, its hopes, or its disappointments. Nor is the history of
+writers to be expected from their contemporaries; because few will
+venture to anticipate the judgment of posterity, and mankind are usually
+so isolated in self, and so jealous of others, that neither time nor
+inclination admits of their becoming the Boswells of all those whose
+productions excite admiration.
+
+If these remarks be true, surprise cannot be felt, though there is
+abundance of cause for regret, that little is known of a poet whose
+merits were not appreciated until after his decease: whose powers were
+destroyed by a distressing malady at a period of life when literary
+exertions begin to be rewarded and stimulated by popular applause.
+
+For the facts contained in the following Memoir of Collins, the author
+is indebted to the researches of others, as his own, which were very
+extensive, were rewarded by trifling discoveries. Dr. Johnson's Life is
+well known; but the praise of collecting every particular which industry
+and zeal could glean belongs to the Rev. Alexander Dyce, the result of
+whose inquiries may be found in his notes to Johnson's Memoir, prefixed
+to an edition of Collins's works which he lately edited. Those notices
+are now, for the first time, wove into a Memoir of Collins; and in
+leaving it to another to erect a fabric out of the materials which he
+has collected instead of being himself the architect, Mr. Dyce has
+evinced a degree of modesty which those who know him must greatly
+lament.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WILLIAM COLLINS was born at Chichester, on the 25th of December, 1721,
+and was baptized in the parish church of St. Peter the Great, alias
+Subdeanery in that city, on the first of the following January. He was
+the son of William Collins, who was then the Mayor of Chichester, where
+he exercised the trade of a hatter, and lived in a respectable manner.
+His mother was Elizabeth, the sister of a Colonel Martyn, to whose
+bounty the poet was deeply indebted.
+
+Being destined for the church, young Collins was admitted a scholar of
+Winchester College on the 19th of January, 1733, where he was educated
+by Dr. Burton; and in 1740 he stood first on the list of scholars who
+were to be received at New College. No vacancy, however, occurred, and
+the circumstance is said by Johnson to have been the original misfortune
+of his life. He became a commoner of Queen's,[1] whence, on the 29th of
+July, 1741, he was elected a demy of Magdalen College. During his stay
+at Queen's he was distinguished for genius and indolence, and the few
+exercises which he could be induced to write bear evident marks of both
+qualities. He continued at Oxford until he took his bachelor's degree,
+and then suddenly left the University, his motive, as he alleged, being
+that he missed a fellowship, for which he offered himself; but it has
+been assigned to his disgust at the dulness of a college life, and to
+his being involved in debt.
+
+On arriving in London, which was either in 1743 or 1744, he became, says
+Johnson, "a literary adventurer, with many projects in his head and very
+little money in his pocket." Collins was not without some reputation as
+an author when he proposed to adopt the most uncertain and deplorable of
+all professions, that of literature, for a subsistence. Whilst at
+Winchester school he wrote his Eclogues, and had appeared before the
+public in some verses addressed to a lady weeping at her sister's
+marriage, which were printed in the Gentleman's Magazine, Oct. 1739,
+when Collins was in his eighteenth year. In January, 1742, he published
+his Eclogues, under the title of "Persian Eclogues;"[2] and, in
+December, 1743, his "Verses to Sir Thomas Hanmer on his Edition of
+Shakespeare," appeared. To neither did he affix his name, but the latter
+was said to be by "a Gentleman of Oxford."
+
+From the time he settled in London, his mind was more occupied with
+literary projects than with steady application; nor had poesy, for which
+Nature peculiarly designed him, sufficient attractions to chain his
+wavering disposition. It is not certain whether his irresolution arose
+from the annoyance of importunate debtors, or from an original infirmity
+of mind, or from these causes united. A popular writer[3] has defended
+Collins from the charge of irresolution, on the ground that it was but
+"the vacillations of a mind broken and confounded;" and he urges, that
+"he had exercised too constantly the highest faculties of fiction, and
+precipitated himself into the dreariness of real life." But this
+explanation does not account for the want of steadiness which prevented
+Collins from accomplishing the objects he meditated. His mind was
+neither "broken nor confounded," nor had he experienced the bitter pangs
+of neglect, when with the buoyancy of hope, and a full confidence in his
+extraordinary powers, he threw himself on the town, at the age of
+twenty-three, intending to live by the exercise of his talents; but his
+indecision was then as apparent as at any subsequent period, so that, in
+truth, the effect preceded the cause to which it has been assigned.
+
+Mankind are becoming too much accustomed to witness splendid talents and
+great firmness of mind united in the same person to partake the mistaken
+sympathy which so many writers evince for the follies or vices of
+genius; nor will it much longer tolerate the opinion, that the
+possession of the finest imagination, or the highest poetic capacity,
+must necessarily be accompanied by eccentricity. It may, indeed, be
+difficult to convert a poetical temperament into a merchant, or to make
+the man who is destined to delight or astonish mankind by his
+conceptions, sit quietly over a ledger; but the transition from poetry
+to the composition of such works as Collins planned is by no means
+unnatural, and the abandonment of his views respecting them must, in
+justice to his memory, be attributed to a different cause.
+
+The most probable reason is, that these works were mere speculations to
+raise money, and that the idea was not encouraged by the booksellers;
+but if, as Johnson, who knew Collins well, asserts, his character wanted
+decision and perseverance, these defects may have been constitutional,
+and were, perhaps, the germs of the disease which too soon ripened into
+the most frightful of human calamities. Endued with a morbid
+sensibility, which was as ill calculated to court popularity as to bear
+neglect; and wanting that stoical indifference to the opinions of the
+many, which ought to render those who are conscious of the value of
+their productions satisfied with the approbation of the few; Collins was
+too impatient of applause, and too anxious to attain perfection, to be a
+voluminous writer. To plan much rather than to execute any thing; to
+commence to-day an ode, to-morrow a tragedy, and to turn on the
+following morning to a different subject, was the chief occupation of
+his life for several years, during which time he destroyed the principal
+part of the little that he wrote. To a man nearly pennyless, such a life
+must be attended by privations and danger; and he was in the hands of
+bailiffs, possibly not for the first time, very shortly before he became
+independent by the death of his maternal uncle, Colonel Martyn. The
+result proved that his want of firmness and perseverance was natural,
+and did not arise from the uncertainty or narrowness of his fortune; for
+being rescued from imprisonment, on the credit of a translation of
+Aristotle's Poetics, which he engaged to furnish a publisher, a work, it
+may be presumed, peculiarly suited to his genius, he no sooner found
+himself in the possession of money by the death of his relative, than he
+repaid the bookseller, and abandoned the translation for ever.
+
+From the commencement of his career, Collins was, however, an object
+for sympathy instead of censure; and though few refuse their compassion
+to the confirmed lunatic, it is rare that the dreadful state of
+irresolution and misery, which sometimes exist for years before the
+fatal catastrophe, receives either pity or indulgence.
+
+In 1747, Collins published his Odes, to the unrivaled splendour of a few
+of which he is alone indebted for his fame; but neither fame nor profit
+was the immediate result; and the author of the Ode on the Passions had
+little reason to expect, from its reception by the public, that it was
+destined to live as long as the passions themselves animate or distract
+the world.
+
+It is uncertain at what time he undertook to publish a volume of Odes in
+conjunction with Joseph Warton, but the intention is placed beyond
+dispute by the following letter from Warton to his brother. It is
+without a date, but it must have been written before the publication of
+Collins's Odes in 1747, and before the appearance of Dodsley's
+Museum,[4] as it is evident the Ode to a Lady on the Death of Colonel
+Ross, which was inserted in that work, was not then in print.
+
+ "DEAR TOM,
+
+ "You will wonder to see my name in an advertisement next week, so
+ I thought I would apprise you of it. The case was this. Collins
+ met me in Surrey, at Guildford races, when I wrote out for him my
+ odes, and he likewise communicated some of his to me; and being
+ both in very high spirits, we took courage, resolved to join our
+ forces, and to publish them immediately. I flatter myself that I
+ shall lose no honor by this publication, because I believe these
+ odes, as they now stand, are infinitely the best things I ever
+ wrote. You will see a very pretty one of Collins's, on the Death
+ of Colonel Ross before Tournay. It is addressed to a lady who was
+ Ross's intimate acquaintance, and who, by the way, is Miss Bett
+ Goddard. Collins is not to publish the odes unless he gets ten
+ guineas for them. I returned from Milford last night, where I left
+ Collins with my mother and sister, and he sets out to-day for
+ London. I must now tell you, that I have sent him your imitation
+ of Horace's Blandusian Fountain, to be printed amongst ours, and
+ which you shall own or not, as you think proper. I would not have
+ done this without your consent, but because I think it very
+ poetically and correctly done, and will get you honour. You will
+ let me know what the Oxford critics say. Adieu, dear Tom,
+
+ "I am your most affectionate brother,
+ "J. WARTON."
+
+Like so many of Collins's projects this was not executed; but the reason
+of its failure is unknown.
+
+On the death of Thomson, in August, 1748, Collins wrote an ode to his
+memory, which is no less remarkable for its beauty as a composition,
+than for its pathetic tenderness as a memorial of a friend.
+
+The Poet's pecuniary difficulties were removed in 1749, by the death of
+his maternal uncle, Lieutenant-Colonel Edmund Martyn, who, after
+bequeathing legacies to some other relations, ordered the residue of his
+real and personal estate to be divided between his nephew William
+Collins, and his nieces Elizabeth and Anne Collins, and appointed the
+said Elizabeth his executrix, who proved her uncle's will on the 30th of
+May, 1749. Collins's share was, it is said, about two thousand pounds;
+and, as has been already observed, the money came most opportunely: a
+greater calamity even than poverty, however, shortly afterwards
+counterbalanced his good fortune; but the assertion of the writer in the
+Gentleman's Magazine, that his mental aberration arose from his having
+squandered this legacy, appears to be unfounded.
+
+One, and but one, letter of Collins's has ever been printed; nor has a
+careful inquiry after others been successful. It is of peculiar
+interest, as it proves that he wrote an Ode on the Music of the Grecian
+Theatre, but which is unfortunately lost. The honour to which he
+alludes was the setting his Ode on the Passions to music.
+
+ "TO DR. WILLIAM HAYES, PROFESSOR OF MUSIC, OXFORD.
+
+ "SIR,
+
+ "MR. BLACKSTONE of Winchester some time since informed me of the
+ honour you had done me at Oxford last summer; for which I return
+ you my sincere thanks. I have another more perfect copy of the
+ ode; which, had I known your obliging design, I would have
+ communicated to you. Inform me by a line, if you should think one
+ of my better judgment acceptable. In such case I could send you
+ one written on a nobler subject; and which, though I have been
+ persuaded to bring it forth in London, I think more calculated for
+ an audience in the university. The subject is the Music of the
+ Grecian Theatre; in which I have, I hope naturally, introduced the
+ various characters with which the chorus was concerned, as
+ Œdipus, Medea, Electra, Orestes, etc. etc. The composition too is
+ probably more correct, as I have chosen the ancient tragedies for
+ my models, and only copied the most affecting passages in them.
+
+ "In the mean time, you would greatly oblige me by sending the
+ score of the last. If you can get it written, I will readily
+ answer the expense. If you send it with a copy or two of the ode
+ (as printed at Oxford) to Mr. Clarke, at Winchester, he will
+ forward it to me here. I am, Sir,
+
+ "With great respect,
+ "Your obliged humble servant,
+ "WILLIAM COLLINS.
+
+ "Chichester, Sussex, November 8, 1750."
+
+ "P. S. Mr. Clarke past some days here while Mr. Worgan was with
+ me; from whose friendship, I hope, he will receive some
+ advantage."
+
+Soon after this period, the disease which had long threatened to destroy
+Collins's intellects assumed a more decided character; but for some time
+the unhappy poet was the only person who was sensible of the approaching
+calamity. A visit to France was tried in vain; and when Johnson called
+upon him, on his return, an incident occurred which proves that Collins
+wisely sought for consolation against the coming wreck of his faculties,
+from a higher and more certain source than mere human aid. Johnson says,
+"he paid him a visit at Islington, where he was then waiting for his
+sister, whom he had directed to meet him: there was then nothing of
+disorder discernible in his mind by any but himself; but he had
+withdrawn from study, and travelled with no other book than an English
+Testament, such as children carry to the school: when his friend took
+it into his hand, out of curiosity to see what companion a man of
+letters had chosen, 'I have but one book,' said Collins, 'but that is
+the best.'"
+
+To this circumstance Hayley beautifully alludes in his epitaph on him:
+
+ He, "in reviving reason's lucid hours,
+ Sought on _one_ book his troubled mind to rest,
+ And rightly deem'd the Book of God the best."
+
+A journey to Bath proved as useless as the one to France; and in 1754,
+he went to Oxford for change of air and amusement, where he stayed a
+month. It was on this occasion that a friend, whose account of him will
+be given at length, saw him in a distressing state of restraint under
+the walls of Merton College. From the paucity of information respecting
+Collins, the following letters are extremely valuable; and though the
+statements are those of his friends, they may be received without
+suspicion of partiality, because they are free from the high colouring
+by which friendship sometimes perverts truth.
+
+The first of the letters in question was printed in the Gentleman's
+Magazine:
+
+ "Jan. 20, 1781.
+
+ "MR. URBAN,
+
+ "WILLIAM COLLINS, the poet, I was intimately acquainted with, from
+ the time that he came to reside at Oxford. He was the son of a
+ tradesman in the city of Chichester, I think a hatter; and being
+ sent very young to Winchester school, was soon distinguished for
+ his early proficiency, and his turn for elegant composition. About
+ the year 1740, he came off from that seminary first upon roll,[5]
+ and was entered a commoner of Queen's college. There, no vacancy
+ offering for New College, he remained a year or two, and then was
+ chosen demy of Magdalen college; where, I think, he took a degree.
+ As he brought with him, for so the whole turn of his conversation
+ discovered, too high an opinion of his school acquisitions, and a
+ sovereign contempt for all academic studies and discipline, he
+ never looked with any complacency on his situation in the
+ university, but was always complaining of the dulness of a college
+ life. In short, he threw up his demyship, and, going to London,
+ commenced a man of the town, spending his time in all the
+ dissipation of Ranelagh, Vauxhall, and the playhouses; and was
+ romantic enough to suppose that his superior abilities would draw
+ the attention of the great world, by means of whom he was to make
+ his fortune.
+
+ "In this pleasurable way of life he soon wasted his little
+ property, and a considerable legacy left him by a maternal uncle,
+ a colonel in the army, to whom the nephew made a visit in
+ Flanders during the war. While on his tour he wrote several
+ entertaining letters to his Oxford friends, some of which I saw.
+ In London I met him often, and remember he lodged in a little
+ house with a Miss Bundy, at the corner of King's-square-court,
+ Soho, now a warehouse, for a long time together. When poverty
+ overtook him, poor man, he had too much sensibility of temper to
+ bear with misfortunes, and so fell into a most deplorable state of
+ mind. How he got down to Oxford, I do not know; but I myself saw
+ him under Merton wall, in a very affecting situation, struggling,
+ and conveyed by force, in the arms of two or three men, towards
+ the parish of St. Clement, in which was a house that took in such
+ unhappy objects: and I always understood, that not long after he
+ died in confinement; but when, or where, or where he was buried, I
+ never knew.
+
+ "Thus was lost to the world this unfortunate person, in the prime
+ of life, without availing himself of fine abilities, which,
+ properly improved, must have raised him to the top of any
+ profession, and have rendered him a blessing to his friends, and
+ an ornament to his country.
+
+ "Without books, or steadiness and resolution to consult them if he
+ had been possessed of any, he was always planning schemes for
+ elaborate publications, which were carried no further than the
+ drawing up proposals for subscriptions, some of which were
+ published; and in particular, as far as I remember, one for 'a
+ History of the Darker Ages.'
+
+ "He was passionately fond of music; good-natured and affable; warm
+ in his friendships, and visionary in his pursuits; and, as long as
+ I knew him, very temperate in his eating and drinking. He was of
+ moderate stature, of a light and clear complexion, with gray eyes,
+ so very weak at times as hardly to bear a candle in the room; and
+ often raising within him apprehensions of blindness.
+
+ "With an anecdote respecting him, while he was at Magdalen
+ College, I shall close my letter. It happened one afternoon, at a
+ tea visit, that several intelligent friends were assembled at his
+ rooms to enjoy each other's conversation, when in comes a member
+ of a certain college,[6] as remarkable at that time for his brutal
+ disposition as for his good scholarship; who, though he met with a
+ circle of the most peaceable people in the world, was determined
+ to quarrel; and, though no man said a word, lifted up his foot and
+ kicked the tea-table, and all its contents, to the other side of
+ the room. Our poet, though of a warm temper, was so confounded at
+ the unexpected downfall, and so astonished at the unmerited
+ insult, that he took no notice of the aggressor, but getting up
+ from his chair calmly, he began picking up the slices of bread and
+ butter, and the fragments of his china, repeating very mildly,
+
+ Invenias etiam disjecti membra poetæ.
+
+ "I am your very humble servant,
+ "V."
+
+The next letter was found among the papers of Mr. William Hymers, of
+Queen's College, Oxford, who was preparing a new edition of the works of
+the poet for publication, when death prevented the completion of his
+design.
+
+ "Hill Street, Richmond in Surrey, July, 1783.
+
+ "SIR,
+
+ "Your favour of the 30th June I did not receive till yesterday.
+ The person who has the care of my house in Bond Street, expecting
+ me there every day, did not send it to Richmond, or I would have
+ answered sooner. As you express a wish to know every particular,
+ however trifling, relating to Mr. William Collins, I will
+ endeavour, so far as can be done by a letter, to satisfy you.
+ There are many little anecdotes, which tell well enough in
+ conversation, but would be tiresome for you to read, or me to
+ write, so shall pass them over. I had formerly several scraps of
+ his poetry, which were suddenly written on particular occasions.
+ These I lent among our acquaintance, who were never civil enough
+ to return them; and being then engaged in extensive business, I
+ forgot to ask for them, and they are lost: all I have remaining of
+ his are about twenty lines, which would require a little history
+ to be understood, being written on trifling subjects. I have a few
+ of his letters, the subjects of which are chiefly on business, but
+ I think there are in them some flights, which strongly mark his
+ character; for which reason I preserved them. There are so few of
+ his intimates now living, that I believe I am the only one who can
+ give a true account of his family and connexions. The principal
+ part of what I write is from my own knowledge, or what I have
+ heard from his nearest relations.
+
+ "His father was not the manufacturer of hats, but the vender. He
+ lived in a genteel style at Chichester; and, I think, filled the
+ office of mayor more than once; he was pompous in his manner; but,
+ at his death, he left his affairs rather embarrassed. Colonel
+ Martyn, his wife's brother, greatly assisted his family, and
+ supported Mr. William Collins at the university, where he stood
+ for a fellowship, which, to his great mortification, he lost, and
+ which was his reason for quitting that place, at least that was
+ his pretext. But he had other reasons: he was in arrears to his
+ bookseller, his tailor, and other tradesmen. But, I believe, a
+ desire to partake of the dissipation and gaiety of London was his
+ principal motive. Colonel Martyn was at this time with his
+ regiment; and Mr. Payne, a near relation, who had the management
+ of the colonel's affairs, had likewise a commission to supply the
+ Collinses with small sums of money. The colonel was the more
+ sparing in this order, having suffered considerably by Alderman
+ Collins, who had formerly been his agent, and, forgetting that his
+ wife's brother's cash was not his own, had applied it to his own
+ use. When Mr. William Collins came from the university, he called
+ on his cousin Payne, gaily dressed, and with a feather in his hat;
+ at which his relation expressed surprise, and told him his
+ appearance was by no means that of a young man who had not a
+ single guinea he could call his own. This gave him great offence;
+ but remembering his sole dependence for subsistence was in the
+ power of Mr. Payne, he concealed his resentment; yet could not
+ refrain from speaking freely behind his back, and saying 'he
+ thought him a d----d dull fellow;' though, indeed, this was an
+ epithet he was pleased to bestow on every one who did not think as
+ he would have them. His frequent demands for a supply obliged Mr.
+ Payne to tell him he must pursue some other line of life, for he
+ was sure Colonel Martyn would be displeased with him for having
+ done so much. This resource being stopped, forced him to set about
+ some work, of which his 'History of the Revival of Learning' was
+ the first; and for which he printed proposals (one of which I
+ have), and took the first subscription money from many of his
+ particular friends: the work was begun, but soon stood still. Both
+ Dr. Johnson and Mr. Langhorne are mistaken when they say, the
+ 'Translation of Aristotle' was never begun: I know the contrary,
+ for some progress was made in both, but most in the latter. From
+ the freedom subsisting between us, we took the liberty of saying
+ any thing to each other. I one day reproached him with idleness;
+ when, to convince me my censure was unjust, he showed me many
+ sheets of his 'Translation of Aristotle,' which he said he had so
+ fully employed himself about, as to prevent him calling on many of
+ his friends so frequently as he used to do. Soon after this he
+ engaged with Mr. Manby, a bookseller on Ludgate Hill, to furnish
+ him with some Lives for the Biographia Britannica, which Manby was
+ then publishing. He showed me some of the lives in embryo; but I
+ do not recollect that any of them came to perfection. To raise a
+ present subsistence he set about writing his odes; and, having a
+ general invitation to my house, he frequently passed whole days
+ there, which he employed in writing them, and as frequently
+ burning what he had written, after reading them to me: many of
+ them, which pleased me, I struggled to preserve, but without
+ effect; for, pretending he would alter them, he got them from me,
+ and thrust them into the fire. He was an acceptable companion
+ every where; and, among the gentlemen who loved him for a genius,
+ I may reckon the Doctors Armstrong, Barrowby, and Hill, Messrs.
+ Quin, Garrick, and Foote, who frequently took his opinion on their
+ pieces before they were seen by the public. He was particularly
+ noticed by the geniuses who frequented the Bedford and Slaughter's
+ Coffee Houses. From his knowledge of Garrick he had the liberty of
+ the scenes and green-room, where he made diverting observations on
+ the vanity and false consequence of that class of people; and his
+ manner of relating them to his particular friends was extremely
+ entertaining. In this manner he lived, with and upon his friends,
+ until the death of Colonel Martyn, who left what fortune he died
+ possessed of unto him and his two sisters. I fear I cannot be
+ certain as to dates, but believe he left the university in the
+ year 43. Some circumstances I recollect, make me almost certain he
+ was in London that year; but I will not be so certain of the time
+ he died, which I did not hear of till long after it happened. When
+ his health and faculties began to decline, he went to France, and
+ after to Bath, in hope his health might be restored, but without
+ success. I never saw him after his sister removed him from
+ M'Donald's madhouse at Chelsea to Chichester, where he soon sunk
+ into a deplorable state of idiotism, which, when I was told,
+ shocked me exceedingly; and, even now, the remembrance of a man
+ for whom I had a particular friendship, and in whose company I
+ have passed so many pleasant happy hours, gives me a severe shock.
+ Since it is in consequence of your own request, Sir, that I write
+ this long farrago, I expect you will overlook all inaccuracies. I
+ am, Sir,
+
+ "Your very humble servant,
+ "JOHN RAGSDALE.
+
+ "Mr. William Hymers, Queen's College, Oxford."
+
+The following communication, by Thomas Warton, was also found among the
+papers of Mr. Hymers. A few passages, concerning various readings, are
+omitted.
+
+ "I often saw Collins in London in 1750. This was before his
+ illness. He then told me of his intended History of the Revival of
+ Learning, and proposed a scheme of a review, to be called the
+ Clarendon Review, and to be printed at the university press, under
+ the conduct and authority of the university. About Easter, the
+ next year, I was in London; when, being given over, and supposed
+ to be dying, he desired to see me, that he might take his last
+ leave of me; but he grew better; and in the summer he sent me a
+ letter on some private business, which I have now by me, dated
+ Chichester, June 9, 1751, written in a fine hand, and without the
+ least symptom of a disordered or debilitated understanding. In
+ 1754, he came to Oxford for change of air and amusement, where he
+ stayed a month; I saw him frequently, but he was so weak and low,
+ that he could not bear conversation. Once he walked from his
+ lodgings, opposite Christ Church, to Trinity College, but
+ supported by his servant. The same year, in September, I and my
+ brother visited him at Chichester, where he lived, in the
+ cathedral cloisters, with his sister. The first day he was in high
+ spirits at intervals, but exerted himself so much that he could
+ not see us the second. Here he showed us an Ode to Mr. John Home,
+ on his leaving England for Scotland, in the octave stanza, very
+ long, and beginning,
+
+ Home, thou return'st from Thames.
+
+ I remember there was a beautiful description of the spectre of a
+ man drowned in the night, or, in the language of the old Scotch
+ superstitions, seized by the angry spirit of the waters, appearing
+ to his wife with pale blue cheek, &c. Mr. Home has no copy of it.
+ He also showed us another ode, of two or three four-lined stanzas,
+ called the Bell of Arragon; on a tradition that, anciently, just
+ before the king of Spain died, the great bell of the cathedral of
+ Sarragossa, in Arragon, tolled spontaneously. It began thus:
+
+ The bell of Arragon, they say,
+ Spontaneous speaks the fatal day.
+
+ Soon afterwards were these lines:
+
+ Whatever dark aerial power,
+ Commission'd, haunts the gloomy tower.
+
+ The last stanza consisted of a moral transition to his own death
+ and knell, which he called 'some simpler bell.' I have seen all
+ his odes already published in his own handwriting; they had the
+ marks of repeated correction: he was perpetually changing his
+ epithets. Dr. Warton, my brother, has a few fragments of some
+ other odes, but too loose and imperfect for publication, yet
+ containing traces of high imagery.
+
+ "In illustration of what Dr. Johnson has related, that during his
+ last malady he was a great reader of the Bible, I am favoured with
+ the following anecdote from the Reverend Mr. Shenton, Vicar of St.
+ Andrews, at Chichester, by whom Collins was buried: 'Walking in my
+ vicaral garden one Sunday evening, during Collins's last illness,
+ I heard a female (the servant, I suppose) reading the Bible in his
+ chamber. Mr. Collins had been accustomed to rave much, and make
+ great moanings; but while she was reading, or rather attempting to
+ read, he was not only silent but attentive likewise, correcting
+ her mistakes, which indeed were very frequent, through the whole
+ of the twenty-seventh chapter of Genesis.' I have just been
+ informed, from undoubted authority, that Collins had finished a
+ Preliminary Dissertation to be prefixed to his History of the
+ Restoration of Learning, and that it was written with great
+ judgment, precision, and knowledge of the subject.
+
+ "T. W."
+
+The overthrow of Collins's mind was too complete for it to be restored
+by variety of scene or the attentions of friendship. Thomas Warton
+describes him as being in a weak and low condition, and unable to bear
+conversation, when he saw him at Oxford. He was afterwards confined in a
+house for the insane at Chelsea; but before September, 1754, he was
+removed to Chichester, under the care of his sister, where he was
+visited by the two Wartons. At this time his spirits temporarily
+rallied; and he adverted with delight to literature, showing his guest
+the Ode to Mr. Home on his leaving England for Scotland. During
+Collins's illness Johnson was a frequent inquirer after his health, and
+those inquiries were made with a degree of feeling which, as he himself
+hints, may have partly arisen from the dread he entertained lest he
+might be the victim of a similar calamity. The following extracts are
+from letters addressed to Joseph Warton:
+
+ "March 8, 1754.
+
+ "But how little can we venture to exult in any intellectual
+ powers or literary attainments, when we consider the condition
+ of poor Collins. I knew him a few years ago, full of hopes and
+ full of projects, versed in many languages, high in fancy, and
+ strong in retention. This busy and forcible mind is now under
+ the government of those who lately would not have been able to
+ comprehend the least and most narrow of its designs. What do
+ you hear of him? are there hopes of his recovery? or is he to
+ pass the remainder of his life in misery and degradation?
+ perhaps with complete consciousness of his calamity."
+
+ "December 24, 1754.
+
+ "Poor dear Collins! Let me know whether you think it would give
+ him pleasure if I should write to him. I have often been near his
+ state, and therefore have it in great commiseration."
+
+ "April 15, 1756.
+
+ "What becomes of poor dear Collins? I wrote him a letter which he
+ never answered. I suppose writing is very troublesome to him. That
+ man is no common loss. The moralists all talk of the uncertainty
+ of fortune, and the transitoriness of beauty; but it is yet more
+ dreadful to consider that the powers of the mind are equally
+ liable to change, that understanding may make its appearance and
+ depart, that it may blaze and expire."
+
+In this state of mental darkness did Collins pass the last six or seven
+years of his existence, in the house now occupied by Mr. Mason, a
+bookseller in Chichester. His malady is described by Johnson as being,
+not so much an alienation of mind as a general laxity and feebleness of
+his vital, rather than his intellectual, powers; but his disorder seems,
+from other authorities, to have been of a more violent nature. As he was
+never married, he was indebted for protection and kindness to his
+youngest sister; and death, the only hope of the afflicted, came to his
+relief on the 12th of June, 1759, in the thirty-ninth year of his age, a
+period of life when the fervour of imagination is generally chastened
+without being subdued, and when all the mental powers are in their
+fullest vigour. He was buried in the church of St. Andrew, at
+Chichester, on the 15th of June; and the admiration of the public for
+his genius has been manifested by the erection of a monument by Flaxman,
+to his memory, in the Cathedral, which is thus described by Mr.
+Dallaway, the historian of Sussex:
+
+"Collins is represented as sitting in a reclining posture, during a
+lucid interval of the afflicting malady to which he was subject, with a
+calm and benign aspect, as if seeking refuge from his misfortunes in the
+consolations of the gospel, which appears open on a table before him,
+whilst his lyre and one of his best compositions lie neglected on the
+ground. Upon the pediment of the table are placed two female ideal
+figures in relief, representing love and pity, entwined each in the arms
+of the other; the proper emblems of the genius of his poetry." It bears
+the following epitaph from the pen of Hayley:
+
+ "Ye who the merits of the dead revere,
+ Who hold misfortune's sacred genius dear,
+ Regard this tomb, where Collins, hapless name,
+ Solicits kindness with a double claim.
+ Though nature gave him, and though science taught
+ The fire of fancy, and the reach of thought,
+ Severely doom'd to penury's extreme,
+ He pass'd in maddening pain life's feverish dream,
+ While rays of genius only served to show
+ The thickening horror, and exalt his woe.
+ Ye walls that echo'd to his frantic moan,
+ Guard the due records of this grateful stone;
+ Strangers to him, enamour'd of his lays,
+ This fond memorial to his talents raise.
+ For this the ashes of a bard require,
+ Who touch'd the tenderest notes of pity's lyre;
+ Who join'd pure faith to strong poetic powers;
+ Who, in reviving reason's lucid hours,
+ Sought on one book his troubled mind to rest,
+ And rightly deem'd the book of God the best."
+
+Collins's character has been portrayed by all his biographers in
+very agreeable colours. He was amiable and virtuous, and was as much
+courted for his popular manners as for the charms of his conversation.
+The associate of Johnson, Armstrong, Hill, Garrick, Quin, Foote, the
+two Wartons, and Thomson, and the friend of several of these eminent
+men, he must have possessed many of the qualities by which they were
+distinguished; for though an adviser may be chosen from a very
+different class of persons, genius will only herd with genius.
+Johnson has honoured him by saying, that "his morals were pure and
+his opinions pious;" and though he hints that his habits were sometimes
+at variance with these characteristics, he assigns the aberration to the
+temptations of want, and the society into which poverty sometimes
+drives the best disposed persons, adding, that he "preserved the
+sources of action unpolluted, that his principles were never shaken,
+that his distinctions of right and wrong were never confounded, and
+that his faults had nothing of malignity or design, but proceeded from
+some unexpected pressure or casual temptation." A higher eulogium,
+from so rigid a moralist, could not be pronounced on a man whose life
+was, for many years, unsettled and perplexed; and those only who have
+experienced the pressure of pecuniary necessities can be aware of
+the difficulty of resisting meanness, or avoiding vice, if not in the
+sense in which these terms are usually understood, at least in a sense
+to which they may as properly be applied--that of refusing to prostitute
+talents to purposes foreign to the conviction and taste of their
+possessor.
+
+On this mainly depend the annoyances and dangers of him who seeks a
+subsistence from his pen. The opinions which he may be desirous to
+express, or the subject he may be capable of illustrating, may not be
+popular, and the more important or learned they be, the more likely is
+such to be the case. Of course his labours would be rejected by
+publishers, who cannot buy what will not sell; hence no alternative
+remains but for him to manufacture marketable commodities; and when the
+_popular_ taste of the present, as well as of former times, is
+remembered, the degradation to which a man of high intellect must often
+submit, when he neglects that for which nature and study peculiarly
+qualified him, for what is in general demand, may be easily conceived.
+It is not requisite to advert to the taste of the age in which we live,
+farther than to allude to the class of works which issues from the
+bazaars of _fashionable_ publishers, and to ask, when such are alone in
+request, what would have been the fate, had they lived in our own times,
+of Johnson, Pope, Dryden, Addison, and the other ornaments of the golden
+age of literature? But if even in that age the Odes of Collins were too
+abstracted from mundane feelings, too rich in imagery, and too strongly
+marked by the fervour of inspiration to be generally appreciated, his
+chance of being so, by the public generally, is at this moment less; and
+the only hope of his obtaining that popularity to which he is
+unquestionably entitled, is by placing his works within the reach of
+all, and, more especially, by acquainting the multitude with the opinion
+entertained of him, by those whose judgments they have the sense to
+venerate, since they are sometimes willing to receive, on the credit of
+another, that which they have not themselves the discrimination or
+feeling to perceive.
+
+An anecdote is related of Collins which, if true, proves that he felt
+the neglect with which his Odes were treated with the indignation
+natural to an enthusiastic temper. Having purchased the unsold copies of
+the first edition from the booksellers, he set fire to them with his own
+hand, as if to revenge himself on the apathy and ignorance of the
+public.
+
+It is unnecessary to append to the Memoir of Collins many observations
+on the character of his poetry, because its peculiar beauties, and the
+qualities by which it is distinguished, are described with considerable
+force and eloquence by Sir Egerton Brydges, in the Essay prefixed to
+this edition. Campbell's remarks on the same subject cannot be
+forgotten; and other critics of the highest reputation have concurred in
+ascribing to Collins a conception and genius scarcely exceeded by any
+English poet. To say that Sir Egerton Brydges's Essay exaggerates the
+merit of some of his productions may produce the retort which has been
+made to Johnson's criticism, that he was too deficient in feeling to be
+capable of appreciating the excellence of the pieces which he censures.
+It is not, however, inconsistent with a high respect for Collins, to
+ascribe every possible praise to that unrivaled production, the Ode to
+the Passions, to feel deeply the beauty, the pathos, and the sublime
+conceptions of the Odes to Evening, to Pity, to Simplicity, and a few
+others, and yet to be sensible of the occasional obscurity and
+imperfections of his imagery in other pieces, to find it difficult to
+discover the meaning of some passages, to think the opening of four of
+his odes which commence with the common-place invocation of "O thou,"
+and the alliteration by which so many lines are disfigured, blemishes
+too serious to be forgotten, unless the judgment be drowned in the full
+tide of generous and enthusiastic admiration of the great and
+extraordinary beauties by which these faults are more than redeemed.
+
+That these defects are to be ascribed to haste it would be uncandid to
+deny; but haste is no apology for such faults in productions which
+scarcely fill a hundred pages, and which their author had ample
+opportunities to remove.
+
+It may also be thought heterodoxy by the band, which, if small in
+numbers, is distinguished by taste, feeling, and genius, to concur in
+Collins's opinion, when he expressed himself dissatisfied with his
+Eclogues; for, though they are not without merit, it is very doubtful if
+they would have lived, even till this time, but for the Odes with which
+they are published, notwithstanding the zeal of Dr. Langhorne, who is in
+raptures over passages the excellence of which is not very conspicuous.
+To give a preference to the Verses to Sir Thomas Hanmer, of which all
+that Langhorne could find to say is, "that the versification is easy and
+genteel, and the allusions always poetical," and especially to the Ode
+addressed to Mr. Home, on the superstition of the Highlands, over the
+Eclogues, may possibly be deemed to betray a corrupt taste, since it is
+an admission which is, it is believed, made for the first time. In that
+Ode, among a hundred other beautiful verses, the following address to
+Tasso has seldom been surpassed:
+
+ "Prevailing Poet! whose undoubting mind
+ Believed the magic wonders which he sung!
+ Hence, at each sound, imagination glows!
+ Hence, at each picture, vivid life starts here!
+ Hence, his warm lay with softest sweetness flows!
+ Melting it flows, pure, murmuring, strong, and clear,
+ And fills the impassion'd heart, and wins the harmonious ear!"
+
+The picture of the swain drowned in a fen, and the grief of his widow,
+possessing every charm which simplicity and tenderness can bestow, and
+give to that Ode claims to admiration which, if admitted, have been
+hitherto conceded in silence.
+
+From the coincidence between Collins's love of, and addresses to, Music,
+his residence at Oxford, and from internal evidence, Some Verses on Our
+Late Taste in Music, which appeared in the Gentleman's Magazine for
+1740, and there said to be "by a Gentleman of Oxford," are printed in
+this edition of Collins's works, not, however, as positively his, but as
+being so likely to be written by him, as to justify their being brought
+to the notice of his readers.
+
+A poet, and not to have felt the tender passion, would be a creature
+which the world has never yet seen. It is said that Collins was
+extremely fond of a young lady who was born the day before him, and who
+did not return his affection; and that, punning upon his misfortune, he
+observed, "he came into the world a day after the fair." The lady is
+supposed to have been Miss Elizabeth Goddard, the intended bride of
+Colonel Ross, to whom he addressed his beautiful Ode on the death of
+that Officer at the battle of Fontenoy, at which time she was on a visit
+to the family of the Earl of Tankerville, who then resided at Up-Park,
+near Chichester, a place that overlooks the little village of Harting,
+mentioned in the Ode.
+
+Collins's person was of the middle size and well formed; of a light
+complexion, with gray, weak eyes. His mind was deeply imbued with
+classical literature, and he understood the Italian, French, and Spanish
+languages. He was well read, and was particularly conversant with early
+English writers, and to an ardent love of literature he united, as is
+manifest from many of his pieces, a passionate devotion to Music, that
+
+ "----Sphere-descended maid,
+ Friend of Pleasure, Wisdom's aid."
+
+His family, which were very respectable, were established at Chichester
+in the sixteenth century as tradesmen of the higher order, and his
+immediate ancestor was mayor of that city in 1619:[7] his mother's
+relations appear to have been of a superior condition in life.[8]
+Collins lost his father in 1734, and on the 5th of July, 1744, his
+mother died. He was an only son: of his two sisters, Elizabeth, the
+eldest, died unmarried, and Anne, the youngest, who took care of him
+when he was bereft of reason, married first Mr. Hugh Sempill, who died
+in 1762, and secondly the Rev. Dr. Thomas Durnford, and died at
+Chichester in November, 1789. Her character is thus described on the
+authority of Mr. Park: "The Reverend Mr. Durnford, who resided at
+Chichester, and was the son of Dr. Durnford, informed me, in August,
+1795, that the sister of Collins loved money to excess, and evinced so
+outrageous an aversion to her brother, because he squandered or gave
+away to the boys in the cloisters whatever money he had, that she
+destroyed, in a paroxysm of resentment, all his papers, and whatever
+remained of his enthusiasm for poetry, as far as she could. Mr. Hayley
+told me, when I visited him at Eartham, that he had obtained from her a
+small drawing by Collins, but it possessed no other value than as a
+memorial that the bard had attempted to handle the pencil as well as the
+pen."[9] That Mrs. Durnford was indifferent to her brother's fame, is
+stated by others, and Sir Egerton Brydges, in his Essay, has made some
+just observations on the circumstance.
+
+This Memoir must not be closed without an expression of acknowledgment
+to the Bishop of Hereford, to the President of Magdalen College, to H.
+Gabell, Esq., and to I. Sanden, Esq., of Chichester, for the desire
+which they were so good as to manifest that this account of Collins
+might be more satisfactory than it is; and if his admirers consider that
+his present biographer has not done sufficient justice to his memory, an
+antidote to the injury will be found in the fervent and unqualified
+admiration which Sir Egerton Brydges has evinced for his genius.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [1] 21st March, 1740.
+
+ [2] Afterwards republished with the title of "Oriental Eclogues."
+
+ [3] D'Israeli, in his "Calamities of Authors," vol. ii. p. 201.
+
+ [4] June 7th, 1746.
+
+ [5] Mr. Joseph Warton, now Dr. Warton, head master of Winton school,
+ was at the same time second upon roll; and Mr. Mulso, now [1781]
+ prebendary of the church of Winton, third upon roll.
+
+ [6] Hampton, the translator of Polybius.
+
+ [7] Dallaway's Sussex, vol. i. p. 185--The arms of the family of
+ Collins are there said to have been, "Azure a griffin segreant
+ or;" but in Sir William Burrell's MS. Collections for a History
+ of Sussex, in the British Museum, the field is described as being
+ vert. From those manuscripts which are marked "Additional MSS."
+ Nos. 5697 to 5699, the following notices of the Poet's family
+ have been extracted.
+
+ REGISTER OF ST. ANDREW'S, CHICHESTER.
+
+ BAPTISM.
+
+ Elizabeth, daughter of Mr. George Collins, 8th October, 1763.
+
+ BURIALS.
+
+ Mrs. Elizabeth Collins [the poet's mother], 6th July, 1744.
+ William Collins, Gent. [the Poet], 15th June, 1759.
+
+ REGISTER OF ST. PETER THE GREAT, CHICHESTER.
+
+ BAPTISMS.
+
+ Charles, son of Roger Collins, 8th February, 1645.
+ George, son of Mr. George Collins, 28th December, 1647.
+ Humphrey, son of Mr. Richard Collins, 20th Dec. 1648.
+ George, son of Mr. George Collins, 7th September, 1651.
+ Christian, daughter of Mr. Richard Collins, 1st Sept. 1652.
+ John, son of Mr. Richard Collins, senior, 13th Dec. 1652.
+ Elizabeth, daughter of Mr. Richard Collins, sen. 16th May, 1656.
+ Joan, daughter of Mr. Richard Collins, jun. 12th Dec. 1656.
+ Judith, daughter of Mr. Collins, Vicar Choral, 17th April, 1667.
+ Elizabeth, daughter of Mr. William Collins, 6th March, 1704.
+
+ MARRIAGES.
+
+ Mr. Charles Collins and Mrs. Elizabeth Cardiff, 14th April, 1696.
+
+ BURIALS.
+
+ ---- wife of Mr. William Collins, 10th December, 1650.
+ Susan, wife of Mr. Richard Collins, 3rd December, 1657.
+ Mr. George Collins, 10th January, 1669.
+ Mrs. Collins of St. Olave's Parish, 19th July, 1696.
+
+ There are monumental inscriptions in St. Andrew's Church,
+ Chichester, to the Poet's father, mother, maternal uncle, Colonel
+ Martyn, and sister, Mrs. Durnford.
+
+ [8] So much of the will of Colonel Edmund Martyn as relates to the Poet
+ and his sister has been already cited, but the testator's
+ situation in life and the respectability of his family are best
+ shown by other parts of that document. He describes himself as a
+ lieutenant-colonel in his Majesty's service, lying sick in the
+ city of Chichester. To his niece Elizabeth, the wife of Thomas
+ Napper, of Itchenor in Sussex, he bequeathed 100_l._ His copyhold
+ estates of the manors of Selsey, and Somerly, in that county, to
+ his nephew, Abraham Martyn, the youngest son of his late only
+ brother, Henry Martyn, and to his servant, John Hipp, he gave his
+ wearing apparel and ten pounds.
+
+ [9] Dyce's edition of Collins, 1827, p. 39.
+
+
+
+
+AN ESSAY ON THE GENIUS AND POEMS OF COLLINS.
+
+ BY SIR EGERTON BRYDGES,
+ BART.
+
+
+Collins is the founder of a new school of poetry, of a high class. It is
+true that, unless Buckhurst and Spenser had gone before him, he could
+not have written as he has done; yet he is an inventor very distinct
+from both. He calls his odes descriptive and allegorical; and this
+characterises them truly, but too generally. The personification of
+abstract qualities had never been so happily executed before; the pure
+spirituality of the conception, the elegance and force of the language,
+the harmony and variety of the numbers, were all executed with a
+felicity which none before or since have reached. That these poems did
+not at once captivate the public attention cannot be accounted for by
+any cause hitherto assigned. We may not wonder that the multitude did
+not at once perceive their full beauties; but that, among readers of
+taste and learning, there should not have been found a sufficient number
+to set the example of admiration, is very extraordinary. In addition to
+all their other high merits, the mere novelty of thought and manner were
+sufficient to excite immediate notice. Nor was there any thing in
+Collins's station or character to create prejudices against the
+probability that beautiful effusions of genius might be struck out by
+his hand. His education at the college of Winchester, his fame at
+Oxford, his associates in London, all were fair preludes to the
+production of beautiful poetry. Indeed, he had already produced
+beautiful poetry in his Oriental Eclogues, four years before his Odes
+appeared. These were, it is admitted, of a different cast from his Odes,
+and of a gentleness and chastity of thought and diction, which he
+himself was conscious, some years afterwards, did not very well
+represent the gorgeousness of eastern composition.
+
+It was a crisis when there was a fair opening for new candidates for the
+laurel. The uniformity of Pope's style began already to pall upon the
+public ear. Thomson was indolent, and Young eccentric; Gray had not yet
+appeared on the stage; and Akenside's metaphysical subject and diffuse
+style were not calculated to engross the general taste. Johnson had
+taken possession of the field of satire, but there are too many readers
+of enthusiastic mind to be satisfied with satire. The pedantry and
+uncouthness of Walter Harte had precluded him from ever being a
+favourite with the public; Shenstone had not yet risen into fame; and
+Lyttelton was engrossed by politics. When, therefore, Collins's Odes
+appeared, all speculation would have anticipated that they must have
+been successful. But we must recollect that they did not excite the
+admiration of Johnson; and that Gray did not read them with that
+unqualified approval which his native taste would have inspired. This
+singularity must be accounted for by other causes than their want of
+merit.
+
+The disappointment of Collins was so keen and deep, that he not only
+burned the unsold copies with his own hand, but soon fell into a
+melancholy which ended in insanity. Many persons have affected to
+comment on this result with an unfeeling ignorance of human nature, and,
+more especially, of fervid genius. It is, undoubtedly, highly dangerous
+to give the entire reins to imagination; the discipline of a constant
+exercise of reason is not only salutary, but necessary. But one can
+easily conceive how the indulgence of that state of mind which produced
+Collins's Odes could end in an entire overthrow of the intellect, when
+embittered by a defect of the principal objects of his worldly ambition.
+He is said to have been puffed up by a vanity which prompted him to
+expect that all eyes would be upon him, and all voices lifted in his
+praise. Such was the conception of a vulgar observer of the human
+character. Why should it have been vanity that prompted this hope? It
+was a consciousness of merit, of those brilliant powers which produced
+the Ode to the Passions! was ever a voice content which sung to those
+who would not hear, which was condemned
+
+ "To waste its sweetness on the desert air?"
+
+Spenser's power of personification is copious beyond example; but it is
+seldom sufficiently select; rich as it is in imagination, it too
+commonly wants taste and delicacy; it has the fault of coarseness, which
+Burke's images in prose two centuries afterwards, sometimes fell into.
+But Collins's images are as pure, and of as exquisite delicacy, as they
+are spiritual. They are not human beings invested with some of the
+attributes of angels, but the whole figure is purely angelic, and of a
+higher order of creation; in this they are distinct even from the
+admirable personifications of Gray, because they are less earthly. The
+Ode to the Passions is, by universal consent, the noblest of Collins's
+productions, because it exhibits a much more extended invention, not of
+one passion only, but of all the passions combined, acting, according to
+the powers of each, to one end. The execution, also, is the happiest,
+each particular passion is drawn with inimitable force and compression.
+Let us take only FEAR and DESPAIR, each dashed out in four lines, of
+which every word is like inspiration. Beautiful as Spenser is, and
+sometimes sublime, yet he redoubles his touches too much, and often
+introduces some coarse feature or expression, which destroys the spell.
+Spenser, indeed, has other merits of splendid and inexhaustible
+invention, which render it impossible to put Collins on a par with him:
+but we must not estimate merit by mere quantity: if a poet produces but
+one short piece, which is perfect, he must be placed according to its
+quality. And surely there is not a single figure in Collins's Ode to the
+Passions which is not perfect, both in conception and language. He has
+had many imitators, but no one has ever approached him in his own
+department.
+
+The Ode to Evening is, perhaps, the next in point of merit. It is quite
+of a different cast; it is descriptive of natural scenery; and such a
+scene of enchanting repose was never exhibited by Claude, or any other
+among the happiest of painters. Though a mere verbal description can
+never rival a fine picture in a mere address to the material part of our
+nature, yet it far eclipses it with those who have the endowment of a
+brilliant fancy, because it gratifies their taste, selection, and
+sentiment. Delightful, therefore, as it is to look upon a Claude, it is
+more delightful to look upon this description. It is vain to attempt to
+analyse the charm of this Ode; it is so subtle, that it escapes
+analysis. Its harmony is so perfect, that it requires no rhyme: the
+objects are so happily chosen, and the simple epithets convey ideas and
+feelings so congenial to each other, as to throw the reader into the
+very mood over which the personified being so beautifully designed
+presides. No other poem on the same subject has the same magic. It
+assuredly suggested some images and a tone of expression to Gray in his
+Elegy.
+
+The Ode on the Poetical Character is here and there a little involved
+and obscure; but its general conception is magnificent, and beaming that
+spirit of inventive enthusiasm, which alone can cherish the poet's
+powers, and bring forth the due fruits. Collins never touched the lyre
+but he was borne away by the inspiration under which he laboured. The
+Dirge in Cymbeline, the lines on Thomson, and the Ode on Colonel Ross
+breathe such a beautiful simplicity of pathos, and yet are so highly
+poetical and graceful in every thought and tone, that, exquisitely
+polished as they are, and without one superfluous or one prosaic word,
+they never once betray the artifices of composition. The extreme
+transparency of the words and thoughts would induce a vulgar reader to
+consider them trite, while they are the expression of a genius so
+refined as to be all essence of spirit. In Gray, excellent as he is, we
+continually encounter the marks of labour and effort, and occasional
+crudeness, which shows that effort had not always succeeded, such as
+"iron hand and torturing hour;" but nothing of this kind occurs in the
+principal poems of Collins. There is a fire of mind which supersedes
+labour, and produces what labour cannot. It has been said that Collins
+is neither sublime nor pathetic; but only ingenious and fanciful. The
+truth is, that he was cast in the very mould of sublimity and pathos. He
+lived in an atmosphere above the earth, and breathed only in a visionary
+world. He was conversant with nothing else, and this must have been the
+secret by which he produced compositions so entirely spiritual. He who
+has daily intercourse with the world, and feels the vulgar human
+passions, cannot be in a humour to write poems which do not partake of
+earthly coarseness.
+
+It may be asked, _cui bono?_ what is the moral use of such poems as
+these? Whatever refines the intellect improves the heart; whatever
+augments and fortifies the spiritual part of our nature raises us in the
+rank of created beings. And what poems are more calculated to refine our
+intellect, and increase our spirituality, than the poems of Collins? To
+embody, in a brilliant manner, the most beautiful abstractions, to put
+them into action, and to add to them splendour, harmony, strength, and
+purity of language, is to complete a task as admirable for its use and
+its delight, as it is difficult to be executed. No one can receive the
+intellectual gratification which such works are capable of producing
+without being the better for it. The understanding was never yet roused
+to the conception of such pure and abstract thinking without an
+elevation of the whole nature of the being so roused. The expression of
+subtle and evanescent ideas, carried to its perfection, is among the
+very noblest and most exalted studies with which the human mind can be
+conversant.
+
+It has been the fashion of our own age to beat out works into twentyfold
+and fiftyfold the size of those of Collins. I do not quarrel with that
+fashion; each fashion has its use: and my own taste induces me to
+perceive the value and many attractions of long narrative poems, full of
+human passions and practical wisdom. The matter is more desirable than
+the workmanship; and much of occasional carelessness in the language may
+be forgiven, for fertility of natural and just thought and interest of
+story. But this in no degree diminishes the value of those gems, which,
+though of the smallest size, comprehend perfections of every kind. It is
+easier to work upon a large field than a small one,--one where is
+
+ "Ample room and verge enough
+ The characters of hell to trace."
+
+But these diffuse productions are not calculated to give the same sort
+of pleasure as the gems. How difficult was the path chosen by Collins
+is sufficiently proved by the want of success of all who have entered
+the same walk: Gray's was not the same, as I shall endeavour presently
+to show. In the miscellany of Dodsley and other collectors will be found
+numerous attempts at Allegorical Odes: they are almost all nauseous
+failures--without originality or distinctness of conception; bald in
+their language, lame in their numbers, and repulsive from their
+insipidity of ideas.
+
+Gray's personifications can scarcely be called allegorical, they have so
+much of humanity about them. He dealt in all the noble and melancholy
+feelings of the human heart: he never for one moment forgot to be a
+moralist: he was constantly under the influence of powerful sympathy for
+the miseries of man's life; and wrote from the overflow of his bosom
+rather than of his imagination. It is true that his imagination
+presented the pictures to him; but it was his heart which impelled him
+to speak. Take the Ode on the Prospect of Eton College; there is not one
+word which did not break from the bottom of his heart. The multitude
+cannot enter into the visionary world of Collins: all who have a spark
+of virtuous human feelings can sympathize with Gray. It is impossible to
+deny that of these two beautiful poets Gray is the most instructive as a
+moralist; but Gray is not so original as Collins, not so inventive, not
+so perfect in his language, and has not so much the fire and flow of
+inspiration.
+
+When Collins is spoken of as one of the _minor_ poets, it is a sad
+misapplication of the term. Unless he be minor because the number and
+size of his poems is small, no one is less a minor poet. In him every
+word is poetry, and poetry either sublime or pathetic. He does not rise
+to the sublimity of Milton or Dante, or reach the graceful tenderness of
+Petrarch; but he has a visionary invention of his own, to which there is
+no rival. As long as the language lasts, every richly gifted and richly
+cultivated mind will read him with intense and wondering rapture; and
+will not cease to entertain the conviction, from his example, if from no
+other, that true poetry of the higher orders is real inspiration.
+
+It will occur to many readers, on perusing these passages of exalted
+praise, that Johnson has spoken of Collins in a very different manner.
+Almost fifty years have elapsed since Johnson's final criticism on him
+appeared in his Lives of the Poets. It disgusted me so much at the time,
+and the disgust continued so violent, that for a long period it blinded
+me to all his stupendous merits, because it evinced not only bad taste
+but unamiable feelings. I cannot yet either justify it, or account for
+it. He speaks of Collins having sought for splendour without attaining
+it--of clogging his lines with consonants, and of mistaking inversion of
+language for poetry. Not one of these faults belongs to Collins. In
+almost all his poems the words follow their natural order, and are
+mellifluous beyond those of almost any other verse writer. If the
+Passions are not described with splendour, there is no such thing as
+splendour. If the beauties which he sought and attained are unnatural
+and extravagant, then the tests of correctness and good taste which have
+been hitherto set up must be abandoned.
+
+This severe criticism is the more extraordinary because Johnson
+professed a warm personal friendship for Collins; he professes
+admiration of his talents, learning, and taste, as well as of his
+disposition and heart, and speaks of his afflicting ill health with a
+passionate tenderness which has seldom been equalled in beauty, pathos,
+and force of language. That he could love him personally with such
+fondness, but be blind to his splendid and unrivaled genius, is utterly
+beyond my power to account for. Who can say that Johnson wanted taste
+when we read his sublime and acute criticisms on Milton, Dryden, and
+Pope? Was it that he roused all the faculties of his judgment when he
+spoke of these great men of past times; yet, that when he descended to
+his contemporaries, he indulged his feelings rather than his intellect,
+and suffered himself to be overcome by the evil passions of envy and
+contempt? His natural taste was, probably, not the best; when his
+criticisms were perfect he had tasked his intellect rather than his
+feelings. He was a man of general wisdom and undoubted genius, but not a
+very nice scholar, and he prided himself upon his every-day sense, his
+practical knowledge, rather than those visionary musings which he
+thought a dangerous indulgence of imagination. He could not put the
+compositions of Collins among the mere curiosities of literature, but he
+permitted himself to depreciate habits of mental excursion which he had
+not himself cultivated.
+
+It was not till more than twenty years after Collins's death that his
+Ode on the Superstitions of the Highlands was recovered. The two Wartons
+had seen it, and spoke highly of it to Johnson and others. About 1781,
+or 1782, a copy was found among the papers of Dr. Carlysle, with a chasm
+of two or three stanzas. The public deemed it equal to the expectations
+which had been raised of it; for my part I will confess that I was
+always deeply disappointed at it. There are in it occasional traces of
+Collins's genius and several good lines--but none grand--none of that
+felicitous flow and inspired vigour which mark the Ode to the Passions
+and other of his lyrics--none of that happy personification of abstract
+conceptions which is the characteristic of his genius. The majority of
+the lines lag and move heavily, and do not seem to me to rise much
+above mediocrity in the expression. The subject was attractive, and
+might have afforded space for the wild excursions of Collins's creative
+powers. As to the edition of Bell, in which it is pretended that the
+lost stanzas have been recovered, I have no more doubt that they are
+_spurious_ than that I did not write them myself: I will not dwell upon
+this subject, but only mention that it is quite impossible Collins could
+write "_Fate_ gave the _fatal_ blow," and "bowing to Freedom's _yoke_;"
+and such a line as
+
+ "In the first year of the first George's reign," &c.
+
+There is not one line among these interpolated stanzas which it is
+possible that Collins could have written.
+
+Mr. Ragdale relates that Collins was in the habit of writing numerous
+fragments, and then throwing them into the flames. Jackson, of Exeter,
+says the same of John Bampfylde. A sensitive mind is scarce ever
+satisfied with the reception it meets, when, in first heat of
+composition, it hopes to delight some listener, to which it first
+communicates its new effusions. It almost always considers itself to be
+"damn'd by faint praise." I have known fervid authors who, if they read
+or communicated a piece before it was finished, never went on with it.
+They thought it became blown upon, and turned from it with coldness,
+disgust, and despair. Yet the hearer is commonly not in fault: who can
+satisfy the warm hopes of aspiring and restless genius?
+
+The Wartons have expressed themselves with praise and affection of
+Collins, but not, I think, with the entire admiration which was due to
+him. Joseph Warton was a good-natured and generous-minded man, but
+something of rivalry lurked in his bosom; and the fraternal partiality
+of Thomas Warton had the same effect. The younger brother seems to have
+thought that Joseph's genius was equal to that of Collins. Gray had the
+critical acumen to discern the difference; but still he in no degree
+does justice to Collins. He accuses him of want of taste and selection,
+which is a surprising charge; and the more so, because Gray did not
+disdain to borrow from him. Gray's fault was an affected fastidiousness,
+as appears by the slighting manner in which he speaks of Thomson's
+Castle of Indolence on its first appearance, as well as of Akenside's
+Pleasures of Imagination, and Shenstone's Elegies. That Gray had
+exquisite taste, and was a perfect scholar, no one can doubt.
+
+Collins lived thirteen years after the publication of his Odes. It does
+not appear that he produced any thing after this publication. How soon
+his grand mental malady extinguished his literary powers, I do not
+exactly know, nor is it recorded, whether any part of it arose from
+bodily disorders. Medical men have never agreed regarding this most
+deplorable of human afflictions. In Collins's case it probably arose
+from the mind. On such an intellectual temperament the extinction of the
+visions which Hope had painted to him seems to have been sufficient to
+produce that derangement, which first enfeebled, and then perverted and
+annihilated his faculties. The account given by Johnson is different
+from that supplied by Mr. Ragdale and another anonymous communication.
+
+He had, perhaps, lucid intervals in which he discovered nothing but
+weakness and exhaustion. But he appears to have sometimes had fits of
+violence and despair. It seems that he was an enthusiastic admirer of
+Shakespeare, and a great reader of black letter books. It may be
+inferred that his studies were not entirely given up during his malady;
+but it is a subject of great wonder and regret that the Wartons, the
+intimate friends both of his better and darker days, have left no
+particular memorials of him. He had a sister, lately, if not still,
+living, from whom, though of a very uncongenial nature, something might
+surely have been gathered. But there is a familiarity which, by
+destroying admiration, destroys the perception of what will interest
+others. There are few of our poets of rare genius, of whose private life
+and character much is known. Little is known of Spenser, Shakespeare,
+and Milton: not much even of Thomson. More is known of Gray by the
+medium of his beautiful letters; but when Southey, Wordsworth, and Scott
+are gone, posterity will know every particular of them; and, even now,
+know much which fills them with delight and admiration. But let us know
+something in good time, also of the new candidates for poetical fame!
+
+If the life of a poet is not in accordance with his song, it may be
+suspected that the song itself is not genuine. Who can be a poet, and
+yet be a worldling in his passions and habits? An artificial poet is a
+disgusting dealer in trifles: nothing but the predominance of strong and
+unstimulated feeling will give that inspiration without which it is
+worse than an empty sound. When the passion is factitious, the
+excitement has always an immoral tendency; but the delineation of real
+and amiable sentiments calls up a sympathy in other bosoms which thus
+confirms and fixes them where they would otherwise die away. The memory
+may preserve what is artificial, but, when it becomes stale, it turns to
+offensiveness, and thus breeds an alienation from literature itself.
+
+That Collins has continued to increase in fame as years have passed
+away, is the most decisive of all proofs that his poems have the pure
+and sterling merit which began to be ascribed to them soon after his
+death. M. Bonstetten tells me that Gray died without a suspicion of the
+high rank he was thereafter to hold in the annals of British genius?
+What did poor Collins think when he submitted his sublime odes to the
+flames? He must have had fits of confidence, even then, in himself; but
+intermixed with gloom and despair, and curses of the wretched doom of
+his birth! Is it sufficient that a man should wrap himself up in
+himself, and be content if the poetry creates itself and expires in his
+own heart? We strike the lyre to excite sympathy, and, if no one will
+hear, will any one not feel that he strikes in vain; and that the talent
+given us is useless, and even painful? But who can be assured that he
+has the talent if no one acknowledges it? To have it, and not to be
+assured that we have it, is a restless fire that burns to consume us.
+
+Let no one envy the endowments, if he looks at the fate, of poets. Let
+him contemplate Spenser, Denham, Rochester, Otway, Collins, Chatterton,
+Burns, Kirke White, Bloomfield, Shelley, Keats, and Byron, besides those
+of foreign countries! Perhaps Collins was the most unhappy of all; as he
+was assuredly one of the most inspired and most amiable.
+
+ "In woful measures wan Despair--
+ Low sullen sounds his grief beguiled,
+ A solemn, strange, and mingled air;
+ 'Twas sad by fits, by starts 'twas wild."
+
+Langhorne's edition of Collins first appeared in 1765, accompanied by
+observations which have been generally appended to subsequent editions.
+These observations have commonly borne the character of feebleness and
+affectation; they have a sort of pedantic prettiness, which is somewhat
+repulsive, but they do not want ingenuity, or justness of criticism.
+Part of them, at least, had previously appeared in the Monthly Review,
+probably written by Langhorne. Langhorne was not deficient himself in
+poetical genius, but is principally remembered by a single beautiful
+stanza, "Cold on Canadian hills," &c. From the time of Langhorne's first
+edition, Collins became a popular poet; a miniature edition appeared
+soon after that of Langhorne; and as long as I can remember books, which
+goes back at least to the year 1770, Collins's poems were almost
+universally on the lips of readers of English poetry. That Cowper, in
+1784, should speak of him as "a poet of no great fame," proves nothing,
+since Cowper's long seclusion from the world had made him utterly
+ignorant of contemporary literature. The negative inference, from the
+omission of Beattie, is not of much weight. I cannot recollect the date
+of the article in the Monthly Review; but, as it appears that Collins
+survived till 1759, I suspect it was before Collins's death. It was in
+September, 1754, that the Wartons visited him at Chichester: in that
+year he paid a visit to Oxford, when it appears that he was suffering
+under exhausture, not alienation, of mind.
+
+The critics, and, among the rest, Mrs. Barbauld and Campbell, have
+ascribed to him "frequent obscurity;" this is unjust,--his general
+characteristic is lucidness and transparency: he is never obscure,
+unless in the Ode to Liberty, and, perhaps, in a few passages of the Ode
+on the Manners. Campbell's criticism is, otherwise, worthy of this
+beautiful poet, whom he praises with congenial spirit. When Hazlitt
+speaks of the "tinsel and splendid patchwork" of Collins, "mixed with
+the solid, sterling ore of his genius," he speaks of a base material not
+to be found there. In Collins there is no tinsel or patchwork, one of
+his excellencies is, that the whole of every piece is of one web; there
+are no joinings or meaner threads. There is no height to which Collins
+might not have risen, had he lived long, had his mind continued sound,
+and had he persevered in exercising his genius. Campbell remarks that,
+at the same age, Milton had written nothing which could eclipse his
+productions.
+
+Of the two communications regarding Collins, to which I have already
+alluded, one anonymous, the other by a Mr. John Ragsdale, I must say
+something more. The first, signed V., appeared in the Gentleman's
+Magazine, with the date of the 20th Jan. 1781. I well remember its
+publication, and with what eagerness I read it. I suspect it was at the
+very crisis of the appearance of the last portion of Johnson's Lives,
+but possibly a year earlier. I perused it with a mixture of delight,
+melancholy, and disgust; the first passage which struck me was this: "As
+he brought with him [to Oxford], for so the whole tone of his
+conversation discovered, too high an opinion of his school acquisitions
+and a sovereign contempt for all academic studies and discipline, he
+never looked with any complacency on his situation in the University,
+but was always complaining of the dulness of a college life. In short,
+he threw up his demyship, and going to London, commenced a man of the
+town, spending his time in all the dissipation of Ranelagh, Vauxhall,
+and the playhouses; and was romantic enough to suppose that his superior
+abilities would draw the attention of the great world, by means of whom
+he was to make his fortune," &c., &c.--"Thus was lost to the world this
+unfortunate person, in the prime of life, without availing himself of
+fine abilities, which, if properly improved, must have raised him to the
+top of any profession, and have rendered him a blessing to his friends,
+and an ornament to his country."
+
+The vulgarity and narrow-mindedness of this last paragraph filled me
+with indignation and contempt. In a selfish point of view Collins
+might, unquestionably, have done better by binding himself to the
+trammels of a profession; but would he have been more an honor to his
+friends and an ornament to his country? Are the fruits of genius he has
+left behind no ornament or use to his country? Professional men, for the
+most part, live for themselves, and not for the world. Who now remembers
+Lord Camden, Lord Thurlow, Lord Rosslyn, Lord Kenyon, Lord Ellenborough,
+or a hundred episcopal or medical characters, all rich and famous in
+their day?
+
+The character of his person and habits we read with deep interest. "He
+was passionately fond of music, good-natured, and affable, warm in his
+friendships, and visionary in his pursuits; and, as long as I knew him,
+very temperate in his eating and drinking. He was of a moderate stature,
+of a light and clear complexion, with gray eyes, so very weak at times
+as hardly to bear a candle in the room, and often raising within him
+apprehensions of blindness."
+
+The letter from Mr. John Ragsdale is addressed to Mr. William Hymers,
+Queen's College, Oxford, dated "Hill Street, Richmond, in Surrey, July,
+1783." He appears to have been a tradesman in Bond Street; and he
+surveyed the character of Collins (with whom he was familiar) with a
+tradesman's eye. He reproached the poet with idleness, not because he
+was lingering and losing his time on the road to fame, but because he
+omitted to get money by his pen. "To raise a present subsistence," says
+Ragsdale, "he set about writing his Odes; and having a general
+invitation to my house, he frequently passed whole days there, which he
+employed in writing them, and as frequently burning what he had written
+after he had read them to me: many of them, which pleased me, I
+struggled to preserve, but without effect; for, pretending he would
+alter them, he got them from me, and thrust them into the fire." That he
+wrote the Odes to gain a present subsistence is but the tradesman's
+mistaken comment.
+
+Gray was about four years older than Collins, and he survived him twelve
+years; he appears to have spent these years in gloominess and spleen;
+but we know not what intense pleasures he received from his solitary
+studies, from the improvement of his mind, from that exquisite taste and
+increasing erudition of which every day added to the stores. The
+enthusiasm of Collins was more active and adventurous, and his erudition
+probably more acute. Timidity and fastidiousness were great defects in
+Gray; they kept down his invention, and made him resort to the wealth of
+others, when he could better have relied upon himself. But as to
+borrowing expressions and simple materials, no genius ever did
+otherwise; it is the new and happy combination in which lies the
+invention. It may be doubted which are now most popular, the Odes of
+Collins or of Gray. On the one hand, what is most abstract is least
+calculated for the general reader; on the other hand, the variety of
+learned allusions in Gray renders the style and thoughts of his most
+celebrated Odes less simple, less direct, and less easily comprehended
+at once; but then his deep morality, the touching strokes which go
+immediately to the heart, his sensibility to the common sorrows of human
+life, his powerful reflection of the sentiments which "come home to
+every one's business and bosom," form an attraction which perhaps turns
+the scale in his favour. Of both these sublime poets the correctness of
+composition renders the writings a national good.
+
+The French Revolution, which affected and partly reversed the minds of
+all Europe, produced a new era in our literature. There was good as well
+as evil in the new force thus infused into the human intellect. Our
+poetry had generally become tame and trite; a sort of languid mechanism
+had brought it into contempt; it was very little read, and still less
+esteemed. This might be not merely the effect, but also the cause of a
+deficiency of striking genius in the candidates for the laurel. Collins
+and Gray were dead; Mason had hung up the lyre; and Thomas Warton was
+then thought too laboured and quaint; Hayley had succeeded beyond
+expectation by a return to moral and didactic poetry at a moment when
+the public was satiated by vile imitations of lyrical and descriptive
+composition; but Cowper gave a new impulse to the curiosity of poetical
+readers, by a natural train of thought and the unlaboured effusions of
+genuine feeling. There is no doubt that a fearful regard to models
+stifles all force and preeminent merit. The burst of the French
+Revolution set the faculties of all young persons free. It was dangerous
+to secondary talents, and only led them into extravagances and
+absurdities. To Wordsworth, Southey, Scott, it was the removal of a
+weight, which would have hid the fire of their genius. But the
+exuberance of their inexhaustible minds in no degree lessens the value
+of the more reserved models of excellence of a tamer age. The contrast
+of their varied attractions supplies the reader with opposite kinds of
+merit, which delight and improve the more by this very opposition.
+
+Authors seldom estimate each other rightly in their lifetimes. The race
+of poets, of whom the last died with the century, had little friendship,
+or even acquaintance among themselves; or rather, they broke into little
+sets of two and three, which narrowed their opinions and their hearts;
+Gray and Mason, Johnson and the two Wartons, Cowper and Hayley, Darwin
+and Miss Seward; but Shenstone, Beattie, Akenside, Burns, Mrs. Carter,
+Mrs. Smith, &c. stood alone. This is not desirable. Innumerable
+advantages spring from frank and generous communication. Collins and
+Gray had not the most remote personal knowledge of each other. Gray
+never mentions Dr. Sneyd Davies, a poet and an Etonian, nearly
+contemporary; nor Nicholas Hardinge, a scholar and a poet also. Mundy,
+the author of Needwood Forest, passed a long life in the country,
+totally removed from poets and literati, except the small coterie of
+Miss Seward, at Litchfield. The lives of poets would be the most amusing
+of all biography, if the materials were less scanty: it is strange that
+so few of them have left any ample records of themselves; of many not
+even a letter or fragment of memorials is preserved. None of Cowley's
+letters, a mode of composition in which he is said to have eminently
+excelled, have come down to us. Of Prior, Tickell, Thomson, Young, Dyer,
+Akenside, the Wartons, there are few of any importance known to be in
+existence. Those of Hayley, which Dr. J. Johnson has brought forward,
+are not of the interest which might have been expected. Mrs. Carter's
+are excellent, and many of Beattie's amusing and amiable: it had been
+well for Miss Seward if most of hers had been consigned to the flames.
+Those of Charlotte Smith it has not been thought prudent to give to the
+public. The greater part of those of Lord Byron, which Moore has
+hitherto put forth, had better have been spared: they are written in
+false taste, and are under a factitious character: in general, the prose
+style of poets is admirable;--it was not Lord Byron's excellence. We
+have no specimens of the prose of Collins: it is grievous that he did
+not execute his project of The History of the Revival of Literature, or
+of the Lives for the Biographia Britannica, which he undertook. Poets of
+research are, of all authors, best qualified to write biography with
+sagacity and eloquence; they see into the human heart, and detect its
+most secret movements; and if there be a class of literature more
+amusing and more instructive than another, it is well written
+biography.
+
+We have a few poets who have not possessed erudition; for genius will
+overcome all deficiencies of art and labour, such as Shakespeare,
+Chatterton, Burns, and Bloomfield: but it cannot be questioned that
+erudition is a mighty aid. Milton could never have been what he was
+without profound and laborious erudition. Another necessary knowledge is
+the knowledge of the human heart, which no industry and learning will
+give. It is an intuitive gift, which mainly depends on an acute and
+correct imagination, and a sympathetic sensibility of the human
+passions. Among the innumerable rich endowments of Shakespeare this was
+the first; it was the predominant brilliance of his knowledge which
+gave him correctness of description, sentiment, and observation, and
+clearness, force, and eloquence of language.
+
+Collins had only reached the age of twenty-six when his Odes were
+published: what inconceivable power would the maturity of age have given
+him? It is lamentable that he had no familiar friend and companion from
+that period capable of apprehending and remembering his conversations.
+In his lucid intervals he must have said many wise, many learned, and
+many brilliant things; perhaps his very disease, in its vacillation
+between light and darkness, may have struck out many unexpected and
+surprising beauties, which common attendants were utterly incapable of
+appreciating. The flushes of the mind under the unnatural impulses of
+malady are sometimes inimitably splendid. His reason, at times, was
+sound, for his reason was fervid to the last. But it is said that his
+shrieks sometimes resounded through the cathedral cloisters of
+Chichester till the horror of those who heard him was insupportable.
+
+All these speculations may appear tedious to those whose curiosity is
+confined to facts: but new facts regarding Collins are not to be had:
+and what are facts unless they are accompanied by reflections,
+conclusions, and sentiments? The use of facts is to teach us to think,
+to judge, and to feel: and facts, regarding men of genius, are valuable
+in enabling us to contemplate how far the gifts of high intellect
+contribute to our happiness, or afford guides for the rest of mankind;
+in what respects they have the possessors upon an equality with the herd
+of the people; and where they expose them to temptations from which
+others are free. For these purposes the ill fated Collins is a
+melancholy illustration: the Muse had touched the lips of his infancy,
+and infused her spirit into him; she had given him a piercing
+understanding, and an amiable disposition and temper; she enabled him to
+come forth with poetry of the first class, in the earliest bloom of
+youth; and to deserve, if not to win, the envied laurel, which millions
+have reached at in vain! What seeming glories and blessings were these!
+Yet to how few was so much misery dispensed as to this once envied
+being! May we not hope that his spirit now has its mighty reward?
+
+Let it not be denied that there is high virtue in the culture of the
+mind, when directed to pure and elevated objects, and accustoming itself
+to travel in lofty paths! The mind cannot attain the necessary
+refinement, nor have its sight cleared of the film of earthly grossness,
+unless the heart throws off the dregs of coarser feeling, and keeps its
+wings afloat on a lighter and airier atmosphere. It may be said, that
+there have been bad men who have been great poets: but this position
+remains to be proved. The dissolute men who have written verses have not
+been great poets. Were Dante, Petrarch, Tasso, Spenser, Shakespeare,
+Dryden, Pope, Thomson, Burns, bad men? We know that Milton's character
+was great and holy, whatever were his politics: and who could be more
+virtuous than Gray, Beattie, Cowper, and Kirke White? And have we not
+virtuous poets among the living,--men whose native splendour and
+intellectual culture have almost purified them into spirits? Let us
+never cease to meditate on the dejected inspiration, which could pour
+forth such strains as these:
+
+ "With eyes upraised, as one inspired,
+ Pale Melancholy sat retired;
+ And from her wild sequester'd seat,
+ In notes by distance made more sweet,
+ Pour'd through the mellow horn her pensive soul:
+ And, dashing soft from rocks around,
+ Bubbling runnels join'd the sound;
+ Through glades and glooms the mingled measures stole,
+ Or o'er some haunted stream with fond delay
+ Round a holy calm diffusing,
+ Love of peace and lonely musing,
+ In hollow murmurs died away."
+
+There are those who will think the praises thus bestowed upon Collins
+extravagant. It is now sixty years since I became familiar with him;
+and I still think of him with unabated admiration. When the calm
+judgment of age confirms the passion of youth and boyhood, we cannot be
+much mistaken in the merit we ascribe to him who is the object of it.
+
+S. E. B.
+
+
+
+
+ORIENTAL ECLOGUES.
+
+WRITTEN ORIGINALLY FOR THE ENTERTAINMENT OF THE LADIES OF TAURIS.
+
+AND NOW TRANSLATED.
+
+ ----Ubi primus equis Oriens adflavit anhelis.
+ VIRG.
+
+
+
+
+The First Edition was entitled, "Persian Eclogues, written originally
+for the Entertainment of the Ladies of Tauris. And now first translated,
+&c.
+
+ Quod si non hic tantus fructus ostenderetur, et si ex his studiis
+ delectatio sola peteretur; tamen, ut opinor, hanc animi
+ remissionem humanissimam ac liberalissimam judicaretis.
+
+ _CIC. pro Arch. Poeta._"
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+It is with the writings of mankind, in some measure, as with their
+complexions or their dress; each nation hath a peculiarity in all these,
+to distinguish it from the rest of the world.
+
+The gravity of the Spaniard, and the levity of the Frenchman, are as
+evident in all their productions as in their persons themselves; and the
+style of my countrymen is as naturally strong and nervous, as that of an
+Arabian or Persian is rich and figurative.
+
+There is an elegancy and wildness of thought which recommends all
+their compositions; and our geniuses are as much too cold for the
+entertainment of such sentiments, as our climate is for their fruits
+and spices. If any of these beauties are to be found in the following
+Eclogues, I hope my reader will consider them as an argument of their
+being original. I received them at the hands of a merchant, who had
+made it his business to enrich himself with the learning, as well as the
+silks and carpets of the Persians. The little information I could
+gather concerning their author, was, that his name was Abdallah, and
+that he was a native of Tauris.
+
+It was in that city that he died of a distemper fatal in those parts,
+whilst he was engaged in celebrating the victories of his favourite
+monarch, the great Abbas.[10] As to the Eclogues themselves, they give a
+very just view of the miseries and inconveniences, as well as the
+felicities, that attend one of the finest countries in the East.
+
+The time of writing them was probably in the beginning of Sha Sultan
+Hosseyn's reign, the successor of Sefi or Solyman the Second.
+
+Whatever defects, as, I doubt not, there will be many, fall under the
+reader's observation, I hope his candour will incline him to make the
+following reflection:
+
+That the works of Orientals contain many peculiarities, and that,
+through defect of language, few European translators can do them
+justice.
+
+
+
+
+ORIENTAL ECLOGUES.
+
+
+ECLOGUE I.
+
+SELIM; OR, THE SHEPHERD'S MORAL.
+
+ SCENE, A valley near Bagdat.
+ TIME, The morning.
+
+
+ 'Ye Persian maids, attend your poet's lays,
+ And hear how shepherds pass their golden days.
+ Not all are blest, whom fortune's hand sustains
+ With wealth in courts, nor all that haunt the plains:
+ Well may your hearts believe the truths I tell; 5
+ 'Tis virtue makes the bliss, where'er we dwell.'
+
+ Thus Selim sung, by sacred Truth inspired;
+ Nor praise, but such as Truth bestow'd, desired:
+ Wise in himself, his meaning songs convey'd
+ Informing morals to the shepherd maid; 10
+ Or taught the swains that surest bliss to find,
+ What groves nor streams bestow, a virtuous mind.
+
+ When sweet and blushing, like a virgin bride,
+ The radiant morn resumed her orient pride;
+ When wanton gales along the valleys play, 15
+ Breathe on each flower, and bear their sweets away;
+ By Tigris' wandering waves he sat, and sung
+ This useful lesson for the fair and young.
+
+ 'Ye Persian dames,' he said, 'to you belong--
+ Well may they please--the morals of my song: 20
+ No fairer maids, I trust, than you are found,
+ Graced with soft arts, the peopled world around!
+ The morn that lights you, to your loves supplies
+ Each gentler ray delicious to your eyes:
+ For you those flowers her fragrant hands bestow; 25
+ And yours the love that kings delight to know.
+ Yet think not these, all beauteous as they are,
+ The best kind blessings heaven can grant the fair!
+ Who trust alone in beauty's feeble ray
+ Boast but the worth[11] Balsora's pearls display: 30
+ Drawn from the deep we own their surface bright,
+ But, dark within, they drink no lustrous light:
+ Such are the maids, and such the charms they boast,
+ By sense unaided, or to virtue lost.
+ Self-flattering sex! your hearts believe in vain 35
+ That love shall blind, when once he fires, the swain;
+ Or hope a lover by your faults to win,
+ As spots on ermine beautify the skin:
+ Who seeks secure to rule, be first her care
+ Each softer virtue that adorns the fair; 40
+ Each tender passion man delights to find,
+ The loved perfections of a female mind!
+
+ 'Blest were the days when Wisdom held her reign,
+ And shepherds sought her on the silent plain!
+ With Truth she wedded in the secret grove, 45
+ Immortal Truth, and daughters bless'd their love.
+ O haste, fair maids! ye Virtues, come away!
+ Sweet Peace and Plenty lead you on your way!
+ The balmy shrub, for you shall love our shore,
+ By Ind excell'd, or Araby, no more. 50
+
+ 'Lost to our fields, for so the fates ordain,
+ The dear deserters shall return again.
+ Come thou, whose thoughts as limpid springs are clear,
+ To lead the train, sweet Modesty, appear:
+ Here make thy court amidst our rural scene, 55
+ And shepherd girls shall own thee for their queen:
+ With thee be Chastity, of all afraid,
+ Distrusting all, a wise suspicious maid,
+ But man the most:--not more the mountain doe
+ Holds the swift falcon for her deadly foe. 60
+ Cold is her breast, like flowers that drink the dew;
+ A silken veil conceals her from the view.
+ No wild desires amidst thy train be known;
+ But Faith, whose heart is fix'd on one alone:
+ Desponding Meekness, with her downcast eyes, 65
+ And friendly Pity, full of tender sighs;
+ And Love the last: by these your hearts approve;
+ These are the virtues that must lead to love.'
+
+ Thus sung the swain; and ancient legends say
+ The maids of Bagdat verified the lay: 70
+ Dear to the plains, the Virtues came along,
+ The shepherds loved, and Selim bless'd his song.
+
+
+VARIATIONS.
+
+ Ver.
+ 8. No praise the youth, but hers alone desired:
+
+ 13. When sweet and odorous, like an eastern bride,
+
+ 30. Balsora's pearls have more of worth than they:
+
+ 31. Drawn from the deep, they sparkle to the sight,
+ And all-unconscious shoot a lustrous light:
+
+ 46. The fair-eyed Truth, and daughters bless'd their love.
+
+ 53. O come, thou Modesty, as they decree,
+ The rose may then improve her blush by thee.
+
+ 69. Thus sung the swain, and eastern legends say
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [10] In the Persian tongue, Abbas signifieth "the father of the
+ people."
+
+ [11] The gulf of that name, famous for the pearl fishery.
+
+
+
+
+ECLOGUE II.
+
+HASSAN; OR, THE CAMEL DRIVER.
+
+ SCENE, The desert.
+ TIME, Midday.
+
+
+ In silent horror o'er the boundless waste
+ The driver Hassan with his camels past:
+ One cruise of water on his back he bore,
+ And his light scrip contain'd a scanty store;
+ A fan of painted feathers in his hand, 5
+ To guard his shaded face from scorching sand.
+ The sultry sun had gain'd the middle sky,
+ And not a tree, and not an herb was nigh;
+ The beasts with pain their dusty way pursue;
+ Shrill roar'd the winds, and dreary was the view! 10
+ With desperate sorrow wild, the affrighted man
+ Thrice sigh'd, thrice struck his breast, and thus began:
+ 'Sad was the hour, and luckless was the day,
+ 'When first from Schiraz' walls I bent my way!'
+
+ 'Ah! little thought I of the blasting wind, 15
+ The thirst, or pinching hunger, that I find!
+ Bethink thee, Hassan, where shall thirst assuage,
+ When fails this cruise, his unrelenting rage?
+ Soon shall this scrip its precious load resign;
+ Then what but tears and hunger shall be thine? 20
+
+ 'Ye mute companions of my toils, that bear
+ In all my griefs a more than equal share!
+ Here, where no springs in murmurs break away,
+ Or moss-crown'd fountains mitigate the day,
+ In vain ye hope the green delights to know, 25
+ Which plains more blest, or verdant vales bestow:
+ Here rocks alone, and tasteless sands, are found,
+ And faint and sickly winds for ever howl around.
+ 'Sad was the hour, and luckless was the day,
+ 'When first from Schiraz' walls I bent my way!' 30
+
+ 'Curst be the gold and silver which persuade
+ Weak men to follow far fatiguing trade!
+ The lily peace outshines the silver store,
+ And life is dearer than the golden ore:
+ Yet money tempts us o'er the desert brown, 35
+ To every distant mart and wealthy town.
+ Full oft we tempt the land, and oft the sea;
+ And are we only yet repaid by thee?
+ Ah! why was ruin so attractive made?
+ Or why fond man so easily betray'd? 40
+ Why heed we not, whilst mad we haste along,
+ The gentle voice of peace, or pleasure's song?
+ Or wherefore think the flowery mountain's side,
+ The fountain's murmurs, and the valley's pride,
+ Why think we these less pleasing to behold 45
+ Than dreary deserts, if they lead to gold?
+ 'Sad was the hour, and luckless was the day,
+ 'When first from Schiraz' walls I bent my way!'
+
+ 'O cease, my fears!--all frantic as I go,
+ When thought creates unnumber'd scenes of woe, 50
+ What if the lion in his rage I meet!--
+ Oft in the dust I view his printed feet:
+ And, fearful! oft, when day's declining light
+ Yields her pale empire to the mourner night,
+ By hunger roused, he scours the groaning plain, 55
+ Gaunt wolves and sullen tigers in his train:
+ Before them Death with shrieks directs their way,
+ Fills the wild yell, and leads them to their prey.
+ 'Sad was the hour, and luckless was the day,
+ 'When first from Schiraz' walls I bent my way!' 60
+
+ 'At that dead hour the silent asp shall creep,
+ If aught of rest I find, upon my sleep:
+ Or some swoln serpent twist his scales around,
+ And wake to anguish with a burning wound.
+ Thrice happy they, the wise contented poor, 65
+ From lust of wealth, and dread of death secure!
+ They tempt no deserts, and no griefs they find;
+ Peace rules the day, where reason rules the mind.
+ 'Sad was the hour, and luckless was the day,
+ 'When first from Schiraz' walls I bent my way!' 70
+
+ 'O hapless youth!--for she thy love hath won,
+ The tender Zara will be most undone!
+ Big swell'd my heart, and own'd the powerful maid,
+ When fast she dropt her tears, as thus she said:
+ "Farewell the youth whom sighs could not detain; 75
+ Whom Zara's breaking heart implored in vain!
+ Yet, as thou go'st, may every blast arise
+ Weak and unfelt, as these rejected sighs!
+ Safe o'er the wild, no perils mayst thou see,
+ No griefs endure, nor weep, false youth, like me." 80
+ O let me safely to the fair return,
+ Say, with a kiss, she must not, shall not mourn;
+ O! let me teach my heart to lose its fears,
+ Recall'd by Wisdom's voice, and Zara's tears.'
+
+ He said, and call'd on heaven to bless the day, 85
+ When back to Schiraz' walls he bent his way.
+
+
+VARIATIONS.
+
+ Ver.
+ 1. In silent horror o'er the desert waste
+
+ 83. Go teach my heart to lose its painful fears.
+
+
+
+
+ECLOGUE III.
+
+ABRA; OR, THE GEORGIAN SULTANA.
+
+ SCENE, A forest.
+ TIME, The evening.
+
+
+ In Georgia's land, where Tefflis' towers are seen,
+ In distant view, along the level green,
+ While evening dews enrich the glittering glade,
+ And the tall forests cast a longer shade,
+ What time 'tis sweet o'er fields of rice to stray, 5
+ Or scent the breathing maize at setting day;
+ Amidst the maids of Zagen's peaceful grove,
+ Emyra sung the pleasing cares of love.
+
+ Of Abra first began the tender strain,
+ Who led her youth with flocks upon the plain. 10
+ At morn she came those willing flocks to lead,
+ Where lilies rear them in the watery mead;
+ From early dawn the livelong hours she told,
+ Till late at silent eve she penn'd the fold.
+ Deep in the grove, beneath the secret shade, 15
+ A various wreath of odorous flowers she made:
+ Gay-motley'd[12] pinks and sweet jonquils she chose,
+ The violet blue that on the moss-bank grows;
+ All sweet to sense, the flaunting rose was there;
+ The finish'd chaplet well adorn'd her hair. 20
+
+ Great Abbas chanced that fated morn to stray,
+ By love conducted from the chase away;
+ Among the vocal vales he heard her song,
+ And sought, the vales and echoing groves among;
+ At length he found, and woo'd the rural maid; 25
+ She knew the monarch, and with fear obey'd.
+ 'Be every youth like royal Abbas moved,
+ 'And every Georgian maid like Abra loved!'
+
+ The royal lover bore her from the plain;
+ Yet still her crook and bleating flock remain: 30
+ Oft, as she went, she backward turn'd her view,
+ And bade that crook and bleating flock adieu.
+ Fair, happy maid! to other scenes remove,
+ To richer scenes of golden power and love!
+ Go leave the simple pipe and shepherd's strain; 35
+ With love delight thee, and with Abbas reign!
+ 'Be every youth like royal Abbas moved,
+ 'And every Georgian maid like Abra loved!'
+
+ Yet, 'midst the blaze of courts, she fix'd her love
+ On the cool fountain, or the shady grove; 40
+ Still, with the shepherd's innocence, her mind
+ To the sweet vale, and flowery mead, inclined;
+ And oft as spring renew'd the plains with flowers,
+ Breathed his soft gales, and led the fragrant hours,
+ With sure return she sought the sylvan scene, 45
+ The breezy mountains, and the forests green.
+ Her maids around her moved, a duteous band!
+ Each bore a crook, all rural, in her hand:
+ Some simple lay, of flocks and herds, they sung;
+ With joy the mountain and the forest rung. 50
+ 'Be every youth like royal Abbas moved,
+ 'And every Georgian maid like Abra loved!'
+
+ And oft the royal lover left the care
+ And thorns of state, attendant on the fair;
+ Oft to the shades and low-roof'd cots retired, 55
+ Or sought the vale where first his heart was fired:
+ A russet mantle, like a swain, he wore,
+ And thought of crowns, and busy courts, no more.
+ 'Be every youth like royal Abbas moved,
+ 'And every Georgian maid like Abra loved!' 60
+
+ Blest was the life that royal Abbas led:
+ Sweet was his love, and innocent his bed.
+ What if in wealth the noble maid excel?
+ The simple shepherd girl can love as well.
+ Let those who rule on Persia's jewel'd throne 65
+ Be famed for love, and gentlest love alone;
+ Or wreathe, like Abbas, full of fair renown,
+ The lover's myrtle with the warrior's crown.
+ O happy days! the maids around her say;
+ O haste, profuse of blessings, haste away! 70
+ 'Be every youth like royal Abbas moved,
+ 'And every Georgian maid like Abra loved!'
+
+
+VARIATION.
+
+ Verses 5 and 6 were inserted in the second edition.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [12] That these flowers are found in very great abundance in some of the
+ provinces of Persia, see the Modern History of the ingenious Mr.
+ Salmon. C.
+
+
+
+
+ECLOGUE IV.
+
+AGIB AND SECANDER; OR, THE FUGITIVES.
+
+ SCENE, A mountain in Circassia.
+ TIME, Midnight.
+
+
+ In fair Circassia, where, to love inclined,
+ Each swain was blest, for every maid was kind;
+ At that still hour, when awful midnight reigns,
+ And none, but wretches, haunt the twilight plains;
+ What time the moon had hung her lamp on high, 5
+ And past in radiance through the cloudless sky;
+ Sad, o'er the dews, two brother shepherds fled,
+ Where wildering fear and desperate sorrow led:
+ Fast as they press'd their flight, behind them lay
+ Wide ravaged plains, and valleys stole away: 10
+ Along the mountain's bending sides they ran,
+ Till, faint and weak, Secander thus began.
+
+
+ SECANDER.
+
+ O stay thee, Agib, for my feet deny,
+ No longer friendly to my life, to fly.
+ Friend of my heart, O turn thee and survey! 15
+ Trace our sad flight through all its length of way
+ And first review that long extended plain,
+ And yon wide groves, already past with pain!
+ Yon ragged cliff, whose dangerous path we tried!
+ And, last, this lofty mountain's weary side! 20
+
+
+ AGIB.
+
+ Weak as thou art, yet, hapless, must thou know
+ The toils of flight, or some severer woe!
+ Still, as I haste, the Tartar shouts behind,
+ And shrieks and sorrows load the saddening wind:
+ In rage of heart, with ruin in his hand, 25
+ He blasts our harvests, and deforms our land.
+ Yon citron grove, whence first in fear we came,
+ Droops its fair honors to the conquering flame:
+ Far fly the swains, like us, in deep despair,
+ And leave to ruffian bands their fleecy care. 30
+
+
+ SECANDER.
+
+ Unhappy land, whose blessings tempt the sword,
+ In vain, unheard, thou call'st thy Persian lord!
+ In vain thou court'st him, helpless, to thine aid,
+ To shield the shepherd, and protect the maid!
+ Far off, in thoughtless indolence resign'd, 35
+ Soft dreams of love and pleasure soothe his mind:
+ 'Midst fair sultanas lost in idle joy,
+ No wars alarm him, and no fears annoy.
+
+
+ AGIB.
+
+ Yet these green hills, in summer's sultry heat,
+ Have lent the monarch oft a cool retreat. 40
+ Sweet to the sight is Zabran's flowery plain,
+ And once by maids and shepherds loved in vain!
+ No more the virgins shall delight to rove
+ By Sargis' banks, or Irwan's shady grove;
+ On Tarkie's mountain catch the cooling gale, 45
+ Or breathe the sweets of Aly's flowery vale:
+ Fair scenes! but, ah! no more with peace possest,
+ With ease alluring, and with plenty blest!
+ No more the shepherds' whitening tents appear,
+ Nor the kind products of a bounteous year; 50
+ No more the date, with snowy blossoms crown'd!
+ But ruin spreads her baleful fires around.
+
+
+ SECANDER.
+
+ In vain Circassia boasts her spicy groves,
+ For ever famed for pure and happy loves:
+ In vain she boasts her fairest of the fair, 55
+ Their eyes' blue languish, and their golden hair!
+ Those eyes in tears their fruitless grief must send;
+ Those hairs the Tartar's cruel hand shall rend.
+
+
+ AGIB.
+
+ Ye Georgian swains, that piteous learn from far
+ Circassia's ruin, and the waste of war; 60
+ Some weightier arms than crooks and staves prepare,
+ To shield your harvests, and defend your fair:
+ The Turk and Tartar like designs pursue,
+ Fix'd to destroy, and steadfast to undo.
+ Wild as his land, in native deserts bred, 65
+ By lust incited, or by malice led,
+ The villain Arab, as he prowls for prey,
+ Oft marks with blood and wasting flames the way;
+ Yet none so cruel as the Tartar foe,
+ To death inured, and nurst in scenes of woe. 70
+
+ He said; when loud along the vale was heard
+ A shriller shriek, and nearer fires appear'd:
+ The affrighted shepherds, through the dews of night,
+ Wide o'er the moonlight hills renew'd their flight.
+
+
+VARIATIONS.
+
+ Ver.
+ 49. No more the shepherds' whitening seats appear,
+
+ 51. No more the dale, with snowy blossoms crown'd!
+
+
+END OF THE ECLOGUES.
+
+
+
+
+ODES
+
+ON SEVERAL DESCRIPTIVE AND ALLEGORICAL SUBJECTS.
+
+ Ειην εὑρυσιεπης αναγεισθαι
+ Προσφορος εν Μοισαν διφρω:
+ Τολμα δε και αμφιλαφης δυναμις
+ Εσποιτο.
+ Πινδαρ. Ολυμπ. Θ.
+
+ ~Eiên heurysiepês anageisthai
+ Prosphoros en Moisan diphrô:
+ Tolma de kai amphilaphês dynamis
+ Espoito.~
+ ~Pindar. Olymp. Th.~
+
+
+ODES.
+
+
+ODE TO PITY.
+
+
+ O thou, the friend of man, assign'd
+ With balmy hands his wounds to bind,
+ And charm his frantic woe:
+ When first Distress, with dagger keen,
+ Broke forth to waste his destined scene, 5
+ His wild unsated foe!
+
+ By Pella's[13] bard, a magic name,
+ By all the griefs his thought could frame,
+ Receive my humble rite:
+ Long, Pity, let the nations view 10
+ The sky-worn robes of tenderest blue,
+ And eyes of dewy light!
+
+ But wherefore need I wander wide
+ To old Ilissus' distant side,
+ Deserted stream, and mute? 15
+ Wild Arun[14] too has heard thy strains,
+ And Echo, 'midst my native plains,
+ Been soothed by Pity's lute.
+
+ There first the wren thy myrtles shed
+ On gentlest Otway's infant head, 20
+ To him thy cell was shown;
+ And while he sung the female heart,
+ With youth's soft notes unspoil'd by art,
+ Thy turtles mix'd their own.
+
+ Come, Pity, come, by Fancy's aid, 25
+ E'en now my thoughts, relenting maid,
+ Thy temple's pride design:
+ Its southern site, its truth complete,
+ Shall raise a wild enthusiast heat
+ In all who view the shrine. 30
+
+ There Picture's toils shall well relate
+ How chance, or hard involving fate,
+ O'er mortal bliss prevail:
+ The buskin'd Muse shall near her stand,
+ And sighing prompt her tender hand, 35
+ With each disastrous tale.
+
+ There let me oft, retired by day,
+ In dreams of passion melt away,
+ Allow'd with thee to dwell:
+ There waste the mournful lamp of night, 40
+ Till, Virgin, thou again delight
+ To hear a British shell!
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [13] Euripides, of whom Aristotle pronounces, on a comparison of him
+ with Sophocles, that he was the greater master of the tender
+ passions, ην τραγικωτερος ~ên tragikôteros~. C.
+
+ [14] The river Arun runs by the village of Trotton in Sussex, where
+ Otway had his birth.
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO FEAR.
+
+
+ Thou, to whom the world unknown,
+ With all its shadowy shapes, is shown;
+ Who seest, appall'd, the unreal scene,
+ While Fancy lifts the veil between:
+ Ah Fear! ah frantic Fear! 5
+ I see, I see thee near.
+ I know thy hurried step, thy haggard eye!
+ Like thee I start; like thee disorder'd fly.
+ For, lo, what monsters in thy train appear!
+ Danger, whose limbs of giant mould 10
+ What mortal eye can fix'd behold?
+ Who stalks his round, an hideous form,
+ Howling amidst the midnight storm;
+ Or throws him on the ridgy steep
+ Of some loose hanging rock to sleep: 15
+ And with him thousand phantoms join'd,
+ Who prompt to deeds accursed the mind:
+ And those, the fiends, who, near allied,
+ O'er Nature's wounds, and wrecks, preside;
+ Whilst Vengeance, in the lurid air, 20
+ Lifts her red arm, exposed and bare:
+ On whom that ravening[15] brood of Fate,
+ Who lap the blood of sorrow, wait:
+ Who, Fear, this ghastly train can see,
+ And look not madly wild, like thee! 25
+
+
+ EPODE.
+
+ In earliest Greece, to thee, with partial choice,
+ The grief-full Muse addrest her infant tongue;
+ The maids and matrons, on her awful voice,
+ Silent and pale, in wild amazement hung.
+
+ Yet he, the bard[16] who first invoked thy name, 30
+ Disdain'd in Marathon its power to feel:
+ For not alone he nursed the poet's flame,
+ But reach'd from Virtue's hand the patriot's steel.
+
+ But who is he whom later garlands grace,
+ Who left a while o'er Hybla's dews to rove, 35
+ With trembling eyes thy dreary steps to trace,
+ Where thou and furies shared the baleful grove?
+
+ Wrapt in thy cloudy veil, the incestuous[17] queen
+ Sigh'd the sad call[18] her son and husband heard,
+ When once alone it broke the silent scene, 40
+ And he the wretch of Thebes no more appear'd.
+
+ O Fear, I know thee by my throbbing heart:
+ Thy withering power inspired each mournful line:
+ Though gentle Pity claim her mingled part,
+ Yet all the thunders of the scene are thine! 45
+
+
+ ANTISTROPHE.
+
+ Thou who such weary lengths hast past,
+ Where wilt thou rest, mad Nymph, at last?
+ Say, wilt thou shroud in haunted cell,
+ Where gloomy Rape and Murder dwell?
+ Or, in some hollow'd seat, 50
+ 'Gainst which the big waves beat,
+ Hear drowning seamen's cries, in tempests brought?
+ Dark power, with shuddering meek submitted thought,
+ Be mine to read the visions old
+ Which thy awakening bards have told: 55
+ And, lest thou meet my blasted view,
+ Hold each strange tale devoutly true;
+ Ne'er be I found, by thee o'erawed,
+ In that thrice hallow'd eve, abroad,
+ When ghosts, as cottage maids believe, 60
+ Their pebbled beds permitted leave;
+ And goblins haunt, from fire, or fen,
+ Or mine, or flood, the walks of men!
+
+ O thou, whose spirit most possest
+ The sacred seat of Shakespeare's breast! 65
+ By all that from thy prophet broke,
+ In thy divine emotions spoke;
+ Hither again thy fury deal,
+ Teach me but once like him to feel:
+ His cypress wreath my meed decree, 70
+ And I, O Fear, will dwell with thee!
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [15] Alluding to the Κυνας αφυκτους ~Kynas aphyktous~ of Sophocles.
+ See the Electra. C.
+
+ [16] Æschylus. C.
+
+ [17] Jocasta. C.
+
+ [18] ουδ’ ετ’ ωρωρει βοη,
+ Ην μεν σιωπη; φθεγμα δ’ εξαιφνης τινος
+ Θωυξεν αυτον, ὡστε παντας ορθιας
+ Στησαι φοβω δεισαντας εξαιφνης τριχας.
+
+ ~----oud' et' ôrôrei boê,
+ Ên men siôpê; phthegma d' exaiphnês tinos
+ Thôuxen auton, hôste pantas orthias
+ Stêsai phobô deisantas exaiphnês trichas.~
+
+ See the Œdip. Colon. of Sophocles. C.
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO SIMPLICITY.
+
+
+ O thou, by Nature taught
+ To breathe her genuine thought,
+ In numbers warmly pure, and sweetly strong;
+ Who first, on mountains wild,
+ In Fancy, loveliest child, 5
+ Thy babe, or Pleasure's, nursed the powers of song!
+
+ Thou, who, with hermit heart,
+ Disdain'st the wealth of art,
+ And gauds, and pageant weeds, and trailing pall;
+ But com'st a decent maid, 10
+ In attic robe array'd,
+ O chaste, unboastful Nymph, to thee I call!
+
+ By all the honey'd store
+ On Hybla's thymy shore;
+ By all her blooms, and mingled murmurs dear; 15
+ By her[19] whose lovelorn woe,
+ In evening musings slow,
+ Soothed sweetly sad Electra's poet's ear:
+
+ By old Cephisus deep,
+ Who spread his wavy sweep, 20
+ In warbled wanderings, round thy green retreat;
+ On whose enamel'd side,
+ When holy Freedom died,
+ No equal haunt allured thy future feet.
+
+ O sister meek of Truth, 25
+ To my admiring youth,
+ Thy sober aid and native charms infuse!
+ The flowers that sweetest breathe,
+ Though Beauty cull'd the wreath,
+ Still ask thy hand to range their order'd hues. 30
+
+ While Rome could none esteem
+ But virtue's patriot theme,
+ You lov'd her hills, and led her laureat band:
+ But staid to sing alone
+ To one distinguish'd throne; 35
+ And turn'd thy face, and fled her alter'd land.
+
+ No more, in hall or bower,
+ The Passions own thy power,
+ Love, only Love her forceless numbers mean:
+ For thou hast left her shrine; 40
+ Nor olive more, nor vine,
+ Shall gain thy feet to bless the servile scene.
+
+ Though taste, though genius, bless
+ To some divine excess,
+ Faints the cold work till thou inspire the whole; 45
+ What each, what all supply,
+ May court, may charm, our eye;
+ Thou, only thou, canst raise the meeting soul!
+
+ Of these let others ask,
+ To aid some mighty task, 50
+ I only seek to find thy temperate vale;
+ Where oft my reed might sound
+ To maids and shepherds round,
+ And all thy sons, O Nature, learn my tale.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [19] The αηδων ~aêdôn~, or nightingale, for which Sophocles seems to
+ have entertained a peculiar fondness. C.
+
+
+
+
+ODE ON THE POETICAL CHARACTER.
+
+
+ As once,--if, not with light regard,
+ I read aright that gifted bard,
+ --Him whose school above the rest
+ His loveliest elfin queen has blest;--
+ One, only one, unrival'd[20] fair, 5
+ Might hope the magic girdle wear,
+ At solemn turney hung on high,
+ The wish of each love-darting eye;
+
+ --Lo! to each other nymph, in turn, applied,
+ As if, in air unseen, some hovering hand, 10
+ Some chaste and angel friend to virgin fame,
+ With whisper'd spell had burst the starting band,
+ It left unblest her loathed dishonour'd side;
+ Happier, hopeless Fair, if never
+ Her baffled hand, with vain endeavour, 15
+ Had touch'd that fatal zone to her denied!
+ Young Fancy thus, to me divinest name,
+ To whom, prepared and bathed in heaven,
+ The cest of amplest power is given:
+ To few the godlike gift assigns, 20
+ To gird their blest prophetic loins,
+ And gaze her visions wild, and feel unmix'd her flame!
+
+ The band, as fairy legends say,
+ Was wove on that creating day,
+ When He, who call'd with thought to birth 25
+ Yon tented sky, this laughing earth,
+ And dress'd with springs and forests tall,
+ And pour'd the main engirting all,
+ Long by the loved enthusiast woo'd,
+ Himself in some diviner mood, 30
+ Retiring, sat with her alone,
+ And placed her on his sapphire throne;
+ The whiles, the vaulted shrine around,
+ Seraphic wires were heard to sound,
+ Now sublimest triumph swelling, 35
+ Now on love and mercy dwelling;
+ And she, from out the veiling cloud,
+ Breathed her magic notes aloud:
+ And thou, thou rich-hair'd youth of morn,
+ And all thy subject life was born! 40
+ The dangerous passions kept aloof,
+ Far from the sainted growing woof:
+ But near it sat ecstatic Wonder,
+ Listening the deep applauding thunder;
+ And Truth, in sunny vest array'd, 45
+ By whose the tarsel's eyes were made;
+ All the shadowy tribes of mind,
+ In braided dance, their murmurs join'd,
+ And all the bright uncounted powers
+ Who feed on heaven's ambrosial flowers. 50
+ --Where is the bard whose soul can now
+ Its high presuming hopes avow?
+ Where he who thinks, with rapture blind,
+ This hallow'd work for him design'd?
+
+ High on some cliff, to heaven up-piled, 55
+ Of rude access, of prospect wild,
+ Where, tangled round the jealous steep,
+ Strange shades o'erbrow the valleys deep,
+ And holy Genii guard the rock,
+ Its glooms embrown, its springs unlock, 60
+ While on its rich ambitious head,
+ An Eden, like his own, lies spread:
+ I view that oak, the fancied glades among,
+ By which, as Milton lay, his evening ear,
+ From many a cloud that dropp'd ethereal dew, 65
+ Nigh sphered in heaven, its native strains could hear;
+ On which that ancient trump he reach'd was hung:
+ Thither oft, his glory greeting,
+ From Waller's myrtle shades retreating,
+ With many a vow from Hope's aspiring tongue, 70
+ My trembling feet his guiding steps pursue;
+ In vain--Such bliss to one alone,
+ Of all the sons of soul, was known;
+ And Heaven, and Fancy, kindred powers,
+ Have now o'erturn'd the inspiring bowers; 75
+ Or curtain'd close such scene from every future view.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [20] Florimel. See Spenser, Leg. 4th. C.
+
+
+
+
+ODE,
+
+WRITTEN IN THE BEGINNING OF THE YEAR 1746.
+
+
+ How sleep the brave, who sink to rest,
+ By all their country's wishes bless'd!
+ When Spring, with dewy fingers cold,
+ Returns to deck their hallow'd mould,
+ She there shall dress a sweeter sod 5
+ Than Fancy's feet have ever trod.
+
+ By fairy hands their knell is rung;
+ By forms unseen their dirge is sung;
+ There Honour comes, a pilgrim-gray,
+ To bless the turf that wraps their clay; 10
+ And Freedom shall awhile repair,
+ To dwell a weeping hermit there!
+
+
+VARIATIONS.
+
+ Ver.
+ 5. She then shall dress a sweeter sod
+
+ 7. By hands unseen the knell is rung;
+
+ 8. By fairy forms their dirge is sung;
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO MERCY.
+
+
+ STROPHE.
+
+ O Thou, who sitt'st a smiling bride
+ By Valour's arm'd and awful side,
+ Gentlest of sky-born forms, and best adored;
+ Who oft with songs, divine to hear,
+ Winn'st from his fatal grasp the spear, 5
+ And hidest in wreaths of flowers his bloodless sword!
+ Thou who, amidst the deathful field,
+ By godlike chiefs alone beheld,
+ Oft with thy bosom bare art found,
+ Pleading for him the youth who sinks to ground: 10
+ See, Mercy, see, with pure and loaded hands,
+ Before thy shrine my country's genius stands,
+ And decks thy altar still, though pierced with many a wound.
+
+
+ ANTISTROPHE.
+
+ When he whom even our joys provoke,
+ The fiend of nature join'd his yoke, 15
+ And rush'd in wrath to make our isle his prey;
+ Thy form, from out thy sweet abode,
+ O'ertook him on his blasted road,
+ And stopp'd his wheels, and look'd his rage away.
+ I see recoil his sable steeds, 20
+ That bore him swift to salvage deeds,
+ Thy tender melting eyes they own;
+ O maid, for all thy love to Britain shown,
+ Where Justice bars her iron tower,
+ To thee we build a roseate bower; 25
+ Thou, thou shalt rule our queen, and share our monarch's throne!
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO LIBERTY.
+
+
+ STROPHE.
+
+ Who shall awake the Spartan fife,
+ And call in solemn sounds to life,
+ The youths, whose locks divinely spreading,
+ Like vernal hyacinths in sullen hue,
+ At once the breath of fear and virtue shedding, 5
+ Applauding Freedom loved of old to view?
+ What new Alcæus,[21] fancy-blest,
+ Shall sing the sword, in myrtles drest,
+ At Wisdom's shrine awhile its flame concealing,
+ (What place so fit to seal a deed renown'd?) 10
+ Till she her brightest lightnings round revealing,
+ It leap'd in glory forth, and dealt her prompted wound!
+ O goddess, in that feeling hour,
+ When most its sounds would court thy ears,
+ Let not my shell's misguided power[22] 15
+ E'er draw thy sad, thy mindful tears.
+ No, Freedom, no, I will not tell
+ How Rome, before thy weeping face,
+ With heaviest sound, a giant-statue, fell,
+ Push'd by a wild and artless race 20
+ From off its wide ambitious base,
+ When Time his northern sons of spoil awoke,
+ And all the blended work of strength and grace,
+ With many a rude repeated stroke,
+ And many a barbarous yell, to thousand fragments broke. 25
+
+
+ EPODE.
+
+ Yet, even where'er the least appear'd,
+ The admiring world thy hand revered;
+ Still, 'midst the scatter'd states around,
+ Some remnants of her strength were found;
+ They saw, by what escaped the storm, 30
+ How wondrous rose her perfect form;
+ How in the great, the labour'd whole,
+ Each mighty master pour'd his soul!
+ For sunny Florence, seat of art,
+ Beneath her vines preserved a part, 35
+ Till they,[23] whom Science loved to name,
+ (O who could fear it?) quench'd her flame.
+ And lo, an humbler relic laid
+ In jealous Pisa's olive shade!
+ See small Marino[24] joins the theme, 40
+ Though least, not last in thy esteem:
+ Strike, louder strike the ennobling strings
+ To those,[25] whose merchant sons were kings;
+ To him,[26] who, deck'd with pearly pride,
+ In Adria weds his green-hair'd bride; 45
+ Hail, port of glory, wealth, and pleasure,
+ Ne'er let me change this Lydian measure:
+ Nor e'er her former pride relate,
+ To sad Liguria's[27] bleeding state.
+ Ah no! more pleased thy haunts I seek, 50
+ On wild Helvetia's[28] mountains bleak:
+ (Where, when the favour'd of thy choice,
+ The daring archer heard thy voice;
+ Forth from his eyrie roused in dread,
+ The ravening eagle northward fled:) 55
+ Or dwell in willow'd meads more near,
+ With those to whom thy stork[29] is dear:
+ Those whom the rod of Alva bruised,
+ Whose crown a British queen[30] refused!
+ The magic works, thou feel'st the strains, 60
+ One holier name alone remains;
+ The perfect spell shall then avail,
+ Hail, nymph, adored by Britain, hail!
+
+
+ ANTISTROPHE.
+
+ Beyond the measure vast of thought,
+ The works the wizard time has wrought! 65
+ The Gaul, 'tis held of antique story,
+ Saw Britain link'd to his now adverse strand,[31]
+ No sea between, nor cliff sublime and hoary,
+ He pass'd with unwet feet through all our land.
+ To the blown Baltic then, they say, 70
+ The wild waves found another way,
+ Where Orcas howls, his wolfish mountains rounding;
+ Till all the banded west at once 'gan rise,
+ A wide wild storm even nature's self confounding,
+ Withering her giant sons with strange uncouth surprise. 75
+ This pillar'd earth so firm and wide,
+ By winds and inward labours torn,
+ In thunders dread was push'd aside,
+ And down the shouldering billows borne.
+ And see, like gems, her laughing train, 80
+ The little isles on every side,
+ Mona,[32] once hid from those who search the main,
+ Where thousand elfin shapes abide,
+ And Wight who checks the westering tide,
+ For thee consenting heaven has each bestow'd, 85
+ A fair attendant on her sovereign pride:
+ To thee this blest divorce she owed,
+ For thou hast made her vales thy loved, thy last abode!
+
+
+ SECOND EPODE.
+
+ Then too, 'tis said, an hoary pile,
+ 'Midst the green navel of our isle, 90
+ Thy shrine in some religious wood,
+ O soul-enforcing goddess, stood!
+ There oft the painted native's feet
+ Were wont thy form celestial meet:
+ Though now with hopeless toil we trace 95
+ Time's backward rolls, to find its place;
+ Whether the fiery-tresséd Dane,
+ Or Roman's self o'erturn'd the fane,
+ Or in what heaven-left age it fell,
+ 'Twere hard for modern song to tell. 100
+ Yet still, if Truth those beams infuse,
+ Which guide at once, and charm the Muse,
+ Beyond yon braided clouds that lie,
+ Paving the light embroider'd sky,
+ Amidst the bright pavilion'd plains, 105
+ The beauteous model still remains.
+ There, happier than in islands blest,
+ Or bowers by spring or Hebe drest,
+ The chiefs who fill our Albion's story,
+ In warlike weeds, retired in glory, 110
+ Hear their consorted Druids sing
+ Their triumphs to the immortal string.
+ How may the poet now unfold
+ What never tongue or numbers told?
+ How learn delighted, and amazed, 115
+ What hands unknown that fabric raised?
+ Even now before his favour'd eyes,
+ In gothic pride, it seems to rise!
+ Yet Græcia's graceful orders join,
+ Majestic through the mix'd design: 120
+ The secret builder knew to choose
+ Each sphere-found gem of richest hues;
+ Whate'er heaven's purer mould contains,
+ When nearer suns emblaze its veins;
+ There on the walls the patriot's sight 125
+ May ever hang with fresh delight,
+ And, graved with some prophetic rage,
+ Read Albion's fame through every age.
+ Ye forms divine, ye laureat band,
+ That near her inmost altar stand! 130
+ Now soothe her to her blissful train
+ Blithe Concord's social form to gain;
+ Concord, whose myrtle wand can steep
+ Even Anger's bloodshot eyes in sleep;
+ Before whose breathing bosom's balm 135
+ Rage drops his steel, and storms grow calm:
+ Her let our sires and matrons hoar
+ Welcome to Briton's ravaged shore;
+ Our youths, enamour'd of the fair,
+ Play with the tangles of her hair, 140
+ Till, in one loud applauding sound,
+ The nations shout to her around,
+ O how supremely art thou blest,
+ Thou, lady--thou shalt rule the west!
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [21] Alluding to that beautiful fragment of Alcæus:
+
+ Εν μυρτου κλαδι το ξιφος φορησω,
+ Hωσπερ Ἁρμοδιος κ’ Αριστογειτων,
+ Ὁτε τον τυραννον κτανετην.
+ Ισονομους τ’ Αθηνας εποιησατην.
+ Φιλταθ’ Ἁρμοδι’ ου τι που τεθνηκας,
+ Νησοις δ’ εν μακαρων σε φασιν ειναι,
+ Ἱνα περ ποδωκης Αχιλευς,
+ Τυδειδην τε φασιν Διομηδεα.
+ Εν μυρτου κλαδι το ξιφος φορησω,
+ Ωσπερ Ἁρμοδιος κ’ Αριστογειτων,
+ Ὁτ’ Αθηναιης εν Θυσιαις
+ Ανδρα τυραννον Ἱππαρχον εκαινετην.
+ Αει σφων κλεος εσσεται κατ’ αιαν,
+ Φιλταθ’ Ἁρμοδιε, κ’ Αριστογειτων,
+ Ὁτι τον τυραννον κτανετον,
+ Ισονομους τ’ Αθηνας εποιησατον.
+
+ ~En myrtou kladi to xiphos phorêsô,
+ Hôsper Harmodios k' Aristogeitôn,
+ Hote ton tyrannon ktanetên.
+ Isonomous t' Athênas epoiêsatên.
+ Philtath' Harmodi' ou ti pou tethnêkas,
+ Nêsois d' en makarôn se phasin einai,
+ Hina per podôkês Achileus,
+ Tydeidên te phasin Diomêdea.
+ En myrtou kladi to xiphos phorêsô,
+ Ôsper Harmodios k' Aristogeitôn,
+ Hot' Athênaiês en Thysiais
+ Andra tyrannon Hipparchon ekainetên.
+ Aei sphôn kleos essetai kat' aian,
+ Philtath' Harmodie, k' Aristogeitôn,
+ Hoti ton tyrannon ktaneton,
+ Isonomous t' Athênas epoiêsaton.~
+
+ [22] Μη μη ταυτα λεγωμες, ἁ δακρυον ηγαγε Δηοι.
+ Callimach. Ὑμνος εις Δημητρα. C.
+
+ ~Mê mê tauta legômes, ha dakryon êgage Dêoi.~
+ Callimach. ~Hymnos eis Dêmêtra~. C.
+
+ [23] The family of the Medici. C.
+
+ [24] The little republic of San Marino. C.
+
+ [25] The Venetians. C.
+
+ [26] The Doge of Venice. C.
+
+ [27] Genoa. C.
+
+ [28] Switzerland. C.
+
+ [29] The Dutch, amongst whom there are very severe penalties for those
+ who are convicted of killing this bird. They are kept tame in
+ almost all their towns, and particularly at the Hague, of the
+ arms of which they make a part. The common people of Holland are
+ said to entertain a superstitious sentiment, that if the whole
+ species of them should become extinct, they should lose their
+ liberties. C.
+
+ [30] Queen Elizabeth. C.
+
+ [31] This tradition is mentioned by several of our old historians. Some
+ naturalists too have endeavoured to support the probability of
+ the fact by arguments drawn from the correspondent disposition of
+ the two opposite coasts. I do not remember that any poetical use
+ has been hitherto made of it. C.
+
+ [32] There is a tradition in the Isle of Man, that a mermaid becoming
+ enamoured of a young man of extraordinary beauty took an
+ opportunity of meeting him one day as he walked on the shore, and
+ opened her passion to him, but was received with a coldness,
+ occasioned by his horror and surprise at her appearance. This,
+ however, was so misconstrued by the sea lady, that, in revenge
+ for his treatment of her, she punished the whole island by
+ covering it with a mist: so that all who attempted to carry on
+ any commerce with it, either never arrived at it, but wandered up
+ and down the sea, or were on a sudden wrecked upon its cliffs.
+ C.
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO A LADY,
+
+ON THE DEATH OF COLONEL ROSS, IN THE ACTION OF FONTENOY.
+
+Written in May, 1745.
+
+
+ While, lost to all his former mirth,
+ Britannia's genius bends to earth,
+ And mourns the fatal day:
+ While stain'd with blood he strives to tear
+ Unseemly from his sea-green hair 5
+ The wreaths of cheerful May:
+
+ The thoughts which musing Pity pays,
+ And fond Remembrance loves to raise,
+ Your faithful hours attend;
+ Still Fancy, to herself unkind, 10
+ Awakes to grief the soften'd mind,
+ And points the bleeding friend.
+
+ By rapid Scheld's descending wave
+ His country's vows shall bless the grave,
+ Where'er the youth is laid: 15
+ That sacred spot the village hind
+ With every sweetest turf shall bind,
+ And Peace protect the shade.
+
+ Blest youth, regardful of thy doom,
+ Aërial hands shall build thy tomb, 20
+ With shadowy trophies crown'd;
+ Whilst Honour bathed in tears shall rove
+ To sigh thy name through every grove,
+ And call his heroes round.
+
+ The warlike dead of every age, 25
+ Who fill the fair recording page,
+ Shall leave their sainted rest;
+ And, half reclining on his spear,
+ Each wondering chief by turns appear,
+ To hail the blooming guest: 30
+
+ Old Edward's sons, unknown to yield,
+ Shall crowd from Cressy's laurel'd field,
+ And gaze with fix'd delight;
+ Again for Britain's wrongs they feel,
+ Again they snatch the gleamy steel, 35
+ And wish the avenging fight.
+
+ But lo, where, sunk in deep despair,
+ Her garments torn, her bosom bare,
+ Impatient Freedom lies!
+ Her matted tresses madly spread, 40
+ To every sod, which wraps the dead,
+ She turns her joyless eyes.
+
+ Ne'er shall she leave that lowly ground
+ Till notes of triumph bursting round
+ Proclaim her reign restored: 45
+ Till William seek the sad retreat,
+ And, bleeding at her sacred feet,
+ Present the sated sword.
+
+ If, weak to soothe so soft a heart,
+ These pictured glories nought impart, 50
+ To dry thy constant tear:
+ If, yet, in Sorrow's distant eye,
+ Exposed and pale thou see'st him lie,
+ Wild War insulting near:
+
+ Where'er from time thou court'st relief, 55
+ The Muse shall still, with social grief,
+ Her gentlest promise keep;
+ Even humbled Harting's cottaged vale[33]
+ Shall learn the sad repeated tale,
+ And bid her shepherds weep. 60
+
+
+VARIATIONS.
+
+ Ver.
+ 4. While sunk in grief he strives to tear
+
+ 19. E'en now regardful of his doom
+ Applauding Honour haunts his tomb,
+ With shadowy trophies crown'd:
+ Whilst Freedom's form beside her roves,
+ Majestic through the twilight groves,
+ And calls her heroes round.
+
+ 19. O'er him, whose doom thy virtues grieve,
+ Aërial forms shall sit at eve,
+ And bend the pensive head;
+ And, fallen to save his injured land,
+ Imperial Honour's awful hand
+ Shall point his lonely bed.
+
+ 31. Old Edward's sons, untaught to yield,
+
+ 49. If, drawn by all a lover's art,
+
+ 58. Even humble Harting's cottaged vale
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [33] Harting, a village adjoining the parish of Trotton, and about two
+ miles distant from it.
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO EVENING.
+
+
+ If aught of oaten stop, or pastoral song,
+ May hope, chaste Eve, to soothe thy modest ear,
+ Like thy own brawling springs,
+ Thy springs, and dying gales;
+
+ O Nymph reserved, while now the bright-hair'd sun 5
+ Sits in yon western tent, whose cloudy skirts,
+ With brede ethereal wove,
+ O'erhang his wavy bed:
+
+ Now air is hush'd, save where the weak-eyed bat
+ With short shrill shriek flits by on leathern wing; 10
+ Or where the beetle winds
+ His small but sullen horn,
+
+ As oft he rises 'midst the twilight path,
+ Against the pilgrim borne in heedless hum:
+ Now teach me, maid composed, 15
+ To breathe some soften'd strain,
+
+ Whose numbers, stealing through thy darkening vale,
+ May not unseemly with its stillness suit;
+ As, musing slow, I hail
+ Thy genial loved return! 20
+
+ For when thy folding-star arising shows
+ His paly circlet, at his warning lamp
+ The fragrant Hours, and Elves
+ Who slept in buds the day,
+
+ And many a Nymph who wreathes her brows with sedge, 25
+ And sheds the freshening dew, and, lovelier still,
+ The pensive Pleasures sweet,
+ Prepare thy shadowy car.
+
+ Then let me rove some wild and heathy scene;
+ Or find some ruin, 'midst its dreary dells, 30
+ Whose walls more awful nod
+ By thy religious gleams.
+
+ Or, if chill blustering winds, or driving rain,
+ Prevent my willing feet, be mine the hut,
+ That, from the mountain's side, 35
+ Views wilds, and swelling floods,
+
+ And hamlets brown, and dim-discover'd spires;
+ And hears their simple bell, and marks o'er all
+ Thy dewy fingers draw
+ The gradual dusky veil. 40
+
+ While Spring shall pour his showers, as oft he wont,
+ And bathe thy breathing tresses, meekest Eve!
+ While Summer loves to sport
+ Beneath thy lingering light;
+
+ While sallow Autumn fills thy lap with leaves; 45
+ Or Winter, yelling through the troublous air,
+ Affrights thy shrinking train,
+ And rudely rends thy robes;
+
+ So long, regardful of thy quiet rule,
+ Shall Fancy, Friendship, Science, smiling Peace, 50
+ Thy gentlest influence own,
+ And love thy favourite name!
+
+
+VARIATIONS.
+
+ Ver
+ 2. May hope, O pensive Eve, to soothe thine ear,
+
+ 3. Like thy own solemn springs,
+
+ 9. While air is hush'd, save where the weak-eyed bat
+
+ 24. Who slept in flowers the day,
+
+ 29. Then lead, calm vot'ress, where some sheety lake
+ Cheers the lone heath, or some time-hallow'd pile,
+
+ 31. Or upland fallows grey,
+ Reflect its last cool gleam.
+
+ 33. But when chill blustering winds, or driving rain,
+ Forbid my willing feet, be mine the hut,
+
+ 49. So long, sure-found beneath the sylvan shed,
+ Shall Fancy, Friendship, Science, rose-lipp'd Health,
+ Thy gentlest influence own,
+ And hymn thy favourite name!
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO PEACE.
+
+
+ O thou, who bad'st thy turtles bear
+ Swift from his grasp thy golden hair,
+ And sought'st thy native skies;
+ When War, by vultures drawn from far,
+ To Britain bent his iron car, 5
+ And bade his storms arise!
+
+ Tired of his rude tyrannic sway,
+ Our youth shall fix some festive day,
+ His sullen shrines to burn:
+ But thou who hear'st the turning spheres, 10
+ What sounds may charm thy partial ears,
+ And gain thy blest return!
+
+ O Peace, thy injured robes up-bind!
+ O rise! and leave not one behind
+ Of all thy beamy train; 15
+ The British Lion, goddess sweet,
+ Lies stretch'd on earth to kiss thy feet,
+ And own thy holier reign.
+
+ Let others court thy transient smile,
+ But come to grace thy western isle, 20
+ By warlike Honour led;
+ And, while around her ports rejoice,
+ While all her sons adore thy choice,
+ With him for ever wed!
+
+
+
+
+THE MANNERS.
+
+AN ODE.
+
+
+ Farewell, for clearer ken design'd,
+ The dim-discover'd tracts of mind;
+ Truths which, from action's paths retired,
+ My silent search in vain required!
+ No more my sail that deep explores; 5
+ No more I search those magic shores;
+ What regions part the world of soul,
+ Or whence thy streams, Opinion, roll:
+ If e'er I round such fairy field,
+ Some power impart the spear and shield, 10
+ At which the wizard Passions fly;
+ By which the giant Follies die!
+
+ Farewell the porch whose roof is seen
+ Arch'd with the enlivening olive's green:
+ Where Science, prank'd in tissued vest, 15
+ By Reason, Pride, and Fancy drest,
+ Comes, like a bride, so trim array'd,
+ To wed with Doubt in Plato's shade!
+
+ Youth of the quick uncheated sight,
+ Thy walks, Observance, more invite! 20
+ O thou who lovest that ampler range,
+ Where life's wide prospects round thee change,
+ And, with her mingling sons allied,
+ Throw'st the prattling page aside,
+ To me, in converse sweet, impart 25
+ To read in man the native heart;
+ To learn, where Science sure is found,
+ From Nature as she lives around;
+ And, gazing oft her mirror true,
+ By turns each shifting image view! 30
+ Till meddling Art's officious lore
+ Reverse the lessons taught before;
+ Alluring from a safer rule,
+ To dream in her enchanted school:
+ Thou, Heaven, whate'er of great we boast, 35
+ Hast blest this social science most.
+
+ Retiring hence to thoughtful cell,
+ As Fancy breathes her potent spell,
+ Not vain she finds the charmful task,
+ In pageant quaint, in motley mask; 40
+ Behold, before her musing eyes,
+ The countless Manners round her rise;
+ While, ever varying as they pass,
+ To some Contempt applies her glass:
+ With these the white-robed maids combine; 45
+ And those the laughing satyrs join!
+ But who is he whom now she views,
+ In robe of wild contending hues?
+ Thou by the Passions nursed, I greet
+ The comic sock that binds thy feet! 50
+ O Humour, thou whose name is known
+ To Britain's favour'd isle alone:
+ Me too amidst thy band admit;
+ There where the young-eyed healthful Wit,
+ (Whose jewels in his crispéd hair 55
+ Are placed each other's beams to share;
+ Whom no delights from thee divide)
+ In laughter loosed, attends thy side.
+
+ By old Miletus,[34] who so long
+ Has ceased his love-inwoven song; 60
+ By all you taught the Tuscan maids,
+ In changed Italia's modern shades;
+ By him[35] whose knight's distinguish'd name
+ Refined a nation's lust of fame;
+ Whose tales e'en now, with echoes sweet, 65
+ Castilia's Moorish hills repeat;
+ Or him[36] whom Seine's blue nymphs deplore,
+ In watchet weeds on Gallia's shore;
+ Who drew the sad Sicilian maid,
+ By virtues in her sire betray'd. 70
+
+ O Nature boon, from whom proceed
+ Each forceful thought, each prompted deed;
+ If but from thee I hope to feel,
+ On all my heart imprint thy seal!
+ Let some retreating cynic find 75
+ Those oft-turn'd scrolls I leave behind:
+ The Sports and I this hour agree,
+ To rove thy scene-full world with thee!
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [34] Alluding to the Milesian tales, some of the earliest romances. C.
+
+ [35] Cervantes. C.
+
+ [36] Monsieur Le Sage, author of the incomparable Adventures of Gil Blas
+ de Santillane, who died in Paris in the year 1745. C.
+
+
+
+
+THE PASSIONS.
+
+AN ODE FOR MUSIC.
+
+Performed at Oxford, with Hayes's music, in 1750.
+
+
+ When Music, heavenly maid, was young,
+ While yet in early Greece she sung,
+ The Passions oft, to hear her shell,
+ Throng'd around her magic cell,
+ Exulting, trembling, raging, fainting, 5
+ Possest beyond the Muse's painting:
+ By turns they felt the glowing mind
+ Disturb'd, delighted, raised, refined;
+ Till once, 'tis said, when all were fired,
+ Fill'd with fury, rapt, inspired, 10
+ From the supporting myrtles round
+ They snatch'd her instruments of sound;
+ And, as they oft had heard apart
+ Sweet lessons of her forceful art,
+ Each (for Madness ruled the hour) 15
+ Would prove his own expressive power.
+
+ First Fear his hand, its skill to try,
+ Amid the chords bewilder'd laid,
+ And back recoil'd, he knew not why,
+ E'en at the sound himself had made. 20
+
+ Next Anger rush'd; his eyes on fire,
+ In lightnings own'd his secret stings:
+ In one rude clash he struck the lyre,
+ And swept with hurried hand the strings.
+
+ With woful measures wan Despair 25
+ Low, sullen sounds his grief beguiled;
+ A solemn, strange, and mingled air;
+ 'Twas sad by fits, by starts 'twas wild.
+
+ But thou, O Hope, with eyes so fair,
+ What was thy delighted measure? 30
+ Still it whisper'd promised pleasure,
+ And bade the lovely scenes at distance hail!
+ Still would her touch the strain prolong;
+ And from the rocks, the woods, the vale,
+ She call'd on Echo still, through all the song; 35
+ And, where her sweetest theme she chose,
+ A soft responsive voice was heard at every close,
+ And Hope enchanted smiled, and waved her golden hair.
+ And longer had she sung;--but, with a frown,
+ Revenge impatient rose: 40
+ He threw his blood-stain'd sword, in thunder, down;
+ And, with a withering look,
+ The war-denouncing trumpet took,
+ And blew a blast so loud and dread,
+ Were ne'er prophetic sounds so full of woe! 45
+ And, ever and anon, he beat
+ The doubling drum, with furious heat;
+ And though sometimes, each dreary pause between,
+ Dejected Pity, at his side,
+ Her soul-subduing voice applied, 50
+ Yet still he kept his wild unalter'd mein,
+ While each strain'd ball of sight seem'd bursting from his head.
+ Thy numbers, Jealousy, to nought were fix'd;
+ Sad proof of thy distressful state;
+ Of differing themes the veering song was mix'd; 55
+ And now it courted Love, now raving call'd on Hate.
+
+ With eyes upraised, as one inspired,
+ Pale Melancholy sate retired;
+ And, from her wild sequester'd seat,
+ In notes by distance made more sweet, 60
+ Pour'd through the mellow horn her pensive soul:
+ And, dashing soft from rocks around,
+ Bubbling runnels join'd the sound;
+ Through glades and glooms the mingled measure stole,
+ Or, o'er some haunted stream, with fond delay, 65
+ Round an holy calm diffusing,
+ Love of Peace, and lonely musing,
+ In hollow murmurs died away.
+
+ But O! how alter'd was its sprightlier tone,
+ When Cheerfulness, a nymph of healthiest hue, 70
+ Her bow across her shoulder flung,
+ Her buskins gemm'd with morning dew,
+ Blew an inspiring air, that dale and thicket rung,
+ The hunter's call, to Faun and Dryad known!
+ The oak-crown'd Sisters, and their chaste-eyed Queen, 75
+ Satyrs and Sylvan Boys, were seen,
+ Peeping from forth their alleys green:
+ Brown Exercise rejoiced to hear;
+ And Sport leapt up, and seized his beechen spear.
+ Last came Joy's ecstatic trial: 80
+ He, with viny crown advancing,
+ First to the lively pipe his hand addrest;
+ But soon he saw the brisk awakening viol,
+ Whose sweet entrancing voice he loved the best;
+ They would have thought who heard the strain 85
+ They saw, in Tempe's vale, her native maids,
+ Amidst the festal sounding shades,
+ To some unwearied minstrel dancing,
+ While, as his flying fingers kiss'd the strings,
+ Love framed with Mirth a gay fantastic round: 90
+ Loose were her tresses seen, her zone unbound;
+ And he, amidst his frolic play,
+ As if he would the charming air repay,
+ Shook thousand odours from his dewy wings.
+
+ O Music! sphere-descended maid, 95
+ Friend of Pleasure, Wisdom's aid!
+ Why, goddess! why, to us denied,
+ Lay'st thou thy ancient lyre aside?
+ As, in that loved Athenian bower,
+ You learn'd an all commanding power, 100
+ Thy mimic soul, O Nymph endear'd,
+ Can well recall what then it heard;
+ Where is thy native simple heart,
+ Devote to Virtue, Fancy, Art?
+ Arise, as in that elder time, 105
+ Warm, energetic, chaste, sublime!
+ Thy wonders, in that godlike age,
+ Fill thy recording Sister's page--
+ 'Tis said, and I believe the tale,
+ Thy humblest reed could more prevail, 110
+ Had more of strength, diviner rage,
+ Than all which charms this laggard age;
+ E'en all at once together found,
+ Cecilia's mingled world of sound--
+ O bid our vain endeavours cease; 115
+ Revive the just designs of Greece:
+ Return in all thy simple state!
+ Confirm the tales her sons relate!
+
+
+VARIATION.
+
+ Ver.
+ 30. What was thy delightful measure?
+
+
+
+
+ODE ON THE DEATH OF THOMSON.
+
+THE SCENE IS SUPPOSED TO LIE ON THE THAMES NEAR RICHMOND.
+
+
+ In yonder grave a Druid lies,
+ Where slowly winds the stealing wave;
+ The year's best sweets shall duteous rise
+ To deck its poet's sylvan grave.
+
+ In yon deep bed of whispering reeds 5
+ His airy harp[37] shall now be laid,
+ That he, whose heart in sorrow bleeds,
+ May love through life the soothing shade.
+
+ Then maids and youths shall linger here,
+ And while its sounds at distance swell, 10
+ Shall sadly seem in pity's ear
+ To hear the woodland pilgrim's knell.
+
+ Remembrance oft shall haunt the shore
+ When Thames in summer wreaths is drest,
+ And oft suspend the dashing oar, 15
+ To bid his gentle spirit rest!
+
+ And oft, as ease and health retire
+ To breezy lawn, or forest deep,
+ The friend shall view yon whitening[38] spire
+ And 'mid the varied landscape weep. 20
+
+ But thou, who own'st that earthy bed,
+ Ah! what will every dirge avail;
+ Or tears, which love and pity shed,
+ That mourn beneath the gliding sail?
+
+ Yet lives there one, whose heedless eye 25
+ Shall scorn thy pale shrine glimmering near?
+ With him, sweet bard, may fancy die,
+ And joy desert the blooming year.
+
+ But thou, lorn stream, whose sullen tide
+ No sedge-crown'd sisters now attend, 30
+ Now waft me from the green hill's side,
+ Whose cold turf hides the buried friend!
+
+ And see, the fairy valleys fade;
+ Dun night has veil'd the solemn view!
+ Yet once again, dear parted shade, 35
+ Meek Nature's Child, again adieu!
+
+ The genial meads,[39] assign'd to bless
+ Thy life, shall mourn thy early doom;
+ Their hinds and shepherd-girls shall dress,
+ With simple hands, thy rural tomb. 40
+
+ Long, long, thy stone and pointed clay
+ Shall melt the musing Briton's eyes:
+ O! vales and wild woods, shall he say,
+ In yonder grave your Druid lies!
+
+
+VARIATION.
+
+ Ver.
+ 21. But thou who own'st that earthly bed,
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [37] The harp of Æolus, of which see a description in the Castle of
+ Indolence. C.
+
+ [38] Richmond Church, in which Thomson was buried. C.
+
+ [39] Mr. Thomson resided in the neighbourhood of Richmond some time
+ before his death.
+
+
+
+
+ODE ON THE POPULAR SUPERSTITIONS OF THE HIGHLANDS OF SCOTLAND;
+
+CONSIDERED AS THE SUBJECT OF POETRY; INSCRIBED TO MR. JOHN HOME.
+
+
+ I.
+
+ Home, thou return'st from Thames, whose Naiads long
+ Have seen thee lingering with a fond delay,
+ 'Mid those soft friends, whose hearts, some future day,
+ Shall melt, perhaps, to hear thy tragic song.[40]
+ Go, not unmindful of that cordial youth[41] 5
+ Whom, long endear'd, thou leavest by Levant's side;
+ Together let us wish him lasting truth,
+ And joy untainted with his destined bride.
+ Go! nor regardless, while these numbers boast
+ My short-lived bliss, forget my social name; 10
+ But think, far off, how, on the southern coast,
+ I met thy friendship with an equal flame!
+ Fresh to that soil thou turn'st, where every vale
+ Shall prompt the poet, and his song demand:
+ To thee thy copious subjects ne'er shall fail; 15
+ Thou need'st but take thy pencil to thy hand,
+ And paint what all believe, who own thy genial land.
+
+
+ II.
+
+ There must thou wake perforce thy Doric quill;
+ 'Tis Fancy's land to which thou sett'st thy feet;
+ Where still, 'tis said, the fairy people meet, 20
+ Beneath each birken shade, on mead or hill;
+ There, each trim lass, that skims the milky store,
+ To the swart tribes their creamy bowls allots;
+ By night they sip it round the cottage door,
+ While airy minstrels warble jocund notes. 25
+ There, every herd, by sad experience, knows
+ How, wing'd with fate, their elf-shot arrows fly,
+ When the sick ewe her summer food foregoes,
+ Or, stretch'd on earth, the heart-smit heifers lie.
+ Such airy beings awe the untutor'd swain: 30
+ Nor thou, though learn'd, his homelier thoughts neglect;
+ Let thy sweet muse the rural faith sustain;
+ These are the themes of simple, sure effect,
+ That add new conquests to her boundless reign,
+ And fill, with double force, her heart-commanding strain. 35
+
+
+ III.
+
+ E'en yet preserved, how often mayst thou hear,
+ Where to the pole the Boreal mountains run,
+ Taught by the father, to his listening son,
+ Strange lays, whose power had charm'd a Spenser's ear.
+ At every pause, before thy mind possest, 40
+ Old Runic bards shall seem to rise around,
+ With uncouth lyres, in many-colour'd vest,
+ Their matted hair with boughs fantastic crown'd:
+ Whether thou bidst the well taught hind repeat
+ The choral dirge, that mourns some chieftain brave, 45
+ When every shrieking maid her bosom beat,
+ And strew'd with choicest herbs his scented grave!
+ Or whether, sitting in the shepherd's shiel,[42]
+ Thou hear'st some sounding tale of war's alarms;
+ When at the bugle's call, with fire and steel, 50
+ The sturdy clans pour'd forth their brawny swarms,
+ And hostile brothers met, to prove each other's arms.
+
+
+ IV.
+
+ 'Tis thine to sing, how, framing hideous spells,
+ In Sky's lone isle, the gifted wizard seer,
+ Lodged in the wintry cave with Fate's fell spear, 55
+ Or in the depth of Uist's dark forest dwells:
+ How they, whose sight such dreary dreams engross,
+ With their own visions oft astonish'd droop,
+ When, o'er the watery strath, or quaggy moss,
+ They see the gliding ghosts unbodied troop. 60
+ Or, if in sports, or on the festive green,
+ Their destined glance some fated youth descry,
+ Who now, perhaps, in lusty vigour seen,
+ And rosy health, shall soon lamented die.
+ For them the viewless forms of air obey; 65
+ Their bidding heed, and at their beck repair:
+ They know what spirit brews the stormful day,
+ And heartless, oft like moody madness, stare
+ To see the phantom train their secret work prepare.
+
+
+ V.
+
+ To monarchs dear, some hundred miles astray, 70
+ Oft have they seen Fate give the fatal blow!
+ The seer, in Sky, shriek'd as the blood did flow,
+ When headless Charles warm on the scaffold lay!
+ As Boreas threw his young Aurora[43] forth,
+ In the first year of the first George's reign, 75
+ And battles raged in welkin of the North,
+ They mourn'd in air, fell, fell Rebellion slain!
+ And as, of late, they joy'd in Preston's fight,
+ Saw, at sad Falkirk, all their hopes near crown'd!
+ They raved! divining, through their second sight,[44] 80
+ Pale, red Culloden, where these hopes were drown'd!
+ Illustrious William![45] Britain's guardian name!
+ One William saved us from a tyrant's stroke;
+ He, for a sceptre, gain'd heroic fame,
+ But thou, more glorious, Slavery's chain hast broke, 85
+ To reign a private man, and bow to Freedom's yoke!
+
+
+ VI.
+
+ These, too, thou'lt sing! for well thy magic muse
+ Can to the topmost heaven of grandeur soar;
+ Or stoop to wail the swain that is no more!
+ Ah, homely swains! your homeward steps ne'er lose; 90
+ Let not dank Will[46] mislead you to the heath;
+ Dancing in mirky night, o'er fen and lake,
+ He glows, to draw you downward to your death,
+ In his bewitch'd, low, marshy, willow brake!
+ What though far off, from some dark dell espied, 95
+ His glimmering mazes cheer the excursive sight,
+ Yet turn, ye wanderers, turn your steps aside,
+ Nor trust the guidance of that faithless light;
+ For watchful, lurking, 'mid the unrustling reed,
+ At those mirk hours the wily monster lies, 100
+ And listens oft to hear the passing steed,
+ And frequent round him rolls his sullen eyes,
+ If chance his savage wrath may some weak wretch surprise.
+
+
+ VII.
+
+ Ah, luckless swain, o'er all unblest, indeed!
+ Whom late bewilder'd in the dank, dark fen, 105
+ Far from his flocks, and smoking hamlet, then!
+ To that sad spot where hums the sedgy weed:
+ On him, enraged, the fiend, in angry mood,
+ Shall never look with pity's kind concern,
+ But instant, furious, raise the whelming flood 110
+ O'er its drown'd banks, forbidding all return!
+ Or, if he meditate his wish'd escape,
+ To some dim hill, that seems uprising near,
+ To his faint eye the grim and grisly shape,
+ In all its terrors clad, shall wild appear. 115
+ Meantime the watery surge shall round him rise,
+ Pour'd sudden forth from every swelling source!
+ What now remains but tears and hopeless sighs?
+ His fear-shook limbs have lost their youthly force,
+ And down the waves he floats, a pale and breathless corse! 120
+
+
+ VIII.
+
+ For him in vain his anxious wife shall wait,
+ Or wander forth to meet him on his way;
+ For him in vain at to-fall of the day,
+ His babes shall linger at the unclosing gate!
+ Ah, ne'er shall he return! Alone, if night 125
+ Her travel'd limbs in broken slumbers steep,
+ With drooping willows drest, his mournful sprite
+ Shall visit sad, perchance, her silent sleep:
+ Then he, perhaps, with moist and watery hand,
+ Shall fondly seem to press her shuddering cheek, 130
+ And with his blue swoln face before her stand,
+ And, shivering cold, these piteous accents speak:
+ "Pursue, dear wife, thy daily toils pursue,
+ At dawn or dusk, industrious as before;
+ Nor e'er of me one helpless thought renew, 135
+ While I lie weltering on the osier'd shore,
+ Drown'd by the Kelpie's[47] wrath, nor e'er shall aid thee more!"
+
+
+ IX.
+
+ Unbounded is thy range; with varied skill
+ Thy muse may, like those feathery tribes which spring
+ From their rude rocks, extend her skirting wing 140
+ Round the moist marge of each cold Hebrid isle,
+ To that hoar pile[48] which still its ruins shows:
+ In whose small vaults a pigmy folk is found,
+ Whose bones the delver with his spade upthrows,
+ And culls them, wondering, from the hallow'd ground! 145
+ Or thither,[49] where, beneath the showery west,
+ The mighty kings of three fair realms are laid;
+ Once foes, perhaps, together now they rest,
+ No slaves revere them, and no wars invade:
+ Yet frequent now, at midnight's solemn hour, 150
+ The rifted mounds their yawning cells unfold,
+ And forth the monarchs stalk with sovereign power,
+ In pageant robes, and wreath'd with sheeny gold,
+ And on their twilight tombs aërial council hold.
+
+
+ X.
+
+ But, oh, o'er all, forget not Kilda's race, 155
+ On whose bleak rocks, which brave the wasting tides,
+ Fair Nature's daughter, Virtue, yet abides.
+ Go! just, as they, their blameless manners trace!
+ Then to my ear transmit some gentle song,
+ Of those whose lives are yet sincere and plain, 160
+ Their bounded walks the rugged cliffs along,
+ And all their prospect but the wintry main.
+ With sparing temperance, at the needful time,
+ They drain the scented spring; or, hunger-prest,
+ Along the Atlantic rock, undreading climb, 165
+ And of its eggs despoil the solan's[50] nest.
+ Thus, blest in primal innocence, they live
+ Sufficed, and happy with that frugal fare
+ Which tasteful toil and hourly danger give.
+ Hard is their shallow soil, and bleak and bare; 170
+ Nor ever vernal bee was heard to murmur there!
+
+
+ XI.
+
+ Nor need'st thou blush that such false themes engage
+ Thy gentle mind, of fairer stores possest;
+ For not alone they touch the village breast,
+ But fill'd, in elder time, the historic page. 175
+ There, Shakespeare's self, with every garland crown'd,
+ Flew to those fairy climes his fancy sheen,
+ In musing hour; his wayward sisters found,
+ And with their terrors drest the magic scene.
+ From them he sung, when, 'mid his bold design, 180
+ Before the Scot, afflicted, and aghast!
+ The shadowy kings of Banquo's fated line
+ Through the dark cave in gleamy pageant pass'd.
+ Proceed! nor quit the tales which, simply told,
+ Could once so well my answering bosom pierce; 185
+ Proceed, in forceful sounds, and colours bold,
+ The native legends of thy land rehearse;
+ To such adapt thy lyre, and suit thy powerful verse.
+
+
+ XII.
+
+ In scenes like these, which, daring to depart
+ From sober truth, are still to nature true, 190
+ And call forth fresh delight to Fancy's view,
+ The heroic muse employ'd her Tasso's art!
+ How have I trembled, when, at Tancred's stroke,
+ Its gushing blood the gaping cypress pour'd!
+ When each live plant with mortal accents spoke, 195
+ And the wild blast upheaved the vanish'd sword!
+ How have I sat, when piped the pensive wind,
+ To hear his harp by British Fairfax strung!
+ Prevailing poet! whose undoubting mind
+ Believed the magic wonders which he sung! 200
+ Hence, at each sound, imagination glows!
+ Hence, at each picture, vivid life starts here!
+ Hence his warm lay with softest sweetness flows!
+ Melting it flows, pure, murmuring, strong, and clear,
+ And fills the impassion'd heart, and wins the harmonious ear! 205
+
+
+ XIII.
+
+ All hail, ye scenes that o'er my soul prevail!
+ Ye splendid friths and lakes, which, far away,
+ Are by smooth Annan[51] fill'd or pastoral Tay,[51]
+ Or Don's[51] romantic springs at distance hail!
+ The time shall come, when I, perhaps, may tread 210
+ Your lowly glens, o'erhung with spreading broom;
+ Or, o'er your stretching heaths, by Fancy led;
+ Or, o'er your mountains creep, in awful gloom!
+ Then will I dress once more the faded bower,
+ Where Jonson[52] sat in Drummond's classic shade; 215
+ Or crop, from Tiviotdale, each lyric flower,
+ And mourn, on Yarrow's banks, where Willy's laid!
+ Meantime, ye powers that on the plains which bore
+ The cordial youth, on Lothian's plains,[53] attend!--
+ Where'er Home dwells, on hill, or lowly moor, 220
+ To him I lose, your kind protection lend,
+ And, touch'd with love like mine, preserve my absent friend!
+
+
+VARIATIONS.
+
+ Ver.
+ 44. Whether thou bidst the well taught hind relate
+
+ 51. The sturdy clans pour'd forth their bony swarms,
+
+ 56. Or in the gloom of Uist's dark forest dwells:
+
+ 58. With their own visions oft afflicted droop,
+
+ 66. Their bidding mark, and at their beck repair:
+
+ 100. At those sad hours the wily monster lies;
+
+ 111. O'er its drowned bank, forbidding all return!
+
+ 124. His babes shall linger at the cottage gate!
+
+ 127. With dropping willows drest, his mournful sprite
+
+ 130. Shall seem to press her cold and shuddering cheek,
+
+ 133. Proceed, dear wife, thy daily toils pursue,
+
+ 135. Nor e'er of me one hapless thought renew,
+
+ 138. Unbounded is thy range; with varied stile
+
+ 164. They drain the sainted spring; or, hunger-prest,
+
+ 193. How have I trembled, when, at Tancred's side,
+ Like him I stalk'd, and all his passions felt;
+ When charm'd by Ismen, through the forest wide,
+ Bark'd in each plant a talking spirit dwelt!
+
+ 201. Hence, sure to charm, his early numbers flow,
+ Though strong, yet sweet----
+ Though faithful, sweet; though strong, of simple kind.
+ Hence, with each theme, he bids the bosom glow,
+ While his warm lays an easy passage find,
+ Pour'd through each inmost nerve, and lull the harmonious ear.
+
+ 204. Melting it flows, pure, numerous, strong, and clear,
+
+ 216. Or crop from Tiviot's dale each--
+
+ 220. Where'er he dwell, on hill, or lowly muir,
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [40] How truly did Collins predict Home's tragic powers!
+
+ [41] A gentleman of the name of Barrow, who introduced Home to Collins.
+ Ed. 1788.
+
+ [42] A summer hut, built in the high part of the mountains, to tend
+ their flocks in the warm season, when the pasture is fine. Ed.
+ 1788.
+
+ [43] By young Aurora, Collins undoubtedly meant the first appearance of
+ the northern lights, which happened about the year 1715; at least
+ it is most highly probable, from this peculiar circumstance, that
+ no ancient writer whatever has taken any notice of them, nor even
+ any modern one, previous to the above period. Ed. 1788.
+
+ [44] Second sight is the term that is used for the divination of the
+ highlanders. Ed. 1788.
+
+ [45] The late Duke of Cumberland, who defeated the Pretender at the
+ battle of Culloden. Ed. 1788.
+
+ [46] A fiery meteor, called by various names, such as Will with the
+ Wisp, Jack with the Lantern, etc. It hovers in the air over
+ marshy and fenny places. Ed. 1788.
+
+ [47] The water fiend.
+
+ [48] One of the Hebrides is called the Isle of Pigmies; where it is
+ reported, that several miniature bones of the human species have
+ been dug up in the ruins of a chapel there.
+
+ [49] Icolmkill, one of the Hebrides, where near sixty of the ancient
+ Scottish, Irish, and Norwegian kings are interred.
+
+ [50] An aquatic bird like a goose, on the eggs of which the inhabitants
+ of St. Kilda, another of the Hebrides, chiefly subsist. Ed.
+ 1788.
+
+ [51] Three rivers in Scotland. Ed. 1788.
+
+ [52] Ben Jonson paid a visit on foot, in 1619, to the Scotch poet
+ Drummond, at his seat of Hawthornden, within four miles of
+ Edinburgh.
+
+ [53] Barrow, it seems, was at the Edinburgh University, which is in the
+ county of Lothian. Ed. 1788.
+
+
+
+
+AN EPISTLE,
+
+ADDRESSED TO SIR THOMAS HANMER, ON HIS EDITION OF SHAKESPEARE'S WORKS.
+
+
+ SIR,
+ A patriot's hand protects a poet's lays,
+ While nursed by you she sees her myrtles bloom,
+ Green and unwither'd o'er his honour'd tomb;
+ Excuse her doubts, if yet she fears to tell 5
+ What secret transports in her bosom swell:
+ With conscious awe she hears the critic's fame,
+ And blushing hides her wreath at Shakespeare's name.
+ Hard was the lot those injured strains endured,
+ Unown'd by Science, and by years obscured: 10
+ Fair Fancy wept; and echoing sighs confess'd
+ A fix'd despair in every tuneful breast.
+ Not with more grief the afflicted swains appear,
+ When wintry winds deform the plenteous year;
+ When lingering frosts the ruin'd seats invade 15
+ Where Peace resorted, and the Graces play'd.
+
+ Each rising art by just gradation moves,
+ Toil builds on toil, and age on age improves:
+ The Muse alone unequal dealt her rage,
+ And graced with noblest pomp her earliest stage. 20
+ Preserved through time, the speaking scenes impart
+ Each changeful wish of Phædra's tortured heart;
+ Or paint the curse that mark'd the Theban's[54] reign,
+ A bed incestuous, and a father slain.
+ With kind concern our pitying eyes o'erflow, 25
+ Trace the sad tale, and own another's woe.
+
+ To Rome removed, with wit secure to please,
+ The comic Sisters kept their native ease:
+ With jealous fear, declining Greece beheld
+ Her own Menander's art almost excell'd; 30
+ But every Muse essay'd to raise in vain
+ Some labour'd rival of her tragic strain:
+ Ilissus' laurels, though transferr'd with toil,
+ Droop'd their fair leaves, nor knew the unfriendly soil.
+ As Arts expired, resistless Dulness rose; 35
+ Goths, Priests, or Vandals,--all were Learning's foes.
+ Till Julius[55] first recall'd each exiled maid,
+ And Cosmo own'd them in the Etrurian shade:
+ Then, deeply skill'd in love's engaging theme,
+ The soft Provençal pass'd to Arno's stream: 40
+ With graceful ease the wanton lyre he strung;
+ Sweet flow'd the lays--but love was all he sung.
+ The gay description could not fail to move,
+ For, led by nature, all are friends to love.
+
+ But Heaven, still various in its works, decreed 45
+ The perfect boast of time should last succeed.
+ The beauteous union must appear at length,
+ Of Tuscan fancy, and Athenian strength:
+ One greater Muse Eliza's reign adorn,
+ And e'en a Shakespeare to her fame be born! 50
+
+ Yet ah! so bright her morning's opening ray,
+ In vain our Britain hoped an equal day!
+ No second growth the western isle could bear,
+ At once exhausted with too rich a year.
+ Too nicely Jonson knew the critic's part; 55
+ Nature in him was almost lost in art.
+ Of softer mould the gentle Fletcher came,
+ The next in order, as the next in name;
+ With pleased attention, 'midst his scenes we find
+ Each glowing thought that warms the female mind; 60
+ Each melting sigh, and every tender tear;
+ The lover's wishes, and the virgin's fear.
+ His every strain[56] the Smiles and Graces own;
+ But stronger Shakespeare felt for man alone:
+ Drawn by his pen, our ruder passions stand 65
+ The unrival'd picture of his early hand.
+
+ With[57] gradual steps and slow, exacter France
+ Saw Art's fair empire o'er her shores advance:
+ By length of toil a bright perfection knew,
+ Correctly bold, and just in all she drew: 70
+ Till late Corneille, with Lucan's[58] spirit fired,
+ Breathed the free strain, as Rome and he inspired:
+ And classic judgment gain'd to sweet Racine
+ The temperate strength of Maro's chaster line.
+
+ But wilder far the British laurel spread, 75
+ And wreaths less artful crown our poet's head.
+ Yet he alone to every scene could give
+ The historian's truth, and bid the manners live.
+ Waked at his call I view, with glad surprise,
+ Majestic forms of mighty monarchs rise. 80
+ There Henry's trumpets spread their loud alarms,
+ And laurel'd Conquest waits her hero's arms.
+ Here gentler Edward claims a pitying sigh,
+ Scarce born to honours, and so soon to die!
+ Yet shall thy throne, unhappy infant, bring 85
+ No beam of comfort to the guilty king:
+ The time[59] shall come when Glo'ster's heart shall bleed,
+ In life's last hours, with horror of the deed;
+ When dreary visions shall at last present
+ Thy vengeful image in the midnight tent: 90
+ Thy hand unseen the secret death shall bear,
+ Blunt the weak sword, and break the oppressive spear!
+
+ Where'er we turn, by Fancy charm'd, we find
+ Some sweet illusion of the cheated mind.
+ Oft, wild of wing, she calls the soul to rove 95
+ With humbler nature, in the rural grove;
+ Where swains contented own the quiet scene,
+ And twilight fairies tread the circled green:
+ Dress'd by her hand, the woods and valleys smile,
+ And Spring diffusive decks the enchanted isle. 100
+
+ O, more than all in powerful genius blest,
+ Come, take thine empire o'er the willing breast!
+ Whate'er the wounds this youthful heart shall feel,
+ Thy songs support me, and thy morals heal!
+ There every thought the poet's warmth may raise, 105
+ There native music dwells in all the lays.
+ O might some verse with happiest skill persuade
+ Expressive Picture to adopt thine aid!
+ What wondrous draughts might rise from every page!
+ What other Raphaels charm a distant age! 110
+
+ Methinks e'en now I view some free design,
+ Where breathing Nature lives in every line:
+ Chaste and subdued the modest lights decay,
+ Steal into shades, and mildly melt away.
+ And see where Anthony,[60] in tears approved, 115
+ Guards the pale relics of the chief he loved:
+ O'er the cold corse the warrior seems to bend,
+ Deep sunk in grief, and mourns his murder'd friend!
+ Still as they press, he calls on all around,
+ Lifts the torn robe, and points the bleeding wound. 120
+
+ But who[61] is he, whose brows exalted bear
+ A wrath impatient, and a fiercer air?
+ Awake to all that injured worth can feel,
+ On his own Rome he turns the avenging steel;
+ Yet shall not war's insatiate fury fall 125
+ (So heaven ordains it) on the destined wall.
+ See the fond mother, 'midst the plaintive train,
+ Hung on his knees, and prostrate on the plain!
+ Touch'd to the soul, in vain he strives to hide
+ The son's affection, in the Roman's pride: 130
+ O'er all the man conflicting passions rise;
+ Rage grasps the sword, while Pity melts the eyes.
+
+ Thus generous Critic, as thy Bard inspires,
+ The sister Arts shall nurse their drooping fires;
+ Each from his scenes her stores alternate bring, 135
+ Blend the fair tints, or wake the vocal string:
+ Those sibyl leaves, the sport of every wind,
+ (For poets ever were a careless kind,)
+ By thee disposed, no farther toil demand,
+ But, just to Nature, own thy forming hand. 140
+
+ So spread o'er Greece, the harmonious whole unknown,
+ E'en Homer's numbers charm'd by parts alone.
+ Their own Ulysses scarce had wander'd more,
+ By winds and waters cast on every shore:
+ When, raised by fate, some former Hanmer join'd 145
+ Each beauteous image of the boundless mind;
+ And bade, like thee, his Athens ever claim
+ A fond alliance with the Poet's name.
+
+ Oxford, Dec. 3,
+ 1743.
+
+
+VARIATIONS.
+
+ Ver.
+ 1. While, own'd by you, with smiles the Muse surveys
+ The expected triumph of her sweetest lays:
+ While, stretch'd at ease, she boasts your guardian aid,
+ Secure, and happy in her sylvan shade:
+ Excuse her fears, who scarce a verse bestows,
+ In just remembrance of the debt she owes;
+ With conscious, &c.
+
+ 9. Long slighted Fancy with a mother's care
+ Wept o'er his works, and felt the last despair:
+ Torn from her head, she saw the roses fall,
+ By all deserted, though admired by all:
+
+ near And "Oh!" she cried, "shall Science still resign
+ 11 Whate'er is Nature's, and whate'er is mine?
+ to Shall Taste and Art but show a cold regard,
+ 22. And scornful Pride reject the unletter'd bard?
+ Ye myrtled nymphs, who own my gentle reign,
+ Tune the sweet lyre, and grace my airy train,
+ If, where ye rove, your searching eyes have known
+ One perfect mind, which judgment calls its own;
+ There every breast its fondest hopes must bend,
+ And every Muse with tears await her friend."
+ 'Twas then fair Isis from her stream arose,
+ In kind compassion of her sister's woes.
+ 'Twas then she promised to the mourning maid
+ The immortal honours which thy hands have paid:
+ "My best loved son," she said, "shall yet restore
+ Thy ruin'd sweets, and Fancy weep no more."
+ Each rising art by slow gradation moves;
+ Toil builds, &c.
+
+ 25. Line after line our pitying eyes o'erflow,
+
+ 27. To Rome removed, with equal power to please,
+
+ 35. When Rome herself, her envied glories dead,
+ No more imperial, stoop'd her conquer'd head;
+ Luxuriant Florence chose a softer theme,
+ While all was peace, by Arno's silver stream.
+ With sweeter notes the Etrurian vales complain'd,
+ And arts reviving told a Cosmo reign'd.
+ Their wanton lyres the bards of Provence strung,
+ Sweet flow'd the lays, but love was all they sung.
+ The gay, &c.
+
+ 45. But Heaven, still rising in its works, decreed
+
+ 63. His every strain the Loves and Graces own;
+
+ 71. Till late Corneille from epick Lucan brought
+ The full expression, and the Roman thought:
+
+ 101. O, blest in all that genius gives to charm,
+ Whose morals mend us, and whose passions warm!
+ Oft let my youth attend thy various page,
+ Where rich invention rules the unbounded stage:
+ There every scene the poet's warmth may raise,
+ And melting music find the softest lays:
+ O, might the Muse with equal ease persuade
+ Expressive Picture to adopt thine aid!
+ Some powerful Raphael should again appear,
+ And arts consenting fix their empire here.
+
+ 111. Methinks e'en now I view some fair design,
+ Where breathing Nature lives in every line;
+ Chaste and subdued, the modest colours lie,
+ In fair proportion to the approving eye:
+ And see where Anthony lamenting stands,
+ In fixt distress, and spreads his pleading hands:
+ O'er the pale corse the warrior seems to bend,
+
+ 122. A rage impatient, and a fiercer air?
+ E'en now his thoughts with eager vengeance doom
+ The last sad ruin of ungrateful Rome.
+ Till, slow advancing o'er the tented plain,
+ In sable weeds, appear the kindred train:
+ The frantic mother leads their wild despair,
+ Beats her swoln breast, and rends her silver hair;
+ And see, he yields! the tears unbidden start,
+ And conscious nature claims the unwilling heart!
+ O'er all the man conflicting passions rise;
+
+ 136. Spread the fair tints, or wake the vocal string:
+
+ 146. Each beauteous image of the tuneful mind;
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [54] The Œdipus of Sophocles.
+
+ [55] Julius the Second, the immediate predecessor of Leo the Tenth.
+
+ [56] Their characters are thus distinguished by Mr. Dryden.
+
+ [57] About the time of Shakespeare, the poet Hardy was in great repute
+ in France. He wrote, according to Fontenelle, six hundred plays.
+ The French poets after him applied themselves in general to the
+ correct improvement of the stage, which was almost totally
+ disregarded by those of our own country, Jonson excepted.
+
+ [58] The favourite author of the elder Corneille.
+
+ [59] Turno tempus erit, magno cum optaverit emptum
+ Intactum Pallanta, etc.
+ VIRG.
+
+ [60] See the tragedy of Julius Cæsar.
+
+ [61] Coriolanus. See Mr. Spence's Dialogue on the Odyssey.
+
+
+
+
+DIRGE IN CYMBELINE,
+
+SUNG BY GUIDERUS AND ARVIRAGUS OVER FIDELE, SUPPOSED TO BE DEAD.
+
+
+ To fair Fidele's grassy tomb
+ Soft maids and village hinds shall bring
+ Each opening sweet of earliest bloom,
+ And rifle all the breathing spring.
+
+ No wailing ghost shall dare appear 5
+ To vex with shrieks this quiet grove;
+ But shepherd lads assemble here,
+ And melting virgins own their love.
+
+ No wither'd witch shall here be seen;
+ No goblins lead their nightly crew: 10
+ The female fays shall haunt the green,
+ And dress thy grave with pearly dew!
+
+ The redbreast oft, at evening hours,
+ Shall kindly lend his little aid,
+ With hoary moss, and gather'd flowers, 15
+ To deck the ground where thou art laid.
+
+ When howling winds, and beating rain,
+ In tempests shake the sylvan cell;
+ Or 'midst the chase, on every plain,
+ The tender thought on thee shall dwell; 20
+
+ Each lonely scene shall thee restore;
+ For thee the tear be duly shed;
+ Beloved till life can charm no more,
+ And mourn'd till Pity's self be dead.
+
+
+VARIATIONS.
+
+ Ver.
+ 1. To fair Pastora's grassy tomb
+
+ 7. But shepherd swains assemble here,
+
+ 11. But female fays shall haunt the green,
+
+ 12. And dress thy bed with pearly dew!
+
+ 17. When chiding winds, and beating rain,
+ In tempest shake the sylvan cell;
+ Or 'midst the flocks, on every plain,
+
+ 21. Each lovely scene shall thee restore;
+
+ 23. Beloved till life could charm no more,
+
+
+
+
+VERSES
+
+WRITTEN ON A PAPER WHICH CONTAINED A PIECE OF BRIDE-CAKE, GIVEN TO THE
+AUTHOR BY A LADY.
+
+
+ Ye curious hands, that, hid from vulgar eyes,
+ By search profane shall find this hallow'd cake,
+ With virtue's awe forbear the sacred prize,
+ Nor dare a theft, for love and pity's sake!
+
+ This precious relic, form'd by magic power, 5
+ Beneath her shepherd's haunted pillow laid,
+ Was meant by love to charm the silent hour,
+ The secret present of a matchless maid.
+
+ The Cyprian queen, at Hymen's fond request,
+ Each nice ingredient chose with happiest art; 10
+ Fears, sighs, and wishes of the enamour'd breast,
+ And pains that please, are mix'd in every part.
+
+ With rosy hand the spicy fruit she brought,
+ From Paphian hills, and fair Cythera's isle;
+ And temper'd sweet with these the melting thought, 15
+ The kiss ambrosial, and the yielding smile.
+
+ Ambiguous looks, that scorn and yet relent,
+ Denials mild, and firm unalter'd truth;
+ Reluctant pride, and amorous faint consent,
+ And meeting ardours, and exulting youth. 20
+
+ Sleep, wayward God! hath sworn, while these remain,
+ With flattering dreams to dry his nightly tear,
+ And cheerful Hope, so oft invoked in vain,
+ With fairy songs shall soothe his pensive ear.
+
+ If, bound by vows to Friendship's gentle side, 25
+ And fond of soul, thou hop'st an equal grace,
+ If youth or maid thy joys and griefs divide,
+ O, much entreated, leave this fatal place!
+
+ Sweet Peace, who long hath shunn'd my plaintive day,
+ Consents at length to bring me short delight, 30
+ Thy careless steps may scare her doves away,
+ And Grief with raven note usurp the night.
+
+
+
+
+TO MISS AURELIA C----R,
+
+ON HER WEEPING AT HER SISTER'S WEDDING.
+
+
+ Cease, fair Aurelia, cease to mourn,
+ Lament not Hannah's happy state;
+ You may be happy in your turn,
+ And seize the treasure you regret.
+
+ With Love united Hymen stands, 5
+ And softly whispers to your charms,
+ "Meet but your lover in my bands,
+ You'll find your sister in his arms."
+
+
+
+
+SONNET.
+
+
+ When Phœbe form'd a wanton smile,
+ My soul! it reach'd not here:
+ Strange, that thy peace, thou trembler, flies
+ Before a rising tear!
+ From 'midst the drops, my love is born, 5
+ That o'er those eyelids rove:
+ Thus issued from a teeming wave
+ The fabled queen of love.
+
+
+
+
+SONG.
+
+THE SENTIMENTS BORROWED FROM SHAKESPEARE.[62]
+
+
+ Young Damon of the vale is dead,
+ Ye lowly hamlets, moan;
+ A dewy turf lies o'er his head,
+ And at his feet a stone.
+
+ His shroud, which Death's cold damps destroy, 5
+ Of snow-white threads was made:
+ All mourn'd to see so sweet a boy
+ In earth for ever laid.
+
+ Pale pansies o'er his corpse were placed,
+ Which, pluck'd before their time, 10
+ Bestrew'd the boy, like him to waste
+ And wither in their prime.
+
+ But will he ne'er return, whose tongue
+ Could tune the rural lay?
+ Ah, no! his bell of peace is rung, 15
+ His lips are cold as clay.
+
+ They bore him out at twilight hour,
+ The youth who loved so well:
+ Ah, me! how many a true love shower
+ Of kind remembrance fell! 20
+
+ Each maid was woe--but Lucy chief,
+ Her grief o'er all was tried;
+ Within his grave she dropp'd in grief,
+ And o'er her loved one died.
+
+
+VARIATION.
+
+ Ver.
+ 2. Ye lowland hamlets, moan;
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [62] It is uncertain where this poem appeared. It was inserted in the
+ Edinburgh edition of the Poets, 1794. A manuscript copy in the
+ collection recently belonging to Mr. Upcott, and now in the
+ British Museum, is headed, "Written by Collins when at Winchester
+ School. From a Manuscript."
+
+
+
+
+ON OUR LATE TASTE IN MUSIC.[[63]]
+
+ ----Quid vocis modulamen inane juvabat
+ Verborum sensusque vacans numerique loquacis?
+ MILTON.
+
+
+ Britons! away with the degenerate pack!
+ Waft, western winds! the foreign spoilers back!
+ Enough has been in wild amusements spent,
+ Let British verse and harmony content!
+ No music once could charm you like your own, 5
+ Then tuneful Robinson,[64] and Tofts were known;
+ Then Purcell touched the strings, while numbers hung
+ Attentive to the sounds--and blest the song!
+ E'en gentle Weldon taught us manly notes,
+ Beyond the enervate thrills of Roman throats! 10
+ Notes, foreign luxury could ne'er inspire,
+ That animate the soul, and swell the lyre!
+ That mend, and not emasculate our hearts,
+ And teach the love of freedom and of arts.
+ Nor yet, while guardian Phœbus gilds our isle, 15
+ Does heaven averse await the muses' toil;
+ Cherish but once our worth of native race,
+ The sister-arts shall soon display their face!
+ Even half discouraged through the gloom they strive,
+ Smile at neglect, and o'er oblivion live. 20
+ See Handel, careless of a foreign fame,
+ Fix on our shore, and boast a Briton's name:
+ While, placed marmoric in the vocal grove,[65]
+ He guides the measures listening throngs approve.
+ Mark silence at the voice of Arne confess'd, 25
+ Soft as the sweet enchantress rules the breast;
+ As when transported Venice lent an ear,
+ Camilla's charms to view, and accents hear![66]
+ So while she varies the impassion'd song,
+ Alternate motions on the bosom throng! 30
+ As heavenly Milton[67] guides her magic voice,
+ And virtue thus convey'd allures the choice.
+ Discard soft nonsense in a slavish tongue,
+ The strain insipid, and the thought unknown;
+ From truth and nature form the unerring test; 35
+ Be what is manly, chaste, and good the best!
+ 'Tis not to ape the songsters of the groves,
+ Through all the quiverings of their wanton loves;
+ 'Tis not the enfeebled thrill, or warbled shake,
+ The heart can strengthen, or the soul awake! 40
+ But where the force of energy is found
+ When the sense rises on the wings of sound;
+ When reason, with the charms of music twined,
+ Through the enraptured ear informs the mind;
+ Bids generous love or soft compassion glow, 45
+ And forms a tuneful Paradise below!
+ Oh Britons! if the honour still you boast,
+ No longer purchase follies at such cost!
+ No longer let unmeaning sounds invite
+ To visionary scenes of false delight: 50
+ When, shame to sense! we see the hero's rage
+ Lisp'd on the tongue, and danced along the stage!
+ Or hear in eunuch sounds a hero squeak,
+ While kingdoms rise or fall upon a shake!
+ Let them at home to slavery's painted train, 55
+ With siren art, repeat the pleasing strain:
+ While we, like wise Ulysses, close our ear
+ To songs which liberty forbids to hear!
+ Keep, guardian gales, the infectious guests away,
+ To charm where priests direct, and slaves obey. 60
+ Madrid, or wanton Rome, be their delight;
+ There they may warble as their poets write.
+ The temper of our isle, though cold, is clear;
+ And such our genius, noble though severe.
+ Our Shakespeare scorn'd the trifling rules of art, 65
+ But knew to conquer and surprise the heart!
+ In magic chains the captive thought to bind,
+ And fathom all the depths of human kind!
+ Too long, our shame, the prostituted herd
+ Our sense have bubbled, and our wealth have shared. 70
+ Too long the favourites of our vulgar great
+ Have bask'd in luxury, and lived in state!
+ In Tuscan wilds now let them villas rear[68]
+ Ennobled by the charity we spare.
+ There let them warble in the tainted breeze, 75
+ Or sing like widow'd orphans to the trees:
+ There let them chant their incoherent dreams,
+ Where howls Charybdis, and where Scylla screams!
+ Or where Avernus, from his darksome round,
+ May echo to the winds the blasted sound! 80
+ As fair Alcyone,[69] with anguish press'd,
+ Broods o'er the British main with tuneful breast,
+ Beneath the white-brow'd cliff protected sings,
+ Or skims the azure plain with painted wings!
+ Grateful, like her, to nature, and as just, 85
+ In our domestic blessings let us trust;
+ Keep for our sons fair learning's honour'd prize,
+ Till the world own the worth they now despise!
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [63] See Memoir, p. xxxviii.
+
+ [64] Now Countess-dowager of Peterborough.
+
+ [65] Vauxhall.
+
+ [66] Vide the Spectator's Letters from Camilla, vol. vi.
+
+ [67] Milton's Comus lately revived.
+
+ [68] Senesino has built a palace near Sienna on an estate which carries
+ the title of a Marquisate, but purchased with English gold.
+
+ [69] The king-fisher.
+
+
+
+
+OBSERVATIONS ON THE ORIENTAL ECLOGUES AND ODES.
+
+BY DR. LANGHORNE.
+
+
+OBSERVATIONS ON THE ORIENTAL ECLOGUES.
+
+
+The genius of the pastoral, as well as of every other respectable
+species of poetry, had its origin in the east, and from thence was
+transplanted by the muses of Greece; but whether from the continent of
+the Lesser Asia, or from Egypt, which, about the era of the Grecian
+pastoral, was the hospitable nurse of letters, it is not easy to
+determine. From the subjects, and the manner of Theocritus, one would
+incline to the latter opinion, while the history of Bion is in favour of
+the former.
+
+However, though it should still remain a doubt through what channel the
+pastoral traveled westward, there is not the least shadow of uncertainty
+concerning its oriental origin.
+
+In those ages which, guided by sacred chronology, from a comparative
+view of time, we call the early ages, it appears, from the most
+authentic historians, that the chiefs of the people employed themselves
+in rural exercises, and that astronomers and legislators were at the
+same time shepherds. Thus Strabo informs us, that the history of the
+creation was communicated to the Egyptians by a Chaldean shepherd.
+
+From these circumstances it is evident, not only that such shepherds
+were capable of all the dignity and elegance peculiar to poetry, but
+that whatever poetry they attempted would be of the pastoral kind; would
+take its subjects from those scenes of rural simplicity in which they
+were conversant, and, as it was the offspring of harmony and nature,
+would employ the powers it derived from the former, to celebrate the
+beauty and benevolence of the latter.
+
+Accordingly we find that the most ancient poems treat of agriculture,
+astronomy, and other objects within the rural and natural systems.
+
+What constitutes the difference between the georgic and the pastoral,
+is love and the colloquial or dramatic form of composition peculiar to
+the latter; this form of composition is sometimes dispensed with, and
+love and rural imagery alone are thought sufficient to distinguish
+the pastoral. The tender passion, however, seems to be essential to
+this species of poetry, and is hardly ever excluded from those
+pieces that were intended to come under this denomination: even in
+those eclogues of the Amœbean kind, whose only purport is a trial of
+skill between contending shepherds, love has its usual share, and
+the praises of their respective mistresses are the general subjects of
+the competitors.
+
+It is to be lamented, that scarce any oriental compositions of this kind
+have survived the ravages of ignorance, tyranny, and time; we cannot
+doubt that many such have been extant, possibly as far down as that
+fatal period, never to be mentioned in the world of letters without
+horror, when the glorious monuments of human ingenuity perished in the
+ashes of the Alexandrian library.
+
+Those ingenious Greeks, whom we call the parents of pastoral poetry,
+were, probably, no more than imitators, of imitators that derived their
+harmony from higher and remoter sources, and kindled their poetical
+fires at those then unextinguished lamps which burned within the tombs
+of oriental genius.
+
+It is evident that Homer has availed himself of those magnificent images
+and descriptions so frequently to be met with in the books of the Old
+Testament; and why may not Theocritus, Moschus, and Bion have found
+their archetypes in other eastern writers, whose names have perished
+with their works? yet, though it may not be illiberal to admit such a
+supposition, it would certainly be invidious to conclude, what the
+malignity of cavillers alone could suggest with regard to Homer, that
+they destroyed the sources from which they borrowed, and, as it is
+fabled of the young of the pelican, drained their supporters to death.
+
+As the Septuagint translation of the Old Testament was performed at the
+request, and under the patronage, of Ptolemy Philadelphus, it were not
+to be wondered if Theocritus, who was entertained at that prince's
+court, had borrowed some part of his pastoral imagery from the poetical
+passages of those books. I think it can hardly be doubted that the
+Sicilian poet had in his eye certain expressions of the prophet Isaiah,
+when he wrote the following lines:
+
+ Νυν ια μεν φορεοιτε βατοι, φορεοιτε δ’ ακανθαι.
+ Ἁ δε καλα Ναρκισσος επ’ αρκευθοισι κομασαι;
+ Παντα δ’ εναλλα γενοιτο, και ἁ πιτυς οχνας ενεικαι
+ –––και τως κυνας ὡλαφος ἑλκοι.
+
+ ~Nyn ia men phoreoite batoi, phoreoite d' akanthai.
+ Ha de kala Narkissos ep' arkeuthoisi komasai;
+ Panta d' enalla genoito, kai ha pitus ochnas eneikai
+ ----kai tôs kynas hôlaphos helkoi.~
+
+ Let vexing brambles the blue violet bear,
+ On the rude thorn Narcissus dress his hair,
+ All, all reversed--The pine with pears be crown'd,
+ And the bold deer shall drag the trembling hound.
+
+The cause, indeed, of these phenomena is very different in the Greek
+from what it is in the Hebrew poet; the former employing them on the
+death, the latter on the birth, of an important person: but the marks of
+imitation are nevertheless obvious.
+
+It might, however, be expected, that if Theocritus had borrowed at all
+from the sacred writers, the celebrated pastoral epithalamium of
+Solomon, so much within his own walk of poetry, would not certainly
+have escaped his notice. His epithalamium on the marriage of Helena,
+moreover, gave him an open field for imitation; therefore, if he has any
+obligations to the royal bard, we may expect to find them there. The
+very opening of the poem is in the spirit of the Hebrew song:
+
+ Ουτω δη πρωιζα κατεδραθες, ω φιλε γαμβρε;
+
+ ~Houtô dê prôiza katedrathes, ô phile gambre;~
+
+The colour of imitation is still stronger in the following passage:
+
+ Αως αντελλοισα καλον διεφαινε προσωπον,
+ Ποτνια νυξ ἁτε, λευκον εαρ χειμωνος ανεντος;
+ Hωδε και ἁ χρυσεα Ἑλενα διεφαινετ’ εν αμιν,
+ Πιειρα μεγαλα ἁτ’ ανεδραμε κοσμος αρουρα.
+ Hη καπω κυπαρισσος, η ἁρματι Θεσσαλος ἱππος.
+
+ ~Aôs antelloisa kalon diephaine prosôpon,
+ Potnia nyx hate, leukon ear cheimônos anentos?
+ Hôde kai ha chrysea Helena diephainet' en amin,
+ Pieira megala hat' anedrame kosmos aroura.
+ Hê kapô kyparissos, ê harmati Thessalos hippos.~
+
+This description of Helen is infinitely above the style and figure of
+the Sicilian pastoral: "She is like the rising of the golden morning,
+when the night departeth, and when the winter is over and gone. She
+resembleth the cypress in the garden, the horse in the chariots of
+Thessaly." These figures plainly declare their origin; and others,
+equally imitative, might be pointed out in the same idyllium.
+
+This beautiful and luxuriant marriage pastoral of Solomon is the only
+perfect form of the oriental eclogue that has survived the ruins of
+time; a happiness for which it is, probably, more indebted to its
+sacred character than to its intrinsic merit. Not that it is by any
+means destitute of poetical excellence: like all the eastern poetry, it
+is bold, wild, and unconnected in its figures, allusions, and parts, and
+has all that graceful and magnificent daring which characterizes its
+metaphorical and comparative imagery.
+
+In consequence of these peculiarities, so ill adapted to the frigid
+genius of the north, Mr. Collins could make but little use of it as a
+precedent for his Oriental Eclogues; and even in his third eclogue,
+where the subject is of a similar nature, he has chosen rather to follow
+the mode of the Doric and the Latian pastoral.
+
+The scenery and subjects then of the foregoing eclogues alone are
+oriental; the style and colouring are purely European; and, for this
+reason, the author's preface, in which he intimates that he had the
+originals from a merchant who traded to the east, is omitted, as being
+now altogether superfluous.[70]
+
+With regard to the merit of these eclogues, it may justly be asserted,
+that in simplicity of description and expression, in delicacy and
+softness of numbers, and in natural and unaffected tenderness, they are
+not to be equaled by any thing of the pastoral kind in the English
+language.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [70] In the present edition the preface is restored.
+
+
+
+
+ECLOGUE I.
+
+
+This eclogue, which is entitled Selim, or the Shepherd's Moral, as
+there is nothing dramatic in the subject, may be thought the least
+entertaining of the four: but it is by no means the least valuable.
+The moral precepts which the intelligent shepherd delivers to his
+fellow-swains, and the virgins their companions, are such as would
+infallibly promote the happiness of the pastoral life.
+
+In impersonating the private virtues, the poet has observed great
+propriety, and has formed their genealogy with the most perfect
+judgment, when he represents them as the daughters of truth and wisdom.
+
+The characteristics of modesty and chastity are extremely happy and
+_peinturesque_:
+
+ "Come thou, whose thoughts as limpid springs are clear,
+ To lead the train, sweet Modesty, appear;
+ With thee be Chastity, of all afraid,
+ Distrusting all, a wise, suspicious maid;
+ Cold is her breast, like flowers that drink the dew;
+ A silken veil conceals her from the view."
+
+The two similes borrowed from rural objects are not only much in
+character, but perfectly natural and expressive. There is,
+notwithstanding, this defect in the former, that it wants a peculiar
+propriety; for purity of thought may as well be applied to chastity as
+to modesty; and from this instance, as well as from a thousand more, we
+may see the necessity of distinguishing, in characteristic poetry, every
+object by marks and attributes peculiarly its own.
+
+It cannot be objected to this eclogue, that it wants both those
+essential criteria of the pastoral, love and the drama; for though it
+partakes not of the latter, the former still retains an interest in it,
+and that too very material, as it professedly consults the virtue and
+happiness of the lover, while it informs what are the qualities
+
+ ----that must lead to love.
+
+
+
+
+ECLOGUE II.
+
+
+All the advantages that any species of poetry can derive from the
+novelty of the subject and scenery, this eclogue possesses. The
+route of a camel-driver is a scene that scarce could exist in the
+imagination of a European, and of its attendant distresses he could
+have no idea.--These are very happily and minutely painted by our
+descriptive poet. What sublime simplicity of expression! what
+nervous plainness in the opening of the poem!
+
+ "In silent horror o'er the boundless waste
+ The driver Hassan with his camels past."
+
+The magic pencil of the poet brings the whole scene before us at once,
+as it were by enchantment; and in this single couplet we feel all the
+effect that arises from the terrible wildness of a region unenlivened by
+the habitations of men. The verses that describe so minutely the
+camel-driver's little provisions have a touching influence on the
+imagination, and prepare the reader to enter more feelingly into his
+future apprehensions of distress:
+
+ "Bethink thee, Hassan, where shall thirst assuage,
+ When fails this cruise, his unrelenting rage!"
+
+It is difficult to say whether his apostrophe to the "mute companions of
+his toils" is more to be admired for the elegance and beauty of the
+poetical imagery, or for the tenderness and humanity of the sentiment.
+He who can read it without being affected, will do his heart no
+injustice if he concludes it to be destitute of sensibility:
+
+ "Ye mute companions of my toils, that bear
+ In all my griefs a more than equal share!
+ Here, where no springs in murmurs break away,
+ Or moss-crown'd fountains mitigate the day,
+ In vain ye hope the green delights to know,
+ Which plains more blest, or verdant vales, bestow:
+ Here rocks alone and tasteless sands are found,
+ And faint and sickly winds for ever howl around."
+
+Yet in these beautiful lines there is a slight error, which writers of
+the greatest genius very frequently fall into.--It will be needless to
+observe to the accurate reader, that in the fifth and sixth verses there
+is a verbal pleonasm where the poet speaks of the _green_ delights of
+_verdant_ vales. There is an oversight of the same kind in the Manners,
+an Ode, where the poet says,
+
+ "----Seine's blue nymphs deplore
+ In watchet weeds----."
+
+This fault is indeed a common one, but to a reader of taste it is
+nevertheless disgustful; and it is mentioned here, as the error of a man
+of genius and judgment, that men of genius and judgment may guard
+against it.
+
+Mr. Collins speaks like a true poet, as well in sentiment as expression,
+when, with regard to the thirst of wealth, he says,
+
+ "Why heed we not, while mad we haste along,
+ The gentle voice of Peace, or Pleasure's song?
+ Or wherefore think the flowery mountain's side,
+ The fountain's murmurs, and the valley's pride,
+ Why think we these less pleasing to behold,
+ Than dreary deserts, if they lead to gold?"
+
+But however just these sentiments may appear to those who have not
+revolted from nature and simplicity, had the author proclaimed them in
+Lombard Street, or Cheapside, he would not have been complimented with
+the understanding of the bellman.--A striking proof, that our own
+particular ideas of happiness regulate our opinions concerning the sense
+and wisdom of others!
+
+It is impossible to take leave of this most beautiful eclogue, without
+paying the tribute of admiration so justly due to the following nervous
+lines:
+
+ "What if the lion in his rage I meet!----
+ Oft in the dust I view his printed feet:
+ And, fearful! oft, when day's declining light
+ Yields her pale empire to the mourner night,
+ By hunger roused, he scours the groaning plain,
+ Gaunt wolves and sullen tigers in his train:
+ Before them death with shrieks directs their way,
+ Fills the wild yell, and leads them to their prey."
+
+This, amongst many other passages to be met with in the writings of
+Collins, shows that his genius was perfectly capable of the grand and
+magnificent in description, notwithstanding what a learned writer has
+advanced to the contrary. Nothing, certainly, could be more greatly
+conceived, or more adequately expressed, than the image in the last
+couplet.
+
+The deception, sometimes used in rhetoric and poetry, which presents us
+with an object or sentiment contrary to what we expected, is here
+introduced to the greatest advantage:
+
+ "Farewell the youth, whom sighs could not detain,
+ Whom Zara's breaking heart implored in vain!
+ Yet, as thou go'st, may every blast arise----
+ Weak and unfelt as these rejected sighs!"
+
+But this, perhaps, is rather an artificial prettiness, than a real or
+natural beauty.
+
+
+
+
+ECLOGUE III.
+
+
+That innocence, and native simplicity of manners, which, in the first
+eclogue, was allowed to constitute the happiness of love, is here
+beautifully described in its effects. The sultan of Persia marries a
+Georgian shepherdess, and finds in her embraces that genuine felicity
+which unperverted nature alone can bestow. The most natural and
+beautiful parts of this eclogue are those where the fair sultana refers
+with so much pleasure to her pastoral amusements, and those scenes of
+happy innocence in which she had passed her early years; particularly
+when, upon her first departure,
+
+ "Oft as she went, she backward turned her view,
+ And bade that crook and bleating flock adieu."
+
+This picture of amiable simplicity reminds one of that passage where
+Proserpine, when carried off by Pluto, regrets the loss of the flowers
+she has been gathering:
+
+ "Collecti flores tunicis cecidere remissis:
+ Tantaque simplicitas puerilibus adfuit annis,
+ Hæc quoque virgineum movit jactura dolorem."
+
+
+
+
+ECLOGUE IV.
+
+
+The beautiful but unfortunate country where the scene of this pathetic
+eclogue is laid, had been recently torn in pieces by the depredations of
+its savage neighbours, when Mr. Collins so affectingly described its
+misfortunes. This ingenious man had not only a pencil to portray, but a
+heart to feel for the miseries of mankind; and it is with the utmost
+tenderness and humanity he enters into the narrative of Circassia's
+ruin, while he realizes the scene, and brings the present drama before
+us. Of every circumstance that could possibly contribute to the tender
+effect this pastoral was designed to produce, the poet has availed
+himself with the utmost art and address. Thus he prepares the heart to
+pity the distresses of Circassia, by representing it as the scene of the
+happiest love:
+
+ "In fair Circassia, where, to love inclined,
+ Each swain was blest, for every maid was kind."
+
+To give the circumstance of the dialogue a more affecting solemnity, he
+makes the time midnight, and describes the two shepherds in the very
+act of flight from the destruction that swept over their country:
+
+ "Sad o'er the dews, two brother shepherds fled,
+ Where wildering fear and desperate sorrow led."
+
+There is a beauty and propriety in the epithet wildering, which strikes
+us more forcibly, the more we consider it.
+
+The opening of the dialogue is equally happy, natural, and unaffected;
+when one of the shepherds, weary and overcome with the fatigue of
+flight, calls upon his companion to review the length of way they had
+passed. This is certainly painting from nature, and the thoughts,
+however obvious, or destitute of refinement, are perfectly in character.
+But as the closest pursuit of nature is the surest way to excellence in
+general, and to sublimity in particular, in poetical description, so we
+find that this simple suggestion of the shepherd is not unattended with
+magnificence. There is a grandeur and variety in the landscape he
+describes:
+
+ "And first review that long extended plain,
+ And yon wide groves, already past with pain!
+ Yon ragged cliff, whose dangerous path we tried!
+ And, last, this lofty mountain's weary side!"
+
+There is, in imitative harmony, an act of expressing a slow and
+difficult movement by adding to the usual number of pauses in a verse.
+This is observable in the line that describes the ascent of the
+mountain:
+
+ And last || this lofty mountain's || weary side ||.
+
+Here we find the number of pauses, or musical bars, which, in an heroic
+verse, is commonly two, increased to three.
+
+The liquid melody, and the numerous sweetness of expression, in the
+following descriptive lines, is almost inimitably beautiful:
+
+ "Sweet to the sight is Zabran's flowery plain,
+ And once by nymphs and shepherds loved in vain!
+ No more the virgins shall delight to rove
+ By Sargis' banks, or Irwan's shady grove;
+ On Tarkie's mountain catch the cooling gale,
+ Or breathe the sweets of Aly's flowery vale."
+
+Nevertheless, in this delightful landscape there is an obvious fault;
+there is no distinction between the plain of Zabran and the vale of Aly;
+they are both flowery, and consequently undiversified. This could not
+proceed from the poet's want of judgment, but from inattention: it had
+not occurred to him that he had employed the epithet flowery twice
+within so short a compass; an oversight which those who are accustomed
+to poetical, or, indeed, to any other species of composition, know to be
+very possible.
+
+Nothing can be more beautifully conceived, or more pathetically
+expressed, than the shepherd's apprehensions for his fair countrywomen,
+exposed to the ravages of the invaders:
+
+ "In vain Circassia boasts her spicy groves,
+ For ever famed for pure and happy loves:
+ In vain she boasts her fairest of the fair,
+ Their eyes' blue languish, and their golden hair!
+ Those eyes in tears their fruitless grief shall send;
+ Those hairs the Tartar's cruel hand shall rend."
+
+There is certainly some very powerful charm in the liquid melody of
+sounds. The editor of these poems could never read or hear the following
+verse repeated, without a degree of pleasure otherwise entirely
+unaccountable:
+
+ "Their eyes' blue languish, and their golden hair."
+
+Such are the Oriental Eclogues, which we leave with the same kind of
+anxious pleasure we feel upon a temporary parting with a beloved
+friend.
+
+
+
+
+OBSERVATIONS
+
+ON THE ODES, DESCRIPTIVE AND ALLEGORICAL.
+
+
+The genius of Collins was capable of every degree of excellence in lyric
+poetry, and perfectly qualified for that high province of the muse.
+Possessed of a native ear for all the varieties of harmony and
+modulation, susceptible of the finest feelings of tenderness and
+humanity, but, above all, carried away by that high enthusiasm which
+gives to imagination its strongest colouring, he was at once capable of
+soothing the ear with the melody of his numbers, of influencing the
+passions by the force of his pathos, and of gratifying the fancy by the
+luxury of description.
+
+In consequence of these powers, but, more particularly, in consideration
+of the last, he chose such subjects for his lyric essays as were most
+favourable for the indulgence of description and allegory; where he
+could exercise his powers in moral and personal painting; where he could
+exert his invention in conferring new attributes on images or objects
+already known, and described by a determinate number of characteristics;
+where he might give an uncommon éclat to his figures, by placing them in
+happier attitudes, or in more advantageous lights, and introduce new
+forms from the moral and intellectual world into the society of
+impersonated beings.
+
+Such, no doubt, were the privileges which the poet expected, and such
+were the advantages he derived from the descriptive and allegorical
+nature of his themes.
+
+It seems to have been the whole industry of our author, (and it is, at
+the same time, almost all the claim to moral excellence his writings can
+boast,) to promote the influence of the social virtues, by painting them
+in the fairest and happiest lights.
+
+ "Melior fieri tuendo"
+
+would be no improper motto to his poems in general; but of his lyric
+poems it seems to be the whole moral tendency and effect. If, therefore,
+it should appear to some readers, that he has been more industrious to
+cultivate description than sentiment, it may be observed, that his
+descriptions themselves are sentimental, and answer the whole end of
+that species of writing, by embellishing every feature of virtue, and by
+conveying, through the effects of the pencil, the finest moral lessons
+to the mind.
+
+Horace speaks of the fidelity of the ear in preference to the
+uncertainty of the eye; but if the mind receives conviction, it is
+certainly of very little importance through what medium, or by which of
+the senses it is conveyed. The impressions left on the imagination may
+possibly be thought less durable than the deposits of the memory, but it
+may very well admit of a question, whether a conclusion of reason, or an
+impression of imagination, will soonest make it sway to the heart. A
+moral precept, conveyed in words, is only an account of truth in its
+effects; a moral picture is truth exemplified; and which is most likely
+to gain upon the affections, it may not be difficult to determine.
+
+This, however, must be allowed, that those works approach the nearest to
+perfection which unite these powers and advantages; which at once
+influence the imagination, and engage the memory; the former by the
+force of animated and striking description, the latter by a brief, but
+harmonious conveyance of precept: thus, while the heart is influenced
+through the operation of the passions or the fancy, the effect, which
+might otherwise have been transient, is secured by the coöperating power
+of the memory, which treasures up in a short aphorism the moral of the
+scene.
+
+This is a good reason, and this, perhaps, is the only reason that can be
+given, why our dramatic performances should generally end with a chain
+of couplets. In these the moral of the whole piece is usually conveyed;
+and that assistance which the memory borrows from rhyme, as it was
+probably the original cause of it, gives it usefulness and propriety
+even there.
+
+After these apologies for the descriptive turn of the following odes,
+something remains to be said on the origin and use of allegory in
+poetical composition.
+
+By this we are not to understand the trope in the schools, which is
+defined aliud verbis, aliud sensu ostendere; and of which Quintilian
+says, usus est, ut tristia dicamus melioribus verbis, aut bonæ rei
+gratia quædam contrariis significemus, &c. It is not the verbal, but the
+sentimental allegory, not allegorical expression (which, indeed, might
+come under the term of metaphor), but allegorical imagery, that is here
+in question.
+
+When we endeavour to trace this species of figurative sentiment to its
+origin, we find it coeval with literature itself. It is generally
+agreed, that the most ancient productions are poetical; and it is
+certain that the most ancient poems abound with allegorical imagery.
+
+If, then, it be allowed that the first literary productions were
+poetical; we shall have little or no difficulty in discovering the
+origin of allegory.
+
+At the birth of letters, in the transition from hieroglyphical to
+literal expression, it is not to be wondered if the custom of
+expressing ideas by personal images, which had so long prevailed, should
+still retain its influence on the mind, though the use of letters had
+rendered the practical application of it superfluous. Those who had been
+accustomed to express strength by the image of an elephant, swiftness by
+that of a panther, and courage by that of a lion, would make no scruple
+of substituting, in letters, the symbols for the ideas they had been
+used to represent.
+
+Here we plainly see the origin of allegorical expression, that it arose
+from the ashes of hieroglyphics; and if to the same cause we should
+refer that figurative boldness of style and imagery which distinguish
+the oriental writings, we shall, perhaps, conclude more justly, than if
+we should impute it to the superior grandeur of eastern genius.
+
+From the same source with the verbal, we are to derive the sentimental
+allegory, which is nothing more than a continuation of the metaphorical
+or symbolical expression of the several agents in an action, or the
+different objects in a scene.
+
+The latter most peculiarly comes under the denomination of allegorical
+imagery; and in this species of allegory, we include the impersonation
+of passions, affections, virtues, and vices, &c. on account of which,
+principally, the following odes were properly termed, by their author,
+allegorical.
+
+With respect to the utility of this figurative writing, the same
+arguments that have been advanced in favour of descriptive poetry will
+be of weight likewise here. It is, indeed, from impersonation, or, as it
+is commonly termed, personification, that poetical description borrows
+its chief powers and graces. Without the aid of this, moral and
+intellectual painting would be flat and unanimated, and even the scenery
+of material objects would be dull, without the introduction of
+fictitious life.
+
+These observations will be most effectually illustrated by the sublime
+and beautiful odes that occasioned them; in those it will appear how
+happily this allegorical painting may be executed by the genuine powers
+of poetical genius, and they will not fail to prove its force and
+utility by passing through the imagination to the heart.
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO PITY.
+
+
+ "By Pella's bard, a magic name,
+ By all the griefs his thoughts could frame,
+ Receive my humble rite:
+ Long, Pity, let the nations view
+ Thy sky-worn robes of tenderest blue,
+ And eyes of dewy light!"
+
+The propriety of invoking Pity, through the mediation of Euripides, is
+obvious.--That admirable poet had the keys of all the tender passions,
+and therefore could not but stand in the highest esteem with a writer of
+Mr. Collins's sensibility.--He did, indeed, admire him as much as Milton
+professedly did, and probably for the same reasons; but we do not find
+that he has copied him so closely as the last mentioned poet has
+sometimes done, and particularly in the opening of Samson Agonistes,
+which is an evident imitation of the following passage in the
+Phœnissæ:
+
+ Hηγου παροιθε, θυγατερ, ὡς τυφλω ποδι
+ Οφθαλμος ει συ, ναυτιλοισιν αστρον ὡς;
+ Δευρ’ εις το λευρον πεδον ιχνος τιθεις’ εμον,
+ Προβαινε––––
+ Act. III. Sc. I.
+
+ ~Hêgou paroithe, thygater, hôs typhlô podi
+ Ophthalmos ei su, nautiloisin astron hôs?
+ Deur' eis to leuron pedon ichnos titheis' emon,
+ Probaine------~
+ Act. III. Sc. I.
+
+The "eyes of dewy light" is one of the happiest strokes of imagination,
+and may be ranked among those expressions which
+
+ "--give us back the image of the mind."
+
+ "Wild Arun too has heard thy strains,
+ And Echo, 'midst my native plains,
+ Been soothed by Pity's lute."
+
+ "There first the wren thy myrtles shed
+ On gentlest Otway's infant head."
+
+Sussex, in which county the Arun is a small river, had the honour of
+giving birth to Otway as well as to Collins: both these pœts,
+unhappily, became the objects of that pity by which their writings are
+distinguished. There was a similitude in their genius and in their
+sufferings. There was a resemblance in the misfortunes and in the
+dissipation of their lives; and the circumstances of their death cannot
+be remembered without pain.
+
+The thought of painting in the temple of Pity the history of human
+misfortunes, and of drawing the scenes from the tragic muse, is very
+happy, and in every respect worthy the imagination of Collins.
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO FEAR.
+
+
+Mr. Collins, who had often determined to apply himself to dramatic
+pœtry, seems here, with the same view, to have addressed one of the
+principal powers of the drama, and to implore that mighty influence she
+had given to the genius of Shakespeare:
+
+ "Hither again thy fury deal,
+ Teach me but once like him to feel:
+ His cypress wreath my meed decree,
+ And I, O Fear, will dwell with thee!"
+
+In the construction of this nervous ode, the author has shown equal
+power of judgment and imagination. Nothing can be more striking than the
+violent and abrupt abbreviation of the measure in the fifth and sixth
+verses, when he feels the strong influence of the power he invokes:
+
+ "Ah Fear! ah frantic Fear!
+ I see, I see thee near."
+
+The editor of these poems has met with nothing in the same species of
+poetry, either in his own, or in any other language, equal, in all
+respects, to the following description of Danger:
+
+
+ "Danger whose limbs of giant mould
+ What mortal eye can fix'd behold?
+ Who stalks his round, an hideous form,
+ Howling amidst the midnight storm,
+ Or throws him on the ridgy steep
+ Of some loose hanging rock to sleep."
+
+It is impossible to contemplate the image conveyed in the two last
+verses, without those emotions of terror it was intended to excite. It
+has, moreover, the entire advantage of novelty to recommend it; for
+there is too much originality in all the circumstances, to suppose that
+the author had in his eye that description of the penal situation of
+Catiline in the ninth Æneid:
+
+ "------Te, Catilina, minaci
+ Pendentem scopulo."
+
+The archetype of the English poet's idea was in Nature, and, probably,
+to her alone he was indebted for the thought. From her, likewise, he
+derived that magnificence of conception, that horrible grandeur of
+imagery, displayed in the following lines:
+
+ "And those, the fiends, who, near allied,
+ O'er Nature's wounds and wrecks preside;
+ While Vengeance in the lurid air
+ Lifts her red arm, exposed and bare:
+ On whom that ravening brood of fate,
+ Who lap the blood of sorrow, wait."
+
+That nutritive enthusiasm, which cherishes the seeds of poetry, and
+which is, indeed, the only soil wherein they will grow to perfection,
+lays open the mind to all the influences of fiction. A passion for
+whatever is greatly wild or magnificent in the works of nature seduces
+the imagination to attend to all that is extravagant, however unnatural.
+Milton was notoriously fond of high romance and gothic diableries; and
+Collins, who in genius and enthusiasm bore no very distant resemblance
+to Milton, was wholly carried away by the same attachments.
+
+ "Be mine to read the visions old,
+ Which thy awakening bards have told:
+ And, lest thou meet my blasted view,
+ Hold each strange tale devoutly true."
+
+ "On that thrice hallow'd eve," &c.
+
+There is an old traditionary superstition, that on St. Mark's eve, the
+forms of all such persons as shall die within the ensuing year make
+their solemn entry into the churches of their respective parishes, as
+St. Patrick swam over the Channel, without their heads.
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO SIMPLICITY.
+
+
+The measure of the ancient ballad seems to have been made choice of for
+this ode, on account of the subject; and it has, indeed, an air of
+simplicity, not altogether unaffecting:
+
+ "By all the honey'd store
+ On Hybla's thymy shore,
+ By all her blooms, and mingled murmurs dear,
+ By her whose lovelorn woe,
+ In evening musings slow,
+ Sooth'd sweetly sad Electra's poet's ear."
+
+This allegorical imagery of the honeyed store, the blooms, and mingled
+murmurs of Hybla, alluding to the sweetness and beauty of the Attic
+poetry, has the finest and the happiest effect: yet, possibly, it will
+bear a question, whether the ancient Greek tragedians had a general
+claim to simplicity in any thing more than the plans of their drama.
+Their language, at least, was infinitely metaphorical; yet it must be
+owned that they justly copied nature and the passions, and so far,
+certainly, they were entitled to the palm of true simplicity; the
+following most beautiful speech of Polynices will be a monument of
+this, so long as poetry shall last:
+
+ ––––––πολυδακρυς δ’ αφικομην
+ Χρονιος ιδων μελαθρα, και βωμους θεων,
+ Γυμνασια θ’ οισιν ενετραφην, Διρκης, θ’ ὑδωρ,
+ Hων ου δικαιως απελαθεις, ξενην πολιν
+ Ναιω, δι’ οσσων ναμ εχων δακρυρῥοουν.
+ Αλλ’ εκ γαρ αλγους αλγος αυ, σε δερκομαι
+ Καρα ξυρηκες, και πεπλους μελαγχιμους
+ Εχουσαν.
+ Eurip. Phœniss. ver. 369.
+
+ ~--------polydakrys d' aphikomên
+ Chronios idôn melathra, kai bômous theôn,
+ Gymnasia th' oisin enetraphên, Dirkês, th' hydôr,
+ Hôn ou dikaiôs apelatheis, xenên polin
+ Naiô, di' ossôn nam echôn dakryrrhooun.
+ All' ek gar algous algos au, se derkomai
+ Kara xyrêkes, kai peplous melanchimous
+ Echousan.~
+ Eurip. Phœniss. ver. 369.
+
+ 22 "But staid to sing alone
+ 33 To one distinguish'd throne."
+
+The poet cuts off the prevalence of simplicity among the Romans with the
+reign of Augustus; and, indeed, it did not continue much longer, most of
+the compositions, after that date, giving into false and artificial
+ornament.
+
+ "No more, in hall or bower,
+ The passions own thy power,
+ Love, only love, her forceless numbers mean."
+
+In these lines the writings of the Provençal poets are principally
+alluded to, in which simplicity is generally sacrificed to the
+rhapsodies of romantic love.
+
+
+
+
+ODE ON THE POETICAL CHARACTER.
+
+ Procul! O! procul este profani!
+
+
+This ode is so infinitely abstracted and replete with high enthusiasm,
+that it will find few readers capable of entering into the spirit of it,
+or of relishing its beauties. There is a style of sentiment as utterly
+unintelligible to common capacities, as if the subject were treated in
+an unknown language; and it is on the same account that abstracted
+poetry will never have many admirers.
+
+The authors of such poems must be content with the approbation of those
+heaven-favoured geniuses, who, by a similarity of taste and sentiment,
+are enabled to penetrate the high mysteries of inspired fancy, and to
+pursue the loftiest flights of enthusiastic imagination. Nevertheless,
+the praise of the distinguished few is certainly preferable to the
+applause of the undiscerning million; for all praise is valuable in
+proportion to the judgment of those who confer it.
+
+As the subject of this ode is uncommon, so are the style and expression
+highly metaphorical and abstracted: thus the sun is called "the
+rich-hair'd youth of morn," the ideas are termed "the shadowy tribes of
+mind," &c. We are struck with the propriety of this mode of expression
+here, and it affords us new proofs of the analogy that subsists between
+language and sentiment.
+
+Nothing can be more loftily imagined than the creation of the cestus of
+Fancy in this ode: the allegorical imagery is rich and sublime: and the
+observation, that the dangerous passions kept aloof during the
+operation, is founded on the strictest philosophical truth: for poetical
+fancy can exist only in minds that are perfectly serene, and in some
+measure abstracted from the influences of sense.
+
+The scene of Milton's "inspiring hour" is perfectly in character, and
+described with all those wild-wood appearances of which the great poet
+was so enthusiastically fond:
+
+ "I view that oak, the fancied glades among,
+ By which as Milton lay, his evening ear,
+ Nigh sphered in heaven, its native strains could hear."
+
+
+
+
+ODE,
+
+WRITTEN IN THE YEAR 1746.
+
+
+ODE TO MERCY.
+
+
+The Ode written in 1746, and the Ode to Mercy, seem to have been written
+on the same occasion, viz. the late rebellion; the former in memory of
+those heroes who fell in defence of their country, the latter to excite
+sentiments of compassion in favour of those unhappy and deluded wretches
+who became a sacrifice to public justice.
+
+The language and imagery of both are very beautiful; but the scene and
+figures described, in the strophe of the Ode to Mercy, are exquisitely
+striking, and would afford a painter one of the finest subjects in the
+world.
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO LIBERTY.
+
+
+The ancient states of Greece, perhaps the only ones in which a perfect
+model of liberty ever existed, are naturally brought to view in the
+opening of the poem:
+
+ "Who shall awake the Spartan fife,
+ And call in solemn sounds to life,
+ The youths, whose locks divinely spreading,
+ Like vernal hyacinths in sullen hue."
+
+There is something extremely bold in this imagery of the locks of the
+Spartan youths, and greatly superior to that description Jocasta gives
+us of the hair of Polynices:
+
+ Βοστρυχων τε κυανοχρωτα χαιτας
+ Πλοκαμον––––
+
+ ~Bostrychôn te kyanochrôta chaitas
+ Plokamon------~
+
+ "What new Alcæus, fancy-blest,
+ Shall sing the sword, in myrtles drest," &c.
+
+This alludes to a fragment of Alcæus still remaining, in which the poet
+celebrates Harmodius and Aristogiton, who slew the tyrant Hipparchus,
+and thereby restored the liberty of Athens.
+
+The fall of Rome is here most nervously described in one line
+
+ "With heaviest sound, a giant statue, fell."
+
+The thought seems altogether new, and the imitative harmony in the
+structure of the verse is admirable.
+
+After bewailing the ruin of ancient liberty, the poet considers the
+influence it has retained, or still retains, among the moderns; and here
+the free republics of Italy naturally engage his attention.--Florence,
+indeed, only to be lamented on account of losing its liberty under those
+patrons of letters, the Medicean family; the jealous Pisa, justly so
+called, in respect to its long impatience and regret under the same
+yoke; and the small Marino, which, however unrespectable with regard to
+power or extent of territory, has, at least, this distinction to boast,
+that it has preserved its liberty longer than any other state, ancient
+or modern, having, without any revolution, retained its present mode of
+government near fourteen hundred years. Moreover the patron saint who
+founded it, and from whom it takes its name, deserves this poetical
+record, as he is, perhaps, the only saint that ever contributed to the
+establishment of freedom.
+
+ "Nor e'er her former pride relate
+ To sad Liguria's bleeding state."
+
+In these lines the poet alludes to those ravages in the state of Genoa,
+occasioned by the unhappy divisions of the Guelphs and Gibelines.
+
+ "----When the favour'd of thy choice,
+ The daring archer heard thy voice."
+
+For an account of the celebrated event referred to in these verses, see
+Voltaire's Epistle to the King of Prussia.
+
+ "Those whom the rod of Alva bruised,
+ Whose crown a British queen refused!"
+
+The Flemings were so dreadfully oppressed by this sanguinary general of
+Philip the Second, that they offered their sovereignty to Elizabeth;
+but, happily for her subjects, she had policy and magnanimity enough to
+refuse it. Desormeaux, in his Abrégé Chronologique de l'Histoire
+d'Espagne, thus describes the sufferings of the Flemings: "Le duc d'Albe
+achevoit de réduire les Flamands au désespoir. Après avoir inondé les
+échafauds du sang le plus noble et le plus précieux, il faisoit
+construire des citadelles en divers endroits, et vouloit établir
+l'Alcavala, ce tribute onéreux qui avoit été longtems en usage parmi les
+Espagnols."--_Abrég. Chron. tom. iv._
+
+ "------Mona,
+ Where thousand elfin shapes abide."
+
+Mona is properly the Roman name of the Isle of Anglesey, anciently so
+famous for its Druids; but sometimes, as in this place, it is given to
+the Isle of Man. Both these isles still retain much of the genius of
+superstition, and are now the only places where there is the least
+chance of finding a fairy.
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO A LADY,
+
+ON THE DEATH OF COLONEL ROSS, IN THE ACTION OF FONTENOY.
+
+
+The iambic kind of numbers in which this ode is conceived seems as well
+calculated for tender and plaintive subjects, as for those where
+strength or rapidity is required.--This, perhaps, is owing to the
+repetition of the strain in the same stanza; for sorrow rejects variety,
+and affects a uniformity of complaint. It is needless to observe, that
+this ode is replete with harmony, spirit, and pathos; and there surely
+appears no reason why the seventh and eighth stanzas should be omitted
+in that copy printed in Dodsley's Collection of Poems.
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO EVENING.
+
+
+The blank ode has for some time solicited admission into the English
+poetry; but its efforts, hitherto, seem to have been in vain, at least
+its reception has been no more than partial. It remains a question,
+then, whether there is not something in the nature of blank verse less
+adapted to the lyric than to the heroic measure, since, though it has
+been generally received in the latter, it is yet unadopted in the
+former. In order to discover this, we are to consider the different
+modes of these different species of poetry. That of the heroic is
+uniform; that of the lyric is various; and in these circumstances of
+uniformity and variety probably lies the cause why blank verse has been
+successful in the one, and unacceptable in the other. While it presented
+itself only in one form, it was familiarized to the ear by custom; but
+where it was obliged to assume the different shapes of the lyric muse,
+it seemed still a stranger of uncouth figure, was received rather with
+curiosity than pleasure, and entertained without that ease or
+satisfaction which acquaintance and familiarity produce.--Moreover, the
+heroic blank verse obtained a sanction of infinite importance to its
+general reception, when it was adopted by one of the greatest poets the
+world ever produced, and was made the vehicle of the noblest poem that
+ever was written. When this poem at length extorted that applause which
+ignorance and prejudice had united to withhold, the versification soon
+found its imitators, and became more generally successful than even in
+those countries from whence it was imported. But lyric blank verse had
+met with no such advantages; for Mr. Collins, whose genius and judgment
+in harmony might have given it so powerful an effect, has left us but
+one specimen of it in the Ode to Evening.
+
+In the choice of his measure he seems to have had in his eye Horace's
+Ode to Pyrrha; for this ode bears the nearest resemblance to that mixed
+kind of the asclepiad and pherecratic verse; and that resemblance in
+some degree reconciles us to the want of rhyme, while it reminds us of
+those great masters of antiquity, whose works had no need of this
+whimsical jingle of sounds.
+
+From the following passage one might be induced to think that the poet
+had it in view to render his subject and his versification suitable to
+each other on this occasion, and that, when he addressed himself to the
+sober power of Evening, he had thought proper to lay aside the foppery
+of rhyme:
+
+ "Now teach me, maid composed,
+ To breathe some soften'd strain,
+ Whose numbers, stealing through thy darkening vale,
+ May not unseemly with its stillness suit,
+ As, musing slow, I hail
+ Thy genial loved return!"
+
+But whatever were the numbers or the versification of this ode,
+the imagery and enthusiasm it contains could not fail of rendering
+it delightful. No other of Mr. Collins's odes is more generally
+characteristic of his genius. In one place we discover his passion
+for visionary beings:
+
+ "For when thy folding-star arising shows
+ His paly circlet, at his warning lamp
+ The fragrant Hours, and Elves
+ Who slept in buds the day,
+
+ And many a Nymph who wreathes her brows with sedge,
+ And sheds the freshening dew, and, lovelier still,
+ The pensive Pleasures sweet,
+ Prepare thy shadowy car."
+
+In another we behold his strong bias to melancholy:
+
+ "Then let me rove some wild and heathy scene,
+ Or find some ruin 'midst its dreary dells,
+ Whose walls more awful nod
+ By thy religious gleams."
+
+Then appears his taste for what is wildly grand and magnificent in
+nature; when, prevented by storms from enjoying his evening walk, he
+wishes for a situation,
+
+ "That from the mountain's side
+ Views wilds and swelling floods;"
+
+And through the whole, his invariable attachment to the expression of
+painting:
+
+ "----and marks o'er all
+ Thy dewy fingers draw
+ The gradual dusky veil."
+
+It might be a sufficient encomium on this beautiful ode to observe, that
+it has been particularly admired by a lady to whom nature has given the
+most perfect principles of taste. She has not even complained of the
+want of rhyme in it; a circumstance by no means unfavourable to the
+cause of lyric blank verse; for surely, if a fair reader can endure an
+ode without bells and chimes, the masculine genius may dispense with
+them.
+
+
+
+
+THE MANNERS.
+
+AN ODE.
+
+
+From the subject and sentiments of this ode, it seems not improbable
+that the author wrote it about the time when he left the university;
+when, weary with the pursuit of academical studies, he no longer
+confined himself to the search of theoretical knowledge, but commenced
+the scholar of humanity, to study nature in her works, and man in
+society.
+
+The following farewell to Science exhibits a very just as well as
+striking picture: for however exalted in theory the Platonic doctrines
+may appear, it is certain that Platonism and Pyrrhonism are nearly
+allied:
+
+ "Farewell the porch, whose roof is seen,
+ Arch'd with the enlivening olive's green:
+ Where Science, prank'd in tissued vest,
+ By Reason, Pride, and Fancy drest,
+ Comes like a bride, so trim array'd,
+ To wed with Doubt in Plato's shade!"
+
+When the mind goes in pursuit of visionary systems, it is not far
+from the regions of doubt; and the greater its capacity to think
+abstractedly, to reason and refine, the more it will be exposed to,
+and bewildered in, uncertainty.--From an enthusiastic warmth of
+temper, indeed, we may for a while be encouraged to persist in some
+favourite doctrine, or to adhere to some adopted system; but when that
+enthusiasm, which is founded on the vivacity of the passions,
+gradually cools and dies away with them, the opinions it supported
+drop from us, and we are thrown upon the inhospitable shore of
+doubt.--A striking proof of the necessity of some moral rule of wisdom
+and virtue, and some system of happiness established by unerring
+knowledge, and unlimited power.
+
+In the poet's address to Humour in this ode there is one image of
+singular beauty and propriety. The ornaments in the hair of Wit are of
+such a nature, and disposed in such a manner, as to be perfectly
+symbolical and characteristic:
+
+ "Me too amidst thy band admit,
+ There where the young-eyed healthful Wit,
+ (Whose jewels in his crisped hair
+ Are placed each other's beams to share,
+ Whom no delights from thee divide)
+ In laughter loosed, attends thy side."
+
+Nothing could be more expressive of wit, which consists in a happy
+collision of comparative and relative images, than this reciprocal
+reflection of light from the disposition of the jewels.
+
+ "O Humour, thou whose name is known
+ To Britain's favour'd isle alone."
+
+The author could only mean to apply this to the time when he wrote,
+since other nations had produced works of great humour, as he himself
+acknowledges afterwards.
+
+ "By old Miletus," &c.
+ "By all you taught the Tuscan maids," &c.
+
+The Milesian and Tuscan romances were by no means distinguished for
+humour; but as they were the models of that species of writing in which
+humour was afterwards employed, they are, probably for that reason only,
+mentioned here.
+
+
+
+
+THE PASSIONS.
+
+AN ODE FOR MUSIC.
+
+
+If the music which was composed for this ode had equal merit with the
+ode itself, it must have been the most excellent performance of the kind
+in which poetry and music have, in modern times, united. Other pieces of
+the same nature have derived their greatest reputation from the
+perfection of the music that accompanied them, having in themselves
+little more merit than that of an ordinary ballad: but in this we have
+the whole soul and power of poetry--expression that, even without the
+aid of music, strikes to the heart; and imagery of power enough to
+transport the attention, without the forceful alliance of corresponding
+sounds! what, then, must have been the effect of these united!
+
+It is very observable, that though the measure is the same, in which the
+musical efforts of Fear, Anger, and Despair are described, yet, by the
+variation of the cadence, the character and operation of each is
+strongly expressed: thus particularly of Despair:
+
+ "With woful measures wan Despair--
+ Low, sullen sounds his grief beguiled,
+ A solemn, strange, and mingled air,
+ 'Twas sad by fits, by starts 'twas wild."
+
+He must be a very unskilful composer who could not catch the power of
+imitative harmony from these lines!
+
+The picture of Hope that follows this is beautiful almost beyond
+imitation. By the united powers of imagery and harmony, that delightful
+being is exhibited with all the charms and graces that pleasure and
+fancy have appropriated to her:
+
+ Relegat, qui semel percurrit;
+ Qui nunquam legit, legat.
+
+ "But thou, O Hope, with eyes so fair,
+ What was thy delighted measure!
+ Still it whisper'd promised pleasure,
+ And bade the lovely scenes at distance hail!
+ Still would her touch the strain prolong,
+ And from the rocks, the woods, the vale,
+ She call'd on Echo still through all the song;
+ And where her sweetest theme she chose,
+ A soft responsive voice was heard at every close,
+ And Hope enchanted smiled, and waved her golden hair."
+
+In what an exalted light does the above stanza place this great master
+of poetical imagery and harmony! what varied sweetness of numbers! what
+delicacy of judgment and expression! how characteristically does Hope
+prolong her strain, repeat her soothing closes, call upon her associate
+Echo for the same purposes, and display every pleasing grace peculiar to
+her!
+
+ "And Hope enchanted smiled, and waved her golden hair."
+
+ Legat, qui nunquam legit;
+ Qui semel percurrit, relegat.
+
+The descriptions of Joy, Jealousy, and Revenge are excellent, though not
+equally so. Those of Melancholy and Cheerfulness are superior to every
+thing of the kind; and, upon the whole, there may be very little hazard
+in asserting, that this is the finest ode in the English language.
+
+
+
+
+AN EPISTLE
+
+TO SIR THOMAS HANMER, ON HIS EDITION OF SHAKESPEARE'S WORKS.
+
+
+This poem was written by our author at the university, about the time
+when Sir Thomas Hanmer's pompous edition of Shakespeare was printed at
+Oxford. If it has not so much merit as the rest of his poems, it has
+still more than the subject deserves. The versification is easy and
+genteel, and the allusions always poetical. The character of the poet
+Fletcher in particular is very justly drawn in this epistle.
+
+
+
+
+DIRGE IN CYMBELINE.
+
+ODE ON THE DEATH OF THOMSON.
+
+
+Mr. Collins had skill to complain. Of that mournful melody, and those
+tender images, which are the distinguishing excellencies of such pieces
+as bewail departed friendship, or beauty, he was an almost unequaled
+master. He knew perfectly to exhibit such circumstances, peculiar to the
+objects, as awaken the influences of pity; and while, from his own great
+sensibility, he felt what he wrote, he naturally addressed himself to
+the feelings of others.
+
+To read such lines as the following, all-beautiful and tender as they
+are, without corresponding emotions of pity, is surely impossible:
+
+ "The tender thought on thee shall dwell;
+ Each lonely scene shall thee restore,
+ For thee the tear be duly shed;
+ Beloved till life can charm no more,
+ And mourn'd till Pity's self be dead."
+
+The Ode on the Death of Thomson seems to have been written in an
+excursion to Richmond by water. The rural scenery has a proper effect in
+an ode to the memory of a poet, much of whose merit lay in descriptions
+of the same kind; and the appellations of "Druid," and "meek Nature's
+child," are happily characteristic. For the better understanding of this
+ode, it is necessary to remember, that Mr. Thomson lies buried in the
+church of Richmond.
+
+
+THE END.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber Notes
+
+Archaic and variable spelling is preserved.
+
+Author's punctuation style is preserved. Quotes in the poetry are
+sometimes repeated on every line, as in the original.
+
+Poetry line numbers regularized.
+
+Footnote 4's location is approximated.
+
+Passages in italics indicated by _underscores_.
+
+Greek transliterations are surrounded by ~tildes~ and follow the
+original Greek characters.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Poetical Works of William Collins, by
+William Collins
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK POETICAL WORKS--WILLIAM COLLINS ***
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+Project Gutenberg's The Poetical Works of William Collins, by William Collins
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Poetical Works of William Collins
+ With a Memoir
+
+Author: William Collins
+
+Commentator: Sir Harris Nicolas
+ Sir Egerton Brydges
+
+Release Date: August 31, 2009 [EBook #29879]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK POETICAL WORKS--WILLIAM COLLINS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Katherine Ward, and the
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration: William Collins tatis
+
+ Quos primus equis Oriens afflavit anhelis
+ Virg.]
+
+
+
+
+ _THE_
+ POETICAL WORKS
+ OF
+ WILLIAM COLLINS.
+
+ _WITH A MEMOIR._
+
+
+ [Illustration: _Perennis et Fragrans._]
+
+
+
+
+ BOSTON:
+ LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY.
+ 1865.
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS.
+
+ Page
+ Memoir by Sir Harris Nicolas v
+ An Essay on the Genius and Poems of Collins, by Sir Egerton
+ Brydges, Bart. xliii
+
+ ORIENTAL ECLOGUES.
+ Selim; or, The Shepherd's Moral 3
+ Hassan; or, The Camel Driver 7
+ Abra; Or, The Georgian Sultana 11
+ Agib And Secander; or, The Fugitives 15
+
+ ODES.
+ To Pity 21
+ To Fear 24
+ To Simplicity 28
+ On the Poetical Character 31
+ Written in the Beginning of the Year 1746 34
+ To Mercy 35
+ To Liberty 37
+ To a Lady, On the Death of Colonel Ross, written in May,
+ 1745 44
+ To Evening 48
+ To Peace 52
+ The Manners 54
+ The Passions 58
+ On the Death of Thomson 63
+ On the Popular Superstitions of the Highlands of Scotland;
+ considered as the Subject of Poetry; inscribed to Mr.
+ John Home 66
+ An Epistle, addressed to Sir Thomas Hanmer, on his Edition of
+ Shakespeare's Works 78
+ Dirge in Cymbeline, sung by Guiderus and Arviragus over
+ Fidele, supposed to be dead 87
+ Verses written on a Paper which contained a Piece of
+ Bride-cake, given to the Author by a Lady 89
+ To Miss Aurelia C----R, on her Weeping at her Sister's
+ Wedding 91
+ Sonnet 91
+ Song. The Sentiments borrowed from Shakespeare 92
+ On our late Taste in Music 94
+
+ Observations on the Oriental Eclogues, by Dr. Langhorne 101
+ Observations on the Odes, by the same 118
+
+
+
+
+MEMOIR OF COLLINS.
+
+ "A Bard,
+ Who touched the tenderest notes of Pity's lyre."
+ HAYLEY.
+
+
+No one can have reflected on the history of genius without being
+impressed with a melancholy feeling at the obscurity in which the lives
+of the poets of our country are, with few exceptions, involved. That
+they lived, and wrote, and died, comprises nearly all that is known of
+many, and, of others, the few facts which are preserved are often
+records of privations, or sufferings, or errors. The cause of the
+lamentable deficiency of materials for literary biography may, without
+difficulty, be explained. The lives of authors are seldom marked by
+events of an unusual character; and they rarely leave behind them the
+most interesting work a writer could compose, and which would embrace
+nearly all the important facts in his career, a "History of his Books,"
+containing the motives which produced them, the various incidents
+respecting their progress, and a faithful account of the bitter
+disappointment, whether the object was fame or profit, or both, which,
+in most instances, is the result of his labours. Various motives deter
+men from writing such a volume; for, though quacks and charlatans
+readily become auto-biographers, and fill their prefaces with their
+personal concerns, real merit shrinks from such disgusting egotism, and,
+flying to the opposite extreme, leaves no authentic notice of their
+struggles, its hopes, or its disappointments. Nor is the history of
+writers to be expected from their contemporaries; because few will
+venture to anticipate the judgment of posterity, and mankind are usually
+so isolated in self, and so jealous of others, that neither time nor
+inclination admits of their becoming the Boswells of all those whose
+productions excite admiration.
+
+If these remarks be true, surprise cannot be felt, though there is
+abundance of cause for regret, that little is known of a poet whose
+merits were not appreciated until after his decease: whose powers were
+destroyed by a distressing malady at a period of life when literary
+exertions begin to be rewarded and stimulated by popular applause.
+
+For the facts contained in the following Memoir of Collins, the author
+is indebted to the researches of others, as his own, which were very
+extensive, were rewarded by trifling discoveries. Dr. Johnson's Life is
+well known; but the praise of collecting every particular which industry
+and zeal could glean belongs to the Rev. Alexander Dyce, the result of
+whose inquiries may be found in his notes to Johnson's Memoir, prefixed
+to an edition of Collins's works which he lately edited. Those notices
+are now, for the first time, wove into a Memoir of Collins; and in
+leaving it to another to erect a fabric out of the materials which he
+has collected instead of being himself the architect, Mr. Dyce has
+evinced a degree of modesty which those who know him must greatly
+lament.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WILLIAM COLLINS was born at Chichester, on the 25th of December, 1721,
+and was baptized in the parish church of St. Peter the Great, alias
+Subdeanery in that city, on the first of the following January. He was
+the son of William Collins, who was then the Mayor of Chichester, where
+he exercised the trade of a hatter, and lived in a respectable manner.
+His mother was Elizabeth, the sister of a Colonel Martyn, to whose
+bounty the poet was deeply indebted.
+
+Being destined for the church, young Collins was admitted a scholar of
+Winchester College on the 19th of January, 1733, where he was educated
+by Dr. Burton; and in 1740 he stood first on the list of scholars who
+were to be received at New College. No vacancy, however, occurred, and
+the circumstance is said by Johnson to have been the original misfortune
+of his life. He became a commoner of Queen's,[1] whence, on the 29th of
+July, 1741, he was elected a demy of Magdalen College. During his stay
+at Queen's he was distinguished for genius and indolence, and the few
+exercises which he could be induced to write bear evident marks of both
+qualities. He continued at Oxford until he took his bachelor's degree,
+and then suddenly left the University, his motive, as he alleged, being
+that he missed a fellowship, for which he offered himself; but it has
+been assigned to his disgust at the dulness of a college life, and to
+his being involved in debt.
+
+On arriving in London, which was either in 1743 or 1744, he became, says
+Johnson, "a literary adventurer, with many projects in his head and very
+little money in his pocket." Collins was not without some reputation as
+an author when he proposed to adopt the most uncertain and deplorable of
+all professions, that of literature, for a subsistence. Whilst at
+Winchester school he wrote his Eclogues, and had appeared before the
+public in some verses addressed to a lady weeping at her sister's
+marriage, which were printed in the Gentleman's Magazine, Oct. 1739,
+when Collins was in his eighteenth year. In January, 1742, he published
+his Eclogues, under the title of "Persian Eclogues;"[2] and, in
+December, 1743, his "Verses to Sir Thomas Hanmer on his Edition of
+Shakespeare," appeared. To neither did he affix his name, but the latter
+was said to be by "a Gentleman of Oxford."
+
+From the time he settled in London, his mind was more occupied with
+literary projects than with steady application; nor had poesy, for which
+Nature peculiarly designed him, sufficient attractions to chain his
+wavering disposition. It is not certain whether his irresolution arose
+from the annoyance of importunate debtors, or from an original infirmity
+of mind, or from these causes united. A popular writer[3] has defended
+Collins from the charge of irresolution, on the ground that it was but
+"the vacillations of a mind broken and confounded;" and he urges, that
+"he had exercised too constantly the highest faculties of fiction, and
+precipitated himself into the dreariness of real life." But this
+explanation does not account for the want of steadiness which prevented
+Collins from accomplishing the objects he meditated. His mind was
+neither "broken nor confounded," nor had he experienced the bitter pangs
+of neglect, when with the buoyancy of hope, and a full confidence in his
+extraordinary powers, he threw himself on the town, at the age of
+twenty-three, intending to live by the exercise of his talents; but his
+indecision was then as apparent as at any subsequent period, so that, in
+truth, the effect preceded the cause to which it has been assigned.
+
+Mankind are becoming too much accustomed to witness splendid talents and
+great firmness of mind united in the same person to partake the mistaken
+sympathy which so many writers evince for the follies or vices of
+genius; nor will it much longer tolerate the opinion, that the
+possession of the finest imagination, or the highest poetic capacity,
+must necessarily be accompanied by eccentricity. It may, indeed, be
+difficult to convert a poetical temperament into a merchant, or to make
+the man who is destined to delight or astonish mankind by his
+conceptions, sit quietly over a ledger; but the transition from poetry
+to the composition of such works as Collins planned is by no means
+unnatural, and the abandonment of his views respecting them must, in
+justice to his memory, be attributed to a different cause.
+
+The most probable reason is, that these works were mere speculations to
+raise money, and that the idea was not encouraged by the booksellers;
+but if, as Johnson, who knew Collins well, asserts, his character wanted
+decision and perseverance, these defects may have been constitutional,
+and were, perhaps, the germs of the disease which too soon ripened into
+the most frightful of human calamities. Endued with a morbid
+sensibility, which was as ill calculated to court popularity as to bear
+neglect; and wanting that stoical indifference to the opinions of the
+many, which ought to render those who are conscious of the value of
+their productions satisfied with the approbation of the few; Collins was
+too impatient of applause, and too anxious to attain perfection, to be a
+voluminous writer. To plan much rather than to execute any thing; to
+commence to-day an ode, to-morrow a tragedy, and to turn on the
+following morning to a different subject, was the chief occupation of
+his life for several years, during which time he destroyed the principal
+part of the little that he wrote. To a man nearly pennyless, such a life
+must be attended by privations and danger; and he was in the hands of
+bailiffs, possibly not for the first time, very shortly before he became
+independent by the death of his maternal uncle, Colonel Martyn. The
+result proved that his want of firmness and perseverance was natural,
+and did not arise from the uncertainty or narrowness of his fortune; for
+being rescued from imprisonment, on the credit of a translation of
+Aristotle's Poetics, which he engaged to furnish a publisher, a work, it
+may be presumed, peculiarly suited to his genius, he no sooner found
+himself in the possession of money by the death of his relative, than he
+repaid the bookseller, and abandoned the translation for ever.
+
+From the commencement of his career, Collins was, however, an object
+for sympathy instead of censure; and though few refuse their compassion
+to the confirmed lunatic, it is rare that the dreadful state of
+irresolution and misery, which sometimes exist for years before the
+fatal catastrophe, receives either pity or indulgence.
+
+In 1747, Collins published his Odes, to the unrivaled splendour of a few
+of which he is alone indebted for his fame; but neither fame nor profit
+was the immediate result; and the author of the Ode on the Passions had
+little reason to expect, from its reception by the public, that it was
+destined to live as long as the passions themselves animate or distract
+the world.
+
+It is uncertain at what time he undertook to publish a volume of Odes in
+conjunction with Joseph Warton, but the intention is placed beyond
+dispute by the following letter from Warton to his brother. It is
+without a date, but it must have been written before the publication of
+Collins's Odes in 1747, and before the appearance of Dodsley's
+Museum,[4] as it is evident the Ode to a Lady on the Death of Colonel
+Ross, which was inserted in that work, was not then in print.
+
+ "DEAR TOM,
+
+ "You will wonder to see my name in an advertisement next week, so
+ I thought I would apprise you of it. The case was this. Collins
+ met me in Surrey, at Guildford races, when I wrote out for him my
+ odes, and he likewise communicated some of his to me; and being
+ both in very high spirits, we took courage, resolved to join our
+ forces, and to publish them immediately. I flatter myself that I
+ shall lose no honor by this publication, because I believe these
+ odes, as they now stand, are infinitely the best things I ever
+ wrote. You will see a very pretty one of Collins's, on the Death
+ of Colonel Ross before Tournay. It is addressed to a lady who was
+ Ross's intimate acquaintance, and who, by the way, is Miss Bett
+ Goddard. Collins is not to publish the odes unless he gets ten
+ guineas for them. I returned from Milford last night, where I left
+ Collins with my mother and sister, and he sets out to-day for
+ London. I must now tell you, that I have sent him your imitation
+ of Horace's Blandusian Fountain, to be printed amongst ours, and
+ which you shall own or not, as you think proper. I would not have
+ done this without your consent, but because I think it very
+ poetically and correctly done, and will get you honour. You will
+ let me know what the Oxford critics say. Adieu, dear Tom,
+
+ "I am your most affectionate brother,
+ "J. WARTON."
+
+Like so many of Collins's projects this was not executed; but the reason
+of its failure is unknown.
+
+On the death of Thomson, in August, 1748, Collins wrote an ode to his
+memory, which is no less remarkable for its beauty as a composition,
+than for its pathetic tenderness as a memorial of a friend.
+
+The Poet's pecuniary difficulties were removed in 1749, by the death of
+his maternal uncle, Lieutenant-Colonel Edmund Martyn, who, after
+bequeathing legacies to some other relations, ordered the residue of his
+real and personal estate to be divided between his nephew William
+Collins, and his nieces Elizabeth and Anne Collins, and appointed the
+said Elizabeth his executrix, who proved her uncle's will on the 30th of
+May, 1749. Collins's share was, it is said, about two thousand pounds;
+and, as has been already observed, the money came most opportunely: a
+greater calamity even than poverty, however, shortly afterwards
+counterbalanced his good fortune; but the assertion of the writer in the
+Gentleman's Magazine, that his mental aberration arose from his having
+squandered this legacy, appears to be unfounded.
+
+One, and but one, letter of Collins's has ever been printed; nor has a
+careful inquiry after others been successful. It is of peculiar
+interest, as it proves that he wrote an Ode on the Music of the Grecian
+Theatre, but which is unfortunately lost. The honour to which he
+alludes was the setting his Ode on the Passions to music.
+
+ "TO DR. WILLIAM HAYES, PROFESSOR OF MUSIC, OXFORD.
+
+ "SIR,
+
+ "MR. BLACKSTONE of Winchester some time since informed me of the
+ honour you had done me at Oxford last summer; for which I return
+ you my sincere thanks. I have another more perfect copy of the
+ ode; which, had I known your obliging design, I would have
+ communicated to you. Inform me by a line, if you should think one
+ of my better judgment acceptable. In such case I could send you
+ one written on a nobler subject; and which, though I have been
+ persuaded to bring it forth in London, I think more calculated for
+ an audience in the university. The subject is the Music of the
+ Grecian Theatre; in which I have, I hope naturally, introduced the
+ various characters with which the chorus was concerned, as
+ OEdipus, Medea, Electra, Orestes, etc. etc. The composition too is
+ probably more correct, as I have chosen the ancient tragedies for
+ my models, and only copied the most affecting passages in them.
+
+ "In the mean time, you would greatly oblige me by sending the
+ score of the last. If you can get it written, I will readily
+ answer the expense. If you send it with a copy or two of the ode
+ (as printed at Oxford) to Mr. Clarke, at Winchester, he will
+ forward it to me here. I am, Sir,
+
+ "With great respect,
+ "Your obliged humble servant,
+ "WILLIAM COLLINS.
+
+ "Chichester, Sussex, November 8, 1750."
+
+ "P. S. Mr. Clarke past some days here while Mr. Worgan was with
+ me; from whose friendship, I hope, he will receive some
+ advantage."
+
+Soon after this period, the disease which had long threatened to destroy
+Collins's intellects assumed a more decided character; but for some time
+the unhappy poet was the only person who was sensible of the approaching
+calamity. A visit to France was tried in vain; and when Johnson called
+upon him, on his return, an incident occurred which proves that Collins
+wisely sought for consolation against the coming wreck of his faculties,
+from a higher and more certain source than mere human aid. Johnson says,
+"he paid him a visit at Islington, where he was then waiting for his
+sister, whom he had directed to meet him: there was then nothing of
+disorder discernible in his mind by any but himself; but he had
+withdrawn from study, and travelled with no other book than an English
+Testament, such as children carry to the school: when his friend took
+it into his hand, out of curiosity to see what companion a man of
+letters had chosen, 'I have but one book,' said Collins, 'but that is
+the best.'"
+
+To this circumstance Hayley beautifully alludes in his epitaph on him:
+
+ He, "in reviving reason's lucid hours,
+ Sought on _one_ book his troubled mind to rest,
+ And rightly deem'd the Book of God the best."
+
+A journey to Bath proved as useless as the one to France; and in 1754,
+he went to Oxford for change of air and amusement, where he stayed a
+month. It was on this occasion that a friend, whose account of him will
+be given at length, saw him in a distressing state of restraint under
+the walls of Merton College. From the paucity of information respecting
+Collins, the following letters are extremely valuable; and though the
+statements are those of his friends, they may be received without
+suspicion of partiality, because they are free from the high colouring
+by which friendship sometimes perverts truth.
+
+The first of the letters in question was printed in the Gentleman's
+Magazine:
+
+ "Jan. 20, 1781.
+
+ "MR. URBAN,
+
+ "WILLIAM COLLINS, the poet, I was intimately acquainted with, from
+ the time that he came to reside at Oxford. He was the son of a
+ tradesman in the city of Chichester, I think a hatter; and being
+ sent very young to Winchester school, was soon distinguished for
+ his early proficiency, and his turn for elegant composition. About
+ the year 1740, he came off from that seminary first upon roll,[5]
+ and was entered a commoner of Queen's college. There, no vacancy
+ offering for New College, he remained a year or two, and then was
+ chosen demy of Magdalen college; where, I think, he took a degree.
+ As he brought with him, for so the whole turn of his conversation
+ discovered, too high an opinion of his school acquisitions, and a
+ sovereign contempt for all academic studies and discipline, he
+ never looked with any complacency on his situation in the
+ university, but was always complaining of the dulness of a college
+ life. In short, he threw up his demyship, and, going to London,
+ commenced a man of the town, spending his time in all the
+ dissipation of Ranelagh, Vauxhall, and the playhouses; and was
+ romantic enough to suppose that his superior abilities would draw
+ the attention of the great world, by means of whom he was to make
+ his fortune.
+
+ "In this pleasurable way of life he soon wasted his little
+ property, and a considerable legacy left him by a maternal uncle,
+ a colonel in the army, to whom the nephew made a visit in
+ Flanders during the war. While on his tour he wrote several
+ entertaining letters to his Oxford friends, some of which I saw.
+ In London I met him often, and remember he lodged in a little
+ house with a Miss Bundy, at the corner of King's-square-court,
+ Soho, now a warehouse, for a long time together. When poverty
+ overtook him, poor man, he had too much sensibility of temper to
+ bear with misfortunes, and so fell into a most deplorable state of
+ mind. How he got down to Oxford, I do not know; but I myself saw
+ him under Merton wall, in a very affecting situation, struggling,
+ and conveyed by force, in the arms of two or three men, towards
+ the parish of St. Clement, in which was a house that took in such
+ unhappy objects: and I always understood, that not long after he
+ died in confinement; but when, or where, or where he was buried, I
+ never knew.
+
+ "Thus was lost to the world this unfortunate person, in the prime
+ of life, without availing himself of fine abilities, which,
+ properly improved, must have raised him to the top of any
+ profession, and have rendered him a blessing to his friends, and
+ an ornament to his country.
+
+ "Without books, or steadiness and resolution to consult them if he
+ had been possessed of any, he was always planning schemes for
+ elaborate publications, which were carried no further than the
+ drawing up proposals for subscriptions, some of which were
+ published; and in particular, as far as I remember, one for 'a
+ History of the Darker Ages.'
+
+ "He was passionately fond of music; good-natured and affable; warm
+ in his friendships, and visionary in his pursuits; and, as long as
+ I knew him, very temperate in his eating and drinking. He was of
+ moderate stature, of a light and clear complexion, with gray eyes,
+ so very weak at times as hardly to bear a candle in the room; and
+ often raising within him apprehensions of blindness.
+
+ "With an anecdote respecting him, while he was at Magdalen
+ College, I shall close my letter. It happened one afternoon, at a
+ tea visit, that several intelligent friends were assembled at his
+ rooms to enjoy each other's conversation, when in comes a member
+ of a certain college,[6] as remarkable at that time for his brutal
+ disposition as for his good scholarship; who, though he met with a
+ circle of the most peaceable people in the world, was determined
+ to quarrel; and, though no man said a word, lifted up his foot and
+ kicked the tea-table, and all its contents, to the other side of
+ the room. Our poet, though of a warm temper, was so confounded at
+ the unexpected downfall, and so astonished at the unmerited
+ insult, that he took no notice of the aggressor, but getting up
+ from his chair calmly, he began picking up the slices of bread and
+ butter, and the fragments of his china, repeating very mildly,
+
+ Invenias etiam disjecti membra poet.
+
+ "I am your very humble servant,
+ "V."
+
+The next letter was found among the papers of Mr. William Hymers, of
+Queen's College, Oxford, who was preparing a new edition of the works of
+the poet for publication, when death prevented the completion of his
+design.
+
+ "Hill Street, Richmond in Surrey, July, 1783.
+
+ "SIR,
+
+ "Your favour of the 30th June I did not receive till yesterday.
+ The person who has the care of my house in Bond Street, expecting
+ me there every day, did not send it to Richmond, or I would have
+ answered sooner. As you express a wish to know every particular,
+ however trifling, relating to Mr. William Collins, I will
+ endeavour, so far as can be done by a letter, to satisfy you.
+ There are many little anecdotes, which tell well enough in
+ conversation, but would be tiresome for you to read, or me to
+ write, so shall pass them over. I had formerly several scraps of
+ his poetry, which were suddenly written on particular occasions.
+ These I lent among our acquaintance, who were never civil enough
+ to return them; and being then engaged in extensive business, I
+ forgot to ask for them, and they are lost: all I have remaining of
+ his are about twenty lines, which would require a little history
+ to be understood, being written on trifling subjects. I have a few
+ of his letters, the subjects of which are chiefly on business, but
+ I think there are in them some flights, which strongly mark his
+ character; for which reason I preserved them. There are so few of
+ his intimates now living, that I believe I am the only one who can
+ give a true account of his family and connexions. The principal
+ part of what I write is from my own knowledge, or what I have
+ heard from his nearest relations.
+
+ "His father was not the manufacturer of hats, but the vender. He
+ lived in a genteel style at Chichester; and, I think, filled the
+ office of mayor more than once; he was pompous in his manner; but,
+ at his death, he left his affairs rather embarrassed. Colonel
+ Martyn, his wife's brother, greatly assisted his family, and
+ supported Mr. William Collins at the university, where he stood
+ for a fellowship, which, to his great mortification, he lost, and
+ which was his reason for quitting that place, at least that was
+ his pretext. But he had other reasons: he was in arrears to his
+ bookseller, his tailor, and other tradesmen. But, I believe, a
+ desire to partake of the dissipation and gaiety of London was his
+ principal motive. Colonel Martyn was at this time with his
+ regiment; and Mr. Payne, a near relation, who had the management
+ of the colonel's affairs, had likewise a commission to supply the
+ Collinses with small sums of money. The colonel was the more
+ sparing in this order, having suffered considerably by Alderman
+ Collins, who had formerly been his agent, and, forgetting that his
+ wife's brother's cash was not his own, had applied it to his own
+ use. When Mr. William Collins came from the university, he called
+ on his cousin Payne, gaily dressed, and with a feather in his hat;
+ at which his relation expressed surprise, and told him his
+ appearance was by no means that of a young man who had not a
+ single guinea he could call his own. This gave him great offence;
+ but remembering his sole dependence for subsistence was in the
+ power of Mr. Payne, he concealed his resentment; yet could not
+ refrain from speaking freely behind his back, and saying 'he
+ thought him a d----d dull fellow;' though, indeed, this was an
+ epithet he was pleased to bestow on every one who did not think as
+ he would have them. His frequent demands for a supply obliged Mr.
+ Payne to tell him he must pursue some other line of life, for he
+ was sure Colonel Martyn would be displeased with him for having
+ done so much. This resource being stopped, forced him to set about
+ some work, of which his 'History of the Revival of Learning' was
+ the first; and for which he printed proposals (one of which I
+ have), and took the first subscription money from many of his
+ particular friends: the work was begun, but soon stood still. Both
+ Dr. Johnson and Mr. Langhorne are mistaken when they say, the
+ 'Translation of Aristotle' was never begun: I know the contrary,
+ for some progress was made in both, but most in the latter. From
+ the freedom subsisting between us, we took the liberty of saying
+ any thing to each other. I one day reproached him with idleness;
+ when, to convince me my censure was unjust, he showed me many
+ sheets of his 'Translation of Aristotle,' which he said he had so
+ fully employed himself about, as to prevent him calling on many of
+ his friends so frequently as he used to do. Soon after this he
+ engaged with Mr. Manby, a bookseller on Ludgate Hill, to furnish
+ him with some Lives for the Biographia Britannica, which Manby was
+ then publishing. He showed me some of the lives in embryo; but I
+ do not recollect that any of them came to perfection. To raise a
+ present subsistence he set about writing his odes; and, having a
+ general invitation to my house, he frequently passed whole days
+ there, which he employed in writing them, and as frequently
+ burning what he had written, after reading them to me: many of
+ them, which pleased me, I struggled to preserve, but without
+ effect; for, pretending he would alter them, he got them from me,
+ and thrust them into the fire. He was an acceptable companion
+ every where; and, among the gentlemen who loved him for a genius,
+ I may reckon the Doctors Armstrong, Barrowby, and Hill, Messrs.
+ Quin, Garrick, and Foote, who frequently took his opinion on their
+ pieces before they were seen by the public. He was particularly
+ noticed by the geniuses who frequented the Bedford and Slaughter's
+ Coffee Houses. From his knowledge of Garrick he had the liberty of
+ the scenes and green-room, where he made diverting observations on
+ the vanity and false consequence of that class of people; and his
+ manner of relating them to his particular friends was extremely
+ entertaining. In this manner he lived, with and upon his friends,
+ until the death of Colonel Martyn, who left what fortune he died
+ possessed of unto him and his two sisters. I fear I cannot be
+ certain as to dates, but believe he left the university in the
+ year 43. Some circumstances I recollect, make me almost certain he
+ was in London that year; but I will not be so certain of the time
+ he died, which I did not hear of till long after it happened. When
+ his health and faculties began to decline, he went to France, and
+ after to Bath, in hope his health might be restored, but without
+ success. I never saw him after his sister removed him from
+ M'Donald's madhouse at Chelsea to Chichester, where he soon sunk
+ into a deplorable state of idiotism, which, when I was told,
+ shocked me exceedingly; and, even now, the remembrance of a man
+ for whom I had a particular friendship, and in whose company I
+ have passed so many pleasant happy hours, gives me a severe shock.
+ Since it is in consequence of your own request, Sir, that I write
+ this long farrago, I expect you will overlook all inaccuracies. I
+ am, Sir,
+
+ "Your very humble servant,
+ "JOHN RAGSDALE.
+
+ "Mr. William Hymers, Queen's College, Oxford."
+
+The following communication, by Thomas Warton, was also found among the
+papers of Mr. Hymers. A few passages, concerning various readings, are
+omitted.
+
+ "I often saw Collins in London in 1750. This was before his
+ illness. He then told me of his intended History of the Revival of
+ Learning, and proposed a scheme of a review, to be called the
+ Clarendon Review, and to be printed at the university press, under
+ the conduct and authority of the university. About Easter, the
+ next year, I was in London; when, being given over, and supposed
+ to be dying, he desired to see me, that he might take his last
+ leave of me; but he grew better; and in the summer he sent me a
+ letter on some private business, which I have now by me, dated
+ Chichester, June 9, 1751, written in a fine hand, and without the
+ least symptom of a disordered or debilitated understanding. In
+ 1754, he came to Oxford for change of air and amusement, where he
+ stayed a month; I saw him frequently, but he was so weak and low,
+ that he could not bear conversation. Once he walked from his
+ lodgings, opposite Christ Church, to Trinity College, but
+ supported by his servant. The same year, in September, I and my
+ brother visited him at Chichester, where he lived, in the
+ cathedral cloisters, with his sister. The first day he was in high
+ spirits at intervals, but exerted himself so much that he could
+ not see us the second. Here he showed us an Ode to Mr. John Home,
+ on his leaving England for Scotland, in the octave stanza, very
+ long, and beginning,
+
+ Home, thou return'st from Thames.
+
+ I remember there was a beautiful description of the spectre of a
+ man drowned in the night, or, in the language of the old Scotch
+ superstitions, seized by the angry spirit of the waters, appearing
+ to his wife with pale blue cheek, &c. Mr. Home has no copy of it.
+ He also showed us another ode, of two or three four-lined stanzas,
+ called the Bell of Arragon; on a tradition that, anciently, just
+ before the king of Spain died, the great bell of the cathedral of
+ Sarragossa, in Arragon, tolled spontaneously. It began thus:
+
+ The bell of Arragon, they say,
+ Spontaneous speaks the fatal day.
+
+ Soon afterwards were these lines:
+
+ Whatever dark aerial power,
+ Commission'd, haunts the gloomy tower.
+
+ The last stanza consisted of a moral transition to his own death
+ and knell, which he called 'some simpler bell.' I have seen all
+ his odes already published in his own handwriting; they had the
+ marks of repeated correction: he was perpetually changing his
+ epithets. Dr. Warton, my brother, has a few fragments of some
+ other odes, but too loose and imperfect for publication, yet
+ containing traces of high imagery.
+
+ "In illustration of what Dr. Johnson has related, that during his
+ last malady he was a great reader of the Bible, I am favoured with
+ the following anecdote from the Reverend Mr. Shenton, Vicar of St.
+ Andrews, at Chichester, by whom Collins was buried: 'Walking in my
+ vicaral garden one Sunday evening, during Collins's last illness,
+ I heard a female (the servant, I suppose) reading the Bible in his
+ chamber. Mr. Collins had been accustomed to rave much, and make
+ great moanings; but while she was reading, or rather attempting to
+ read, he was not only silent but attentive likewise, correcting
+ her mistakes, which indeed were very frequent, through the whole
+ of the twenty-seventh chapter of Genesis.' I have just been
+ informed, from undoubted authority, that Collins had finished a
+ Preliminary Dissertation to be prefixed to his History of the
+ Restoration of Learning, and that it was written with great
+ judgment, precision, and knowledge of the subject.
+
+ "T. W."
+
+The overthrow of Collins's mind was too complete for it to be restored
+by variety of scene or the attentions of friendship. Thomas Warton
+describes him as being in a weak and low condition, and unable to bear
+conversation, when he saw him at Oxford. He was afterwards confined in a
+house for the insane at Chelsea; but before September, 1754, he was
+removed to Chichester, under the care of his sister, where he was
+visited by the two Wartons. At this time his spirits temporarily
+rallied; and he adverted with delight to literature, showing his guest
+the Ode to Mr. Home on his leaving England for Scotland. During
+Collins's illness Johnson was a frequent inquirer after his health, and
+those inquiries were made with a degree of feeling which, as he himself
+hints, may have partly arisen from the dread he entertained lest he
+might be the victim of a similar calamity. The following extracts are
+from letters addressed to Joseph Warton:
+
+ "March 8, 1754.
+
+ "But how little can we venture to exult in any intellectual
+ powers or literary attainments, when we consider the condition
+ of poor Collins. I knew him a few years ago, full of hopes and
+ full of projects, versed in many languages, high in fancy, and
+ strong in retention. This busy and forcible mind is now under
+ the government of those who lately would not have been able to
+ comprehend the least and most narrow of its designs. What do
+ you hear of him? are there hopes of his recovery? or is he to
+ pass the remainder of his life in misery and degradation?
+ perhaps with complete consciousness of his calamity."
+
+ "December 24, 1754.
+
+ "Poor dear Collins! Let me know whether you think it would give
+ him pleasure if I should write to him. I have often been near his
+ state, and therefore have it in great commiseration."
+
+ "April 15, 1756.
+
+ "What becomes of poor dear Collins? I wrote him a letter which he
+ never answered. I suppose writing is very troublesome to him. That
+ man is no common loss. The moralists all talk of the uncertainty
+ of fortune, and the transitoriness of beauty; but it is yet more
+ dreadful to consider that the powers of the mind are equally
+ liable to change, that understanding may make its appearance and
+ depart, that it may blaze and expire."
+
+In this state of mental darkness did Collins pass the last six or seven
+years of his existence, in the house now occupied by Mr. Mason, a
+bookseller in Chichester. His malady is described by Johnson as being,
+not so much an alienation of mind as a general laxity and feebleness of
+his vital, rather than his intellectual, powers; but his disorder seems,
+from other authorities, to have been of a more violent nature. As he was
+never married, he was indebted for protection and kindness to his
+youngest sister; and death, the only hope of the afflicted, came to his
+relief on the 12th of June, 1759, in the thirty-ninth year of his age, a
+period of life when the fervour of imagination is generally chastened
+without being subdued, and when all the mental powers are in their
+fullest vigour. He was buried in the church of St. Andrew, at
+Chichester, on the 15th of June; and the admiration of the public for
+his genius has been manifested by the erection of a monument by Flaxman,
+to his memory, in the Cathedral, which is thus described by Mr.
+Dallaway, the historian of Sussex:
+
+"Collins is represented as sitting in a reclining posture, during a
+lucid interval of the afflicting malady to which he was subject, with a
+calm and benign aspect, as if seeking refuge from his misfortunes in the
+consolations of the gospel, which appears open on a table before him,
+whilst his lyre and one of his best compositions lie neglected on the
+ground. Upon the pediment of the table are placed two female ideal
+figures in relief, representing love and pity, entwined each in the arms
+of the other; the proper emblems of the genius of his poetry." It bears
+the following epitaph from the pen of Hayley:
+
+ "Ye who the merits of the dead revere,
+ Who hold misfortune's sacred genius dear,
+ Regard this tomb, where Collins, hapless name,
+ Solicits kindness with a double claim.
+ Though nature gave him, and though science taught
+ The fire of fancy, and the reach of thought,
+ Severely doom'd to penury's extreme,
+ He pass'd in maddening pain life's feverish dream,
+ While rays of genius only served to show
+ The thickening horror, and exalt his woe.
+ Ye walls that echo'd to his frantic moan,
+ Guard the due records of this grateful stone;
+ Strangers to him, enamour'd of his lays,
+ This fond memorial to his talents raise.
+ For this the ashes of a bard require,
+ Who touch'd the tenderest notes of pity's lyre;
+ Who join'd pure faith to strong poetic powers;
+ Who, in reviving reason's lucid hours,
+ Sought on one book his troubled mind to rest,
+ And rightly deem'd the book of God the best."
+
+Collins's character has been portrayed by all his biographers in
+very agreeable colours. He was amiable and virtuous, and was as much
+courted for his popular manners as for the charms of his conversation.
+The associate of Johnson, Armstrong, Hill, Garrick, Quin, Foote, the
+two Wartons, and Thomson, and the friend of several of these eminent
+men, he must have possessed many of the qualities by which they were
+distinguished; for though an adviser may be chosen from a very
+different class of persons, genius will only herd with genius.
+Johnson has honoured him by saying, that "his morals were pure and
+his opinions pious;" and though he hints that his habits were sometimes
+at variance with these characteristics, he assigns the aberration to the
+temptations of want, and the society into which poverty sometimes
+drives the best disposed persons, adding, that he "preserved the
+sources of action unpolluted, that his principles were never shaken,
+that his distinctions of right and wrong were never confounded, and
+that his faults had nothing of malignity or design, but proceeded from
+some unexpected pressure or casual temptation." A higher eulogium,
+from so rigid a moralist, could not be pronounced on a man whose life
+was, for many years, unsettled and perplexed; and those only who have
+experienced the pressure of pecuniary necessities can be aware of
+the difficulty of resisting meanness, or avoiding vice, if not in the
+sense in which these terms are usually understood, at least in a sense
+to which they may as properly be applied--that of refusing to prostitute
+talents to purposes foreign to the conviction and taste of their
+possessor.
+
+On this mainly depend the annoyances and dangers of him who seeks a
+subsistence from his pen. The opinions which he may be desirous to
+express, or the subject he may be capable of illustrating, may not be
+popular, and the more important or learned they be, the more likely is
+such to be the case. Of course his labours would be rejected by
+publishers, who cannot buy what will not sell; hence no alternative
+remains but for him to manufacture marketable commodities; and when the
+_popular_ taste of the present, as well as of former times, is
+remembered, the degradation to which a man of high intellect must often
+submit, when he neglects that for which nature and study peculiarly
+qualified him, for what is in general demand, may be easily conceived.
+It is not requisite to advert to the taste of the age in which we live,
+farther than to allude to the class of works which issues from the
+bazaars of _fashionable_ publishers, and to ask, when such are alone in
+request, what would have been the fate, had they lived in our own times,
+of Johnson, Pope, Dryden, Addison, and the other ornaments of the golden
+age of literature? But if even in that age the Odes of Collins were too
+abstracted from mundane feelings, too rich in imagery, and too strongly
+marked by the fervour of inspiration to be generally appreciated, his
+chance of being so, by the public generally, is at this moment less; and
+the only hope of his obtaining that popularity to which he is
+unquestionably entitled, is by placing his works within the reach of
+all, and, more especially, by acquainting the multitude with the opinion
+entertained of him, by those whose judgments they have the sense to
+venerate, since they are sometimes willing to receive, on the credit of
+another, that which they have not themselves the discrimination or
+feeling to perceive.
+
+An anecdote is related of Collins which, if true, proves that he felt
+the neglect with which his Odes were treated with the indignation
+natural to an enthusiastic temper. Having purchased the unsold copies of
+the first edition from the booksellers, he set fire to them with his own
+hand, as if to revenge himself on the apathy and ignorance of the
+public.
+
+It is unnecessary to append to the Memoir of Collins many observations
+on the character of his poetry, because its peculiar beauties, and the
+qualities by which it is distinguished, are described with considerable
+force and eloquence by Sir Egerton Brydges, in the Essay prefixed to
+this edition. Campbell's remarks on the same subject cannot be
+forgotten; and other critics of the highest reputation have concurred in
+ascribing to Collins a conception and genius scarcely exceeded by any
+English poet. To say that Sir Egerton Brydges's Essay exaggerates the
+merit of some of his productions may produce the retort which has been
+made to Johnson's criticism, that he was too deficient in feeling to be
+capable of appreciating the excellence of the pieces which he censures.
+It is not, however, inconsistent with a high respect for Collins, to
+ascribe every possible praise to that unrivaled production, the Ode to
+the Passions, to feel deeply the beauty, the pathos, and the sublime
+conceptions of the Odes to Evening, to Pity, to Simplicity, and a few
+others, and yet to be sensible of the occasional obscurity and
+imperfections of his imagery in other pieces, to find it difficult to
+discover the meaning of some passages, to think the opening of four of
+his odes which commence with the common-place invocation of "O thou,"
+and the alliteration by which so many lines are disfigured, blemishes
+too serious to be forgotten, unless the judgment be drowned in the full
+tide of generous and enthusiastic admiration of the great and
+extraordinary beauties by which these faults are more than redeemed.
+
+That these defects are to be ascribed to haste it would be uncandid to
+deny; but haste is no apology for such faults in productions which
+scarcely fill a hundred pages, and which their author had ample
+opportunities to remove.
+
+It may also be thought heterodoxy by the band, which, if small in
+numbers, is distinguished by taste, feeling, and genius, to concur in
+Collins's opinion, when he expressed himself dissatisfied with his
+Eclogues; for, though they are not without merit, it is very doubtful if
+they would have lived, even till this time, but for the Odes with which
+they are published, notwithstanding the zeal of Dr. Langhorne, who is in
+raptures over passages the excellence of which is not very conspicuous.
+To give a preference to the Verses to Sir Thomas Hanmer, of which all
+that Langhorne could find to say is, "that the versification is easy and
+genteel, and the allusions always poetical," and especially to the Ode
+addressed to Mr. Home, on the superstition of the Highlands, over the
+Eclogues, may possibly be deemed to betray a corrupt taste, since it is
+an admission which is, it is believed, made for the first time. In that
+Ode, among a hundred other beautiful verses, the following address to
+Tasso has seldom been surpassed:
+
+ "Prevailing Poet! whose undoubting mind
+ Believed the magic wonders which he sung!
+ Hence, at each sound, imagination glows!
+ Hence, at each picture, vivid life starts here!
+ Hence, his warm lay with softest sweetness flows!
+ Melting it flows, pure, murmuring, strong, and clear,
+ And fills the impassion'd heart, and wins the harmonious ear!"
+
+The picture of the swain drowned in a fen, and the grief of his widow,
+possessing every charm which simplicity and tenderness can bestow, and
+give to that Ode claims to admiration which, if admitted, have been
+hitherto conceded in silence.
+
+From the coincidence between Collins's love of, and addresses to, Music,
+his residence at Oxford, and from internal evidence, Some Verses on Our
+Late Taste in Music, which appeared in the Gentleman's Magazine for
+1740, and there said to be "by a Gentleman of Oxford," are printed in
+this edition of Collins's works, not, however, as positively his, but as
+being so likely to be written by him, as to justify their being brought
+to the notice of his readers.
+
+A poet, and not to have felt the tender passion, would be a creature
+which the world has never yet seen. It is said that Collins was
+extremely fond of a young lady who was born the day before him, and who
+did not return his affection; and that, punning upon his misfortune, he
+observed, "he came into the world a day after the fair." The lady is
+supposed to have been Miss Elizabeth Goddard, the intended bride of
+Colonel Ross, to whom he addressed his beautiful Ode on the death of
+that Officer at the battle of Fontenoy, at which time she was on a visit
+to the family of the Earl of Tankerville, who then resided at Up-Park,
+near Chichester, a place that overlooks the little village of Harting,
+mentioned in the Ode.
+
+Collins's person was of the middle size and well formed; of a light
+complexion, with gray, weak eyes. His mind was deeply imbued with
+classical literature, and he understood the Italian, French, and Spanish
+languages. He was well read, and was particularly conversant with early
+English writers, and to an ardent love of literature he united, as is
+manifest from many of his pieces, a passionate devotion to Music, that
+
+ "----Sphere-descended maid,
+ Friend of Pleasure, Wisdom's aid."
+
+His family, which were very respectable, were established at Chichester
+in the sixteenth century as tradesmen of the higher order, and his
+immediate ancestor was mayor of that city in 1619:[7] his mother's
+relations appear to have been of a superior condition in life.[8]
+Collins lost his father in 1734, and on the 5th of July, 1744, his
+mother died. He was an only son: of his two sisters, Elizabeth, the
+eldest, died unmarried, and Anne, the youngest, who took care of him
+when he was bereft of reason, married first Mr. Hugh Sempill, who died
+in 1762, and secondly the Rev. Dr. Thomas Durnford, and died at
+Chichester in November, 1789. Her character is thus described on the
+authority of Mr. Park: "The Reverend Mr. Durnford, who resided at
+Chichester, and was the son of Dr. Durnford, informed me, in August,
+1795, that the sister of Collins loved money to excess, and evinced so
+outrageous an aversion to her brother, because he squandered or gave
+away to the boys in the cloisters whatever money he had, that she
+destroyed, in a paroxysm of resentment, all his papers, and whatever
+remained of his enthusiasm for poetry, as far as she could. Mr. Hayley
+told me, when I visited him at Eartham, that he had obtained from her a
+small drawing by Collins, but it possessed no other value than as a
+memorial that the bard had attempted to handle the pencil as well as the
+pen."[9] That Mrs. Durnford was indifferent to her brother's fame, is
+stated by others, and Sir Egerton Brydges, in his Essay, has made some
+just observations on the circumstance.
+
+This Memoir must not be closed without an expression of acknowledgment
+to the Bishop of Hereford, to the President of Magdalen College, to H.
+Gabell, Esq., and to I. Sanden, Esq., of Chichester, for the desire
+which they were so good as to manifest that this account of Collins
+might be more satisfactory than it is; and if his admirers consider that
+his present biographer has not done sufficient justice to his memory, an
+antidote to the injury will be found in the fervent and unqualified
+admiration which Sir Egerton Brydges has evinced for his genius.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [1] 21st March, 1740.
+
+ [2] Afterwards republished with the title of "Oriental Eclogues."
+
+ [3] D'Israeli, in his "Calamities of Authors," vol. ii. p. 201.
+
+ [4] June 7th, 1746.
+
+ [5] Mr. Joseph Warton, now Dr. Warton, head master of Winton school,
+ was at the same time second upon roll; and Mr. Mulso, now [1781]
+ prebendary of the church of Winton, third upon roll.
+
+ [6] Hampton, the translator of Polybius.
+
+ [7] Dallaway's Sussex, vol. i. p. 185--The arms of the family of
+ Collins are there said to have been, "Azure a griffin segreant
+ or;" but in Sir William Burrell's MS. Collections for a History
+ of Sussex, in the British Museum, the field is described as being
+ vert. From those manuscripts which are marked "Additional MSS."
+ Nos. 5697 to 5699, the following notices of the Poet's family
+ have been extracted.
+
+ REGISTER OF ST. ANDREW'S, CHICHESTER.
+
+ BAPTISM.
+
+ Elizabeth, daughter of Mr. George Collins, 8th October, 1763.
+
+ BURIALS.
+
+ Mrs. Elizabeth Collins [the poet's mother], 6th July, 1744.
+ William Collins, Gent. [the Poet], 15th June, 1759.
+
+ REGISTER OF ST. PETER THE GREAT, CHICHESTER.
+
+ BAPTISMS.
+
+ Charles, son of Roger Collins, 8th February, 1645.
+ George, son of Mr. George Collins, 28th December, 1647.
+ Humphrey, son of Mr. Richard Collins, 20th Dec. 1648.
+ George, son of Mr. George Collins, 7th September, 1651.
+ Christian, daughter of Mr. Richard Collins, 1st Sept. 1652.
+ John, son of Mr. Richard Collins, senior, 13th Dec. 1652.
+ Elizabeth, daughter of Mr. Richard Collins, sen. 16th May, 1656.
+ Joan, daughter of Mr. Richard Collins, jun. 12th Dec. 1656.
+ Judith, daughter of Mr. Collins, Vicar Choral, 17th April, 1667.
+ Elizabeth, daughter of Mr. William Collins, 6th March, 1704.
+
+ MARRIAGES.
+
+ Mr. Charles Collins and Mrs. Elizabeth Cardiff, 14th April, 1696.
+
+ BURIALS.
+
+ ---- wife of Mr. William Collins, 10th December, 1650.
+ Susan, wife of Mr. Richard Collins, 3rd December, 1657.
+ Mr. George Collins, 10th January, 1669.
+ Mrs. Collins of St. Olave's Parish, 19th July, 1696.
+
+ There are monumental inscriptions in St. Andrew's Church,
+ Chichester, to the Poet's father, mother, maternal uncle, Colonel
+ Martyn, and sister, Mrs. Durnford.
+
+ [8] So much of the will of Colonel Edmund Martyn as relates to the Poet
+ and his sister has been already cited, but the testator's
+ situation in life and the respectability of his family are best
+ shown by other parts of that document. He describes himself as a
+ lieutenant-colonel in his Majesty's service, lying sick in the
+ city of Chichester. To his niece Elizabeth, the wife of Thomas
+ Napper, of Itchenor in Sussex, he bequeathed 100_l._ His copyhold
+ estates of the manors of Selsey, and Somerly, in that county, to
+ his nephew, Abraham Martyn, the youngest son of his late only
+ brother, Henry Martyn, and to his servant, John Hipp, he gave his
+ wearing apparel and ten pounds.
+
+ [9] Dyce's edition of Collins, 1827, p. 39.
+
+
+
+
+AN ESSAY ON THE GENIUS AND POEMS OF COLLINS.
+
+ BY SIR EGERTON BRYDGES,
+ BART.
+
+
+Collins is the founder of a new school of poetry, of a high class. It is
+true that, unless Buckhurst and Spenser had gone before him, he could
+not have written as he has done; yet he is an inventor very distinct
+from both. He calls his odes descriptive and allegorical; and this
+characterises them truly, but too generally. The personification of
+abstract qualities had never been so happily executed before; the pure
+spirituality of the conception, the elegance and force of the language,
+the harmony and variety of the numbers, were all executed with a
+felicity which none before or since have reached. That these poems did
+not at once captivate the public attention cannot be accounted for by
+any cause hitherto assigned. We may not wonder that the multitude did
+not at once perceive their full beauties; but that, among readers of
+taste and learning, there should not have been found a sufficient number
+to set the example of admiration, is very extraordinary. In addition to
+all their other high merits, the mere novelty of thought and manner were
+sufficient to excite immediate notice. Nor was there any thing in
+Collins's station or character to create prejudices against the
+probability that beautiful effusions of genius might be struck out by
+his hand. His education at the college of Winchester, his fame at
+Oxford, his associates in London, all were fair preludes to the
+production of beautiful poetry. Indeed, he had already produced
+beautiful poetry in his Oriental Eclogues, four years before his Odes
+appeared. These were, it is admitted, of a different cast from his Odes,
+and of a gentleness and chastity of thought and diction, which he
+himself was conscious, some years afterwards, did not very well
+represent the gorgeousness of eastern composition.
+
+It was a crisis when there was a fair opening for new candidates for the
+laurel. The uniformity of Pope's style began already to pall upon the
+public ear. Thomson was indolent, and Young eccentric; Gray had not yet
+appeared on the stage; and Akenside's metaphysical subject and diffuse
+style were not calculated to engross the general taste. Johnson had
+taken possession of the field of satire, but there are too many readers
+of enthusiastic mind to be satisfied with satire. The pedantry and
+uncouthness of Walter Harte had precluded him from ever being a
+favourite with the public; Shenstone had not yet risen into fame; and
+Lyttelton was engrossed by politics. When, therefore, Collins's Odes
+appeared, all speculation would have anticipated that they must have
+been successful. But we must recollect that they did not excite the
+admiration of Johnson; and that Gray did not read them with that
+unqualified approval which his native taste would have inspired. This
+singularity must be accounted for by other causes than their want of
+merit.
+
+The disappointment of Collins was so keen and deep, that he not only
+burned the unsold copies with his own hand, but soon fell into a
+melancholy which ended in insanity. Many persons have affected to
+comment on this result with an unfeeling ignorance of human nature, and,
+more especially, of fervid genius. It is, undoubtedly, highly dangerous
+to give the entire reins to imagination; the discipline of a constant
+exercise of reason is not only salutary, but necessary. But one can
+easily conceive how the indulgence of that state of mind which produced
+Collins's Odes could end in an entire overthrow of the intellect, when
+embittered by a defect of the principal objects of his worldly ambition.
+He is said to have been puffed up by a vanity which prompted him to
+expect that all eyes would be upon him, and all voices lifted in his
+praise. Such was the conception of a vulgar observer of the human
+character. Why should it have been vanity that prompted this hope? It
+was a consciousness of merit, of those brilliant powers which produced
+the Ode to the Passions! was ever a voice content which sung to those
+who would not hear, which was condemned
+
+ "To waste its sweetness on the desert air?"
+
+Spenser's power of personification is copious beyond example; but it is
+seldom sufficiently select; rich as it is in imagination, it too
+commonly wants taste and delicacy; it has the fault of coarseness, which
+Burke's images in prose two centuries afterwards, sometimes fell into.
+But Collins's images are as pure, and of as exquisite delicacy, as they
+are spiritual. They are not human beings invested with some of the
+attributes of angels, but the whole figure is purely angelic, and of a
+higher order of creation; in this they are distinct even from the
+admirable personifications of Gray, because they are less earthly. The
+Ode to the Passions is, by universal consent, the noblest of Collins's
+productions, because it exhibits a much more extended invention, not of
+one passion only, but of all the passions combined, acting, according to
+the powers of each, to one end. The execution, also, is the happiest,
+each particular passion is drawn with inimitable force and compression.
+Let us take only FEAR and DESPAIR, each dashed out in four lines, of
+which every word is like inspiration. Beautiful as Spenser is, and
+sometimes sublime, yet he redoubles his touches too much, and often
+introduces some coarse feature or expression, which destroys the spell.
+Spenser, indeed, has other merits of splendid and inexhaustible
+invention, which render it impossible to put Collins on a par with him:
+but we must not estimate merit by mere quantity: if a poet produces but
+one short piece, which is perfect, he must be placed according to its
+quality. And surely there is not a single figure in Collins's Ode to the
+Passions which is not perfect, both in conception and language. He has
+had many imitators, but no one has ever approached him in his own
+department.
+
+The Ode to Evening is, perhaps, the next in point of merit. It is quite
+of a different cast; it is descriptive of natural scenery; and such a
+scene of enchanting repose was never exhibited by Claude, or any other
+among the happiest of painters. Though a mere verbal description can
+never rival a fine picture in a mere address to the material part of our
+nature, yet it far eclipses it with those who have the endowment of a
+brilliant fancy, because it gratifies their taste, selection, and
+sentiment. Delightful, therefore, as it is to look upon a Claude, it is
+more delightful to look upon this description. It is vain to attempt to
+analyse the charm of this Ode; it is so subtle, that it escapes
+analysis. Its harmony is so perfect, that it requires no rhyme: the
+objects are so happily chosen, and the simple epithets convey ideas and
+feelings so congenial to each other, as to throw the reader into the
+very mood over which the personified being so beautifully designed
+presides. No other poem on the same subject has the same magic. It
+assuredly suggested some images and a tone of expression to Gray in his
+Elegy.
+
+The Ode on the Poetical Character is here and there a little involved
+and obscure; but its general conception is magnificent, and beaming that
+spirit of inventive enthusiasm, which alone can cherish the poet's
+powers, and bring forth the due fruits. Collins never touched the lyre
+but he was borne away by the inspiration under which he laboured. The
+Dirge in Cymbeline, the lines on Thomson, and the Ode on Colonel Ross
+breathe such a beautiful simplicity of pathos, and yet are so highly
+poetical and graceful in every thought and tone, that, exquisitely
+polished as they are, and without one superfluous or one prosaic word,
+they never once betray the artifices of composition. The extreme
+transparency of the words and thoughts would induce a vulgar reader to
+consider them trite, while they are the expression of a genius so
+refined as to be all essence of spirit. In Gray, excellent as he is, we
+continually encounter the marks of labour and effort, and occasional
+crudeness, which shows that effort had not always succeeded, such as
+"iron hand and torturing hour;" but nothing of this kind occurs in the
+principal poems of Collins. There is a fire of mind which supersedes
+labour, and produces what labour cannot. It has been said that Collins
+is neither sublime nor pathetic; but only ingenious and fanciful. The
+truth is, that he was cast in the very mould of sublimity and pathos. He
+lived in an atmosphere above the earth, and breathed only in a visionary
+world. He was conversant with nothing else, and this must have been the
+secret by which he produced compositions so entirely spiritual. He who
+has daily intercourse with the world, and feels the vulgar human
+passions, cannot be in a humour to write poems which do not partake of
+earthly coarseness.
+
+It may be asked, _cui bono?_ what is the moral use of such poems as
+these? Whatever refines the intellect improves the heart; whatever
+augments and fortifies the spiritual part of our nature raises us in the
+rank of created beings. And what poems are more calculated to refine our
+intellect, and increase our spirituality, than the poems of Collins? To
+embody, in a brilliant manner, the most beautiful abstractions, to put
+them into action, and to add to them splendour, harmony, strength, and
+purity of language, is to complete a task as admirable for its use and
+its delight, as it is difficult to be executed. No one can receive the
+intellectual gratification which such works are capable of producing
+without being the better for it. The understanding was never yet roused
+to the conception of such pure and abstract thinking without an
+elevation of the whole nature of the being so roused. The expression of
+subtle and evanescent ideas, carried to its perfection, is among the
+very noblest and most exalted studies with which the human mind can be
+conversant.
+
+It has been the fashion of our own age to beat out works into twentyfold
+and fiftyfold the size of those of Collins. I do not quarrel with that
+fashion; each fashion has its use: and my own taste induces me to
+perceive the value and many attractions of long narrative poems, full of
+human passions and practical wisdom. The matter is more desirable than
+the workmanship; and much of occasional carelessness in the language may
+be forgiven, for fertility of natural and just thought and interest of
+story. But this in no degree diminishes the value of those gems, which,
+though of the smallest size, comprehend perfections of every kind. It is
+easier to work upon a large field than a small one,--one where is
+
+ "Ample room and verge enough
+ The characters of hell to trace."
+
+But these diffuse productions are not calculated to give the same sort
+of pleasure as the gems. How difficult was the path chosen by Collins
+is sufficiently proved by the want of success of all who have entered
+the same walk: Gray's was not the same, as I shall endeavour presently
+to show. In the miscellany of Dodsley and other collectors will be found
+numerous attempts at Allegorical Odes: they are almost all nauseous
+failures--without originality or distinctness of conception; bald in
+their language, lame in their numbers, and repulsive from their
+insipidity of ideas.
+
+Gray's personifications can scarcely be called allegorical, they have so
+much of humanity about them. He dealt in all the noble and melancholy
+feelings of the human heart: he never for one moment forgot to be a
+moralist: he was constantly under the influence of powerful sympathy for
+the miseries of man's life; and wrote from the overflow of his bosom
+rather than of his imagination. It is true that his imagination
+presented the pictures to him; but it was his heart which impelled him
+to speak. Take the Ode on the Prospect of Eton College; there is not one
+word which did not break from the bottom of his heart. The multitude
+cannot enter into the visionary world of Collins: all who have a spark
+of virtuous human feelings can sympathize with Gray. It is impossible to
+deny that of these two beautiful poets Gray is the most instructive as a
+moralist; but Gray is not so original as Collins, not so inventive, not
+so perfect in his language, and has not so much the fire and flow of
+inspiration.
+
+When Collins is spoken of as one of the _minor_ poets, it is a sad
+misapplication of the term. Unless he be minor because the number and
+size of his poems is small, no one is less a minor poet. In him every
+word is poetry, and poetry either sublime or pathetic. He does not rise
+to the sublimity of Milton or Dante, or reach the graceful tenderness of
+Petrarch; but he has a visionary invention of his own, to which there is
+no rival. As long as the language lasts, every richly gifted and richly
+cultivated mind will read him with intense and wondering rapture; and
+will not cease to entertain the conviction, from his example, if from no
+other, that true poetry of the higher orders is real inspiration.
+
+It will occur to many readers, on perusing these passages of exalted
+praise, that Johnson has spoken of Collins in a very different manner.
+Almost fifty years have elapsed since Johnson's final criticism on him
+appeared in his Lives of the Poets. It disgusted me so much at the time,
+and the disgust continued so violent, that for a long period it blinded
+me to all his stupendous merits, because it evinced not only bad taste
+but unamiable feelings. I cannot yet either justify it, or account for
+it. He speaks of Collins having sought for splendour without attaining
+it--of clogging his lines with consonants, and of mistaking inversion of
+language for poetry. Not one of these faults belongs to Collins. In
+almost all his poems the words follow their natural order, and are
+mellifluous beyond those of almost any other verse writer. If the
+Passions are not described with splendour, there is no such thing as
+splendour. If the beauties which he sought and attained are unnatural
+and extravagant, then the tests of correctness and good taste which have
+been hitherto set up must be abandoned.
+
+This severe criticism is the more extraordinary because Johnson
+professed a warm personal friendship for Collins; he professes
+admiration of his talents, learning, and taste, as well as of his
+disposition and heart, and speaks of his afflicting ill health with a
+passionate tenderness which has seldom been equalled in beauty, pathos,
+and force of language. That he could love him personally with such
+fondness, but be blind to his splendid and unrivaled genius, is utterly
+beyond my power to account for. Who can say that Johnson wanted taste
+when we read his sublime and acute criticisms on Milton, Dryden, and
+Pope? Was it that he roused all the faculties of his judgment when he
+spoke of these great men of past times; yet, that when he descended to
+his contemporaries, he indulged his feelings rather than his intellect,
+and suffered himself to be overcome by the evil passions of envy and
+contempt? His natural taste was, probably, not the best; when his
+criticisms were perfect he had tasked his intellect rather than his
+feelings. He was a man of general wisdom and undoubted genius, but not a
+very nice scholar, and he prided himself upon his every-day sense, his
+practical knowledge, rather than those visionary musings which he
+thought a dangerous indulgence of imagination. He could not put the
+compositions of Collins among the mere curiosities of literature, but he
+permitted himself to depreciate habits of mental excursion which he had
+not himself cultivated.
+
+It was not till more than twenty years after Collins's death that his
+Ode on the Superstitions of the Highlands was recovered. The two Wartons
+had seen it, and spoke highly of it to Johnson and others. About 1781,
+or 1782, a copy was found among the papers of Dr. Carlysle, with a chasm
+of two or three stanzas. The public deemed it equal to the expectations
+which had been raised of it; for my part I will confess that I was
+always deeply disappointed at it. There are in it occasional traces of
+Collins's genius and several good lines--but none grand--none of that
+felicitous flow and inspired vigour which mark the Ode to the Passions
+and other of his lyrics--none of that happy personification of abstract
+conceptions which is the characteristic of his genius. The majority of
+the lines lag and move heavily, and do not seem to me to rise much
+above mediocrity in the expression. The subject was attractive, and
+might have afforded space for the wild excursions of Collins's creative
+powers. As to the edition of Bell, in which it is pretended that the
+lost stanzas have been recovered, I have no more doubt that they are
+_spurious_ than that I did not write them myself: I will not dwell upon
+this subject, but only mention that it is quite impossible Collins could
+write "_Fate_ gave the _fatal_ blow," and "bowing to Freedom's _yoke_;"
+and such a line as
+
+ "In the first year of the first George's reign," &c.
+
+There is not one line among these interpolated stanzas which it is
+possible that Collins could have written.
+
+Mr. Ragdale relates that Collins was in the habit of writing numerous
+fragments, and then throwing them into the flames. Jackson, of Exeter,
+says the same of John Bampfylde. A sensitive mind is scarce ever
+satisfied with the reception it meets, when, in first heat of
+composition, it hopes to delight some listener, to which it first
+communicates its new effusions. It almost always considers itself to be
+"damn'd by faint praise." I have known fervid authors who, if they read
+or communicated a piece before it was finished, never went on with it.
+They thought it became blown upon, and turned from it with coldness,
+disgust, and despair. Yet the hearer is commonly not in fault: who can
+satisfy the warm hopes of aspiring and restless genius?
+
+The Wartons have expressed themselves with praise and affection of
+Collins, but not, I think, with the entire admiration which was due to
+him. Joseph Warton was a good-natured and generous-minded man, but
+something of rivalry lurked in his bosom; and the fraternal partiality
+of Thomas Warton had the same effect. The younger brother seems to have
+thought that Joseph's genius was equal to that of Collins. Gray had the
+critical acumen to discern the difference; but still he in no degree
+does justice to Collins. He accuses him of want of taste and selection,
+which is a surprising charge; and the more so, because Gray did not
+disdain to borrow from him. Gray's fault was an affected fastidiousness,
+as appears by the slighting manner in which he speaks of Thomson's
+Castle of Indolence on its first appearance, as well as of Akenside's
+Pleasures of Imagination, and Shenstone's Elegies. That Gray had
+exquisite taste, and was a perfect scholar, no one can doubt.
+
+Collins lived thirteen years after the publication of his Odes. It does
+not appear that he produced any thing after this publication. How soon
+his grand mental malady extinguished his literary powers, I do not
+exactly know, nor is it recorded, whether any part of it arose from
+bodily disorders. Medical men have never agreed regarding this most
+deplorable of human afflictions. In Collins's case it probably arose
+from the mind. On such an intellectual temperament the extinction of the
+visions which Hope had painted to him seems to have been sufficient to
+produce that derangement, which first enfeebled, and then perverted and
+annihilated his faculties. The account given by Johnson is different
+from that supplied by Mr. Ragdale and another anonymous communication.
+
+He had, perhaps, lucid intervals in which he discovered nothing but
+weakness and exhaustion. But he appears to have sometimes had fits of
+violence and despair. It seems that he was an enthusiastic admirer of
+Shakespeare, and a great reader of black letter books. It may be
+inferred that his studies were not entirely given up during his malady;
+but it is a subject of great wonder and regret that the Wartons, the
+intimate friends both of his better and darker days, have left no
+particular memorials of him. He had a sister, lately, if not still,
+living, from whom, though of a very uncongenial nature, something might
+surely have been gathered. But there is a familiarity which, by
+destroying admiration, destroys the perception of what will interest
+others. There are few of our poets of rare genius, of whose private life
+and character much is known. Little is known of Spenser, Shakespeare,
+and Milton: not much even of Thomson. More is known of Gray by the
+medium of his beautiful letters; but when Southey, Wordsworth, and Scott
+are gone, posterity will know every particular of them; and, even now,
+know much which fills them with delight and admiration. But let us know
+something in good time, also of the new candidates for poetical fame!
+
+If the life of a poet is not in accordance with his song, it may be
+suspected that the song itself is not genuine. Who can be a poet, and
+yet be a worldling in his passions and habits? An artificial poet is a
+disgusting dealer in trifles: nothing but the predominance of strong and
+unstimulated feeling will give that inspiration without which it is
+worse than an empty sound. When the passion is factitious, the
+excitement has always an immoral tendency; but the delineation of real
+and amiable sentiments calls up a sympathy in other bosoms which thus
+confirms and fixes them where they would otherwise die away. The memory
+may preserve what is artificial, but, when it becomes stale, it turns to
+offensiveness, and thus breeds an alienation from literature itself.
+
+That Collins has continued to increase in fame as years have passed
+away, is the most decisive of all proofs that his poems have the pure
+and sterling merit which began to be ascribed to them soon after his
+death. M. Bonstetten tells me that Gray died without a suspicion of the
+high rank he was thereafter to hold in the annals of British genius?
+What did poor Collins think when he submitted his sublime odes to the
+flames? He must have had fits of confidence, even then, in himself; but
+intermixed with gloom and despair, and curses of the wretched doom of
+his birth! Is it sufficient that a man should wrap himself up in
+himself, and be content if the poetry creates itself and expires in his
+own heart? We strike the lyre to excite sympathy, and, if no one will
+hear, will any one not feel that he strikes in vain; and that the talent
+given us is useless, and even painful? But who can be assured that he
+has the talent if no one acknowledges it? To have it, and not to be
+assured that we have it, is a restless fire that burns to consume us.
+
+Let no one envy the endowments, if he looks at the fate, of poets. Let
+him contemplate Spenser, Denham, Rochester, Otway, Collins, Chatterton,
+Burns, Kirke White, Bloomfield, Shelley, Keats, and Byron, besides those
+of foreign countries! Perhaps Collins was the most unhappy of all; as he
+was assuredly one of the most inspired and most amiable.
+
+ "In woful measures wan Despair--
+ Low sullen sounds his grief beguiled,
+ A solemn, strange, and mingled air;
+ 'Twas sad by fits, by starts 'twas wild."
+
+Langhorne's edition of Collins first appeared in 1765, accompanied by
+observations which have been generally appended to subsequent editions.
+These observations have commonly borne the character of feebleness and
+affectation; they have a sort of pedantic prettiness, which is somewhat
+repulsive, but they do not want ingenuity, or justness of criticism.
+Part of them, at least, had previously appeared in the Monthly Review,
+probably written by Langhorne. Langhorne was not deficient himself in
+poetical genius, but is principally remembered by a single beautiful
+stanza, "Cold on Canadian hills," &c. From the time of Langhorne's first
+edition, Collins became a popular poet; a miniature edition appeared
+soon after that of Langhorne; and as long as I can remember books, which
+goes back at least to the year 1770, Collins's poems were almost
+universally on the lips of readers of English poetry. That Cowper, in
+1784, should speak of him as "a poet of no great fame," proves nothing,
+since Cowper's long seclusion from the world had made him utterly
+ignorant of contemporary literature. The negative inference, from the
+omission of Beattie, is not of much weight. I cannot recollect the date
+of the article in the Monthly Review; but, as it appears that Collins
+survived till 1759, I suspect it was before Collins's death. It was in
+September, 1754, that the Wartons visited him at Chichester: in that
+year he paid a visit to Oxford, when it appears that he was suffering
+under exhausture, not alienation, of mind.
+
+The critics, and, among the rest, Mrs. Barbauld and Campbell, have
+ascribed to him "frequent obscurity;" this is unjust,--his general
+characteristic is lucidness and transparency: he is never obscure,
+unless in the Ode to Liberty, and, perhaps, in a few passages of the Ode
+on the Manners. Campbell's criticism is, otherwise, worthy of this
+beautiful poet, whom he praises with congenial spirit. When Hazlitt
+speaks of the "tinsel and splendid patchwork" of Collins, "mixed with
+the solid, sterling ore of his genius," he speaks of a base material not
+to be found there. In Collins there is no tinsel or patchwork, one of
+his excellencies is, that the whole of every piece is of one web; there
+are no joinings or meaner threads. There is no height to which Collins
+might not have risen, had he lived long, had his mind continued sound,
+and had he persevered in exercising his genius. Campbell remarks that,
+at the same age, Milton had written nothing which could eclipse his
+productions.
+
+Of the two communications regarding Collins, to which I have already
+alluded, one anonymous, the other by a Mr. John Ragsdale, I must say
+something more. The first, signed V., appeared in the Gentleman's
+Magazine, with the date of the 20th Jan. 1781. I well remember its
+publication, and with what eagerness I read it. I suspect it was at the
+very crisis of the appearance of the last portion of Johnson's Lives,
+but possibly a year earlier. I perused it with a mixture of delight,
+melancholy, and disgust; the first passage which struck me was this: "As
+he brought with him [to Oxford], for so the whole tone of his
+conversation discovered, too high an opinion of his school acquisitions
+and a sovereign contempt for all academic studies and discipline, he
+never looked with any complacency on his situation in the University,
+but was always complaining of the dulness of a college life. In short,
+he threw up his demyship, and going to London, commenced a man of the
+town, spending his time in all the dissipation of Ranelagh, Vauxhall,
+and the playhouses; and was romantic enough to suppose that his superior
+abilities would draw the attention of the great world, by means of whom
+he was to make his fortune," &c., &c.--"Thus was lost to the world this
+unfortunate person, in the prime of life, without availing himself of
+fine abilities, which, if properly improved, must have raised him to the
+top of any profession, and have rendered him a blessing to his friends,
+and an ornament to his country."
+
+The vulgarity and narrow-mindedness of this last paragraph filled me
+with indignation and contempt. In a selfish point of view Collins
+might, unquestionably, have done better by binding himself to the
+trammels of a profession; but would he have been more an honor to his
+friends and an ornament to his country? Are the fruits of genius he has
+left behind no ornament or use to his country? Professional men, for the
+most part, live for themselves, and not for the world. Who now remembers
+Lord Camden, Lord Thurlow, Lord Rosslyn, Lord Kenyon, Lord Ellenborough,
+or a hundred episcopal or medical characters, all rich and famous in
+their day?
+
+The character of his person and habits we read with deep interest. "He
+was passionately fond of music, good-natured, and affable, warm in his
+friendships, and visionary in his pursuits; and, as long as I knew him,
+very temperate in his eating and drinking. He was of a moderate stature,
+of a light and clear complexion, with gray eyes, so very weak at times
+as hardly to bear a candle in the room, and often raising within him
+apprehensions of blindness."
+
+The letter from Mr. John Ragsdale is addressed to Mr. William Hymers,
+Queen's College, Oxford, dated "Hill Street, Richmond, in Surrey, July,
+1783." He appears to have been a tradesman in Bond Street; and he
+surveyed the character of Collins (with whom he was familiar) with a
+tradesman's eye. He reproached the poet with idleness, not because he
+was lingering and losing his time on the road to fame, but because he
+omitted to get money by his pen. "To raise a present subsistence," says
+Ragsdale, "he set about writing his Odes; and having a general
+invitation to my house, he frequently passed whole days there, which he
+employed in writing them, and as frequently burning what he had written
+after he had read them to me: many of them, which pleased me, I
+struggled to preserve, but without effect; for, pretending he would
+alter them, he got them from me, and thrust them into the fire." That he
+wrote the Odes to gain a present subsistence is but the tradesman's
+mistaken comment.
+
+Gray was about four years older than Collins, and he survived him twelve
+years; he appears to have spent these years in gloominess and spleen;
+but we know not what intense pleasures he received from his solitary
+studies, from the improvement of his mind, from that exquisite taste and
+increasing erudition of which every day added to the stores. The
+enthusiasm of Collins was more active and adventurous, and his erudition
+probably more acute. Timidity and fastidiousness were great defects in
+Gray; they kept down his invention, and made him resort to the wealth of
+others, when he could better have relied upon himself. But as to
+borrowing expressions and simple materials, no genius ever did
+otherwise; it is the new and happy combination in which lies the
+invention. It may be doubted which are now most popular, the Odes of
+Collins or of Gray. On the one hand, what is most abstract is least
+calculated for the general reader; on the other hand, the variety of
+learned allusions in Gray renders the style and thoughts of his most
+celebrated Odes less simple, less direct, and less easily comprehended
+at once; but then his deep morality, the touching strokes which go
+immediately to the heart, his sensibility to the common sorrows of human
+life, his powerful reflection of the sentiments which "come home to
+every one's business and bosom," form an attraction which perhaps turns
+the scale in his favour. Of both these sublime poets the correctness of
+composition renders the writings a national good.
+
+The French Revolution, which affected and partly reversed the minds of
+all Europe, produced a new era in our literature. There was good as well
+as evil in the new force thus infused into the human intellect. Our
+poetry had generally become tame and trite; a sort of languid mechanism
+had brought it into contempt; it was very little read, and still less
+esteemed. This might be not merely the effect, but also the cause of a
+deficiency of striking genius in the candidates for the laurel. Collins
+and Gray were dead; Mason had hung up the lyre; and Thomas Warton was
+then thought too laboured and quaint; Hayley had succeeded beyond
+expectation by a return to moral and didactic poetry at a moment when
+the public was satiated by vile imitations of lyrical and descriptive
+composition; but Cowper gave a new impulse to the curiosity of poetical
+readers, by a natural train of thought and the unlaboured effusions of
+genuine feeling. There is no doubt that a fearful regard to models
+stifles all force and preeminent merit. The burst of the French
+Revolution set the faculties of all young persons free. It was dangerous
+to secondary talents, and only led them into extravagances and
+absurdities. To Wordsworth, Southey, Scott, it was the removal of a
+weight, which would have hid the fire of their genius. But the
+exuberance of their inexhaustible minds in no degree lessens the value
+of the more reserved models of excellence of a tamer age. The contrast
+of their varied attractions supplies the reader with opposite kinds of
+merit, which delight and improve the more by this very opposition.
+
+Authors seldom estimate each other rightly in their lifetimes. The race
+of poets, of whom the last died with the century, had little friendship,
+or even acquaintance among themselves; or rather, they broke into little
+sets of two and three, which narrowed their opinions and their hearts;
+Gray and Mason, Johnson and the two Wartons, Cowper and Hayley, Darwin
+and Miss Seward; but Shenstone, Beattie, Akenside, Burns, Mrs. Carter,
+Mrs. Smith, &c. stood alone. This is not desirable. Innumerable
+advantages spring from frank and generous communication. Collins and
+Gray had not the most remote personal knowledge of each other. Gray
+never mentions Dr. Sneyd Davies, a poet and an Etonian, nearly
+contemporary; nor Nicholas Hardinge, a scholar and a poet also. Mundy,
+the author of Needwood Forest, passed a long life in the country,
+totally removed from poets and literati, except the small coterie of
+Miss Seward, at Litchfield. The lives of poets would be the most amusing
+of all biography, if the materials were less scanty: it is strange that
+so few of them have left any ample records of themselves; of many not
+even a letter or fragment of memorials is preserved. None of Cowley's
+letters, a mode of composition in which he is said to have eminently
+excelled, have come down to us. Of Prior, Tickell, Thomson, Young, Dyer,
+Akenside, the Wartons, there are few of any importance known to be in
+existence. Those of Hayley, which Dr. J. Johnson has brought forward,
+are not of the interest which might have been expected. Mrs. Carter's
+are excellent, and many of Beattie's amusing and amiable: it had been
+well for Miss Seward if most of hers had been consigned to the flames.
+Those of Charlotte Smith it has not been thought prudent to give to the
+public. The greater part of those of Lord Byron, which Moore has
+hitherto put forth, had better have been spared: they are written in
+false taste, and are under a factitious character: in general, the prose
+style of poets is admirable;--it was not Lord Byron's excellence. We
+have no specimens of the prose of Collins: it is grievous that he did
+not execute his project of The History of the Revival of Literature, or
+of the Lives for the Biographia Britannica, which he undertook. Poets of
+research are, of all authors, best qualified to write biography with
+sagacity and eloquence; they see into the human heart, and detect its
+most secret movements; and if there be a class of literature more
+amusing and more instructive than another, it is well written
+biography.
+
+We have a few poets who have not possessed erudition; for genius will
+overcome all deficiencies of art and labour, such as Shakespeare,
+Chatterton, Burns, and Bloomfield: but it cannot be questioned that
+erudition is a mighty aid. Milton could never have been what he was
+without profound and laborious erudition. Another necessary knowledge is
+the knowledge of the human heart, which no industry and learning will
+give. It is an intuitive gift, which mainly depends on an acute and
+correct imagination, and a sympathetic sensibility of the human
+passions. Among the innumerable rich endowments of Shakespeare this was
+the first; it was the predominant brilliance of his knowledge which
+gave him correctness of description, sentiment, and observation, and
+clearness, force, and eloquence of language.
+
+Collins had only reached the age of twenty-six when his Odes were
+published: what inconceivable power would the maturity of age have given
+him? It is lamentable that he had no familiar friend and companion from
+that period capable of apprehending and remembering his conversations.
+In his lucid intervals he must have said many wise, many learned, and
+many brilliant things; perhaps his very disease, in its vacillation
+between light and darkness, may have struck out many unexpected and
+surprising beauties, which common attendants were utterly incapable of
+appreciating. The flushes of the mind under the unnatural impulses of
+malady are sometimes inimitably splendid. His reason, at times, was
+sound, for his reason was fervid to the last. But it is said that his
+shrieks sometimes resounded through the cathedral cloisters of
+Chichester till the horror of those who heard him was insupportable.
+
+All these speculations may appear tedious to those whose curiosity is
+confined to facts: but new facts regarding Collins are not to be had:
+and what are facts unless they are accompanied by reflections,
+conclusions, and sentiments? The use of facts is to teach us to think,
+to judge, and to feel: and facts, regarding men of genius, are valuable
+in enabling us to contemplate how far the gifts of high intellect
+contribute to our happiness, or afford guides for the rest of mankind;
+in what respects they have the possessors upon an equality with the herd
+of the people; and where they expose them to temptations from which
+others are free. For these purposes the ill fated Collins is a
+melancholy illustration: the Muse had touched the lips of his infancy,
+and infused her spirit into him; she had given him a piercing
+understanding, and an amiable disposition and temper; she enabled him to
+come forth with poetry of the first class, in the earliest bloom of
+youth; and to deserve, if not to win, the envied laurel, which millions
+have reached at in vain! What seeming glories and blessings were these!
+Yet to how few was so much misery dispensed as to this once envied
+being! May we not hope that his spirit now has its mighty reward?
+
+Let it not be denied that there is high virtue in the culture of the
+mind, when directed to pure and elevated objects, and accustoming itself
+to travel in lofty paths! The mind cannot attain the necessary
+refinement, nor have its sight cleared of the film of earthly grossness,
+unless the heart throws off the dregs of coarser feeling, and keeps its
+wings afloat on a lighter and airier atmosphere. It may be said, that
+there have been bad men who have been great poets: but this position
+remains to be proved. The dissolute men who have written verses have not
+been great poets. Were Dante, Petrarch, Tasso, Spenser, Shakespeare,
+Dryden, Pope, Thomson, Burns, bad men? We know that Milton's character
+was great and holy, whatever were his politics: and who could be more
+virtuous than Gray, Beattie, Cowper, and Kirke White? And have we not
+virtuous poets among the living,--men whose native splendour and
+intellectual culture have almost purified them into spirits? Let us
+never cease to meditate on the dejected inspiration, which could pour
+forth such strains as these:
+
+ "With eyes upraised, as one inspired,
+ Pale Melancholy sat retired;
+ And from her wild sequester'd seat,
+ In notes by distance made more sweet,
+ Pour'd through the mellow horn her pensive soul:
+ And, dashing soft from rocks around,
+ Bubbling runnels join'd the sound;
+ Through glades and glooms the mingled measures stole,
+ Or o'er some haunted stream with fond delay
+ Round a holy calm diffusing,
+ Love of peace and lonely musing,
+ In hollow murmurs died away."
+
+There are those who will think the praises thus bestowed upon Collins
+extravagant. It is now sixty years since I became familiar with him;
+and I still think of him with unabated admiration. When the calm
+judgment of age confirms the passion of youth and boyhood, we cannot be
+much mistaken in the merit we ascribe to him who is the object of it.
+
+S. E. B.
+
+
+
+
+ORIENTAL ECLOGUES.
+
+WRITTEN ORIGINALLY FOR THE ENTERTAINMENT OF THE LADIES OF TAURIS.
+
+AND NOW TRANSLATED.
+
+ ----Ubi primus equis Oriens adflavit anhelis.
+ VIRG.
+
+
+
+
+The First Edition was entitled, "Persian Eclogues, written originally
+for the Entertainment of the Ladies of Tauris. And now first translated,
+&c.
+
+ Quod si non hic tantus fructus ostenderetur, et si ex his studiis
+ delectatio sola peteretur; tamen, ut opinor, hanc animi
+ remissionem humanissimam ac liberalissimam judicaretis.
+
+ _CIC. pro Arch. Poeta._"
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+It is with the writings of mankind, in some measure, as with their
+complexions or their dress; each nation hath a peculiarity in all these,
+to distinguish it from the rest of the world.
+
+The gravity of the Spaniard, and the levity of the Frenchman, are as
+evident in all their productions as in their persons themselves; and the
+style of my countrymen is as naturally strong and nervous, as that of an
+Arabian or Persian is rich and figurative.
+
+There is an elegancy and wildness of thought which recommends all
+their compositions; and our geniuses are as much too cold for the
+entertainment of such sentiments, as our climate is for their fruits
+and spices. If any of these beauties are to be found in the following
+Eclogues, I hope my reader will consider them as an argument of their
+being original. I received them at the hands of a merchant, who had
+made it his business to enrich himself with the learning, as well as the
+silks and carpets of the Persians. The little information I could
+gather concerning their author, was, that his name was Abdallah, and
+that he was a native of Tauris.
+
+It was in that city that he died of a distemper fatal in those parts,
+whilst he was engaged in celebrating the victories of his favourite
+monarch, the great Abbas.[10] As to the Eclogues themselves, they give a
+very just view of the miseries and inconveniences, as well as the
+felicities, that attend one of the finest countries in the East.
+
+The time of writing them was probably in the beginning of Sha Sultan
+Hosseyn's reign, the successor of Sefi or Solyman the Second.
+
+Whatever defects, as, I doubt not, there will be many, fall under the
+reader's observation, I hope his candour will incline him to make the
+following reflection:
+
+That the works of Orientals contain many peculiarities, and that,
+through defect of language, few European translators can do them
+justice.
+
+
+
+
+ORIENTAL ECLOGUES.
+
+
+ECLOGUE I.
+
+SELIM; OR, THE SHEPHERD'S MORAL.
+
+ SCENE, A valley near Bagdat.
+ TIME, The morning.
+
+
+ 'Ye Persian maids, attend your poet's lays,
+ And hear how shepherds pass their golden days.
+ Not all are blest, whom fortune's hand sustains
+ With wealth in courts, nor all that haunt the plains:
+ Well may your hearts believe the truths I tell; 5
+ 'Tis virtue makes the bliss, where'er we dwell.'
+
+ Thus Selim sung, by sacred Truth inspired;
+ Nor praise, but such as Truth bestow'd, desired:
+ Wise in himself, his meaning songs convey'd
+ Informing morals to the shepherd maid; 10
+ Or taught the swains that surest bliss to find,
+ What groves nor streams bestow, a virtuous mind.
+
+ When sweet and blushing, like a virgin bride,
+ The radiant morn resumed her orient pride;
+ When wanton gales along the valleys play, 15
+ Breathe on each flower, and bear their sweets away;
+ By Tigris' wandering waves he sat, and sung
+ This useful lesson for the fair and young.
+
+ 'Ye Persian dames,' he said, 'to you belong--
+ Well may they please--the morals of my song: 20
+ No fairer maids, I trust, than you are found,
+ Graced with soft arts, the peopled world around!
+ The morn that lights you, to your loves supplies
+ Each gentler ray delicious to your eyes:
+ For you those flowers her fragrant hands bestow; 25
+ And yours the love that kings delight to know.
+ Yet think not these, all beauteous as they are,
+ The best kind blessings heaven can grant the fair!
+ Who trust alone in beauty's feeble ray
+ Boast but the worth[11] Balsora's pearls display: 30
+ Drawn from the deep we own their surface bright,
+ But, dark within, they drink no lustrous light:
+ Such are the maids, and such the charms they boast,
+ By sense unaided, or to virtue lost.
+ Self-flattering sex! your hearts believe in vain 35
+ That love shall blind, when once he fires, the swain;
+ Or hope a lover by your faults to win,
+ As spots on ermine beautify the skin:
+ Who seeks secure to rule, be first her care
+ Each softer virtue that adorns the fair; 40
+ Each tender passion man delights to find,
+ The loved perfections of a female mind!
+
+ 'Blest were the days when Wisdom held her reign,
+ And shepherds sought her on the silent plain!
+ With Truth she wedded in the secret grove, 45
+ Immortal Truth, and daughters bless'd their love.
+ O haste, fair maids! ye Virtues, come away!
+ Sweet Peace and Plenty lead you on your way!
+ The balmy shrub, for you shall love our shore,
+ By Ind excell'd, or Araby, no more. 50
+
+ 'Lost to our fields, for so the fates ordain,
+ The dear deserters shall return again.
+ Come thou, whose thoughts as limpid springs are clear,
+ To lead the train, sweet Modesty, appear:
+ Here make thy court amidst our rural scene, 55
+ And shepherd girls shall own thee for their queen:
+ With thee be Chastity, of all afraid,
+ Distrusting all, a wise suspicious maid,
+ But man the most:--not more the mountain doe
+ Holds the swift falcon for her deadly foe. 60
+ Cold is her breast, like flowers that drink the dew;
+ A silken veil conceals her from the view.
+ No wild desires amidst thy train be known;
+ But Faith, whose heart is fix'd on one alone:
+ Desponding Meekness, with her downcast eyes, 65
+ And friendly Pity, full of tender sighs;
+ And Love the last: by these your hearts approve;
+ These are the virtues that must lead to love.'
+
+ Thus sung the swain; and ancient legends say
+ The maids of Bagdat verified the lay: 70
+ Dear to the plains, the Virtues came along,
+ The shepherds loved, and Selim bless'd his song.
+
+
+VARIATIONS.
+
+ Ver.
+ 8. No praise the youth, but hers alone desired:
+
+ 13. When sweet and odorous, like an eastern bride,
+
+ 30. Balsora's pearls have more of worth than they:
+
+ 31. Drawn from the deep, they sparkle to the sight,
+ And all-unconscious shoot a lustrous light:
+
+ 46. The fair-eyed Truth, and daughters bless'd their love.
+
+ 53. O come, thou Modesty, as they decree,
+ The rose may then improve her blush by thee.
+
+ 69. Thus sung the swain, and eastern legends say
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [10] In the Persian tongue, Abbas signifieth "the father of the
+ people."
+
+ [11] The gulf of that name, famous for the pearl fishery.
+
+
+
+
+ECLOGUE II.
+
+HASSAN; OR, THE CAMEL DRIVER.
+
+ SCENE, The desert.
+ TIME, Midday.
+
+
+ In silent horror o'er the boundless waste
+ The driver Hassan with his camels past:
+ One cruise of water on his back he bore,
+ And his light scrip contain'd a scanty store;
+ A fan of painted feathers in his hand, 5
+ To guard his shaded face from scorching sand.
+ The sultry sun had gain'd the middle sky,
+ And not a tree, and not an herb was nigh;
+ The beasts with pain their dusty way pursue;
+ Shrill roar'd the winds, and dreary was the view! 10
+ With desperate sorrow wild, the affrighted man
+ Thrice sigh'd, thrice struck his breast, and thus began:
+ 'Sad was the hour, and luckless was the day,
+ 'When first from Schiraz' walls I bent my way!'
+
+ 'Ah! little thought I of the blasting wind, 15
+ The thirst, or pinching hunger, that I find!
+ Bethink thee, Hassan, where shall thirst assuage,
+ When fails this cruise, his unrelenting rage?
+ Soon shall this scrip its precious load resign;
+ Then what but tears and hunger shall be thine? 20
+
+ 'Ye mute companions of my toils, that bear
+ In all my griefs a more than equal share!
+ Here, where no springs in murmurs break away,
+ Or moss-crown'd fountains mitigate the day,
+ In vain ye hope the green delights to know, 25
+ Which plains more blest, or verdant vales bestow:
+ Here rocks alone, and tasteless sands, are found,
+ And faint and sickly winds for ever howl around.
+ 'Sad was the hour, and luckless was the day,
+ 'When first from Schiraz' walls I bent my way!' 30
+
+ 'Curst be the gold and silver which persuade
+ Weak men to follow far fatiguing trade!
+ The lily peace outshines the silver store,
+ And life is dearer than the golden ore:
+ Yet money tempts us o'er the desert brown, 35
+ To every distant mart and wealthy town.
+ Full oft we tempt the land, and oft the sea;
+ And are we only yet repaid by thee?
+ Ah! why was ruin so attractive made?
+ Or why fond man so easily betray'd? 40
+ Why heed we not, whilst mad we haste along,
+ The gentle voice of peace, or pleasure's song?
+ Or wherefore think the flowery mountain's side,
+ The fountain's murmurs, and the valley's pride,
+ Why think we these less pleasing to behold 45
+ Than dreary deserts, if they lead to gold?
+ 'Sad was the hour, and luckless was the day,
+ 'When first from Schiraz' walls I bent my way!'
+
+ 'O cease, my fears!--all frantic as I go,
+ When thought creates unnumber'd scenes of woe, 50
+ What if the lion in his rage I meet!--
+ Oft in the dust I view his printed feet:
+ And, fearful! oft, when day's declining light
+ Yields her pale empire to the mourner night,
+ By hunger roused, he scours the groaning plain, 55
+ Gaunt wolves and sullen tigers in his train:
+ Before them Death with shrieks directs their way,
+ Fills the wild yell, and leads them to their prey.
+ 'Sad was the hour, and luckless was the day,
+ 'When first from Schiraz' walls I bent my way!' 60
+
+ 'At that dead hour the silent asp shall creep,
+ If aught of rest I find, upon my sleep:
+ Or some swoln serpent twist his scales around,
+ And wake to anguish with a burning wound.
+ Thrice happy they, the wise contented poor, 65
+ From lust of wealth, and dread of death secure!
+ They tempt no deserts, and no griefs they find;
+ Peace rules the day, where reason rules the mind.
+ 'Sad was the hour, and luckless was the day,
+ 'When first from Schiraz' walls I bent my way!' 70
+
+ 'O hapless youth!--for she thy love hath won,
+ The tender Zara will be most undone!
+ Big swell'd my heart, and own'd the powerful maid,
+ When fast she dropt her tears, as thus she said:
+ "Farewell the youth whom sighs could not detain; 75
+ Whom Zara's breaking heart implored in vain!
+ Yet, as thou go'st, may every blast arise
+ Weak and unfelt, as these rejected sighs!
+ Safe o'er the wild, no perils mayst thou see,
+ No griefs endure, nor weep, false youth, like me." 80
+ O let me safely to the fair return,
+ Say, with a kiss, she must not, shall not mourn;
+ O! let me teach my heart to lose its fears,
+ Recall'd by Wisdom's voice, and Zara's tears.'
+
+ He said, and call'd on heaven to bless the day, 85
+ When back to Schiraz' walls he bent his way.
+
+
+VARIATIONS.
+
+ Ver.
+ 1. In silent horror o'er the desert waste
+
+ 83. Go teach my heart to lose its painful fears.
+
+
+
+
+ECLOGUE III.
+
+ABRA; OR, THE GEORGIAN SULTANA.
+
+ SCENE, A forest.
+ TIME, The evening.
+
+
+ In Georgia's land, where Tefflis' towers are seen,
+ In distant view, along the level green,
+ While evening dews enrich the glittering glade,
+ And the tall forests cast a longer shade,
+ What time 'tis sweet o'er fields of rice to stray, 5
+ Or scent the breathing maize at setting day;
+ Amidst the maids of Zagen's peaceful grove,
+ Emyra sung the pleasing cares of love.
+
+ Of Abra first began the tender strain,
+ Who led her youth with flocks upon the plain. 10
+ At morn she came those willing flocks to lead,
+ Where lilies rear them in the watery mead;
+ From early dawn the livelong hours she told,
+ Till late at silent eve she penn'd the fold.
+ Deep in the grove, beneath the secret shade, 15
+ A various wreath of odorous flowers she made:
+ Gay-motley'd[12] pinks and sweet jonquils she chose,
+ The violet blue that on the moss-bank grows;
+ All sweet to sense, the flaunting rose was there;
+ The finish'd chaplet well adorn'd her hair. 20
+
+ Great Abbas chanced that fated morn to stray,
+ By love conducted from the chase away;
+ Among the vocal vales he heard her song,
+ And sought, the vales and echoing groves among;
+ At length he found, and woo'd the rural maid; 25
+ She knew the monarch, and with fear obey'd.
+ 'Be every youth like royal Abbas moved,
+ 'And every Georgian maid like Abra loved!'
+
+ The royal lover bore her from the plain;
+ Yet still her crook and bleating flock remain: 30
+ Oft, as she went, she backward turn'd her view,
+ And bade that crook and bleating flock adieu.
+ Fair, happy maid! to other scenes remove,
+ To richer scenes of golden power and love!
+ Go leave the simple pipe and shepherd's strain; 35
+ With love delight thee, and with Abbas reign!
+ 'Be every youth like royal Abbas moved,
+ 'And every Georgian maid like Abra loved!'
+
+ Yet, 'midst the blaze of courts, she fix'd her love
+ On the cool fountain, or the shady grove; 40
+ Still, with the shepherd's innocence, her mind
+ To the sweet vale, and flowery mead, inclined;
+ And oft as spring renew'd the plains with flowers,
+ Breathed his soft gales, and led the fragrant hours,
+ With sure return she sought the sylvan scene, 45
+ The breezy mountains, and the forests green.
+ Her maids around her moved, a duteous band!
+ Each bore a crook, all rural, in her hand:
+ Some simple lay, of flocks and herds, they sung;
+ With joy the mountain and the forest rung. 50
+ 'Be every youth like royal Abbas moved,
+ 'And every Georgian maid like Abra loved!'
+
+ And oft the royal lover left the care
+ And thorns of state, attendant on the fair;
+ Oft to the shades and low-roof'd cots retired, 55
+ Or sought the vale where first his heart was fired:
+ A russet mantle, like a swain, he wore,
+ And thought of crowns, and busy courts, no more.
+ 'Be every youth like royal Abbas moved,
+ 'And every Georgian maid like Abra loved!' 60
+
+ Blest was the life that royal Abbas led:
+ Sweet was his love, and innocent his bed.
+ What if in wealth the noble maid excel?
+ The simple shepherd girl can love as well.
+ Let those who rule on Persia's jewel'd throne 65
+ Be famed for love, and gentlest love alone;
+ Or wreathe, like Abbas, full of fair renown,
+ The lover's myrtle with the warrior's crown.
+ O happy days! the maids around her say;
+ O haste, profuse of blessings, haste away! 70
+ 'Be every youth like royal Abbas moved,
+ 'And every Georgian maid like Abra loved!'
+
+
+VARIATION.
+
+ Verses 5 and 6 were inserted in the second edition.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [12] That these flowers are found in very great abundance in some of the
+ provinces of Persia, see the Modern History of the ingenious Mr.
+ Salmon. C.
+
+
+
+
+ECLOGUE IV.
+
+AGIB AND SECANDER; OR, THE FUGITIVES.
+
+ SCENE, A mountain in Circassia.
+ TIME, Midnight.
+
+
+ In fair Circassia, where, to love inclined,
+ Each swain was blest, for every maid was kind;
+ At that still hour, when awful midnight reigns,
+ And none, but wretches, haunt the twilight plains;
+ What time the moon had hung her lamp on high, 5
+ And past in radiance through the cloudless sky;
+ Sad, o'er the dews, two brother shepherds fled,
+ Where wildering fear and desperate sorrow led:
+ Fast as they press'd their flight, behind them lay
+ Wide ravaged plains, and valleys stole away: 10
+ Along the mountain's bending sides they ran,
+ Till, faint and weak, Secander thus began.
+
+
+ SECANDER.
+
+ O stay thee, Agib, for my feet deny,
+ No longer friendly to my life, to fly.
+ Friend of my heart, O turn thee and survey! 15
+ Trace our sad flight through all its length of way
+ And first review that long extended plain,
+ And yon wide groves, already past with pain!
+ Yon ragged cliff, whose dangerous path we tried!
+ And, last, this lofty mountain's weary side! 20
+
+
+ AGIB.
+
+ Weak as thou art, yet, hapless, must thou know
+ The toils of flight, or some severer woe!
+ Still, as I haste, the Tartar shouts behind,
+ And shrieks and sorrows load the saddening wind:
+ In rage of heart, with ruin in his hand, 25
+ He blasts our harvests, and deforms our land.
+ Yon citron grove, whence first in fear we came,
+ Droops its fair honors to the conquering flame:
+ Far fly the swains, like us, in deep despair,
+ And leave to ruffian bands their fleecy care. 30
+
+
+ SECANDER.
+
+ Unhappy land, whose blessings tempt the sword,
+ In vain, unheard, thou call'st thy Persian lord!
+ In vain thou court'st him, helpless, to thine aid,
+ To shield the shepherd, and protect the maid!
+ Far off, in thoughtless indolence resign'd, 35
+ Soft dreams of love and pleasure soothe his mind:
+ 'Midst fair sultanas lost in idle joy,
+ No wars alarm him, and no fears annoy.
+
+
+ AGIB.
+
+ Yet these green hills, in summer's sultry heat,
+ Have lent the monarch oft a cool retreat. 40
+ Sweet to the sight is Zabran's flowery plain,
+ And once by maids and shepherds loved in vain!
+ No more the virgins shall delight to rove
+ By Sargis' banks, or Irwan's shady grove;
+ On Tarkie's mountain catch the cooling gale, 45
+ Or breathe the sweets of Aly's flowery vale:
+ Fair scenes! but, ah! no more with peace possest,
+ With ease alluring, and with plenty blest!
+ No more the shepherds' whitening tents appear,
+ Nor the kind products of a bounteous year; 50
+ No more the date, with snowy blossoms crown'd!
+ But ruin spreads her baleful fires around.
+
+
+ SECANDER.
+
+ In vain Circassia boasts her spicy groves,
+ For ever famed for pure and happy loves:
+ In vain she boasts her fairest of the fair, 55
+ Their eyes' blue languish, and their golden hair!
+ Those eyes in tears their fruitless grief must send;
+ Those hairs the Tartar's cruel hand shall rend.
+
+
+ AGIB.
+
+ Ye Georgian swains, that piteous learn from far
+ Circassia's ruin, and the waste of war; 60
+ Some weightier arms than crooks and staves prepare,
+ To shield your harvests, and defend your fair:
+ The Turk and Tartar like designs pursue,
+ Fix'd to destroy, and steadfast to undo.
+ Wild as his land, in native deserts bred, 65
+ By lust incited, or by malice led,
+ The villain Arab, as he prowls for prey,
+ Oft marks with blood and wasting flames the way;
+ Yet none so cruel as the Tartar foe,
+ To death inured, and nurst in scenes of woe. 70
+
+ He said; when loud along the vale was heard
+ A shriller shriek, and nearer fires appear'd:
+ The affrighted shepherds, through the dews of night,
+ Wide o'er the moonlight hills renew'd their flight.
+
+
+VARIATIONS.
+
+ Ver.
+ 49. No more the shepherds' whitening seats appear,
+
+ 51. No more the dale, with snowy blossoms crown'd!
+
+
+END OF THE ECLOGUES.
+
+
+
+
+ODES
+
+ON SEVERAL DESCRIPTIVE AND ALLEGORICAL SUBJECTS.
+
+ ~Ein heurysieps anageisthai
+ Prosphoros en Moisan diphr:
+ Tolma de kai amphilaphs dynamis
+ Espoito.~
+ ~Pindar. Olymp. Th.~
+
+
+ODES.
+
+
+ODE TO PITY.
+
+
+ O thou, the friend of man, assign'd
+ With balmy hands his wounds to bind,
+ And charm his frantic woe:
+ When first Distress, with dagger keen,
+ Broke forth to waste his destined scene, 5
+ His wild unsated foe!
+
+ By Pella's[13] bard, a magic name,
+ By all the griefs his thought could frame,
+ Receive my humble rite:
+ Long, Pity, let the nations view 10
+ The sky-worn robes of tenderest blue,
+ And eyes of dewy light!
+
+ But wherefore need I wander wide
+ To old Ilissus' distant side,
+ Deserted stream, and mute? 15
+ Wild Arun[14] too has heard thy strains,
+ And Echo, 'midst my native plains,
+ Been soothed by Pity's lute.
+
+ There first the wren thy myrtles shed
+ On gentlest Otway's infant head, 20
+ To him thy cell was shown;
+ And while he sung the female heart,
+ With youth's soft notes unspoil'd by art,
+ Thy turtles mix'd their own.
+
+ Come, Pity, come, by Fancy's aid, 25
+ E'en now my thoughts, relenting maid,
+ Thy temple's pride design:
+ Its southern site, its truth complete,
+ Shall raise a wild enthusiast heat
+ In all who view the shrine. 30
+
+ There Picture's toils shall well relate
+ How chance, or hard involving fate,
+ O'er mortal bliss prevail:
+ The buskin'd Muse shall near her stand,
+ And sighing prompt her tender hand, 35
+ With each disastrous tale.
+
+ There let me oft, retired by day,
+ In dreams of passion melt away,
+ Allow'd with thee to dwell:
+ There waste the mournful lamp of night, 40
+ Till, Virgin, thou again delight
+ To hear a British shell!
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [13] Euripides, of whom Aristotle pronounces, on a comparison of him
+ with Sophocles, that he was the greater master of the tender
+ passions, ~n tragikteros~. C.
+
+ [14] The river Arun runs by the village of Trotton in Sussex, where
+ Otway had his birth.
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO FEAR.
+
+
+ Thou, to whom the world unknown,
+ With all its shadowy shapes, is shown;
+ Who seest, appall'd, the unreal scene,
+ While Fancy lifts the veil between:
+ Ah Fear! ah frantic Fear! 5
+ I see, I see thee near.
+ I know thy hurried step, thy haggard eye!
+ Like thee I start; like thee disorder'd fly.
+ For, lo, what monsters in thy train appear!
+ Danger, whose limbs of giant mould 10
+ What mortal eye can fix'd behold?
+ Who stalks his round, an hideous form,
+ Howling amidst the midnight storm;
+ Or throws him on the ridgy steep
+ Of some loose hanging rock to sleep: 15
+ And with him thousand phantoms join'd,
+ Who prompt to deeds accursed the mind:
+ And those, the fiends, who, near allied,
+ O'er Nature's wounds, and wrecks, preside;
+ Whilst Vengeance, in the lurid air, 20
+ Lifts her red arm, exposed and bare:
+ On whom that ravening[15] brood of Fate,
+ Who lap the blood of sorrow, wait:
+ Who, Fear, this ghastly train can see,
+ And look not madly wild, like thee! 25
+
+
+ EPODE.
+
+ In earliest Greece, to thee, with partial choice,
+ The grief-full Muse addrest her infant tongue;
+ The maids and matrons, on her awful voice,
+ Silent and pale, in wild amazement hung.
+
+ Yet he, the bard[16] who first invoked thy name, 30
+ Disdain'd in Marathon its power to feel:
+ For not alone he nursed the poet's flame,
+ But reach'd from Virtue's hand the patriot's steel.
+
+ But who is he whom later garlands grace,
+ Who left a while o'er Hybla's dews to rove, 35
+ With trembling eyes thy dreary steps to trace,
+ Where thou and furies shared the baleful grove?
+
+ Wrapt in thy cloudy veil, the incestuous[17] queen
+ Sigh'd the sad call[18] her son and husband heard,
+ When once alone it broke the silent scene, 40
+ And he the wretch of Thebes no more appear'd.
+
+ O Fear, I know thee by my throbbing heart:
+ Thy withering power inspired each mournful line:
+ Though gentle Pity claim her mingled part,
+ Yet all the thunders of the scene are thine! 45
+
+
+ ANTISTROPHE.
+
+ Thou who such weary lengths hast past,
+ Where wilt thou rest, mad Nymph, at last?
+ Say, wilt thou shroud in haunted cell,
+ Where gloomy Rape and Murder dwell?
+ Or, in some hollow'd seat, 50
+ 'Gainst which the big waves beat,
+ Hear drowning seamen's cries, in tempests brought?
+ Dark power, with shuddering meek submitted thought,
+ Be mine to read the visions old
+ Which thy awakening bards have told: 55
+ And, lest thou meet my blasted view,
+ Hold each strange tale devoutly true;
+ Ne'er be I found, by thee o'erawed,
+ In that thrice hallow'd eve, abroad,
+ When ghosts, as cottage maids believe, 60
+ Their pebbled beds permitted leave;
+ And goblins haunt, from fire, or fen,
+ Or mine, or flood, the walks of men!
+
+ O thou, whose spirit most possest
+ The sacred seat of Shakespeare's breast! 65
+ By all that from thy prophet broke,
+ In thy divine emotions spoke;
+ Hither again thy fury deal,
+ Teach me but once like him to feel:
+ His cypress wreath my meed decree, 70
+ And I, O Fear, will dwell with thee!
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [15] Alluding to the ~Kynas aphyktous~ of Sophocles. See the Electra.
+ C.
+
+ [16] schylus. C.
+
+ [17] Jocasta. C.
+
+ [18] ~----oud' et' rrei bo,
+ n men sip; phthegma d' exaiphns tinos
+ Thuxen auton, hste pantas orthias
+ Stsai phob deisantas exaiphns trichas.~
+
+ See the OEdip. Colon. of Sophocles. C.
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO SIMPLICITY.
+
+
+ O thou, by Nature taught
+ To breathe her genuine thought,
+ In numbers warmly pure, and sweetly strong;
+ Who first, on mountains wild,
+ In Fancy, loveliest child, 5
+ Thy babe, or Pleasure's, nursed the powers of song!
+
+ Thou, who, with hermit heart,
+ Disdain'st the wealth of art,
+ And gauds, and pageant weeds, and trailing pall;
+ But com'st a decent maid, 10
+ In attic robe array'd,
+ O chaste, unboastful Nymph, to thee I call!
+
+ By all the honey'd store
+ On Hybla's thymy shore;
+ By all her blooms, and mingled murmurs dear; 15
+ By her[19] whose lovelorn woe,
+ In evening musings slow,
+ Soothed sweetly sad Electra's poet's ear:
+
+ By old Cephisus deep,
+ Who spread his wavy sweep, 20
+ In warbled wanderings, round thy green retreat;
+ On whose enamel'd side,
+ When holy Freedom died,
+ No equal haunt allured thy future feet.
+
+ O sister meek of Truth, 25
+ To my admiring youth,
+ Thy sober aid and native charms infuse!
+ The flowers that sweetest breathe,
+ Though Beauty cull'd the wreath,
+ Still ask thy hand to range their order'd hues. 30
+
+ While Rome could none esteem
+ But virtue's patriot theme,
+ You lov'd her hills, and led her laureat band:
+ But staid to sing alone
+ To one distinguish'd throne; 35
+ And turn'd thy face, and fled her alter'd land.
+
+ No more, in hall or bower,
+ The Passions own thy power,
+ Love, only Love her forceless numbers mean:
+ For thou hast left her shrine; 40
+ Nor olive more, nor vine,
+ Shall gain thy feet to bless the servile scene.
+
+ Though taste, though genius, bless
+ To some divine excess,
+ Faints the cold work till thou inspire the whole; 45
+ What each, what all supply,
+ May court, may charm, our eye;
+ Thou, only thou, canst raise the meeting soul!
+
+ Of these let others ask,
+ To aid some mighty task, 50
+ I only seek to find thy temperate vale;
+ Where oft my reed might sound
+ To maids and shepherds round,
+ And all thy sons, O Nature, learn my tale.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [19] The ~adn~, or nightingale, for which Sophocles seems to have
+ entertained a peculiar fondness. C.
+
+
+
+
+ODE ON THE POETICAL CHARACTER.
+
+
+ As once,--if, not with light regard,
+ I read aright that gifted bard,
+ --Him whose school above the rest
+ His loveliest elfin queen has blest;--
+ One, only one, unrival'd[20] fair, 5
+ Might hope the magic girdle wear,
+ At solemn turney hung on high,
+ The wish of each love-darting eye;
+
+ --Lo! to each other nymph, in turn, applied,
+ As if, in air unseen, some hovering hand, 10
+ Some chaste and angel friend to virgin fame,
+ With whisper'd spell had burst the starting band,
+ It left unblest her loathed dishonour'd side;
+ Happier, hopeless Fair, if never
+ Her baffled hand, with vain endeavour, 15
+ Had touch'd that fatal zone to her denied!
+ Young Fancy thus, to me divinest name,
+ To whom, prepared and bathed in heaven,
+ The cest of amplest power is given:
+ To few the godlike gift assigns, 20
+ To gird their blest prophetic loins,
+ And gaze her visions wild, and feel unmix'd her flame!
+
+ The band, as fairy legends say,
+ Was wove on that creating day,
+ When He, who call'd with thought to birth 25
+ Yon tented sky, this laughing earth,
+ And dress'd with springs and forests tall,
+ And pour'd the main engirting all,
+ Long by the loved enthusiast woo'd,
+ Himself in some diviner mood, 30
+ Retiring, sat with her alone,
+ And placed her on his sapphire throne;
+ The whiles, the vaulted shrine around,
+ Seraphic wires were heard to sound,
+ Now sublimest triumph swelling, 35
+ Now on love and mercy dwelling;
+ And she, from out the veiling cloud,
+ Breathed her magic notes aloud:
+ And thou, thou rich-hair'd youth of morn,
+ And all thy subject life was born! 40
+ The dangerous passions kept aloof,
+ Far from the sainted growing woof:
+ But near it sat ecstatic Wonder,
+ Listening the deep applauding thunder;
+ And Truth, in sunny vest array'd, 45
+ By whose the tarsel's eyes were made;
+ All the shadowy tribes of mind,
+ In braided dance, their murmurs join'd,
+ And all the bright uncounted powers
+ Who feed on heaven's ambrosial flowers. 50
+ --Where is the bard whose soul can now
+ Its high presuming hopes avow?
+ Where he who thinks, with rapture blind,
+ This hallow'd work for him design'd?
+
+ High on some cliff, to heaven up-piled, 55
+ Of rude access, of prospect wild,
+ Where, tangled round the jealous steep,
+ Strange shades o'erbrow the valleys deep,
+ And holy Genii guard the rock,
+ Its glooms embrown, its springs unlock, 60
+ While on its rich ambitious head,
+ An Eden, like his own, lies spread:
+ I view that oak, the fancied glades among,
+ By which, as Milton lay, his evening ear,
+ From many a cloud that dropp'd ethereal dew, 65
+ Nigh sphered in heaven, its native strains could hear;
+ On which that ancient trump he reach'd was hung:
+ Thither oft, his glory greeting,
+ From Waller's myrtle shades retreating,
+ With many a vow from Hope's aspiring tongue, 70
+ My trembling feet his guiding steps pursue;
+ In vain--Such bliss to one alone,
+ Of all the sons of soul, was known;
+ And Heaven, and Fancy, kindred powers,
+ Have now o'erturn'd the inspiring bowers; 75
+ Or curtain'd close such scene from every future view.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [20] Florimel. See Spenser, Leg. 4th. C.
+
+
+
+
+ODE,
+
+WRITTEN IN THE BEGINNING OF THE YEAR 1746.
+
+
+ How sleep the brave, who sink to rest,
+ By all their country's wishes bless'd!
+ When Spring, with dewy fingers cold,
+ Returns to deck their hallow'd mould,
+ She there shall dress a sweeter sod 5
+ Than Fancy's feet have ever trod.
+
+ By fairy hands their knell is rung;
+ By forms unseen their dirge is sung;
+ There Honour comes, a pilgrim-gray,
+ To bless the turf that wraps their clay; 10
+ And Freedom shall awhile repair,
+ To dwell a weeping hermit there!
+
+
+VARIATIONS.
+
+ Ver.
+ 5. She then shall dress a sweeter sod
+
+ 7. By hands unseen the knell is rung;
+
+ 8. By fairy forms their dirge is sung;
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO MERCY.
+
+
+ STROPHE.
+
+ O Thou, who sitt'st a smiling bride
+ By Valour's arm'd and awful side,
+ Gentlest of sky-born forms, and best adored;
+ Who oft with songs, divine to hear,
+ Winn'st from his fatal grasp the spear, 5
+ And hidest in wreaths of flowers his bloodless sword!
+ Thou who, amidst the deathful field,
+ By godlike chiefs alone beheld,
+ Oft with thy bosom bare art found,
+ Pleading for him the youth who sinks to ground: 10
+ See, Mercy, see, with pure and loaded hands,
+ Before thy shrine my country's genius stands,
+ And decks thy altar still, though pierced with many a wound.
+
+
+ ANTISTROPHE.
+
+ When he whom even our joys provoke,
+ The fiend of nature join'd his yoke, 15
+ And rush'd in wrath to make our isle his prey;
+ Thy form, from out thy sweet abode,
+ O'ertook him on his blasted road,
+ And stopp'd his wheels, and look'd his rage away.
+ I see recoil his sable steeds, 20
+ That bore him swift to salvage deeds,
+ Thy tender melting eyes they own;
+ O maid, for all thy love to Britain shown,
+ Where Justice bars her iron tower,
+ To thee we build a roseate bower; 25
+ Thou, thou shalt rule our queen, and share our monarch's throne!
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO LIBERTY.
+
+
+ STROPHE.
+
+ Who shall awake the Spartan fife,
+ And call in solemn sounds to life,
+ The youths, whose locks divinely spreading,
+ Like vernal hyacinths in sullen hue,
+ At once the breath of fear and virtue shedding, 5
+ Applauding Freedom loved of old to view?
+ What new Alcus,[21] fancy-blest,
+ Shall sing the sword, in myrtles drest,
+ At Wisdom's shrine awhile its flame concealing,
+ (What place so fit to seal a deed renown'd?) 10
+ Till she her brightest lightnings round revealing,
+ It leap'd in glory forth, and dealt her prompted wound!
+ O goddess, in that feeling hour,
+ When most its sounds would court thy ears,
+ Let not my shell's misguided power[22] 15
+ E'er draw thy sad, thy mindful tears.
+ No, Freedom, no, I will not tell
+ How Rome, before thy weeping face,
+ With heaviest sound, a giant-statue, fell,
+ Push'd by a wild and artless race 20
+ From off its wide ambitious base,
+ When Time his northern sons of spoil awoke,
+ And all the blended work of strength and grace,
+ With many a rude repeated stroke,
+ And many a barbarous yell, to thousand fragments broke. 25
+
+
+ EPODE.
+
+ Yet, even where'er the least appear'd,
+ The admiring world thy hand revered;
+ Still, 'midst the scatter'd states around,
+ Some remnants of her strength were found;
+ They saw, by what escaped the storm, 30
+ How wondrous rose her perfect form;
+ How in the great, the labour'd whole,
+ Each mighty master pour'd his soul!
+ For sunny Florence, seat of art,
+ Beneath her vines preserved a part, 35
+ Till they,[23] whom Science loved to name,
+ (O who could fear it?) quench'd her flame.
+ And lo, an humbler relic laid
+ In jealous Pisa's olive shade!
+ See small Marino[24] joins the theme, 40
+ Though least, not last in thy esteem:
+ Strike, louder strike the ennobling strings
+ To those,[25] whose merchant sons were kings;
+ To him,[26] who, deck'd with pearly pride,
+ In Adria weds his green-hair'd bride; 45
+ Hail, port of glory, wealth, and pleasure,
+ Ne'er let me change this Lydian measure:
+ Nor e'er her former pride relate,
+ To sad Liguria's[27] bleeding state.
+ Ah no! more pleased thy haunts I seek, 50
+ On wild Helvetia's[28] mountains bleak:
+ (Where, when the favour'd of thy choice,
+ The daring archer heard thy voice;
+ Forth from his eyrie roused in dread,
+ The ravening eagle northward fled:) 55
+ Or dwell in willow'd meads more near,
+ With those to whom thy stork[29] is dear:
+ Those whom the rod of Alva bruised,
+ Whose crown a British queen[30] refused!
+ The magic works, thou feel'st the strains, 60
+ One holier name alone remains;
+ The perfect spell shall then avail,
+ Hail, nymph, adored by Britain, hail!
+
+
+ ANTISTROPHE.
+
+ Beyond the measure vast of thought,
+ The works the wizard time has wrought! 65
+ The Gaul, 'tis held of antique story,
+ Saw Britain link'd to his now adverse strand,[31]
+ No sea between, nor cliff sublime and hoary,
+ He pass'd with unwet feet through all our land.
+ To the blown Baltic then, they say, 70
+ The wild waves found another way,
+ Where Orcas howls, his wolfish mountains rounding;
+ Till all the banded west at once 'gan rise,
+ A wide wild storm even nature's self confounding,
+ Withering her giant sons with strange uncouth surprise. 75
+ This pillar'd earth so firm and wide,
+ By winds and inward labours torn,
+ In thunders dread was push'd aside,
+ And down the shouldering billows borne.
+ And see, like gems, her laughing train, 80
+ The little isles on every side,
+ Mona,[32] once hid from those who search the main,
+ Where thousand elfin shapes abide,
+ And Wight who checks the westering tide,
+ For thee consenting heaven has each bestow'd, 85
+ A fair attendant on her sovereign pride:
+ To thee this blest divorce she owed,
+ For thou hast made her vales thy loved, thy last abode!
+
+
+ SECOND EPODE.
+
+ Then too, 'tis said, an hoary pile,
+ 'Midst the green navel of our isle, 90
+ Thy shrine in some religious wood,
+ O soul-enforcing goddess, stood!
+ There oft the painted native's feet
+ Were wont thy form celestial meet:
+ Though now with hopeless toil we trace 95
+ Time's backward rolls, to find its place;
+ Whether the fiery-tressd Dane,
+ Or Roman's self o'erturn'd the fane,
+ Or in what heaven-left age it fell,
+ 'Twere hard for modern song to tell. 100
+ Yet still, if Truth those beams infuse,
+ Which guide at once, and charm the Muse,
+ Beyond yon braided clouds that lie,
+ Paving the light embroider'd sky,
+ Amidst the bright pavilion'd plains, 105
+ The beauteous model still remains.
+ There, happier than in islands blest,
+ Or bowers by spring or Hebe drest,
+ The chiefs who fill our Albion's story,
+ In warlike weeds, retired in glory, 110
+ Hear their consorted Druids sing
+ Their triumphs to the immortal string.
+ How may the poet now unfold
+ What never tongue or numbers told?
+ How learn delighted, and amazed, 115
+ What hands unknown that fabric raised?
+ Even now before his favour'd eyes,
+ In gothic pride, it seems to rise!
+ Yet Grcia's graceful orders join,
+ Majestic through the mix'd design: 120
+ The secret builder knew to choose
+ Each sphere-found gem of richest hues;
+ Whate'er heaven's purer mould contains,
+ When nearer suns emblaze its veins;
+ There on the walls the patriot's sight 125
+ May ever hang with fresh delight,
+ And, graved with some prophetic rage,
+ Read Albion's fame through every age.
+ Ye forms divine, ye laureat band,
+ That near her inmost altar stand! 130
+ Now soothe her to her blissful train
+ Blithe Concord's social form to gain;
+ Concord, whose myrtle wand can steep
+ Even Anger's bloodshot eyes in sleep;
+ Before whose breathing bosom's balm 135
+ Rage drops his steel, and storms grow calm:
+ Her let our sires and matrons hoar
+ Welcome to Briton's ravaged shore;
+ Our youths, enamour'd of the fair,
+ Play with the tangles of her hair, 140
+ Till, in one loud applauding sound,
+ The nations shout to her around,
+ O how supremely art thou blest,
+ Thou, lady--thou shalt rule the west!
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [21] Alluding to that beautiful fragment of Alcus:
+
+ ~En myrtou kladi to xiphos phors,
+ Hsper Harmodios k' Aristogeitn,
+ Hote ton tyrannon ktanetn.
+ Isonomous t' Athnas epoisatn.
+ Philtath' Harmodi' ou ti pou tethnkas,
+ Nsois d' en makarn se phasin einai,
+ Hina per podks Achileus,
+ Tydeidn te phasin Diomdea.
+ En myrtou kladi to xiphos phors,
+ sper Harmodios k' Aristogeitn,
+ Hot' Athnais en Thysiais
+ Andra tyrannon Hipparchon ekainetn.
+ Aei sphn kleos essetai kat' aian,
+ Philtath' Harmodie, k' Aristogeitn,
+ Hoti ton tyrannon ktaneton,
+ Isonomous t' Athnas epoisaton.~
+
+ [22] ~M m tauta legmes, ha dakryon gage Doi.~
+ Callimach. ~Hymnos eis Dmtra~. C.
+
+ [23] The family of the Medici. C.
+
+ [24] The little republic of San Marino. C.
+
+ [25] The Venetians. C.
+
+ [26] The Doge of Venice. C.
+
+ [27] Genoa. C.
+
+ [28] Switzerland. C.
+
+ [29] The Dutch, amongst whom there are very severe penalties for those
+ who are convicted of killing this bird. They are kept tame in
+ almost all their towns, and particularly at the Hague, of the
+ arms of which they make a part. The common people of Holland are
+ said to entertain a superstitious sentiment, that if the whole
+ species of them should become extinct, they should lose their
+ liberties. C.
+
+ [30] Queen Elizabeth. C.
+
+ [31] This tradition is mentioned by several of our old historians. Some
+ naturalists too have endeavoured to support the probability of
+ the fact by arguments drawn from the correspondent disposition of
+ the two opposite coasts. I do not remember that any poetical use
+ has been hitherto made of it. C.
+
+ [32] There is a tradition in the Isle of Man, that a mermaid becoming
+ enamoured of a young man of extraordinary beauty took an
+ opportunity of meeting him one day as he walked on the shore, and
+ opened her passion to him, but was received with a coldness,
+ occasioned by his horror and surprise at her appearance. This,
+ however, was so misconstrued by the sea lady, that, in revenge
+ for his treatment of her, she punished the whole island by
+ covering it with a mist: so that all who attempted to carry on
+ any commerce with it, either never arrived at it, but wandered up
+ and down the sea, or were on a sudden wrecked upon its cliffs.
+ C.
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO A LADY,
+
+ON THE DEATH OF COLONEL ROSS, IN THE ACTION OF FONTENOY.
+
+Written in May, 1745.
+
+
+ While, lost to all his former mirth,
+ Britannia's genius bends to earth,
+ And mourns the fatal day:
+ While stain'd with blood he strives to tear
+ Unseemly from his sea-green hair 5
+ The wreaths of cheerful May:
+
+ The thoughts which musing Pity pays,
+ And fond Remembrance loves to raise,
+ Your faithful hours attend;
+ Still Fancy, to herself unkind, 10
+ Awakes to grief the soften'd mind,
+ And points the bleeding friend.
+
+ By rapid Scheld's descending wave
+ His country's vows shall bless the grave,
+ Where'er the youth is laid: 15
+ That sacred spot the village hind
+ With every sweetest turf shall bind,
+ And Peace protect the shade.
+
+ Blest youth, regardful of thy doom,
+ Arial hands shall build thy tomb, 20
+ With shadowy trophies crown'd;
+ Whilst Honour bathed in tears shall rove
+ To sigh thy name through every grove,
+ And call his heroes round.
+
+ The warlike dead of every age, 25
+ Who fill the fair recording page,
+ Shall leave their sainted rest;
+ And, half reclining on his spear,
+ Each wondering chief by turns appear,
+ To hail the blooming guest: 30
+
+ Old Edward's sons, unknown to yield,
+ Shall crowd from Cressy's laurel'd field,
+ And gaze with fix'd delight;
+ Again for Britain's wrongs they feel,
+ Again they snatch the gleamy steel, 35
+ And wish the avenging fight.
+
+ But lo, where, sunk in deep despair,
+ Her garments torn, her bosom bare,
+ Impatient Freedom lies!
+ Her matted tresses madly spread, 40
+ To every sod, which wraps the dead,
+ She turns her joyless eyes.
+
+ Ne'er shall she leave that lowly ground
+ Till notes of triumph bursting round
+ Proclaim her reign restored: 45
+ Till William seek the sad retreat,
+ And, bleeding at her sacred feet,
+ Present the sated sword.
+
+ If, weak to soothe so soft a heart,
+ These pictured glories nought impart, 50
+ To dry thy constant tear:
+ If, yet, in Sorrow's distant eye,
+ Exposed and pale thou see'st him lie,
+ Wild War insulting near:
+
+ Where'er from time thou court'st relief, 55
+ The Muse shall still, with social grief,
+ Her gentlest promise keep;
+ Even humbled Harting's cottaged vale[33]
+ Shall learn the sad repeated tale,
+ And bid her shepherds weep. 60
+
+
+VARIATIONS.
+
+ Ver.
+ 4. While sunk in grief he strives to tear
+
+ 19. E'en now regardful of his doom
+ Applauding Honour haunts his tomb,
+ With shadowy trophies crown'd:
+ Whilst Freedom's form beside her roves,
+ Majestic through the twilight groves,
+ And calls her heroes round.
+
+ 19. O'er him, whose doom thy virtues grieve,
+ Arial forms shall sit at eve,
+ And bend the pensive head;
+ And, fallen to save his injured land,
+ Imperial Honour's awful hand
+ Shall point his lonely bed.
+
+ 31. Old Edward's sons, untaught to yield,
+
+ 49. If, drawn by all a lover's art,
+
+ 58. Even humble Harting's cottaged vale
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [33] Harting, a village adjoining the parish of Trotton, and about two
+ miles distant from it.
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO EVENING.
+
+
+ If aught of oaten stop, or pastoral song,
+ May hope, chaste Eve, to soothe thy modest ear,
+ Like thy own brawling springs,
+ Thy springs, and dying gales;
+
+ O Nymph reserved, while now the bright-hair'd sun 5
+ Sits in yon western tent, whose cloudy skirts,
+ With brede ethereal wove,
+ O'erhang his wavy bed:
+
+ Now air is hush'd, save where the weak-eyed bat
+ With short shrill shriek flits by on leathern wing; 10
+ Or where the beetle winds
+ His small but sullen horn,
+
+ As oft he rises 'midst the twilight path,
+ Against the pilgrim borne in heedless hum:
+ Now teach me, maid composed, 15
+ To breathe some soften'd strain,
+
+ Whose numbers, stealing through thy darkening vale,
+ May not unseemly with its stillness suit;
+ As, musing slow, I hail
+ Thy genial loved return! 20
+
+ For when thy folding-star arising shows
+ His paly circlet, at his warning lamp
+ The fragrant Hours, and Elves
+ Who slept in buds the day,
+
+ And many a Nymph who wreathes her brows with sedge, 25
+ And sheds the freshening dew, and, lovelier still,
+ The pensive Pleasures sweet,
+ Prepare thy shadowy car.
+
+ Then let me rove some wild and heathy scene;
+ Or find some ruin, 'midst its dreary dells, 30
+ Whose walls more awful nod
+ By thy religious gleams.
+
+ Or, if chill blustering winds, or driving rain,
+ Prevent my willing feet, be mine the hut,
+ That, from the mountain's side, 35
+ Views wilds, and swelling floods,
+
+ And hamlets brown, and dim-discover'd spires;
+ And hears their simple bell, and marks o'er all
+ Thy dewy fingers draw
+ The gradual dusky veil. 40
+
+ While Spring shall pour his showers, as oft he wont,
+ And bathe thy breathing tresses, meekest Eve!
+ While Summer loves to sport
+ Beneath thy lingering light;
+
+ While sallow Autumn fills thy lap with leaves; 45
+ Or Winter, yelling through the troublous air,
+ Affrights thy shrinking train,
+ And rudely rends thy robes;
+
+ So long, regardful of thy quiet rule,
+ Shall Fancy, Friendship, Science, smiling Peace, 50
+ Thy gentlest influence own,
+ And love thy favourite name!
+
+
+VARIATIONS.
+
+ Ver
+ 2. May hope, O pensive Eve, to soothe thine ear,
+
+ 3. Like thy own solemn springs,
+
+ 9. While air is hush'd, save where the weak-eyed bat
+
+ 24. Who slept in flowers the day,
+
+ 29. Then lead, calm vot'ress, where some sheety lake
+ Cheers the lone heath, or some time-hallow'd pile,
+
+ 31. Or upland fallows grey,
+ Reflect its last cool gleam.
+
+ 33. But when chill blustering winds, or driving rain,
+ Forbid my willing feet, be mine the hut,
+
+ 49. So long, sure-found beneath the sylvan shed,
+ Shall Fancy, Friendship, Science, rose-lipp'd Health,
+ Thy gentlest influence own,
+ And hymn thy favourite name!
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO PEACE.
+
+
+ O thou, who bad'st thy turtles bear
+ Swift from his grasp thy golden hair,
+ And sought'st thy native skies;
+ When War, by vultures drawn from far,
+ To Britain bent his iron car, 5
+ And bade his storms arise!
+
+ Tired of his rude tyrannic sway,
+ Our youth shall fix some festive day,
+ His sullen shrines to burn:
+ But thou who hear'st the turning spheres, 10
+ What sounds may charm thy partial ears,
+ And gain thy blest return!
+
+ O Peace, thy injured robes up-bind!
+ O rise! and leave not one behind
+ Of all thy beamy train; 15
+ The British Lion, goddess sweet,
+ Lies stretch'd on earth to kiss thy feet,
+ And own thy holier reign.
+
+ Let others court thy transient smile,
+ But come to grace thy western isle, 20
+ By warlike Honour led;
+ And, while around her ports rejoice,
+ While all her sons adore thy choice,
+ With him for ever wed!
+
+
+
+
+THE MANNERS.
+
+AN ODE.
+
+
+ Farewell, for clearer ken design'd,
+ The dim-discover'd tracts of mind;
+ Truths which, from action's paths retired,
+ My silent search in vain required!
+ No more my sail that deep explores; 5
+ No more I search those magic shores;
+ What regions part the world of soul,
+ Or whence thy streams, Opinion, roll:
+ If e'er I round such fairy field,
+ Some power impart the spear and shield, 10
+ At which the wizard Passions fly;
+ By which the giant Follies die!
+
+ Farewell the porch whose roof is seen
+ Arch'd with the enlivening olive's green:
+ Where Science, prank'd in tissued vest, 15
+ By Reason, Pride, and Fancy drest,
+ Comes, like a bride, so trim array'd,
+ To wed with Doubt in Plato's shade!
+
+ Youth of the quick uncheated sight,
+ Thy walks, Observance, more invite! 20
+ O thou who lovest that ampler range,
+ Where life's wide prospects round thee change,
+ And, with her mingling sons allied,
+ Throw'st the prattling page aside,
+ To me, in converse sweet, impart 25
+ To read in man the native heart;
+ To learn, where Science sure is found,
+ From Nature as she lives around;
+ And, gazing oft her mirror true,
+ By turns each shifting image view! 30
+ Till meddling Art's officious lore
+ Reverse the lessons taught before;
+ Alluring from a safer rule,
+ To dream in her enchanted school:
+ Thou, Heaven, whate'er of great we boast, 35
+ Hast blest this social science most.
+
+ Retiring hence to thoughtful cell,
+ As Fancy breathes her potent spell,
+ Not vain she finds the charmful task,
+ In pageant quaint, in motley mask; 40
+ Behold, before her musing eyes,
+ The countless Manners round her rise;
+ While, ever varying as they pass,
+ To some Contempt applies her glass:
+ With these the white-robed maids combine; 45
+ And those the laughing satyrs join!
+ But who is he whom now she views,
+ In robe of wild contending hues?
+ Thou by the Passions nursed, I greet
+ The comic sock that binds thy feet! 50
+ O Humour, thou whose name is known
+ To Britain's favour'd isle alone:
+ Me too amidst thy band admit;
+ There where the young-eyed healthful Wit,
+ (Whose jewels in his crispd hair 55
+ Are placed each other's beams to share;
+ Whom no delights from thee divide)
+ In laughter loosed, attends thy side.
+
+ By old Miletus,[34] who so long
+ Has ceased his love-inwoven song; 60
+ By all you taught the Tuscan maids,
+ In changed Italia's modern shades;
+ By him[35] whose knight's distinguish'd name
+ Refined a nation's lust of fame;
+ Whose tales e'en now, with echoes sweet, 65
+ Castilia's Moorish hills repeat;
+ Or him[36] whom Seine's blue nymphs deplore,
+ In watchet weeds on Gallia's shore;
+ Who drew the sad Sicilian maid,
+ By virtues in her sire betray'd. 70
+
+ O Nature boon, from whom proceed
+ Each forceful thought, each prompted deed;
+ If but from thee I hope to feel,
+ On all my heart imprint thy seal!
+ Let some retreating cynic find 75
+ Those oft-turn'd scrolls I leave behind:
+ The Sports and I this hour agree,
+ To rove thy scene-full world with thee!
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [34] Alluding to the Milesian tales, some of the earliest romances. C.
+
+ [35] Cervantes. C.
+
+ [36] Monsieur Le Sage, author of the incomparable Adventures of Gil Blas
+ de Santillane, who died in Paris in the year 1745. C.
+
+
+
+
+THE PASSIONS.
+
+AN ODE FOR MUSIC.
+
+Performed at Oxford, with Hayes's music, in 1750.
+
+
+ When Music, heavenly maid, was young,
+ While yet in early Greece she sung,
+ The Passions oft, to hear her shell,
+ Throng'd around her magic cell,
+ Exulting, trembling, raging, fainting, 5
+ Possest beyond the Muse's painting:
+ By turns they felt the glowing mind
+ Disturb'd, delighted, raised, refined;
+ Till once, 'tis said, when all were fired,
+ Fill'd with fury, rapt, inspired, 10
+ From the supporting myrtles round
+ They snatch'd her instruments of sound;
+ And, as they oft had heard apart
+ Sweet lessons of her forceful art,
+ Each (for Madness ruled the hour) 15
+ Would prove his own expressive power.
+
+ First Fear his hand, its skill to try,
+ Amid the chords bewilder'd laid,
+ And back recoil'd, he knew not why,
+ E'en at the sound himself had made. 20
+
+ Next Anger rush'd; his eyes on fire,
+ In lightnings own'd his secret stings:
+ In one rude clash he struck the lyre,
+ And swept with hurried hand the strings.
+
+ With woful measures wan Despair 25
+ Low, sullen sounds his grief beguiled;
+ A solemn, strange, and mingled air;
+ 'Twas sad by fits, by starts 'twas wild.
+
+ But thou, O Hope, with eyes so fair,
+ What was thy delighted measure? 30
+ Still it whisper'd promised pleasure,
+ And bade the lovely scenes at distance hail!
+ Still would her touch the strain prolong;
+ And from the rocks, the woods, the vale,
+ She call'd on Echo still, through all the song; 35
+ And, where her sweetest theme she chose,
+ A soft responsive voice was heard at every close,
+ And Hope enchanted smiled, and waved her golden hair.
+ And longer had she sung;--but, with a frown,
+ Revenge impatient rose: 40
+ He threw his blood-stain'd sword, in thunder, down;
+ And, with a withering look,
+ The war-denouncing trumpet took,
+ And blew a blast so loud and dread,
+ Were ne'er prophetic sounds so full of woe! 45
+ And, ever and anon, he beat
+ The doubling drum, with furious heat;
+ And though sometimes, each dreary pause between,
+ Dejected Pity, at his side,
+ Her soul-subduing voice applied, 50
+ Yet still he kept his wild unalter'd mein,
+ While each strain'd ball of sight seem'd bursting from his head.
+ Thy numbers, Jealousy, to nought were fix'd;
+ Sad proof of thy distressful state;
+ Of differing themes the veering song was mix'd; 55
+ And now it courted Love, now raving call'd on Hate.
+
+ With eyes upraised, as one inspired,
+ Pale Melancholy sate retired;
+ And, from her wild sequester'd seat,
+ In notes by distance made more sweet, 60
+ Pour'd through the mellow horn her pensive soul:
+ And, dashing soft from rocks around,
+ Bubbling runnels join'd the sound;
+ Through glades and glooms the mingled measure stole,
+ Or, o'er some haunted stream, with fond delay, 65
+ Round an holy calm diffusing,
+ Love of Peace, and lonely musing,
+ In hollow murmurs died away.
+
+ But O! how alter'd was its sprightlier tone,
+ When Cheerfulness, a nymph of healthiest hue, 70
+ Her bow across her shoulder flung,
+ Her buskins gemm'd with morning dew,
+ Blew an inspiring air, that dale and thicket rung,
+ The hunter's call, to Faun and Dryad known!
+ The oak-crown'd Sisters, and their chaste-eyed Queen, 75
+ Satyrs and Sylvan Boys, were seen,
+ Peeping from forth their alleys green:
+ Brown Exercise rejoiced to hear;
+ And Sport leapt up, and seized his beechen spear.
+ Last came Joy's ecstatic trial: 80
+ He, with viny crown advancing,
+ First to the lively pipe his hand addrest;
+ But soon he saw the brisk awakening viol,
+ Whose sweet entrancing voice he loved the best;
+ They would have thought who heard the strain 85
+ They saw, in Tempe's vale, her native maids,
+ Amidst the festal sounding shades,
+ To some unwearied minstrel dancing,
+ While, as his flying fingers kiss'd the strings,
+ Love framed with Mirth a gay fantastic round: 90
+ Loose were her tresses seen, her zone unbound;
+ And he, amidst his frolic play,
+ As if he would the charming air repay,
+ Shook thousand odours from his dewy wings.
+
+ O Music! sphere-descended maid, 95
+ Friend of Pleasure, Wisdom's aid!
+ Why, goddess! why, to us denied,
+ Lay'st thou thy ancient lyre aside?
+ As, in that loved Athenian bower,
+ You learn'd an all commanding power, 100
+ Thy mimic soul, O Nymph endear'd,
+ Can well recall what then it heard;
+ Where is thy native simple heart,
+ Devote to Virtue, Fancy, Art?
+ Arise, as in that elder time, 105
+ Warm, energetic, chaste, sublime!
+ Thy wonders, in that godlike age,
+ Fill thy recording Sister's page--
+ 'Tis said, and I believe the tale,
+ Thy humblest reed could more prevail, 110
+ Had more of strength, diviner rage,
+ Than all which charms this laggard age;
+ E'en all at once together found,
+ Cecilia's mingled world of sound--
+ O bid our vain endeavours cease; 115
+ Revive the just designs of Greece:
+ Return in all thy simple state!
+ Confirm the tales her sons relate!
+
+
+VARIATION.
+
+ Ver.
+ 30. What was thy delightful measure?
+
+
+
+
+ODE ON THE DEATH OF THOMSON.
+
+THE SCENE IS SUPPOSED TO LIE ON THE THAMES NEAR RICHMOND.
+
+
+ In yonder grave a Druid lies,
+ Where slowly winds the stealing wave;
+ The year's best sweets shall duteous rise
+ To deck its poet's sylvan grave.
+
+ In yon deep bed of whispering reeds 5
+ His airy harp[37] shall now be laid,
+ That he, whose heart in sorrow bleeds,
+ May love through life the soothing shade.
+
+ Then maids and youths shall linger here,
+ And while its sounds at distance swell, 10
+ Shall sadly seem in pity's ear
+ To hear the woodland pilgrim's knell.
+
+ Remembrance oft shall haunt the shore
+ When Thames in summer wreaths is drest,
+ And oft suspend the dashing oar, 15
+ To bid his gentle spirit rest!
+
+ And oft, as ease and health retire
+ To breezy lawn, or forest deep,
+ The friend shall view yon whitening[38] spire
+ And 'mid the varied landscape weep. 20
+
+ But thou, who own'st that earthy bed,
+ Ah! what will every dirge avail;
+ Or tears, which love and pity shed,
+ That mourn beneath the gliding sail?
+
+ Yet lives there one, whose heedless eye 25
+ Shall scorn thy pale shrine glimmering near?
+ With him, sweet bard, may fancy die,
+ And joy desert the blooming year.
+
+ But thou, lorn stream, whose sullen tide
+ No sedge-crown'd sisters now attend, 30
+ Now waft me from the green hill's side,
+ Whose cold turf hides the buried friend!
+
+ And see, the fairy valleys fade;
+ Dun night has veil'd the solemn view!
+ Yet once again, dear parted shade, 35
+ Meek Nature's Child, again adieu!
+
+ The genial meads,[39] assign'd to bless
+ Thy life, shall mourn thy early doom;
+ Their hinds and shepherd-girls shall dress,
+ With simple hands, thy rural tomb. 40
+
+ Long, long, thy stone and pointed clay
+ Shall melt the musing Briton's eyes:
+ O! vales and wild woods, shall he say,
+ In yonder grave your Druid lies!
+
+
+VARIATION.
+
+ Ver.
+ 21. But thou who own'st that earthly bed,
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [37] The harp of olus, of which see a description in the Castle of
+ Indolence. C.
+
+ [38] Richmond Church, in which Thomson was buried. C.
+
+ [39] Mr. Thomson resided in the neighbourhood of Richmond some time
+ before his death.
+
+
+
+
+ODE ON THE POPULAR SUPERSTITIONS OF THE HIGHLANDS OF SCOTLAND;
+
+CONSIDERED AS THE SUBJECT OF POETRY; INSCRIBED TO MR. JOHN HOME.
+
+
+ I.
+
+ Home, thou return'st from Thames, whose Naiads long
+ Have seen thee lingering with a fond delay,
+ 'Mid those soft friends, whose hearts, some future day,
+ Shall melt, perhaps, to hear thy tragic song.[40]
+ Go, not unmindful of that cordial youth[41] 5
+ Whom, long endear'd, thou leavest by Levant's side;
+ Together let us wish him lasting truth,
+ And joy untainted with his destined bride.
+ Go! nor regardless, while these numbers boast
+ My short-lived bliss, forget my social name; 10
+ But think, far off, how, on the southern coast,
+ I met thy friendship with an equal flame!
+ Fresh to that soil thou turn'st, where every vale
+ Shall prompt the poet, and his song demand:
+ To thee thy copious subjects ne'er shall fail; 15
+ Thou need'st but take thy pencil to thy hand,
+ And paint what all believe, who own thy genial land.
+
+
+ II.
+
+ There must thou wake perforce thy Doric quill;
+ 'Tis Fancy's land to which thou sett'st thy feet;
+ Where still, 'tis said, the fairy people meet, 20
+ Beneath each birken shade, on mead or hill;
+ There, each trim lass, that skims the milky store,
+ To the swart tribes their creamy bowls allots;
+ By night they sip it round the cottage door,
+ While airy minstrels warble jocund notes. 25
+ There, every herd, by sad experience, knows
+ How, wing'd with fate, their elf-shot arrows fly,
+ When the sick ewe her summer food foregoes,
+ Or, stretch'd on earth, the heart-smit heifers lie.
+ Such airy beings awe the untutor'd swain: 30
+ Nor thou, though learn'd, his homelier thoughts neglect;
+ Let thy sweet muse the rural faith sustain;
+ These are the themes of simple, sure effect,
+ That add new conquests to her boundless reign,
+ And fill, with double force, her heart-commanding strain. 35
+
+
+ III.
+
+ E'en yet preserved, how often mayst thou hear,
+ Where to the pole the Boreal mountains run,
+ Taught by the father, to his listening son,
+ Strange lays, whose power had charm'd a Spenser's ear.
+ At every pause, before thy mind possest, 40
+ Old Runic bards shall seem to rise around,
+ With uncouth lyres, in many-colour'd vest,
+ Their matted hair with boughs fantastic crown'd:
+ Whether thou bidst the well taught hind repeat
+ The choral dirge, that mourns some chieftain brave, 45
+ When every shrieking maid her bosom beat,
+ And strew'd with choicest herbs his scented grave!
+ Or whether, sitting in the shepherd's shiel,[42]
+ Thou hear'st some sounding tale of war's alarms;
+ When at the bugle's call, with fire and steel, 50
+ The sturdy clans pour'd forth their brawny swarms,
+ And hostile brothers met, to prove each other's arms.
+
+
+ IV.
+
+ 'Tis thine to sing, how, framing hideous spells,
+ In Sky's lone isle, the gifted wizard seer,
+ Lodged in the wintry cave with Fate's fell spear, 55
+ Or in the depth of Uist's dark forest dwells:
+ How they, whose sight such dreary dreams engross,
+ With their own visions oft astonish'd droop,
+ When, o'er the watery strath, or quaggy moss,
+ They see the gliding ghosts unbodied troop. 60
+ Or, if in sports, or on the festive green,
+ Their destined glance some fated youth descry,
+ Who now, perhaps, in lusty vigour seen,
+ And rosy health, shall soon lamented die.
+ For them the viewless forms of air obey; 65
+ Their bidding heed, and at their beck repair:
+ They know what spirit brews the stormful day,
+ And heartless, oft like moody madness, stare
+ To see the phantom train their secret work prepare.
+
+
+ V.
+
+ To monarchs dear, some hundred miles astray, 70
+ Oft have they seen Fate give the fatal blow!
+ The seer, in Sky, shriek'd as the blood did flow,
+ When headless Charles warm on the scaffold lay!
+ As Boreas threw his young Aurora[43] forth,
+ In the first year of the first George's reign, 75
+ And battles raged in welkin of the North,
+ They mourn'd in air, fell, fell Rebellion slain!
+ And as, of late, they joy'd in Preston's fight,
+ Saw, at sad Falkirk, all their hopes near crown'd!
+ They raved! divining, through their second sight,[44] 80
+ Pale, red Culloden, where these hopes were drown'd!
+ Illustrious William![45] Britain's guardian name!
+ One William saved us from a tyrant's stroke;
+ He, for a sceptre, gain'd heroic fame,
+ But thou, more glorious, Slavery's chain hast broke, 85
+ To reign a private man, and bow to Freedom's yoke!
+
+
+ VI.
+
+ These, too, thou'lt sing! for well thy magic muse
+ Can to the topmost heaven of grandeur soar;
+ Or stoop to wail the swain that is no more!
+ Ah, homely swains! your homeward steps ne'er lose; 90
+ Let not dank Will[46] mislead you to the heath;
+ Dancing in mirky night, o'er fen and lake,
+ He glows, to draw you downward to your death,
+ In his bewitch'd, low, marshy, willow brake!
+ What though far off, from some dark dell espied, 95
+ His glimmering mazes cheer the excursive sight,
+ Yet turn, ye wanderers, turn your steps aside,
+ Nor trust the guidance of that faithless light;
+ For watchful, lurking, 'mid the unrustling reed,
+ At those mirk hours the wily monster lies, 100
+ And listens oft to hear the passing steed,
+ And frequent round him rolls his sullen eyes,
+ If chance his savage wrath may some weak wretch surprise.
+
+
+ VII.
+
+ Ah, luckless swain, o'er all unblest, indeed!
+ Whom late bewilder'd in the dank, dark fen, 105
+ Far from his flocks, and smoking hamlet, then!
+ To that sad spot where hums the sedgy weed:
+ On him, enraged, the fiend, in angry mood,
+ Shall never look with pity's kind concern,
+ But instant, furious, raise the whelming flood 110
+ O'er its drown'd banks, forbidding all return!
+ Or, if he meditate his wish'd escape,
+ To some dim hill, that seems uprising near,
+ To his faint eye the grim and grisly shape,
+ In all its terrors clad, shall wild appear. 115
+ Meantime the watery surge shall round him rise,
+ Pour'd sudden forth from every swelling source!
+ What now remains but tears and hopeless sighs?
+ His fear-shook limbs have lost their youthly force,
+ And down the waves he floats, a pale and breathless corse! 120
+
+
+ VIII.
+
+ For him in vain his anxious wife shall wait,
+ Or wander forth to meet him on his way;
+ For him in vain at to-fall of the day,
+ His babes shall linger at the unclosing gate!
+ Ah, ne'er shall he return! Alone, if night 125
+ Her travel'd limbs in broken slumbers steep,
+ With drooping willows drest, his mournful sprite
+ Shall visit sad, perchance, her silent sleep:
+ Then he, perhaps, with moist and watery hand,
+ Shall fondly seem to press her shuddering cheek, 130
+ And with his blue swoln face before her stand,
+ And, shivering cold, these piteous accents speak:
+ "Pursue, dear wife, thy daily toils pursue,
+ At dawn or dusk, industrious as before;
+ Nor e'er of me one helpless thought renew, 135
+ While I lie weltering on the osier'd shore,
+ Drown'd by the Kelpie's[47] wrath, nor e'er shall aid thee more!"
+
+
+ IX.
+
+ Unbounded is thy range; with varied skill
+ Thy muse may, like those feathery tribes which spring
+ From their rude rocks, extend her skirting wing 140
+ Round the moist marge of each cold Hebrid isle,
+ To that hoar pile[48] which still its ruins shows:
+ In whose small vaults a pigmy folk is found,
+ Whose bones the delver with his spade upthrows,
+ And culls them, wondering, from the hallow'd ground! 145
+ Or thither,[49] where, beneath the showery west,
+ The mighty kings of three fair realms are laid;
+ Once foes, perhaps, together now they rest,
+ No slaves revere them, and no wars invade:
+ Yet frequent now, at midnight's solemn hour, 150
+ The rifted mounds their yawning cells unfold,
+ And forth the monarchs stalk with sovereign power,
+ In pageant robes, and wreath'd with sheeny gold,
+ And on their twilight tombs arial council hold.
+
+
+ X.
+
+ But, oh, o'er all, forget not Kilda's race, 155
+ On whose bleak rocks, which brave the wasting tides,
+ Fair Nature's daughter, Virtue, yet abides.
+ Go! just, as they, their blameless manners trace!
+ Then to my ear transmit some gentle song,
+ Of those whose lives are yet sincere and plain, 160
+ Their bounded walks the rugged cliffs along,
+ And all their prospect but the wintry main.
+ With sparing temperance, at the needful time,
+ They drain the scented spring; or, hunger-prest,
+ Along the Atlantic rock, undreading climb, 165
+ And of its eggs despoil the solan's[50] nest.
+ Thus, blest in primal innocence, they live
+ Sufficed, and happy with that frugal fare
+ Which tasteful toil and hourly danger give.
+ Hard is their shallow soil, and bleak and bare; 170
+ Nor ever vernal bee was heard to murmur there!
+
+
+ XI.
+
+ Nor need'st thou blush that such false themes engage
+ Thy gentle mind, of fairer stores possest;
+ For not alone they touch the village breast,
+ But fill'd, in elder time, the historic page. 175
+ There, Shakespeare's self, with every garland crown'd,
+ Flew to those fairy climes his fancy sheen,
+ In musing hour; his wayward sisters found,
+ And with their terrors drest the magic scene.
+ From them he sung, when, 'mid his bold design, 180
+ Before the Scot, afflicted, and aghast!
+ The shadowy kings of Banquo's fated line
+ Through the dark cave in gleamy pageant pass'd.
+ Proceed! nor quit the tales which, simply told,
+ Could once so well my answering bosom pierce; 185
+ Proceed, in forceful sounds, and colours bold,
+ The native legends of thy land rehearse;
+ To such adapt thy lyre, and suit thy powerful verse.
+
+
+ XII.
+
+ In scenes like these, which, daring to depart
+ From sober truth, are still to nature true, 190
+ And call forth fresh delight to Fancy's view,
+ The heroic muse employ'd her Tasso's art!
+ How have I trembled, when, at Tancred's stroke,
+ Its gushing blood the gaping cypress pour'd!
+ When each live plant with mortal accents spoke, 195
+ And the wild blast upheaved the vanish'd sword!
+ How have I sat, when piped the pensive wind,
+ To hear his harp by British Fairfax strung!
+ Prevailing poet! whose undoubting mind
+ Believed the magic wonders which he sung! 200
+ Hence, at each sound, imagination glows!
+ Hence, at each picture, vivid life starts here!
+ Hence his warm lay with softest sweetness flows!
+ Melting it flows, pure, murmuring, strong, and clear,
+ And fills the impassion'd heart, and wins the harmonious ear! 205
+
+
+ XIII.
+
+ All hail, ye scenes that o'er my soul prevail!
+ Ye splendid friths and lakes, which, far away,
+ Are by smooth Annan[51] fill'd or pastoral Tay,[51]
+ Or Don's[51] romantic springs at distance hail!
+ The time shall come, when I, perhaps, may tread 210
+ Your lowly glens, o'erhung with spreading broom;
+ Or, o'er your stretching heaths, by Fancy led;
+ Or, o'er your mountains creep, in awful gloom!
+ Then will I dress once more the faded bower,
+ Where Jonson[52] sat in Drummond's classic shade; 215
+ Or crop, from Tiviotdale, each lyric flower,
+ And mourn, on Yarrow's banks, where Willy's laid!
+ Meantime, ye powers that on the plains which bore
+ The cordial youth, on Lothian's plains,[53] attend!--
+ Where'er Home dwells, on hill, or lowly moor, 220
+ To him I lose, your kind protection lend,
+ And, touch'd with love like mine, preserve my absent friend!
+
+
+VARIATIONS.
+
+ Ver.
+ 44. Whether thou bidst the well taught hind relate
+
+ 51. The sturdy clans pour'd forth their bony swarms,
+
+ 56. Or in the gloom of Uist's dark forest dwells:
+
+ 58. With their own visions oft afflicted droop,
+
+ 66. Their bidding mark, and at their beck repair:
+
+ 100. At those sad hours the wily monster lies;
+
+ 111. O'er its drowned bank, forbidding all return!
+
+ 124. His babes shall linger at the cottage gate!
+
+ 127. With dropping willows drest, his mournful sprite
+
+ 130. Shall seem to press her cold and shuddering cheek,
+
+ 133. Proceed, dear wife, thy daily toils pursue,
+
+ 135. Nor e'er of me one hapless thought renew,
+
+ 138. Unbounded is thy range; with varied stile
+
+ 164. They drain the sainted spring; or, hunger-prest,
+
+ 193. How have I trembled, when, at Tancred's side,
+ Like him I stalk'd, and all his passions felt;
+ When charm'd by Ismen, through the forest wide,
+ Bark'd in each plant a talking spirit dwelt!
+
+ 201. Hence, sure to charm, his early numbers flow,
+ Though strong, yet sweet----
+ Though faithful, sweet; though strong, of simple kind.
+ Hence, with each theme, he bids the bosom glow,
+ While his warm lays an easy passage find,
+ Pour'd through each inmost nerve, and lull the harmonious ear.
+
+ 204. Melting it flows, pure, numerous, strong, and clear,
+
+ 216. Or crop from Tiviot's dale each--
+
+ 220. Where'er he dwell, on hill, or lowly muir,
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [40] How truly did Collins predict Home's tragic powers!
+
+ [41] A gentleman of the name of Barrow, who introduced Home to Collins.
+ Ed. 1788.
+
+ [42] A summer hut, built in the high part of the mountains, to tend
+ their flocks in the warm season, when the pasture is fine. Ed.
+ 1788.
+
+ [43] By young Aurora, Collins undoubtedly meant the first appearance of
+ the northern lights, which happened about the year 1715; at least
+ it is most highly probable, from this peculiar circumstance, that
+ no ancient writer whatever has taken any notice of them, nor even
+ any modern one, previous to the above period. Ed. 1788.
+
+ [44] Second sight is the term that is used for the divination of the
+ highlanders. Ed. 1788.
+
+ [45] The late Duke of Cumberland, who defeated the Pretender at the
+ battle of Culloden. Ed. 1788.
+
+ [46] A fiery meteor, called by various names, such as Will with the
+ Wisp, Jack with the Lantern, etc. It hovers in the air over
+ marshy and fenny places. Ed. 1788.
+
+ [47] The water fiend.
+
+ [48] One of the Hebrides is called the Isle of Pigmies; where it is
+ reported, that several miniature bones of the human species have
+ been dug up in the ruins of a chapel there.
+
+ [49] Icolmkill, one of the Hebrides, where near sixty of the ancient
+ Scottish, Irish, and Norwegian kings are interred.
+
+ [50] An aquatic bird like a goose, on the eggs of which the inhabitants
+ of St. Kilda, another of the Hebrides, chiefly subsist. Ed.
+ 1788.
+
+ [51] Three rivers in Scotland. Ed. 1788.
+
+ [52] Ben Jonson paid a visit on foot, in 1619, to the Scotch poet
+ Drummond, at his seat of Hawthornden, within four miles of
+ Edinburgh.
+
+ [53] Barrow, it seems, was at the Edinburgh University, which is in the
+ county of Lothian. Ed. 1788.
+
+
+
+
+AN EPISTLE,
+
+ADDRESSED TO SIR THOMAS HANMER, ON HIS EDITION OF SHAKESPEARE'S WORKS.
+
+
+ SIR,
+ A patriot's hand protects a poet's lays,
+ While nursed by you she sees her myrtles bloom,
+ Green and unwither'd o'er his honour'd tomb;
+ Excuse her doubts, if yet she fears to tell 5
+ What secret transports in her bosom swell:
+ With conscious awe she hears the critic's fame,
+ And blushing hides her wreath at Shakespeare's name.
+ Hard was the lot those injured strains endured,
+ Unown'd by Science, and by years obscured: 10
+ Fair Fancy wept; and echoing sighs confess'd
+ A fix'd despair in every tuneful breast.
+ Not with more grief the afflicted swains appear,
+ When wintry winds deform the plenteous year;
+ When lingering frosts the ruin'd seats invade 15
+ Where Peace resorted, and the Graces play'd.
+
+ Each rising art by just gradation moves,
+ Toil builds on toil, and age on age improves:
+ The Muse alone unequal dealt her rage,
+ And graced with noblest pomp her earliest stage. 20
+ Preserved through time, the speaking scenes impart
+ Each changeful wish of Phdra's tortured heart;
+ Or paint the curse that mark'd the Theban's[54] reign,
+ A bed incestuous, and a father slain.
+ With kind concern our pitying eyes o'erflow, 25
+ Trace the sad tale, and own another's woe.
+
+ To Rome removed, with wit secure to please,
+ The comic Sisters kept their native ease:
+ With jealous fear, declining Greece beheld
+ Her own Menander's art almost excell'd; 30
+ But every Muse essay'd to raise in vain
+ Some labour'd rival of her tragic strain:
+ Ilissus' laurels, though transferr'd with toil,
+ Droop'd their fair leaves, nor knew the unfriendly soil.
+ As Arts expired, resistless Dulness rose; 35
+ Goths, Priests, or Vandals,--all were Learning's foes.
+ Till Julius[55] first recall'd each exiled maid,
+ And Cosmo own'd them in the Etrurian shade:
+ Then, deeply skill'd in love's engaging theme,
+ The soft Provenal pass'd to Arno's stream: 40
+ With graceful ease the wanton lyre he strung;
+ Sweet flow'd the lays--but love was all he sung.
+ The gay description could not fail to move,
+ For, led by nature, all are friends to love.
+
+ But Heaven, still various in its works, decreed 45
+ The perfect boast of time should last succeed.
+ The beauteous union must appear at length,
+ Of Tuscan fancy, and Athenian strength:
+ One greater Muse Eliza's reign adorn,
+ And e'en a Shakespeare to her fame be born! 50
+
+ Yet ah! so bright her morning's opening ray,
+ In vain our Britain hoped an equal day!
+ No second growth the western isle could bear,
+ At once exhausted with too rich a year.
+ Too nicely Jonson knew the critic's part; 55
+ Nature in him was almost lost in art.
+ Of softer mould the gentle Fletcher came,
+ The next in order, as the next in name;
+ With pleased attention, 'midst his scenes we find
+ Each glowing thought that warms the female mind; 60
+ Each melting sigh, and every tender tear;
+ The lover's wishes, and the virgin's fear.
+ His every strain[56] the Smiles and Graces own;
+ But stronger Shakespeare felt for man alone:
+ Drawn by his pen, our ruder passions stand 65
+ The unrival'd picture of his early hand.
+
+ With[57] gradual steps and slow, exacter France
+ Saw Art's fair empire o'er her shores advance:
+ By length of toil a bright perfection knew,
+ Correctly bold, and just in all she drew: 70
+ Till late Corneille, with Lucan's[58] spirit fired,
+ Breathed the free strain, as Rome and he inspired:
+ And classic judgment gain'd to sweet Racine
+ The temperate strength of Maro's chaster line.
+
+ But wilder far the British laurel spread, 75
+ And wreaths less artful crown our poet's head.
+ Yet he alone to every scene could give
+ The historian's truth, and bid the manners live.
+ Waked at his call I view, with glad surprise,
+ Majestic forms of mighty monarchs rise. 80
+ There Henry's trumpets spread their loud alarms,
+ And laurel'd Conquest waits her hero's arms.
+ Here gentler Edward claims a pitying sigh,
+ Scarce born to honours, and so soon to die!
+ Yet shall thy throne, unhappy infant, bring 85
+ No beam of comfort to the guilty king:
+ The time[59] shall come when Glo'ster's heart shall bleed,
+ In life's last hours, with horror of the deed;
+ When dreary visions shall at last present
+ Thy vengeful image in the midnight tent: 90
+ Thy hand unseen the secret death shall bear,
+ Blunt the weak sword, and break the oppressive spear!
+
+ Where'er we turn, by Fancy charm'd, we find
+ Some sweet illusion of the cheated mind.
+ Oft, wild of wing, she calls the soul to rove 95
+ With humbler nature, in the rural grove;
+ Where swains contented own the quiet scene,
+ And twilight fairies tread the circled green:
+ Dress'd by her hand, the woods and valleys smile,
+ And Spring diffusive decks the enchanted isle. 100
+
+ O, more than all in powerful genius blest,
+ Come, take thine empire o'er the willing breast!
+ Whate'er the wounds this youthful heart shall feel,
+ Thy songs support me, and thy morals heal!
+ There every thought the poet's warmth may raise, 105
+ There native music dwells in all the lays.
+ O might some verse with happiest skill persuade
+ Expressive Picture to adopt thine aid!
+ What wondrous draughts might rise from every page!
+ What other Raphaels charm a distant age! 110
+
+ Methinks e'en now I view some free design,
+ Where breathing Nature lives in every line:
+ Chaste and subdued the modest lights decay,
+ Steal into shades, and mildly melt away.
+ And see where Anthony,[60] in tears approved, 115
+ Guards the pale relics of the chief he loved:
+ O'er the cold corse the warrior seems to bend,
+ Deep sunk in grief, and mourns his murder'd friend!
+ Still as they press, he calls on all around,
+ Lifts the torn robe, and points the bleeding wound. 120
+
+ But who[61] is he, whose brows exalted bear
+ A wrath impatient, and a fiercer air?
+ Awake to all that injured worth can feel,
+ On his own Rome he turns the avenging steel;
+ Yet shall not war's insatiate fury fall 125
+ (So heaven ordains it) on the destined wall.
+ See the fond mother, 'midst the plaintive train,
+ Hung on his knees, and prostrate on the plain!
+ Touch'd to the soul, in vain he strives to hide
+ The son's affection, in the Roman's pride: 130
+ O'er all the man conflicting passions rise;
+ Rage grasps the sword, while Pity melts the eyes.
+
+ Thus generous Critic, as thy Bard inspires,
+ The sister Arts shall nurse their drooping fires;
+ Each from his scenes her stores alternate bring, 135
+ Blend the fair tints, or wake the vocal string:
+ Those sibyl leaves, the sport of every wind,
+ (For poets ever were a careless kind,)
+ By thee disposed, no farther toil demand,
+ But, just to Nature, own thy forming hand. 140
+
+ So spread o'er Greece, the harmonious whole unknown,
+ E'en Homer's numbers charm'd by parts alone.
+ Their own Ulysses scarce had wander'd more,
+ By winds and waters cast on every shore:
+ When, raised by fate, some former Hanmer join'd 145
+ Each beauteous image of the boundless mind;
+ And bade, like thee, his Athens ever claim
+ A fond alliance with the Poet's name.
+
+ Oxford, Dec. 3,
+ 1743.
+
+
+VARIATIONS.
+
+ Ver.
+ 1. While, own'd by you, with smiles the Muse surveys
+ The expected triumph of her sweetest lays:
+ While, stretch'd at ease, she boasts your guardian aid,
+ Secure, and happy in her sylvan shade:
+ Excuse her fears, who scarce a verse bestows,
+ In just remembrance of the debt she owes;
+ With conscious, &c.
+
+ 9. Long slighted Fancy with a mother's care
+ Wept o'er his works, and felt the last despair:
+ Torn from her head, she saw the roses fall,
+ By all deserted, though admired by all:
+
+ near And "Oh!" she cried, "shall Science still resign
+ 11 Whate'er is Nature's, and whate'er is mine?
+ to Shall Taste and Art but show a cold regard,
+ 22. And scornful Pride reject the unletter'd bard?
+ Ye myrtled nymphs, who own my gentle reign,
+ Tune the sweet lyre, and grace my airy train,
+ If, where ye rove, your searching eyes have known
+ One perfect mind, which judgment calls its own;
+ There every breast its fondest hopes must bend,
+ And every Muse with tears await her friend."
+ 'Twas then fair Isis from her stream arose,
+ In kind compassion of her sister's woes.
+ 'Twas then she promised to the mourning maid
+ The immortal honours which thy hands have paid:
+ "My best loved son," she said, "shall yet restore
+ Thy ruin'd sweets, and Fancy weep no more."
+ Each rising art by slow gradation moves;
+ Toil builds, &c.
+
+ 25. Line after line our pitying eyes o'erflow,
+
+ 27. To Rome removed, with equal power to please,
+
+ 35. When Rome herself, her envied glories dead,
+ No more imperial, stoop'd her conquer'd head;
+ Luxuriant Florence chose a softer theme,
+ While all was peace, by Arno's silver stream.
+ With sweeter notes the Etrurian vales complain'd,
+ And arts reviving told a Cosmo reign'd.
+ Their wanton lyres the bards of Provence strung,
+ Sweet flow'd the lays, but love was all they sung.
+ The gay, &c.
+
+ 45. But Heaven, still rising in its works, decreed
+
+ 63. His every strain the Loves and Graces own;
+
+ 71. Till late Corneille from epick Lucan brought
+ The full expression, and the Roman thought:
+
+ 101. O, blest in all that genius gives to charm,
+ Whose morals mend us, and whose passions warm!
+ Oft let my youth attend thy various page,
+ Where rich invention rules the unbounded stage:
+ There every scene the poet's warmth may raise,
+ And melting music find the softest lays:
+ O, might the Muse with equal ease persuade
+ Expressive Picture to adopt thine aid!
+ Some powerful Raphael should again appear,
+ And arts consenting fix their empire here.
+
+ 111. Methinks e'en now I view some fair design,
+ Where breathing Nature lives in every line;
+ Chaste and subdued, the modest colours lie,
+ In fair proportion to the approving eye:
+ And see where Anthony lamenting stands,
+ In fixt distress, and spreads his pleading hands:
+ O'er the pale corse the warrior seems to bend,
+
+ 122. A rage impatient, and a fiercer air?
+ E'en now his thoughts with eager vengeance doom
+ The last sad ruin of ungrateful Rome.
+ Till, slow advancing o'er the tented plain,
+ In sable weeds, appear the kindred train:
+ The frantic mother leads their wild despair,
+ Beats her swoln breast, and rends her silver hair;
+ And see, he yields! the tears unbidden start,
+ And conscious nature claims the unwilling heart!
+ O'er all the man conflicting passions rise;
+
+ 136. Spread the fair tints, or wake the vocal string:
+
+ 146. Each beauteous image of the tuneful mind;
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [54] The OEdipus of Sophocles.
+
+ [55] Julius the Second, the immediate predecessor of Leo the Tenth.
+
+ [56] Their characters are thus distinguished by Mr. Dryden.
+
+ [57] About the time of Shakespeare, the poet Hardy was in great repute
+ in France. He wrote, according to Fontenelle, six hundred plays.
+ The French poets after him applied themselves in general to the
+ correct improvement of the stage, which was almost totally
+ disregarded by those of our own country, Jonson excepted.
+
+ [58] The favourite author of the elder Corneille.
+
+ [59] Turno tempus erit, magno cum optaverit emptum
+ Intactum Pallanta, etc.
+ VIRG.
+
+ [60] See the tragedy of Julius Csar.
+
+ [61] Coriolanus. See Mr. Spence's Dialogue on the Odyssey.
+
+
+
+
+DIRGE IN CYMBELINE,
+
+SUNG BY GUIDERUS AND ARVIRAGUS OVER FIDELE, SUPPOSED TO BE DEAD.
+
+
+ To fair Fidele's grassy tomb
+ Soft maids and village hinds shall bring
+ Each opening sweet of earliest bloom,
+ And rifle all the breathing spring.
+
+ No wailing ghost shall dare appear 5
+ To vex with shrieks this quiet grove;
+ But shepherd lads assemble here,
+ And melting virgins own their love.
+
+ No wither'd witch shall here be seen;
+ No goblins lead their nightly crew: 10
+ The female fays shall haunt the green,
+ And dress thy grave with pearly dew!
+
+ The redbreast oft, at evening hours,
+ Shall kindly lend his little aid,
+ With hoary moss, and gather'd flowers, 15
+ To deck the ground where thou art laid.
+
+ When howling winds, and beating rain,
+ In tempests shake the sylvan cell;
+ Or 'midst the chase, on every plain,
+ The tender thought on thee shall dwell; 20
+
+ Each lonely scene shall thee restore;
+ For thee the tear be duly shed;
+ Beloved till life can charm no more,
+ And mourn'd till Pity's self be dead.
+
+
+VARIATIONS.
+
+ Ver.
+ 1. To fair Pastora's grassy tomb
+
+ 7. But shepherd swains assemble here,
+
+ 11. But female fays shall haunt the green,
+
+ 12. And dress thy bed with pearly dew!
+
+ 17. When chiding winds, and beating rain,
+ In tempest shake the sylvan cell;
+ Or 'midst the flocks, on every plain,
+
+ 21. Each lovely scene shall thee restore;
+
+ 23. Beloved till life could charm no more,
+
+
+
+
+VERSES
+
+WRITTEN ON A PAPER WHICH CONTAINED A PIECE OF BRIDE-CAKE, GIVEN TO THE
+AUTHOR BY A LADY.
+
+
+ Ye curious hands, that, hid from vulgar eyes,
+ By search profane shall find this hallow'd cake,
+ With virtue's awe forbear the sacred prize,
+ Nor dare a theft, for love and pity's sake!
+
+ This precious relic, form'd by magic power, 5
+ Beneath her shepherd's haunted pillow laid,
+ Was meant by love to charm the silent hour,
+ The secret present of a matchless maid.
+
+ The Cyprian queen, at Hymen's fond request,
+ Each nice ingredient chose with happiest art; 10
+ Fears, sighs, and wishes of the enamour'd breast,
+ And pains that please, are mix'd in every part.
+
+ With rosy hand the spicy fruit she brought,
+ From Paphian hills, and fair Cythera's isle;
+ And temper'd sweet with these the melting thought, 15
+ The kiss ambrosial, and the yielding smile.
+
+ Ambiguous looks, that scorn and yet relent,
+ Denials mild, and firm unalter'd truth;
+ Reluctant pride, and amorous faint consent,
+ And meeting ardours, and exulting youth. 20
+
+ Sleep, wayward God! hath sworn, while these remain,
+ With flattering dreams to dry his nightly tear,
+ And cheerful Hope, so oft invoked in vain,
+ With fairy songs shall soothe his pensive ear.
+
+ If, bound by vows to Friendship's gentle side, 25
+ And fond of soul, thou hop'st an equal grace,
+ If youth or maid thy joys and griefs divide,
+ O, much entreated, leave this fatal place!
+
+ Sweet Peace, who long hath shunn'd my plaintive day,
+ Consents at length to bring me short delight, 30
+ Thy careless steps may scare her doves away,
+ And Grief with raven note usurp the night.
+
+
+
+
+TO MISS AURELIA C----R,
+
+ON HER WEEPING AT HER SISTER'S WEDDING.
+
+
+ Cease, fair Aurelia, cease to mourn,
+ Lament not Hannah's happy state;
+ You may be happy in your turn,
+ And seize the treasure you regret.
+
+ With Love united Hymen stands, 5
+ And softly whispers to your charms,
+ "Meet but your lover in my bands,
+ You'll find your sister in his arms."
+
+
+
+
+SONNET.
+
+
+ When Phoebe form'd a wanton smile,
+ My soul! it reach'd not here:
+ Strange, that thy peace, thou trembler, flies
+ Before a rising tear!
+ From 'midst the drops, my love is born, 5
+ That o'er those eyelids rove:
+ Thus issued from a teeming wave
+ The fabled queen of love.
+
+
+
+
+SONG.
+
+THE SENTIMENTS BORROWED FROM SHAKESPEARE.[62]
+
+
+ Young Damon of the vale is dead,
+ Ye lowly hamlets, moan;
+ A dewy turf lies o'er his head,
+ And at his feet a stone.
+
+ His shroud, which Death's cold damps destroy, 5
+ Of snow-white threads was made:
+ All mourn'd to see so sweet a boy
+ In earth for ever laid.
+
+ Pale pansies o'er his corpse were placed,
+ Which, pluck'd before their time, 10
+ Bestrew'd the boy, like him to waste
+ And wither in their prime.
+
+ But will he ne'er return, whose tongue
+ Could tune the rural lay?
+ Ah, no! his bell of peace is rung, 15
+ His lips are cold as clay.
+
+ They bore him out at twilight hour,
+ The youth who loved so well:
+ Ah, me! how many a true love shower
+ Of kind remembrance fell! 20
+
+ Each maid was woe--but Lucy chief,
+ Her grief o'er all was tried;
+ Within his grave she dropp'd in grief,
+ And o'er her loved one died.
+
+
+VARIATION.
+
+ Ver.
+ 2. Ye lowland hamlets, moan;
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [62] It is uncertain where this poem appeared. It was inserted in the
+ Edinburgh edition of the Poets, 1794. A manuscript copy in the
+ collection recently belonging to Mr. Upcott, and now in the
+ British Museum, is headed, "Written by Collins when at Winchester
+ School. From a Manuscript."
+
+
+
+
+ON OUR LATE TASTE IN MUSIC.[[63]]
+
+ ----Quid vocis modulamen inane juvabat
+ Verborum sensusque vacans numerique loquacis?
+ MILTON.
+
+
+ Britons! away with the degenerate pack!
+ Waft, western winds! the foreign spoilers back!
+ Enough has been in wild amusements spent,
+ Let British verse and harmony content!
+ No music once could charm you like your own, 5
+ Then tuneful Robinson,[64] and Tofts were known;
+ Then Purcell touched the strings, while numbers hung
+ Attentive to the sounds--and blest the song!
+ E'en gentle Weldon taught us manly notes,
+ Beyond the enervate thrills of Roman throats! 10
+ Notes, foreign luxury could ne'er inspire,
+ That animate the soul, and swell the lyre!
+ That mend, and not emasculate our hearts,
+ And teach the love of freedom and of arts.
+ Nor yet, while guardian Phoebus gilds our isle, 15
+ Does heaven averse await the muses' toil;
+ Cherish but once our worth of native race,
+ The sister-arts shall soon display their face!
+ Even half discouraged through the gloom they strive,
+ Smile at neglect, and o'er oblivion live. 20
+ See Handel, careless of a foreign fame,
+ Fix on our shore, and boast a Briton's name:
+ While, placed marmoric in the vocal grove,[65]
+ He guides the measures listening throngs approve.
+ Mark silence at the voice of Arne confess'd, 25
+ Soft as the sweet enchantress rules the breast;
+ As when transported Venice lent an ear,
+ Camilla's charms to view, and accents hear![66]
+ So while she varies the impassion'd song,
+ Alternate motions on the bosom throng! 30
+ As heavenly Milton[67] guides her magic voice,
+ And virtue thus convey'd allures the choice.
+ Discard soft nonsense in a slavish tongue,
+ The strain insipid, and the thought unknown;
+ From truth and nature form the unerring test; 35
+ Be what is manly, chaste, and good the best!
+ 'Tis not to ape the songsters of the groves,
+ Through all the quiverings of their wanton loves;
+ 'Tis not the enfeebled thrill, or warbled shake,
+ The heart can strengthen, or the soul awake! 40
+ But where the force of energy is found
+ When the sense rises on the wings of sound;
+ When reason, with the charms of music twined,
+ Through the enraptured ear informs the mind;
+ Bids generous love or soft compassion glow, 45
+ And forms a tuneful Paradise below!
+ Oh Britons! if the honour still you boast,
+ No longer purchase follies at such cost!
+ No longer let unmeaning sounds invite
+ To visionary scenes of false delight: 50
+ When, shame to sense! we see the hero's rage
+ Lisp'd on the tongue, and danced along the stage!
+ Or hear in eunuch sounds a hero squeak,
+ While kingdoms rise or fall upon a shake!
+ Let them at home to slavery's painted train, 55
+ With siren art, repeat the pleasing strain:
+ While we, like wise Ulysses, close our ear
+ To songs which liberty forbids to hear!
+ Keep, guardian gales, the infectious guests away,
+ To charm where priests direct, and slaves obey. 60
+ Madrid, or wanton Rome, be their delight;
+ There they may warble as their poets write.
+ The temper of our isle, though cold, is clear;
+ And such our genius, noble though severe.
+ Our Shakespeare scorn'd the trifling rules of art, 65
+ But knew to conquer and surprise the heart!
+ In magic chains the captive thought to bind,
+ And fathom all the depths of human kind!
+ Too long, our shame, the prostituted herd
+ Our sense have bubbled, and our wealth have shared. 70
+ Too long the favourites of our vulgar great
+ Have bask'd in luxury, and lived in state!
+ In Tuscan wilds now let them villas rear[68]
+ Ennobled by the charity we spare.
+ There let them warble in the tainted breeze, 75
+ Or sing like widow'd orphans to the trees:
+ There let them chant their incoherent dreams,
+ Where howls Charybdis, and where Scylla screams!
+ Or where Avernus, from his darksome round,
+ May echo to the winds the blasted sound! 80
+ As fair Alcyone,[69] with anguish press'd,
+ Broods o'er the British main with tuneful breast,
+ Beneath the white-brow'd cliff protected sings,
+ Or skims the azure plain with painted wings!
+ Grateful, like her, to nature, and as just, 85
+ In our domestic blessings let us trust;
+ Keep for our sons fair learning's honour'd prize,
+ Till the world own the worth they now despise!
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [63] See Memoir, p. xxxviii.
+
+ [64] Now Countess-dowager of Peterborough.
+
+ [65] Vauxhall.
+
+ [66] Vide the Spectator's Letters from Camilla, vol. vi.
+
+ [67] Milton's Comus lately revived.
+
+ [68] Senesino has built a palace near Sienna on an estate which carries
+ the title of a Marquisate, but purchased with English gold.
+
+ [69] The king-fisher.
+
+
+
+
+OBSERVATIONS ON THE ORIENTAL ECLOGUES AND ODES.
+
+BY DR. LANGHORNE.
+
+
+OBSERVATIONS ON THE ORIENTAL ECLOGUES.
+
+
+The genius of the pastoral, as well as of every other respectable
+species of poetry, had its origin in the east, and from thence was
+transplanted by the muses of Greece; but whether from the continent of
+the Lesser Asia, or from Egypt, which, about the era of the Grecian
+pastoral, was the hospitable nurse of letters, it is not easy to
+determine. From the subjects, and the manner of Theocritus, one would
+incline to the latter opinion, while the history of Bion is in favour of
+the former.
+
+However, though it should still remain a doubt through what channel the
+pastoral traveled westward, there is not the least shadow of uncertainty
+concerning its oriental origin.
+
+In those ages which, guided by sacred chronology, from a comparative
+view of time, we call the early ages, it appears, from the most
+authentic historians, that the chiefs of the people employed themselves
+in rural exercises, and that astronomers and legislators were at the
+same time shepherds. Thus Strabo informs us, that the history of the
+creation was communicated to the Egyptians by a Chaldean shepherd.
+
+From these circumstances it is evident, not only that such shepherds
+were capable of all the dignity and elegance peculiar to poetry, but
+that whatever poetry they attempted would be of the pastoral kind; would
+take its subjects from those scenes of rural simplicity in which they
+were conversant, and, as it was the offspring of harmony and nature,
+would employ the powers it derived from the former, to celebrate the
+beauty and benevolence of the latter.
+
+Accordingly we find that the most ancient poems treat of agriculture,
+astronomy, and other objects within the rural and natural systems.
+
+What constitutes the difference between the georgic and the pastoral,
+is love and the colloquial or dramatic form of composition peculiar to
+the latter; this form of composition is sometimes dispensed with, and
+love and rural imagery alone are thought sufficient to distinguish
+the pastoral. The tender passion, however, seems to be essential to
+this species of poetry, and is hardly ever excluded from those
+pieces that were intended to come under this denomination: even in
+those eclogues of the Amoebean kind, whose only purport is a trial of
+skill between contending shepherds, love has its usual share, and
+the praises of their respective mistresses are the general subjects of
+the competitors.
+
+It is to be lamented, that scarce any oriental compositions of this kind
+have survived the ravages of ignorance, tyranny, and time; we cannot
+doubt that many such have been extant, possibly as far down as that
+fatal period, never to be mentioned in the world of letters without
+horror, when the glorious monuments of human ingenuity perished in the
+ashes of the Alexandrian library.
+
+Those ingenious Greeks, whom we call the parents of pastoral poetry,
+were, probably, no more than imitators, of imitators that derived their
+harmony from higher and remoter sources, and kindled their poetical
+fires at those then unextinguished lamps which burned within the tombs
+of oriental genius.
+
+It is evident that Homer has availed himself of those magnificent images
+and descriptions so frequently to be met with in the books of the Old
+Testament; and why may not Theocritus, Moschus, and Bion have found
+their archetypes in other eastern writers, whose names have perished
+with their works? yet, though it may not be illiberal to admit such a
+supposition, it would certainly be invidious to conclude, what the
+malignity of cavillers alone could suggest with regard to Homer, that
+they destroyed the sources from which they borrowed, and, as it is
+fabled of the young of the pelican, drained their supporters to death.
+
+As the Septuagint translation of the Old Testament was performed at the
+request, and under the patronage, of Ptolemy Philadelphus, it were not
+to be wondered if Theocritus, who was entertained at that prince's
+court, had borrowed some part of his pastoral imagery from the poetical
+passages of those books. I think it can hardly be doubted that the
+Sicilian poet had in his eye certain expressions of the prophet Isaiah,
+when he wrote the following lines:
+
+ ~Nyn ia men phoreoite batoi, phoreoite d' akanthai.
+ Ha de kala Narkissos ep' arkeuthoisi komasai;
+ Panta d' enalla genoito, kai ha pitus ochnas eneikai
+ ----kai ts kynas hlaphos helkoi.~
+
+ Let vexing brambles the blue violet bear,
+ On the rude thorn Narcissus dress his hair,
+ All, all reversed--The pine with pears be crown'd,
+ And the bold deer shall drag the trembling hound.
+
+The cause, indeed, of these phenomena is very different in the Greek
+from what it is in the Hebrew poet; the former employing them on the
+death, the latter on the birth, of an important person: but the marks of
+imitation are nevertheless obvious.
+
+It might, however, be expected, that if Theocritus had borrowed at all
+from the sacred writers, the celebrated pastoral epithalamium of
+Solomon, so much within his own walk of poetry, would not certainly
+have escaped his notice. His epithalamium on the marriage of Helena,
+moreover, gave him an open field for imitation; therefore, if he has any
+obligations to the royal bard, we may expect to find them there. The
+very opening of the poem is in the spirit of the Hebrew song:
+
+ ~Hout d priza katedrathes, phile gambre;~
+
+The colour of imitation is still stronger in the following passage:
+
+ ~As antelloisa kalon diephaine prospon,
+ Potnia nyx hate, leukon ear cheimnos anentos?
+ Hde kai ha chrysea Helena diephainet' en amin,
+ Pieira megala hat' anedrame kosmos aroura.
+ H kap kyparissos, harmati Thessalos hippos.~
+
+This description of Helen is infinitely above the style and figure of
+the Sicilian pastoral: "She is like the rising of the golden morning,
+when the night departeth, and when the winter is over and gone. She
+resembleth the cypress in the garden, the horse in the chariots of
+Thessaly." These figures plainly declare their origin; and others,
+equally imitative, might be pointed out in the same idyllium.
+
+This beautiful and luxuriant marriage pastoral of Solomon is the only
+perfect form of the oriental eclogue that has survived the ruins of
+time; a happiness for which it is, probably, more indebted to its
+sacred character than to its intrinsic merit. Not that it is by any
+means destitute of poetical excellence: like all the eastern poetry, it
+is bold, wild, and unconnected in its figures, allusions, and parts, and
+has all that graceful and magnificent daring which characterizes its
+metaphorical and comparative imagery.
+
+In consequence of these peculiarities, so ill adapted to the frigid
+genius of the north, Mr. Collins could make but little use of it as a
+precedent for his Oriental Eclogues; and even in his third eclogue,
+where the subject is of a similar nature, he has chosen rather to follow
+the mode of the Doric and the Latian pastoral.
+
+The scenery and subjects then of the foregoing eclogues alone are
+oriental; the style and colouring are purely European; and, for this
+reason, the author's preface, in which he intimates that he had the
+originals from a merchant who traded to the east, is omitted, as being
+now altogether superfluous.[70]
+
+With regard to the merit of these eclogues, it may justly be asserted,
+that in simplicity of description and expression, in delicacy and
+softness of numbers, and in natural and unaffected tenderness, they are
+not to be equaled by any thing of the pastoral kind in the English
+language.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [70] In the present edition the preface is restored.
+
+
+
+
+ECLOGUE I.
+
+
+This eclogue, which is entitled Selim, or the Shepherd's Moral, as
+there is nothing dramatic in the subject, may be thought the least
+entertaining of the four: but it is by no means the least valuable.
+The moral precepts which the intelligent shepherd delivers to his
+fellow-swains, and the virgins their companions, are such as would
+infallibly promote the happiness of the pastoral life.
+
+In impersonating the private virtues, the poet has observed great
+propriety, and has formed their genealogy with the most perfect
+judgment, when he represents them as the daughters of truth and wisdom.
+
+The characteristics of modesty and chastity are extremely happy and
+_peinturesque_:
+
+ "Come thou, whose thoughts as limpid springs are clear,
+ To lead the train, sweet Modesty, appear;
+ With thee be Chastity, of all afraid,
+ Distrusting all, a wise, suspicious maid;
+ Cold is her breast, like flowers that drink the dew;
+ A silken veil conceals her from the view."
+
+The two similes borrowed from rural objects are not only much in
+character, but perfectly natural and expressive. There is,
+notwithstanding, this defect in the former, that it wants a peculiar
+propriety; for purity of thought may as well be applied to chastity as
+to modesty; and from this instance, as well as from a thousand more, we
+may see the necessity of distinguishing, in characteristic poetry, every
+object by marks and attributes peculiarly its own.
+
+It cannot be objected to this eclogue, that it wants both those
+essential criteria of the pastoral, love and the drama; for though it
+partakes not of the latter, the former still retains an interest in it,
+and that too very material, as it professedly consults the virtue and
+happiness of the lover, while it informs what are the qualities
+
+ ----that must lead to love.
+
+
+
+
+ECLOGUE II.
+
+
+All the advantages that any species of poetry can derive from the
+novelty of the subject and scenery, this eclogue possesses. The
+route of a camel-driver is a scene that scarce could exist in the
+imagination of a European, and of its attendant distresses he could
+have no idea.--These are very happily and minutely painted by our
+descriptive poet. What sublime simplicity of expression! what
+nervous plainness in the opening of the poem!
+
+ "In silent horror o'er the boundless waste
+ The driver Hassan with his camels past."
+
+The magic pencil of the poet brings the whole scene before us at once,
+as it were by enchantment; and in this single couplet we feel all the
+effect that arises from the terrible wildness of a region unenlivened by
+the habitations of men. The verses that describe so minutely the
+camel-driver's little provisions have a touching influence on the
+imagination, and prepare the reader to enter more feelingly into his
+future apprehensions of distress:
+
+ "Bethink thee, Hassan, where shall thirst assuage,
+ When fails this cruise, his unrelenting rage!"
+
+It is difficult to say whether his apostrophe to the "mute companions of
+his toils" is more to be admired for the elegance and beauty of the
+poetical imagery, or for the tenderness and humanity of the sentiment.
+He who can read it without being affected, will do his heart no
+injustice if he concludes it to be destitute of sensibility:
+
+ "Ye mute companions of my toils, that bear
+ In all my griefs a more than equal share!
+ Here, where no springs in murmurs break away,
+ Or moss-crown'd fountains mitigate the day,
+ In vain ye hope the green delights to know,
+ Which plains more blest, or verdant vales, bestow:
+ Here rocks alone and tasteless sands are found,
+ And faint and sickly winds for ever howl around."
+
+Yet in these beautiful lines there is a slight error, which writers of
+the greatest genius very frequently fall into.--It will be needless to
+observe to the accurate reader, that in the fifth and sixth verses there
+is a verbal pleonasm where the poet speaks of the _green_ delights of
+_verdant_ vales. There is an oversight of the same kind in the Manners,
+an Ode, where the poet says,
+
+ "----Seine's blue nymphs deplore
+ In watchet weeds----."
+
+This fault is indeed a common one, but to a reader of taste it is
+nevertheless disgustful; and it is mentioned here, as the error of a man
+of genius and judgment, that men of genius and judgment may guard
+against it.
+
+Mr. Collins speaks like a true poet, as well in sentiment as expression,
+when, with regard to the thirst of wealth, he says,
+
+ "Why heed we not, while mad we haste along,
+ The gentle voice of Peace, or Pleasure's song?
+ Or wherefore think the flowery mountain's side,
+ The fountain's murmurs, and the valley's pride,
+ Why think we these less pleasing to behold,
+ Than dreary deserts, if they lead to gold?"
+
+But however just these sentiments may appear to those who have not
+revolted from nature and simplicity, had the author proclaimed them in
+Lombard Street, or Cheapside, he would not have been complimented with
+the understanding of the bellman.--A striking proof, that our own
+particular ideas of happiness regulate our opinions concerning the sense
+and wisdom of others!
+
+It is impossible to take leave of this most beautiful eclogue, without
+paying the tribute of admiration so justly due to the following nervous
+lines:
+
+ "What if the lion in his rage I meet!----
+ Oft in the dust I view his printed feet:
+ And, fearful! oft, when day's declining light
+ Yields her pale empire to the mourner night,
+ By hunger roused, he scours the groaning plain,
+ Gaunt wolves and sullen tigers in his train:
+ Before them death with shrieks directs their way,
+ Fills the wild yell, and leads them to their prey."
+
+This, amongst many other passages to be met with in the writings of
+Collins, shows that his genius was perfectly capable of the grand and
+magnificent in description, notwithstanding what a learned writer has
+advanced to the contrary. Nothing, certainly, could be more greatly
+conceived, or more adequately expressed, than the image in the last
+couplet.
+
+The deception, sometimes used in rhetoric and poetry, which presents us
+with an object or sentiment contrary to what we expected, is here
+introduced to the greatest advantage:
+
+ "Farewell the youth, whom sighs could not detain,
+ Whom Zara's breaking heart implored in vain!
+ Yet, as thou go'st, may every blast arise----
+ Weak and unfelt as these rejected sighs!"
+
+But this, perhaps, is rather an artificial prettiness, than a real or
+natural beauty.
+
+
+
+
+ECLOGUE III.
+
+
+That innocence, and native simplicity of manners, which, in the first
+eclogue, was allowed to constitute the happiness of love, is here
+beautifully described in its effects. The sultan of Persia marries a
+Georgian shepherdess, and finds in her embraces that genuine felicity
+which unperverted nature alone can bestow. The most natural and
+beautiful parts of this eclogue are those where the fair sultana refers
+with so much pleasure to her pastoral amusements, and those scenes of
+happy innocence in which she had passed her early years; particularly
+when, upon her first departure,
+
+ "Oft as she went, she backward turned her view,
+ And bade that crook and bleating flock adieu."
+
+This picture of amiable simplicity reminds one of that passage where
+Proserpine, when carried off by Pluto, regrets the loss of the flowers
+she has been gathering:
+
+ "Collecti flores tunicis cecidere remissis:
+ Tantaque simplicitas puerilibus adfuit annis,
+ Hc quoque virgineum movit jactura dolorem."
+
+
+
+
+ECLOGUE IV.
+
+
+The beautiful but unfortunate country where the scene of this pathetic
+eclogue is laid, had been recently torn in pieces by the depredations of
+its savage neighbours, when Mr. Collins so affectingly described its
+misfortunes. This ingenious man had not only a pencil to portray, but a
+heart to feel for the miseries of mankind; and it is with the utmost
+tenderness and humanity he enters into the narrative of Circassia's
+ruin, while he realizes the scene, and brings the present drama before
+us. Of every circumstance that could possibly contribute to the tender
+effect this pastoral was designed to produce, the poet has availed
+himself with the utmost art and address. Thus he prepares the heart to
+pity the distresses of Circassia, by representing it as the scene of the
+happiest love:
+
+ "In fair Circassia, where, to love inclined,
+ Each swain was blest, for every maid was kind."
+
+To give the circumstance of the dialogue a more affecting solemnity, he
+makes the time midnight, and describes the two shepherds in the very
+act of flight from the destruction that swept over their country:
+
+ "Sad o'er the dews, two brother shepherds fled,
+ Where wildering fear and desperate sorrow led."
+
+There is a beauty and propriety in the epithet wildering, which strikes
+us more forcibly, the more we consider it.
+
+The opening of the dialogue is equally happy, natural, and unaffected;
+when one of the shepherds, weary and overcome with the fatigue of
+flight, calls upon his companion to review the length of way they had
+passed. This is certainly painting from nature, and the thoughts,
+however obvious, or destitute of refinement, are perfectly in character.
+But as the closest pursuit of nature is the surest way to excellence in
+general, and to sublimity in particular, in poetical description, so we
+find that this simple suggestion of the shepherd is not unattended with
+magnificence. There is a grandeur and variety in the landscape he
+describes:
+
+ "And first review that long extended plain,
+ And yon wide groves, already past with pain!
+ Yon ragged cliff, whose dangerous path we tried!
+ And, last, this lofty mountain's weary side!"
+
+There is, in imitative harmony, an act of expressing a slow and
+difficult movement by adding to the usual number of pauses in a verse.
+This is observable in the line that describes the ascent of the
+mountain:
+
+ And last || this lofty mountain's || weary side ||.
+
+Here we find the number of pauses, or musical bars, which, in an heroic
+verse, is commonly two, increased to three.
+
+The liquid melody, and the numerous sweetness of expression, in the
+following descriptive lines, is almost inimitably beautiful:
+
+ "Sweet to the sight is Zabran's flowery plain,
+ And once by nymphs and shepherds loved in vain!
+ No more the virgins shall delight to rove
+ By Sargis' banks, or Irwan's shady grove;
+ On Tarkie's mountain catch the cooling gale,
+ Or breathe the sweets of Aly's flowery vale."
+
+Nevertheless, in this delightful landscape there is an obvious fault;
+there is no distinction between the plain of Zabran and the vale of Aly;
+they are both flowery, and consequently undiversified. This could not
+proceed from the poet's want of judgment, but from inattention: it had
+not occurred to him that he had employed the epithet flowery twice
+within so short a compass; an oversight which those who are accustomed
+to poetical, or, indeed, to any other species of composition, know to be
+very possible.
+
+Nothing can be more beautifully conceived, or more pathetically
+expressed, than the shepherd's apprehensions for his fair countrywomen,
+exposed to the ravages of the invaders:
+
+ "In vain Circassia boasts her spicy groves,
+ For ever famed for pure and happy loves:
+ In vain she boasts her fairest of the fair,
+ Their eyes' blue languish, and their golden hair!
+ Those eyes in tears their fruitless grief shall send;
+ Those hairs the Tartar's cruel hand shall rend."
+
+There is certainly some very powerful charm in the liquid melody of
+sounds. The editor of these poems could never read or hear the following
+verse repeated, without a degree of pleasure otherwise entirely
+unaccountable:
+
+ "Their eyes' blue languish, and their golden hair."
+
+Such are the Oriental Eclogues, which we leave with the same kind of
+anxious pleasure we feel upon a temporary parting with a beloved
+friend.
+
+
+
+
+OBSERVATIONS
+
+ON THE ODES, DESCRIPTIVE AND ALLEGORICAL.
+
+
+The genius of Collins was capable of every degree of excellence in lyric
+poetry, and perfectly qualified for that high province of the muse.
+Possessed of a native ear for all the varieties of harmony and
+modulation, susceptible of the finest feelings of tenderness and
+humanity, but, above all, carried away by that high enthusiasm which
+gives to imagination its strongest colouring, he was at once capable of
+soothing the ear with the melody of his numbers, of influencing the
+passions by the force of his pathos, and of gratifying the fancy by the
+luxury of description.
+
+In consequence of these powers, but, more particularly, in consideration
+of the last, he chose such subjects for his lyric essays as were most
+favourable for the indulgence of description and allegory; where he
+could exercise his powers in moral and personal painting; where he could
+exert his invention in conferring new attributes on images or objects
+already known, and described by a determinate number of characteristics;
+where he might give an uncommon clat to his figures, by placing them in
+happier attitudes, or in more advantageous lights, and introduce new
+forms from the moral and intellectual world into the society of
+impersonated beings.
+
+Such, no doubt, were the privileges which the poet expected, and such
+were the advantages he derived from the descriptive and allegorical
+nature of his themes.
+
+It seems to have been the whole industry of our author, (and it is, at
+the same time, almost all the claim to moral excellence his writings can
+boast,) to promote the influence of the social virtues, by painting them
+in the fairest and happiest lights.
+
+ "Melior fieri tuendo"
+
+would be no improper motto to his poems in general; but of his lyric
+poems it seems to be the whole moral tendency and effect. If, therefore,
+it should appear to some readers, that he has been more industrious to
+cultivate description than sentiment, it may be observed, that his
+descriptions themselves are sentimental, and answer the whole end of
+that species of writing, by embellishing every feature of virtue, and by
+conveying, through the effects of the pencil, the finest moral lessons
+to the mind.
+
+Horace speaks of the fidelity of the ear in preference to the
+uncertainty of the eye; but if the mind receives conviction, it is
+certainly of very little importance through what medium, or by which of
+the senses it is conveyed. The impressions left on the imagination may
+possibly be thought less durable than the deposits of the memory, but it
+may very well admit of a question, whether a conclusion of reason, or an
+impression of imagination, will soonest make it sway to the heart. A
+moral precept, conveyed in words, is only an account of truth in its
+effects; a moral picture is truth exemplified; and which is most likely
+to gain upon the affections, it may not be difficult to determine.
+
+This, however, must be allowed, that those works approach the nearest to
+perfection which unite these powers and advantages; which at once
+influence the imagination, and engage the memory; the former by the
+force of animated and striking description, the latter by a brief, but
+harmonious conveyance of precept: thus, while the heart is influenced
+through the operation of the passions or the fancy, the effect, which
+might otherwise have been transient, is secured by the coperating power
+of the memory, which treasures up in a short aphorism the moral of the
+scene.
+
+This is a good reason, and this, perhaps, is the only reason that can be
+given, why our dramatic performances should generally end with a chain
+of couplets. In these the moral of the whole piece is usually conveyed;
+and that assistance which the memory borrows from rhyme, as it was
+probably the original cause of it, gives it usefulness and propriety
+even there.
+
+After these apologies for the descriptive turn of the following odes,
+something remains to be said on the origin and use of allegory in
+poetical composition.
+
+By this we are not to understand the trope in the schools, which is
+defined aliud verbis, aliud sensu ostendere; and of which Quintilian
+says, usus est, ut tristia dicamus melioribus verbis, aut bon rei
+gratia qudam contrariis significemus, &c. It is not the verbal, but the
+sentimental allegory, not allegorical expression (which, indeed, might
+come under the term of metaphor), but allegorical imagery, that is here
+in question.
+
+When we endeavour to trace this species of figurative sentiment to its
+origin, we find it coeval with literature itself. It is generally
+agreed, that the most ancient productions are poetical; and it is
+certain that the most ancient poems abound with allegorical imagery.
+
+If, then, it be allowed that the first literary productions were
+poetical; we shall have little or no difficulty in discovering the
+origin of allegory.
+
+At the birth of letters, in the transition from hieroglyphical to
+literal expression, it is not to be wondered if the custom of
+expressing ideas by personal images, which had so long prevailed, should
+still retain its influence on the mind, though the use of letters had
+rendered the practical application of it superfluous. Those who had been
+accustomed to express strength by the image of an elephant, swiftness by
+that of a panther, and courage by that of a lion, would make no scruple
+of substituting, in letters, the symbols for the ideas they had been
+used to represent.
+
+Here we plainly see the origin of allegorical expression, that it arose
+from the ashes of hieroglyphics; and if to the same cause we should
+refer that figurative boldness of style and imagery which distinguish
+the oriental writings, we shall, perhaps, conclude more justly, than if
+we should impute it to the superior grandeur of eastern genius.
+
+From the same source with the verbal, we are to derive the sentimental
+allegory, which is nothing more than a continuation of the metaphorical
+or symbolical expression of the several agents in an action, or the
+different objects in a scene.
+
+The latter most peculiarly comes under the denomination of allegorical
+imagery; and in this species of allegory, we include the impersonation
+of passions, affections, virtues, and vices, &c. on account of which,
+principally, the following odes were properly termed, by their author,
+allegorical.
+
+With respect to the utility of this figurative writing, the same
+arguments that have been advanced in favour of descriptive poetry will
+be of weight likewise here. It is, indeed, from impersonation, or, as it
+is commonly termed, personification, that poetical description borrows
+its chief powers and graces. Without the aid of this, moral and
+intellectual painting would be flat and unanimated, and even the scenery
+of material objects would be dull, without the introduction of
+fictitious life.
+
+These observations will be most effectually illustrated by the sublime
+and beautiful odes that occasioned them; in those it will appear how
+happily this allegorical painting may be executed by the genuine powers
+of poetical genius, and they will not fail to prove its force and
+utility by passing through the imagination to the heart.
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO PITY.
+
+
+ "By Pella's bard, a magic name,
+ By all the griefs his thoughts could frame,
+ Receive my humble rite:
+ Long, Pity, let the nations view
+ Thy sky-worn robes of tenderest blue,
+ And eyes of dewy light!"
+
+The propriety of invoking Pity, through the mediation of Euripides, is
+obvious.--That admirable poet had the keys of all the tender passions,
+and therefore could not but stand in the highest esteem with a writer of
+Mr. Collins's sensibility.--He did, indeed, admire him as much as Milton
+professedly did, and probably for the same reasons; but we do not find
+that he has copied him so closely as the last mentioned poet has
+sometimes done, and particularly in the opening of Samson Agonistes,
+which is an evident imitation of the following passage in the
+Phoeniss:
+
+ ~Hgou paroithe, thygater, hs typhl podi
+ Ophthalmos ei su, nautiloisin astron hs?
+ Deur' eis to leuron pedon ichnos titheis' emon,
+ Probaine------~
+ Act. III. Sc. I.
+
+The "eyes of dewy light" is one of the happiest strokes of imagination,
+and may be ranked among those expressions which
+
+ "--give us back the image of the mind."
+
+ "Wild Arun too has heard thy strains,
+ And Echo, 'midst my native plains,
+ Been soothed by Pity's lute."
+
+ "There first the wren thy myrtles shed
+ On gentlest Otway's infant head."
+
+Sussex, in which county the Arun is a small river, had the honour of
+giving birth to Otway as well as to Collins: both these poets,
+unhappily, became the objects of that pity by which their writings are
+distinguished. There was a similitude in their genius and in their
+sufferings. There was a resemblance in the misfortunes and in the
+dissipation of their lives; and the circumstances of their death cannot
+be remembered without pain.
+
+The thought of painting in the temple of Pity the history of human
+misfortunes, and of drawing the scenes from the tragic muse, is very
+happy, and in every respect worthy the imagination of Collins.
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO FEAR.
+
+
+Mr. Collins, who had often determined to apply himself to dramatic
+poetry, seems here, with the same view, to have addressed one of the
+principal powers of the drama, and to implore that mighty influence she
+had given to the genius of Shakespeare:
+
+ "Hither again thy fury deal,
+ Teach me but once like him to feel:
+ His cypress wreath my meed decree,
+ And I, O Fear, will dwell with thee!"
+
+In the construction of this nervous ode, the author has shown equal
+power of judgment and imagination. Nothing can be more striking than the
+violent and abrupt abbreviation of the measure in the fifth and sixth
+verses, when he feels the strong influence of the power he invokes:
+
+ "Ah Fear! ah frantic Fear!
+ I see, I see thee near."
+
+The editor of these poems has met with nothing in the same species of
+poetry, either in his own, or in any other language, equal, in all
+respects, to the following description of Danger:
+
+
+ "Danger whose limbs of giant mould
+ What mortal eye can fix'd behold?
+ Who stalks his round, an hideous form,
+ Howling amidst the midnight storm,
+ Or throws him on the ridgy steep
+ Of some loose hanging rock to sleep."
+
+It is impossible to contemplate the image conveyed in the two last
+verses, without those emotions of terror it was intended to excite. It
+has, moreover, the entire advantage of novelty to recommend it; for
+there is too much originality in all the circumstances, to suppose that
+the author had in his eye that description of the penal situation of
+Catiline in the ninth neid:
+
+ "------Te, Catilina, minaci
+ Pendentem scopulo."
+
+The archetype of the English poet's idea was in Nature, and, probably,
+to her alone he was indebted for the thought. From her, likewise, he
+derived that magnificence of conception, that horrible grandeur of
+imagery, displayed in the following lines:
+
+ "And those, the fiends, who, near allied,
+ O'er Nature's wounds and wrecks preside;
+ While Vengeance in the lurid air
+ Lifts her red arm, exposed and bare:
+ On whom that ravening brood of fate,
+ Who lap the blood of sorrow, wait."
+
+That nutritive enthusiasm, which cherishes the seeds of poetry, and
+which is, indeed, the only soil wherein they will grow to perfection,
+lays open the mind to all the influences of fiction. A passion for
+whatever is greatly wild or magnificent in the works of nature seduces
+the imagination to attend to all that is extravagant, however unnatural.
+Milton was notoriously fond of high romance and gothic diableries; and
+Collins, who in genius and enthusiasm bore no very distant resemblance
+to Milton, was wholly carried away by the same attachments.
+
+ "Be mine to read the visions old,
+ Which thy awakening bards have told:
+ And, lest thou meet my blasted view,
+ Hold each strange tale devoutly true."
+
+ "On that thrice hallow'd eve," &c.
+
+There is an old traditionary superstition, that on St. Mark's eve, the
+forms of all such persons as shall die within the ensuing year make
+their solemn entry into the churches of their respective parishes, as
+St. Patrick swam over the Channel, without their heads.
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO SIMPLICITY.
+
+
+The measure of the ancient ballad seems to have been made choice of for
+this ode, on account of the subject; and it has, indeed, an air of
+simplicity, not altogether unaffecting:
+
+ "By all the honey'd store
+ On Hybla's thymy shore,
+ By all her blooms, and mingled murmurs dear,
+ By her whose lovelorn woe,
+ In evening musings slow,
+ Sooth'd sweetly sad Electra's poet's ear."
+
+This allegorical imagery of the honeyed store, the blooms, and mingled
+murmurs of Hybla, alluding to the sweetness and beauty of the Attic
+poetry, has the finest and the happiest effect: yet, possibly, it will
+bear a question, whether the ancient Greek tragedians had a general
+claim to simplicity in any thing more than the plans of their drama.
+Their language, at least, was infinitely metaphorical; yet it must be
+owned that they justly copied nature and the passions, and so far,
+certainly, they were entitled to the palm of true simplicity; the
+following most beautiful speech of Polynices will be a monument of
+this, so long as poetry shall last:
+
+ ~--------polydakrys d' aphikomn
+ Chronios idn melathra, kai bmous then,
+ Gymnasia th' oisin enetraphn, Dirks, th' hydr,
+ Hn ou dikais apelatheis, xenn polin
+ Nai, di' ossn nam echn dakryrrhooun.
+ All' ek gar algous algos au, se derkomai
+ Kara xyrkes, kai peplous melanchimous
+ Echousan.~
+ Eurip. Phoeniss. ver. 369.
+
+ 22 "But staid to sing alone
+ 33 To one distinguish'd throne."
+
+The poet cuts off the prevalence of simplicity among the Romans with the
+reign of Augustus; and, indeed, it did not continue much longer, most of
+the compositions, after that date, giving into false and artificial
+ornament.
+
+ "No more, in hall or bower,
+ The passions own thy power,
+ Love, only love, her forceless numbers mean."
+
+In these lines the writings of the Provenal poets are principally
+alluded to, in which simplicity is generally sacrificed to the
+rhapsodies of romantic love.
+
+
+
+
+ODE ON THE POETICAL CHARACTER.
+
+ Procul! O! procul este profani!
+
+
+This ode is so infinitely abstracted and replete with high enthusiasm,
+that it will find few readers capable of entering into the spirit of it,
+or of relishing its beauties. There is a style of sentiment as utterly
+unintelligible to common capacities, as if the subject were treated in
+an unknown language; and it is on the same account that abstracted
+poetry will never have many admirers.
+
+The authors of such poems must be content with the approbation of those
+heaven-favoured geniuses, who, by a similarity of taste and sentiment,
+are enabled to penetrate the high mysteries of inspired fancy, and to
+pursue the loftiest flights of enthusiastic imagination. Nevertheless,
+the praise of the distinguished few is certainly preferable to the
+applause of the undiscerning million; for all praise is valuable in
+proportion to the judgment of those who confer it.
+
+As the subject of this ode is uncommon, so are the style and expression
+highly metaphorical and abstracted: thus the sun is called "the
+rich-hair'd youth of morn," the ideas are termed "the shadowy tribes of
+mind," &c. We are struck with the propriety of this mode of expression
+here, and it affords us new proofs of the analogy that subsists between
+language and sentiment.
+
+Nothing can be more loftily imagined than the creation of the cestus of
+Fancy in this ode: the allegorical imagery is rich and sublime: and the
+observation, that the dangerous passions kept aloof during the
+operation, is founded on the strictest philosophical truth: for poetical
+fancy can exist only in minds that are perfectly serene, and in some
+measure abstracted from the influences of sense.
+
+The scene of Milton's "inspiring hour" is perfectly in character, and
+described with all those wild-wood appearances of which the great poet
+was so enthusiastically fond:
+
+ "I view that oak, the fancied glades among,
+ By which as Milton lay, his evening ear,
+ Nigh sphered in heaven, its native strains could hear."
+
+
+
+
+ODE,
+
+WRITTEN IN THE YEAR 1746.
+
+
+ODE TO MERCY.
+
+
+The Ode written in 1746, and the Ode to Mercy, seem to have been written
+on the same occasion, viz. the late rebellion; the former in memory of
+those heroes who fell in defence of their country, the latter to excite
+sentiments of compassion in favour of those unhappy and deluded wretches
+who became a sacrifice to public justice.
+
+The language and imagery of both are very beautiful; but the scene and
+figures described, in the strophe of the Ode to Mercy, are exquisitely
+striking, and would afford a painter one of the finest subjects in the
+world.
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO LIBERTY.
+
+
+The ancient states of Greece, perhaps the only ones in which a perfect
+model of liberty ever existed, are naturally brought to view in the
+opening of the poem:
+
+ "Who shall awake the Spartan fife,
+ And call in solemn sounds to life,
+ The youths, whose locks divinely spreading,
+ Like vernal hyacinths in sullen hue."
+
+There is something extremely bold in this imagery of the locks of the
+Spartan youths, and greatly superior to that description Jocasta gives
+us of the hair of Polynices:
+
+ ~Bostrychn te kyanochrta chaitas
+ Plokamon------~
+
+ "What new Alcus, fancy-blest,
+ Shall sing the sword, in myrtles drest," &c.
+
+This alludes to a fragment of Alcus still remaining, in which the poet
+celebrates Harmodius and Aristogiton, who slew the tyrant Hipparchus,
+and thereby restored the liberty of Athens.
+
+The fall of Rome is here most nervously described in one line
+
+ "With heaviest sound, a giant statue, fell."
+
+The thought seems altogether new, and the imitative harmony in the
+structure of the verse is admirable.
+
+After bewailing the ruin of ancient liberty, the poet considers the
+influence it has retained, or still retains, among the moderns; and here
+the free republics of Italy naturally engage his attention.--Florence,
+indeed, only to be lamented on account of losing its liberty under those
+patrons of letters, the Medicean family; the jealous Pisa, justly so
+called, in respect to its long impatience and regret under the same
+yoke; and the small Marino, which, however unrespectable with regard to
+power or extent of territory, has, at least, this distinction to boast,
+that it has preserved its liberty longer than any other state, ancient
+or modern, having, without any revolution, retained its present mode of
+government near fourteen hundred years. Moreover the patron saint who
+founded it, and from whom it takes its name, deserves this poetical
+record, as he is, perhaps, the only saint that ever contributed to the
+establishment of freedom.
+
+ "Nor e'er her former pride relate
+ To sad Liguria's bleeding state."
+
+In these lines the poet alludes to those ravages in the state of Genoa,
+occasioned by the unhappy divisions of the Guelphs and Gibelines.
+
+ "----When the favour'd of thy choice,
+ The daring archer heard thy voice."
+
+For an account of the celebrated event referred to in these verses, see
+Voltaire's Epistle to the King of Prussia.
+
+ "Those whom the rod of Alva bruised,
+ Whose crown a British queen refused!"
+
+The Flemings were so dreadfully oppressed by this sanguinary general of
+Philip the Second, that they offered their sovereignty to Elizabeth;
+but, happily for her subjects, she had policy and magnanimity enough to
+refuse it. Desormeaux, in his Abrg Chronologique de l'Histoire
+d'Espagne, thus describes the sufferings of the Flemings: "Le duc d'Albe
+achevoit de rduire les Flamands au dsespoir. Aprs avoir inond les
+chafauds du sang le plus noble et le plus prcieux, il faisoit
+construire des citadelles en divers endroits, et vouloit tablir
+l'Alcavala, ce tribute onreux qui avoit t longtems en usage parmi les
+Espagnols."--_Abrg. Chron. tom. iv._
+
+ "------Mona,
+ Where thousand elfin shapes abide."
+
+Mona is properly the Roman name of the Isle of Anglesey, anciently so
+famous for its Druids; but sometimes, as in this place, it is given to
+the Isle of Man. Both these isles still retain much of the genius of
+superstition, and are now the only places where there is the least
+chance of finding a fairy.
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO A LADY,
+
+ON THE DEATH OF COLONEL ROSS, IN THE ACTION OF FONTENOY.
+
+
+The iambic kind of numbers in which this ode is conceived seems as well
+calculated for tender and plaintive subjects, as for those where
+strength or rapidity is required.--This, perhaps, is owing to the
+repetition of the strain in the same stanza; for sorrow rejects variety,
+and affects a uniformity of complaint. It is needless to observe, that
+this ode is replete with harmony, spirit, and pathos; and there surely
+appears no reason why the seventh and eighth stanzas should be omitted
+in that copy printed in Dodsley's Collection of Poems.
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO EVENING.
+
+
+The blank ode has for some time solicited admission into the English
+poetry; but its efforts, hitherto, seem to have been in vain, at least
+its reception has been no more than partial. It remains a question,
+then, whether there is not something in the nature of blank verse less
+adapted to the lyric than to the heroic measure, since, though it has
+been generally received in the latter, it is yet unadopted in the
+former. In order to discover this, we are to consider the different
+modes of these different species of poetry. That of the heroic is
+uniform; that of the lyric is various; and in these circumstances of
+uniformity and variety probably lies the cause why blank verse has been
+successful in the one, and unacceptable in the other. While it presented
+itself only in one form, it was familiarized to the ear by custom; but
+where it was obliged to assume the different shapes of the lyric muse,
+it seemed still a stranger of uncouth figure, was received rather with
+curiosity than pleasure, and entertained without that ease or
+satisfaction which acquaintance and familiarity produce.--Moreover, the
+heroic blank verse obtained a sanction of infinite importance to its
+general reception, when it was adopted by one of the greatest poets the
+world ever produced, and was made the vehicle of the noblest poem that
+ever was written. When this poem at length extorted that applause which
+ignorance and prejudice had united to withhold, the versification soon
+found its imitators, and became more generally successful than even in
+those countries from whence it was imported. But lyric blank verse had
+met with no such advantages; for Mr. Collins, whose genius and judgment
+in harmony might have given it so powerful an effect, has left us but
+one specimen of it in the Ode to Evening.
+
+In the choice of his measure he seems to have had in his eye Horace's
+Ode to Pyrrha; for this ode bears the nearest resemblance to that mixed
+kind of the asclepiad and pherecratic verse; and that resemblance in
+some degree reconciles us to the want of rhyme, while it reminds us of
+those great masters of antiquity, whose works had no need of this
+whimsical jingle of sounds.
+
+From the following passage one might be induced to think that the poet
+had it in view to render his subject and his versification suitable to
+each other on this occasion, and that, when he addressed himself to the
+sober power of Evening, he had thought proper to lay aside the foppery
+of rhyme:
+
+ "Now teach me, maid composed,
+ To breathe some soften'd strain,
+ Whose numbers, stealing through thy darkening vale,
+ May not unseemly with its stillness suit,
+ As, musing slow, I hail
+ Thy genial loved return!"
+
+But whatever were the numbers or the versification of this ode,
+the imagery and enthusiasm it contains could not fail of rendering
+it delightful. No other of Mr. Collins's odes is more generally
+characteristic of his genius. In one place we discover his passion
+for visionary beings:
+
+ "For when thy folding-star arising shows
+ His paly circlet, at his warning lamp
+ The fragrant Hours, and Elves
+ Who slept in buds the day,
+
+ And many a Nymph who wreathes her brows with sedge,
+ And sheds the freshening dew, and, lovelier still,
+ The pensive Pleasures sweet,
+ Prepare thy shadowy car."
+
+In another we behold his strong bias to melancholy:
+
+ "Then let me rove some wild and heathy scene,
+ Or find some ruin 'midst its dreary dells,
+ Whose walls more awful nod
+ By thy religious gleams."
+
+Then appears his taste for what is wildly grand and magnificent in
+nature; when, prevented by storms from enjoying his evening walk, he
+wishes for a situation,
+
+ "That from the mountain's side
+ Views wilds and swelling floods;"
+
+And through the whole, his invariable attachment to the expression of
+painting:
+
+ "----and marks o'er all
+ Thy dewy fingers draw
+ The gradual dusky veil."
+
+It might be a sufficient encomium on this beautiful ode to observe, that
+it has been particularly admired by a lady to whom nature has given the
+most perfect principles of taste. She has not even complained of the
+want of rhyme in it; a circumstance by no means unfavourable to the
+cause of lyric blank verse; for surely, if a fair reader can endure an
+ode without bells and chimes, the masculine genius may dispense with
+them.
+
+
+
+
+THE MANNERS.
+
+AN ODE.
+
+
+From the subject and sentiments of this ode, it seems not improbable
+that the author wrote it about the time when he left the university;
+when, weary with the pursuit of academical studies, he no longer
+confined himself to the search of theoretical knowledge, but commenced
+the scholar of humanity, to study nature in her works, and man in
+society.
+
+The following farewell to Science exhibits a very just as well as
+striking picture: for however exalted in theory the Platonic doctrines
+may appear, it is certain that Platonism and Pyrrhonism are nearly
+allied:
+
+ "Farewell the porch, whose roof is seen,
+ Arch'd with the enlivening olive's green:
+ Where Science, prank'd in tissued vest,
+ By Reason, Pride, and Fancy drest,
+ Comes like a bride, so trim array'd,
+ To wed with Doubt in Plato's shade!"
+
+When the mind goes in pursuit of visionary systems, it is not far
+from the regions of doubt; and the greater its capacity to think
+abstractedly, to reason and refine, the more it will be exposed to,
+and bewildered in, uncertainty.--From an enthusiastic warmth of
+temper, indeed, we may for a while be encouraged to persist in some
+favourite doctrine, or to adhere to some adopted system; but when that
+enthusiasm, which is founded on the vivacity of the passions,
+gradually cools and dies away with them, the opinions it supported
+drop from us, and we are thrown upon the inhospitable shore of
+doubt.--A striking proof of the necessity of some moral rule of wisdom
+and virtue, and some system of happiness established by unerring
+knowledge, and unlimited power.
+
+In the poet's address to Humour in this ode there is one image of
+singular beauty and propriety. The ornaments in the hair of Wit are of
+such a nature, and disposed in such a manner, as to be perfectly
+symbolical and characteristic:
+
+ "Me too amidst thy band admit,
+ There where the young-eyed healthful Wit,
+ (Whose jewels in his crisped hair
+ Are placed each other's beams to share,
+ Whom no delights from thee divide)
+ In laughter loosed, attends thy side."
+
+Nothing could be more expressive of wit, which consists in a happy
+collision of comparative and relative images, than this reciprocal
+reflection of light from the disposition of the jewels.
+
+ "O Humour, thou whose name is known
+ To Britain's favour'd isle alone."
+
+The author could only mean to apply this to the time when he wrote,
+since other nations had produced works of great humour, as he himself
+acknowledges afterwards.
+
+ "By old Miletus," &c.
+ "By all you taught the Tuscan maids," &c.
+
+The Milesian and Tuscan romances were by no means distinguished for
+humour; but as they were the models of that species of writing in which
+humour was afterwards employed, they are, probably for that reason only,
+mentioned here.
+
+
+
+
+THE PASSIONS.
+
+AN ODE FOR MUSIC.
+
+
+If the music which was composed for this ode had equal merit with the
+ode itself, it must have been the most excellent performance of the kind
+in which poetry and music have, in modern times, united. Other pieces of
+the same nature have derived their greatest reputation from the
+perfection of the music that accompanied them, having in themselves
+little more merit than that of an ordinary ballad: but in this we have
+the whole soul and power of poetry--expression that, even without the
+aid of music, strikes to the heart; and imagery of power enough to
+transport the attention, without the forceful alliance of corresponding
+sounds! what, then, must have been the effect of these united!
+
+It is very observable, that though the measure is the same, in which the
+musical efforts of Fear, Anger, and Despair are described, yet, by the
+variation of the cadence, the character and operation of each is
+strongly expressed: thus particularly of Despair:
+
+ "With woful measures wan Despair--
+ Low, sullen sounds his grief beguiled,
+ A solemn, strange, and mingled air,
+ 'Twas sad by fits, by starts 'twas wild."
+
+He must be a very unskilful composer who could not catch the power of
+imitative harmony from these lines!
+
+The picture of Hope that follows this is beautiful almost beyond
+imitation. By the united powers of imagery and harmony, that delightful
+being is exhibited with all the charms and graces that pleasure and
+fancy have appropriated to her:
+
+ Relegat, qui semel percurrit;
+ Qui nunquam legit, legat.
+
+ "But thou, O Hope, with eyes so fair,
+ What was thy delighted measure!
+ Still it whisper'd promised pleasure,
+ And bade the lovely scenes at distance hail!
+ Still would her touch the strain prolong,
+ And from the rocks, the woods, the vale,
+ She call'd on Echo still through all the song;
+ And where her sweetest theme she chose,
+ A soft responsive voice was heard at every close,
+ And Hope enchanted smiled, and waved her golden hair."
+
+In what an exalted light does the above stanza place this great master
+of poetical imagery and harmony! what varied sweetness of numbers! what
+delicacy of judgment and expression! how characteristically does Hope
+prolong her strain, repeat her soothing closes, call upon her associate
+Echo for the same purposes, and display every pleasing grace peculiar to
+her!
+
+ "And Hope enchanted smiled, and waved her golden hair."
+
+ Legat, qui nunquam legit;
+ Qui semel percurrit, relegat.
+
+The descriptions of Joy, Jealousy, and Revenge are excellent, though not
+equally so. Those of Melancholy and Cheerfulness are superior to every
+thing of the kind; and, upon the whole, there may be very little hazard
+in asserting, that this is the finest ode in the English language.
+
+
+
+
+AN EPISTLE
+
+TO SIR THOMAS HANMER, ON HIS EDITION OF SHAKESPEARE'S WORKS.
+
+
+This poem was written by our author at the university, about the time
+when Sir Thomas Hanmer's pompous edition of Shakespeare was printed at
+Oxford. If it has not so much merit as the rest of his poems, it has
+still more than the subject deserves. The versification is easy and
+genteel, and the allusions always poetical. The character of the poet
+Fletcher in particular is very justly drawn in this epistle.
+
+
+
+
+DIRGE IN CYMBELINE.
+
+ODE ON THE DEATH OF THOMSON.
+
+
+Mr. Collins had skill to complain. Of that mournful melody, and those
+tender images, which are the distinguishing excellencies of such pieces
+as bewail departed friendship, or beauty, he was an almost unequaled
+master. He knew perfectly to exhibit such circumstances, peculiar to the
+objects, as awaken the influences of pity; and while, from his own great
+sensibility, he felt what he wrote, he naturally addressed himself to
+the feelings of others.
+
+To read such lines as the following, all-beautiful and tender as they
+are, without corresponding emotions of pity, is surely impossible:
+
+ "The tender thought on thee shall dwell;
+ Each lonely scene shall thee restore,
+ For thee the tear be duly shed;
+ Beloved till life can charm no more,
+ And mourn'd till Pity's self be dead."
+
+The Ode on the Death of Thomson seems to have been written in an
+excursion to Richmond by water. The rural scenery has a proper effect in
+an ode to the memory of a poet, much of whose merit lay in descriptions
+of the same kind; and the appellations of "Druid," and "meek Nature's
+child," are happily characteristic. For the better understanding of this
+ode, it is necessary to remember, that Mr. Thomson lies buried in the
+church of Richmond.
+
+
+THE END.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber Notes
+
+Archaic and variable spelling is preserved.
+
+Author's punctuation style is preserved. Quotes in the poetry are
+sometimes repeated on every line, as in the original.
+
+Poetry line numbers regularized.
+
+Footnote 4's location is approximated.
+
+Passages in italics indicated by _underscores_.
+
+Greek transliterations are surrounded by ~tildes~.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Poetical Works of William Collins, by
+William Collins
+
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+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Poetical Works of William Collins, by William Collins</title>
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+<pre>
+
+Project Gutenberg's The Poetical Works of William Collins, by William Collins
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Poetical Works of William Collins
+ With a Memoir
+
+Author: William Collins
+
+Commentator: Sir Harris Nicolas
+ Sir Egerton Brydges
+
+Release Date: August 31, 2009 [EBook #29879]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK POETICAL WORKS--WILLIAM COLLINS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Katherine Ward, and the
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_1' id='linki_1'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/frontis.jpg' alt='' title='' width='425' height='500' /><br />
+<p class='caption'>
+<i><span class="larger">William Collins</span><br />
+<br />
+<span class="smaller">&AElig;tatis</span><br />
+<br />
+Quos primus equis Oriens afflavit anhelis&ndash;&ndash;Virg.</i><br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h1><span class="smaller"><i>THE</i></span><br />
+<span class="muchlarger smcap">Poetical Works</span><br />
+<span class="smaller">OF</span><br />
+WILLIAM COLLINS.</h1>
+<div class="center">
+<p><i>WITH A MEMOIR.</i></p>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_2' id='linki_2'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/pub_mark.png' alt='' title='' width='238' height='250' /><br />
+</div>
+<p class='padtop'>BOSTON:<br />
+LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY.<br />
+1865.</p>
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2>CONTENTS.</h2>
+<table border='0' cellpadding='2' cellspacing='0' summary='Contents' style='margin:1em auto;'>
+<tr>
+ <td />
+ <td valign='top' align='right'><p class="smaller ralign">Page</p></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>Memoir by Sir Harris Nicolas</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#MEMOIR_OF_COLLINS'>v</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'>An Essay on the Genius and Poems of Collins, by Sir Egerton Brydges, Bart.</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#AN_ESSAY_ON_THE_GENIUS_AND_POEMS_OF_COLLINS__BY_SIR_EGERTON_BRYDGES__BART'>xliii</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td />
+ <td />
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'><p class="center"> ORIENTAL ECLOGUES.</p></td>
+ <td />
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'>Selim; or, The Shepherd&rsquo;s Moral</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#ECLOGUE_I_SELIM_OR_THE_SHEPHERDS_MORAL'>3</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'>Hassan; or, The Camel Driver</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#ECLOGUE_II_HASSAN_OR_THE_CAMEL_DRIVER'>7</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'>Abra; Or, The Georgian Sultana</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#ECLOGUE_III_ABRA_OR_THE_GEORGIAN_SULTANA'>11</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'>Agib And Secander; or, The Fugitives</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#ECLOGUE_IV_AGIB_AND_SECANDER_OR_THE_FUGITIVES'>15</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td />
+ <td />
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'><p class="center"> ODES.</p></td>
+ <td />
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'>To Pity</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#ODE_TO_PITY'>21</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'>To Fear</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#ODE_TO_FEAR'>24</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'>To Simplicity</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#ODE_TO_SIMPLICITY'>28</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'>On the Poetical Character</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#ODE_ON_THE_POETICAL_CHARACTER'>31</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'>Written in the Beginning of the Year 1746</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#ODE_WRITTEN_IN_THE_BEGINNING_OF_THE_YEAR_1746'>34</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'>To Mercy</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#ODE_TO_MERCY'>35</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'>To Liberty</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#ODE_TO_LIBERTY'>37</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'>To a Lady, On the Death of Colonel Ross, written in May, 1745</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#ODE_TO_A_LADY_ON_THE_DEATH_OF_COLONEL_ROSS_IN_THE_ACTION_OF_FONTENOY___WRITTEN_IN_MAY_1745'>44</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'>To Evening</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#ODE_TO_EVENING'>48</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'>To Peace</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#ODE_TO_PEACE'>52</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'>The Manners</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#THE_MANNERS_AN_ODE'>54</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'>The Passions</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#THE_PASSIONS_AN_ODE_FOR_MUSIC'>58</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'>On the Death of Thomson</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#ODE_ON_THE_DEATH_OF_THOMSON_THE_SCENE_IS_SUPPOSED_TO_LIE_ON_THE_THAMES_NEAR_RICHMOND'>63</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'>On the Popular Superstitions of the Highlands of Scotland; considered as the Subject of Poetry; inscribed to Mr. John Home</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#ODE_ON_THE_POPULAR_SUPERSTITIONS_OF_THE_HIGHLANDS_OF_SCOTLAND_CONSIDERED_AS_THE_SUBJECT_OF_POETRY_INSCRIBED_TO_MR_JOHN_HOME'>66</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'>An Epistle, addressed to Sir Thomas Hanmer, on his Edition of Shakespeare&rsquo;s Works</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#AN_EPISTLE_ADDRESSED_TO_SIR_THOMAS_HANMER_ON_HIS_EDITION_OF_SHAKESPEARES_WORKS'>78</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'>Dirge in Cymbeline, sung by Guiderus and Arviragus over Fidele, supposed to be dead</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#DIRGE_IN_CYMBELINE_SUNG_BY_GUIDERUS_AND_ARVIRAGUS_OVER_FIDELE_SUPPOSED_TO_BE_DEAD'>87</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'>Verses written on a Paper which contained a Piece of Bride-cake, given to the Author by a Lady</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#VERSES_WRITTEN_ON_A_PAPER_WHICH_CONTAINED_A_PIECE_OF_BRIDECAKE_GIVEN_TO_THE_AUTHOR_BY_A_LADY'>89</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'>To Miss Aurelia C&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;R, on her Weeping at her Sister&rsquo;s Wedding</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#TO_MISS_AURELIA_CR_ON_HER_WEEPING_AT_HER_SISTERS_WEDDING'>91</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'>Sonnet</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#SONNET'>91</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'>Song. The Sentiments borrowed from Shakespeare</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#SONG_THE_SENTIMENTS_BORROWED_FROM_SHAKESPEARE'>92</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'>On our late Taste in Music</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#ON_OUR_LATE_TASTE_IN_MUSIC'>94</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td />
+ <td />
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'>Observations on the Oriental Eclogues, by Dr. Langhorne</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#OBSERVATIONS_ON_THE_ORIENTAL_ECLOGUES_AND_ODES_BY_DR_LANGHORNE'>101</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'>Observations on the Odes, by the same</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#OBSERVATIONS_ON_THE_ODES_DESCRIPTIVE_AND_ALLEGORICAL'>118</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
+<a name='MEMOIR_OF_COLLINS' id='MEMOIR_OF_COLLINS'></a>
+<h2>MEMOIR OF COLLINS.</h2>
+</div>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='ralign'>&ldquo;A Bard,&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
+<p>Who touched the tenderest notes of Pity&rsquo;s lyre.&rdquo;</p>
+<p class='ralign'><span class='smcap'>Hayley.</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>No one can have reflected on the history of genius
+without being impressed with a melancholy
+feeling at the obscurity in which the lives of the
+poets of our country are, with few exceptions,
+involved. That they lived, and wrote, and died,
+comprises nearly all that is known of many, and,
+of others, the few facts which are preserved are
+often records of privations, or sufferings, or errors.
+The cause of the lamentable deficiency of materials
+for literary biography may, without difficulty,
+be explained. The lives of authors are seldom
+marked by events of an unusual character; and
+they rarely leave behind them the most interesting
+work a writer could compose, and which
+would embrace nearly all the important facts in
+his career, a &ldquo;History of his Books,&rdquo; containing
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_vi' name='page_vi'></a>vi</span>
+the motives which produced them, the various
+incidents respecting their progress, and a faithful
+account of the bitter disappointment, whether the
+object was fame or profit, or both, which, in most
+instances, is the result of his labours. Various
+motives deter men from writing such a volume;
+for, though quacks and charlatans readily become
+auto-biographers, and fill their prefaces with their
+personal concerns, real merit shrinks from such
+disgusting egotism, and, flying to the opposite
+extreme, leaves no authentic notice of their struggles,
+its hopes, or its disappointments. Nor is
+the history of writers to be expected from their
+contemporaries; because few will venture to anticipate
+the judgment of posterity, and mankind
+are usually so isolated in self, and so jealous of
+others, that neither time nor inclination admits of
+their becoming the Boswells of all those whose
+productions excite admiration.</p>
+<p>If these remarks be true, surprise cannot be felt,
+though there is abundance of cause for regret,
+that little is known of a poet whose merits were
+not appreciated until after his decease: whose
+powers were destroyed by a distressing malady
+at a period of life when literary exertions begin
+to be rewarded and stimulated by popular applause.</p>
+<p>For the facts contained in the following Memoir
+of Collins, the author is indebted to the
+researches of others, as his own, which were
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_vii' name='page_vii'></a>vii</span>
+very extensive, were rewarded by trifling discoveries.
+Dr. Johnson&rsquo;s Life is well known; but
+the praise of collecting every particular which
+industry and zeal could glean belongs to the
+Rev. Alexander Dyce, the result of whose inquiries
+may be found in his notes to Johnson&rsquo;s
+Memoir, prefixed to an edition of Collins&rsquo;s works
+which he lately edited. Those notices are now,
+for the first time, wove into a Memoir of Collins;
+and in leaving it to another to erect a
+fabric out of the materials which he has collected
+instead of being himself the architect, Mr. Dyce
+has evinced a degree of modesty which those who
+know him must greatly lament.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p><span class='smcap'>William Collins</span> was born at Chichester,
+on the 25th of December, 1721, and was baptized
+in the parish church of St. Peter the Great,
+alias Subdeanery in that city, on the first of the
+following January. He was the son of William
+Collins, who was then the Mayor of Chichester,
+where he exercised the trade of a hatter, and
+lived in a respectable manner. His mother was
+Elizabeth, the sister of a Colonel Martyn, to whose
+bounty the poet was deeply indebted.</p>
+<p>Being destined for the church, young Collins
+was admitted a scholar of Winchester College on
+the 19th of January, 1733, where he was educated
+by Dr. Burton; and in 1740 he stood first
+on the list of scholars who were to be received at
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_viii' name='page_viii'></a>viii</span>
+New College. No vacancy, however, occurred,
+and the circumstance is said by Johnson to have
+been the original misfortune of his life. He became
+a commoner of Queen&rsquo;s,<a name='FNanchor_0001' id='FNanchor_0001'></a><a href='#Footnote_0001' class='fnanchor'>[1]</a> whence, on the
+29th of July, 1741, he was elected a demy of
+Magdalen College. During his stay at Queen&rsquo;s
+he was distinguished for genius and indolence,
+and the few exercises which he could be induced
+to write bear evident marks of both qualities.
+He continued at Oxford until he took his bachelor&rsquo;s
+degree, and then suddenly left the University,
+his motive, as he alleged, being that he
+missed a fellowship, for which he offered himself;
+but it has been assigned to his disgust at the
+dulness of a college life, and to his being involved
+in debt.</p>
+<p>On arriving in London, which was either in 1743
+or 1744, he became, says Johnson, &ldquo;a literary
+adventurer, with many projects in his head and
+very little money in his pocket.&rdquo; Collins was not
+without some reputation as an author when he
+proposed to adopt the most uncertain and deplorable
+of all professions, that of literature, for
+a subsistence. Whilst at Winchester school he
+wrote his Eclogues, and had appeared before the
+public in some verses addressed to a lady weeping
+at her sister&rsquo;s marriage, which were printed in the
+Gentleman&rsquo;s Magazine, Oct. 1739, when Collins
+was in his eighteenth year. In January, 1742,
+he published his Eclogues, under the title of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_ix' name='page_ix'></a>ix</span>
+&ldquo;Persian Eclogues;&rdquo;<a name='FNanchor_0002' id='FNanchor_0002'></a><a href='#Footnote_0002' class='fnanchor'>[2]</a> and, in December, 1743,
+his &ldquo;Verses to Sir Thomas Hanmer on his Edition
+of Shakespeare,&rdquo; appeared. To neither did
+he affix his name, but the latter was said to be
+by &ldquo;a Gentleman of Oxford.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>From the time he settled in London, his mind
+was more occupied with literary projects than
+with steady application; nor had poesy, for
+which Nature peculiarly designed him, sufficient
+attractions to chain his wavering disposition. It
+is not certain whether his irresolution arose from
+the annoyance of importunate debtors, or from
+an original infirmity of mind, or from these causes
+united. A popular writer<a name='FNanchor_0003' id='FNanchor_0003'></a><a href='#Footnote_0003' class='fnanchor'>[3]</a> has defended Collins
+from the charge of irresolution, on the ground
+that it was but &ldquo;the vacillations of a mind broken
+and confounded;&rdquo; and he urges, that &ldquo;he
+had exercised too constantly the highest faculties
+of fiction, and precipitated himself into the dreariness
+of real life.&rdquo; But this explanation does
+not account for the want of steadiness which prevented
+Collins from accomplishing the objects he
+meditated. His mind was neither &ldquo;broken nor
+confounded,&rdquo; nor had he experienced the bitter
+pangs of neglect, when with the buoyancy of hope,
+and a full confidence in his extraordinary powers,
+he threw himself on the town, at the age of twenty-three,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_x' name='page_x'></a>x</span>
+intending to live by the exercise of his
+talents; but his indecision was then as apparent
+as at any subsequent period, so that, in truth,
+the effect preceded the cause to which it has
+been assigned.</p>
+<p>Mankind are becoming too much accustomed
+to witness splendid talents and great firmness of
+mind united in the same person to partake the
+mistaken sympathy which so many writers evince
+for the follies or vices of genius; nor will it
+much longer tolerate the opinion, that the possession
+of the finest imagination, or the highest
+poetic capacity, must necessarily be accompanied
+by eccentricity. It may, indeed, be difficult to
+convert a poetical temperament into a merchant,
+or to make the man who is destined to delight or
+astonish mankind by his conceptions, sit quietly
+over a ledger; but the transition from poetry to
+the composition of such works as Collins planned
+is by no means unnatural, and the abandonment
+of his views respecting them must, in justice to
+his memory, be attributed to a different cause.</p>
+<p>The most probable reason is, that these works
+were mere speculations to raise money, and that
+the idea was not encouraged by the booksellers;
+but if, as Johnson, who knew Collins well, asserts,
+his character wanted decision and perseverance,
+these defects may have been constitutional, and
+were, perhaps, the germs of the disease which too
+soon ripened into the most frightful of human
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xi' name='page_xi'></a>xi</span>
+calamities. Endued with a morbid sensibility,
+which was as ill calculated to court popularity as
+to bear neglect; and wanting that stoical indifference
+to the opinions of the many, which ought
+to render those who are conscious of the value of
+their productions satisfied with the approbation of
+the few; Collins was too impatient of applause,
+and too anxious to attain perfection, to be a voluminous
+writer. To plan much rather than to execute
+any thing; to commence to-day an ode, to-morrow
+a tragedy, and to turn on the following
+morning to a different subject, was the chief occupation
+of his life for several years, during
+which time he destroyed the principal part of the
+little that he wrote. To a man nearly pennyless,
+such a life must be attended by privations and
+danger; and he was in the hands of bailiffs,
+possibly not for the first time, very shortly before
+he became independent by the death of his maternal
+uncle, Colonel Martyn. The result proved
+that his want of firmness and perseverance was
+natural, and did not arise from the uncertainty
+or narrowness of his fortune; for being rescued
+from imprisonment, on the credit of a translation
+of Aristotle&rsquo;s Poetics, which he engaged to furnish
+a publisher, a work, it may be presumed, peculiarly
+suited to his genius, he no sooner found
+himself in the possession of money by the death
+of his relative, than he repaid the bookseller, and
+abandoned the translation for ever.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xii' name='page_xii'></a>xii</span></div>
+<p>From the commencement of his career, Collins
+was, however, an object for sympathy instead of
+censure; and though few refuse their compassion
+to the confirmed lunatic, it is rare that the
+dreadful state of irresolution and misery, which
+sometimes exist for years before the fatal catastrophe,
+receives either pity or indulgence.</p>
+<p>In 1747, Collins published his Odes, to the
+unrivaled splendour of a few of which he is
+alone indebted for his fame; but neither fame
+nor profit was the immediate result; and the
+author of the Ode on the Passions had little
+reason to expect, from its reception by the
+public, that it was destined to live as long as
+the passions themselves animate or distract the
+world.</p>
+<p>It is uncertain at what time he undertook to
+publish a volume of Odes in conjunction with
+Joseph Warton, but the intention is placed beyond
+dispute by the following letter from Warton
+to his brother. It is without a date, but it
+must have been written before the publication of
+Collins&rsquo;s Odes in 1747, and before the appearance
+of Dodsley&rsquo;s Museum,<a name='FNanchor_0004' id='FNanchor_0004'></a><a href='#Footnote_0004' class='fnanchor'>[4]</a> as it is evident the
+Ode to a Lady on the Death of Colonel Ross,
+which was inserted in that work, was not then in
+print.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xiii' name='page_xiii'></a>xiii</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;<span class='smcap'>Dear Tom</span>,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You will wonder to see my name in an advertisement
+next week, so I thought I would apprise
+you of it. The case was this. Collins met me in
+Surrey, at Guildford races, when I wrote out for
+him my odes, and he likewise communicated
+some of his to me; and being both in very high
+spirits, we took courage, resolved to join our
+forces, and to publish them immediately. I flatter
+myself that I shall lose no honor by this
+publication, because I believe these odes, as they
+now stand, are infinitely the best things I ever
+wrote. You will see a very pretty one of Collins&rsquo;s,
+on the Death of Colonel Ross before Tournay.
+It is addressed to a lady who was Ross&rsquo;s
+intimate acquaintance, and who, by the way, is
+Miss Bett Goddard. Collins is not to publish
+the odes unless he gets ten guineas for them. I
+returned from Milford last night, where I left
+Collins with my mother and sister, and he sets
+out to-day for London. I must now tell you,
+that I have sent him your imitation of Horace&rsquo;s
+Blandusian Fountain, to be printed amongst
+ours, and which you shall own or not, as you
+think proper. I would not have done this without
+your consent, but because I think it very
+poetically and correctly done, and will get you
+honour. You will let me know what the Oxford
+critics say. Adieu, dear Tom,</p>
+<p class='ralign'>&ldquo;I am your most affectionate brother,<span class='rindent4'>&nbsp;</span><br />
+&ldquo;<span class='smcap'>J. Warton</span>.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xiv' name='page_xiv'></a>xiv</span></div>
+<p>Like so many of Collins&rsquo;s projects this was
+not executed; but the reason of its failure is unknown.</p>
+<p>On the death of Thomson, in August, 1748,
+Collins wrote an ode to his memory, which is no
+less remarkable for its beauty as a composition,
+than for its pathetic tenderness as a memorial of
+a friend.</p>
+<p>The Poet&rsquo;s pecuniary difficulties were removed
+in 1749, by the death of his maternal uncle,
+Lieutenant-Colonel Edmund Martyn, who, after
+bequeathing legacies to some other relations,
+ordered the residue of his real and personal
+estate to be divided between his nephew William
+Collins, and his nieces Elizabeth and Anne Collins,
+and appointed the said Elizabeth his executrix,
+who proved her uncle&rsquo;s will on the 30th of
+May, 1749. Collins&rsquo;s share was, it is said, about
+two thousand pounds; and, as has been already
+observed, the money came most opportunely: a
+greater calamity even than poverty, however,
+shortly afterwards counterbalanced his good fortune;
+but the assertion of the writer in the Gentleman&rsquo;s
+Magazine, that his mental aberration
+arose from his having squandered this legacy,
+appears to be unfounded.</p>
+<p>One, and but one, letter of Collins&rsquo;s has ever
+been printed; nor has a careful inquiry after
+others been successful. It is of peculiar interest,
+as it proves that he wrote an Ode on the Music
+of the Grecian Theatre, but which is unfortunately
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xv' name='page_xv'></a>xv</span>
+lost. The honour to which he alludes was
+the setting his Ode on the Passions to music.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p class='center'>&ldquo;<span class='smcap'>TO DR. WILLIAM HAYES, PROFESSOR OF
+MUSIC, OXFORD.</span></p>
+<p>&ldquo;<span class='smcap'>Sir</span>,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<span class='smcap'>Mr. Blackstone</span> of Winchester some time
+since informed me of the honour you had done
+me at Oxford last summer; for which I return
+you my sincere thanks. I have another more
+perfect copy of the ode; which, had I known
+your obliging design, I would have communicated
+to you. Inform me by a line, if you should
+think one of my better judgment acceptable. In
+such case I could send you one written on a
+nobler subject; and which, though I have been
+persuaded to bring it forth in London, I think
+more calculated for an audience in the university.
+The subject is the Music of the Grecian Theatre;
+in which I have, I hope naturally, introduced the
+various characters with which the chorus was
+concerned, as &OElig;dipus, Medea, Electra, Orestes,
+etc. etc. The composition too is probably more
+correct, as I have chosen the ancient tragedies
+for my models, and only copied the most affecting
+passages in them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In the mean time, you would greatly oblige
+me by sending the score of the last. If you can
+get it written, I will readily answer the expense.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xvi' name='page_xvi'></a>xvi</span>
+If you send it with a copy or two of the ode (as
+printed at Oxford) to Mr. Clarke, at Winchester,
+he will forward it to me here. I am, Sir,</p>
+<p class='ralign'>&ldquo;With great respect,<span class='rindent8'>&nbsp;</span><br />
+&ldquo;Your obliged humble servant,<span class='rindent4'>&nbsp;</span><br />
+&ldquo;<span class='smcap'>William Collins</span>.</p>
+<p class='smaller'>&ldquo;Chichester, Sussex, November 8, 1750.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;P. S. Mr. Clarke past some days here while
+Mr. Worgan was with me; from whose friendship,
+I hope, he will receive some advantage.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Soon after this period, the disease which had
+long threatened to destroy Collins&rsquo;s intellects
+assumed a more decided character; but for some
+time the unhappy poet was the only person who
+was sensible of the approaching calamity. A
+visit to France was tried in vain; and when Johnson
+called upon him, on his return, an incident
+occurred which proves that Collins wisely sought
+for consolation against the coming wreck of his
+faculties, from a higher and more certain source
+than mere human aid. Johnson says, &ldquo;he paid
+him a visit at Islington, where he was then
+waiting for his sister, whom he had directed
+to meet him: there was then nothing of disorder
+discernible in his mind by any but himself; but
+he had withdrawn from study, and travelled with
+no other book than an English Testament, such
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xvii' name='page_xvii'></a>xvii</span>
+as children carry to the school: when his friend
+took it into his hand, out of curiosity to see what
+companion a man of letters had chosen, &lsquo;I have
+but one book,&rsquo; said Collins, &lsquo;but that is the
+best.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>To this circumstance Hayley beautifully alludes
+in his epitaph on him:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>He, &ldquo;in reviving reason&rsquo;s lucid hours,</p>
+<p>Sought on <i>one</i> book his troubled mind to rest,</p>
+<p>And rightly deem&rsquo;d the Book of God the best.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>A journey to Bath proved as useless as the one
+to France; and in 1754, he went to Oxford for
+change of air and amusement, where he stayed a
+month. It was on this occasion that a friend,
+whose account of him will be given at length, saw
+him in a distressing state of restraint under the
+walls of Merton College. From the paucity of
+information respecting Collins, the following letters
+are extremely valuable; and though the
+statements are those of his friends, they may be
+received without suspicion of partiality, because
+they are free from the high colouring by which
+friendship sometimes perverts truth.</p>
+<p>The first of the letters in question was printed
+in the Gentleman&rsquo;s Magazine:</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p class='ralign'>&ldquo;Jan. 20, 1781.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<span class='smcap'>Mr. Urban</span>,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<span class='smcap'>William Collins</span>, the poet, I was intimately
+acquainted with, from the time that he came to
+reside at Oxford. He was the son of a tradesman
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xviii' name='page_xviii'></a>xviii</span>
+in the city of Chichester, I think a hatter;
+and being sent very young to Winchester school,
+was soon distinguished for his early proficiency,
+and his turn for elegant composition. About the
+year 1740, he came off from that seminary first
+upon roll,<a name='FNanchor_0005' id='FNanchor_0005'></a><a href='#Footnote_0005' class='fnanchor'>[5]</a> and was entered a commoner of
+Queen&rsquo;s college. There, no vacancy offering for
+New College, he remained a year or two, and
+then was chosen demy of Magdalen college;
+where, I think, he took a degree. As he brought
+with him, for so the whole turn of his conversation
+discovered, too high an opinion of his school
+acquisitions, and a sovereign contempt for all
+academic studies and discipline, he never looked
+with any complacency on his situation in the
+university, but was always complaining of the
+dulness of a college life. In short, he threw up
+his demyship, and, going to London, commenced
+a man of the town, spending his time in all the
+dissipation of Ranelagh, Vauxhall, and the playhouses;
+and was romantic enough to suppose
+that his superior abilities would draw the attention
+of the great world, by means of whom he
+was to make his fortune.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In this pleasurable way of life he soon wasted
+his little property, and a considerable legacy left
+him by a maternal uncle, a colonel in the army,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xix' name='page_xix'></a>xix</span>
+to whom the nephew made a visit in Flanders
+during the war. While on his tour he wrote
+several entertaining letters to his Oxford friends,
+some of which I saw. In London I met him
+often, and remember he lodged in a little house
+with a Miss Bundy, at the corner of King&rsquo;s-square-court,
+Soho, now a warehouse, for a long
+time together. When poverty overtook him,
+poor man, he had too much sensibility of temper
+to bear with misfortunes, and so fell into a
+most deplorable state of mind. How he got
+down to Oxford, I do not know; but I myself saw
+him under Merton wall, in a very affecting situation,
+struggling, and conveyed by force, in the
+arms of two or three men, towards the parish of
+St. Clement, in which was a house that took in
+such unhappy objects: and I always understood,
+that not long after he died in confinement; but
+when, or where, or where he was buried, I never
+knew.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thus was lost to the world this unfortunate
+person, in the prime of life, without availing himself
+of fine abilities, which, properly improved,
+must have raised him to the top of any profession,
+and have rendered him a blessing to his
+friends, and an ornament to his country.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Without books, or steadiness and resolution
+to consult them if he had been possessed of any,
+he was always planning schemes for elaborate
+publications, which were carried no further than
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xx' name='page_xx'></a>xx</span>
+the drawing up proposals for subscriptions, some
+of which were published; and in particular, as
+far as I remember, one for &lsquo;a History of the
+Darker Ages.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He was passionately fond of music; good-natured
+and affable; warm in his friendships, and
+visionary in his pursuits; and, as long as I knew
+him, very temperate in his eating and drinking.
+He was of moderate stature, of a light and clear
+complexion, with gray eyes, so very weak at times
+as hardly to bear a candle in the room; and often
+raising within him apprehensions of blindness.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;With an anecdote respecting him, while he
+was at Magdalen College, I shall close my letter.
+It happened one afternoon, at a tea visit, that
+several intelligent friends were assembled at his
+rooms to enjoy each other&rsquo;s conversation, when
+in comes a member of a certain college,<a name='FNanchor_0006' id='FNanchor_0006'></a><a href='#Footnote_0006' class='fnanchor'>[6]</a> as remarkable
+at that time for his brutal disposition
+as for his good scholarship; who, though he met
+with a circle of the most peaceable people in the
+world, was determined to quarrel; and, though
+no man said a word, lifted up his foot and kicked
+the tea-table, and all its contents, to the other
+side of the room. Our poet, though of a warm
+temper, was so confounded at the unexpected
+downfall, and so astonished at the unmerited
+insult, that he took no notice of the aggressor,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xxi' name='page_xxi'></a>xxi</span>
+but getting up from his chair calmly, he began
+picking up the slices of bread and butter, and
+the fragments of his china, repeating very mildly,</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='smaller'>Invenias etiam disjecti membra poet&aelig;.</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p class='ralign'>&ldquo;I am your very humble servant,<span class='rindent4'>&nbsp;</span><br />
+&ldquo;V.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The next letter was found among the papers of
+Mr. William Hymers, of Queen&rsquo;s College, Oxford,
+who was preparing a new edition of the works of
+the poet for publication, when death prevented
+the completion of his design.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p class='smaller ralign'>&ldquo;Hill Street, Richmond in Surrey, July, 1783.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<span class='smcap'>Sir</span>,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your favour of the 30th June I did not receive
+till yesterday. The person who has the care of
+my house in Bond Street, expecting me there
+every day, did not send it to Richmond, or I
+would have answered sooner. As you express a
+wish to know every particular, however trifling,
+relating to Mr. William Collins, I will endeavour,
+so far as can be done by a letter, to satisfy you.
+There are many little anecdotes, which tell well
+enough in conversation, but would be tiresome for
+you to read, or me to write, so shall pass them
+over. I had formerly several scraps of his poetry,
+which were suddenly written on particular occasions.
+These I lent among our acquaintance,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xxii' name='page_xxii'></a>xxii</span>
+who were never civil enough to return them; and
+being then engaged in extensive business, I forgot
+to ask for them, and they are lost: all I have remaining
+of his are about twenty lines, which
+would require a little history to be understood,
+being written on trifling subjects. I have a few
+of his letters, the subjects of which are chiefly
+on business, but I think there are in them some
+flights, which strongly mark his character; for
+which reason I preserved them. There are so
+few of his intimates now living, that I believe I
+am the only one who can give a true account of
+his family and connexions. The principal part of
+what I write is from my own knowledge, or what
+I have heard from his nearest relations.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;His father was not the manufacturer of hats,
+but the vender. He lived in a genteel style at
+Chichester; and, I think, filled the office of
+mayor more than once; he was pompous in his
+manner; but, at his death, he left his affairs
+rather embarrassed. Colonel Martyn, his wife&rsquo;s
+brother, greatly assisted his family, and supported
+Mr. William Collins at the university,
+where he stood for a fellowship, which, to his
+great mortification, he lost, and which was his
+reason for quitting that place, at least that was
+his pretext. But he had other reasons: he was
+in arrears to his bookseller, his tailor, and other
+tradesmen. But, I believe, a desire to partake
+of the dissipation and gaiety of London was his
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xxiii' name='page_xxiii'></a>xxiii</span>
+principal motive. Colonel Martyn was at this
+time with his regiment; and Mr. Payne, a near
+relation, who had the management of the colonel&rsquo;s
+affairs, had likewise a commission to supply
+the Collinses with small sums of money. The
+colonel was the more sparing in this order, having
+suffered considerably by Alderman Collins, who
+had formerly been his agent, and, forgetting that
+his wife&rsquo;s brother&rsquo;s cash was not his own, had applied
+it to his own use. When Mr. William Collins
+came from the university, he called on his cousin
+Payne, gaily dressed, and with a feather in his hat;
+at which his relation expressed surprise, and told
+him his appearance was by no means that of a
+young man who had not a single guinea he could
+call his own. This gave him great offence; but
+remembering his sole dependence for subsistence
+was in the power of Mr. Payne, he concealed his
+resentment; yet could not refrain from speaking
+freely behind his back, and saying &lsquo;he thought
+him a d&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;d dull fellow;&rsquo; though, indeed, this
+was an epithet he was pleased to bestow on every
+one who did not think as he would have them.
+His frequent demands for a supply obliged Mr.
+Payne to tell him he must pursue some other
+line of life, for he was sure Colonel Martyn would
+be displeased with him for having done so much.
+This resource being stopped, forced him to set
+about some work, of which his &lsquo;History of the
+Revival of Learning&rsquo; was the first; and for
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xxiv' name='page_xxiv'></a>xxiv</span>
+which he printed proposals (one of which I have),
+and took the first subscription money from many
+of his particular friends: the work was begun,
+but soon stood still. Both Dr. Johnson and
+Mr. Langhorne are mistaken when they say, the
+&lsquo;Translation of Aristotle&rsquo; was never begun: I
+know the contrary, for some progress was made
+in both, but most in the latter. From the freedom
+subsisting between us, we took the liberty of
+saying any thing to each other. I one day reproached
+him with idleness; when, to convince
+me my censure was unjust, he showed me many
+sheets of his &lsquo;Translation of Aristotle,&rsquo; which he
+said he had so fully employed himself about, as
+to prevent him calling on many of his friends so
+frequently as he used to do. Soon after this he
+engaged with Mr. Manby, a bookseller on Ludgate
+Hill, to furnish him with some Lives for
+the Biographia Britannica, which Manby was
+then publishing. He showed me some of the
+lives in embryo; but I do not recollect that any
+of them came to perfection. To raise a present
+subsistence he set about writing his odes; and,
+having a general invitation to my house, he frequently
+passed whole days there, which he employed
+in writing them, and as frequently burning
+what he had written, after reading them to me:
+many of them, which pleased me, I struggled to
+preserve, but without effect; for, pretending he
+would alter them, he got them from me, and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xxv' name='page_xxv'></a>xxv</span>
+thrust them into the fire. He was an acceptable
+companion every where; and, among the gentlemen
+who loved him for a genius, I may reckon
+the Doctors Armstrong, Barrowby, and Hill,
+Messrs. Quin, Garrick, and Foote, who frequently
+took his opinion on their pieces before they were
+seen by the public. He was particularly noticed
+by the geniuses who frequented the Bedford and
+Slaughter&rsquo;s Coffee Houses. From his knowledge
+of Garrick he had the liberty of the scenes and
+green-room, where he made diverting observations
+on the vanity and false consequence of that
+class of people; and his manner of relating them
+to his particular friends was extremely entertaining.
+In this manner he lived, with and upon
+his friends, until the death of Colonel Martyn,
+who left what fortune he died possessed of unto
+him and his two sisters. I fear I cannot be certain
+as to dates, but believe he left the university
+in the year 43. Some circumstances I
+recollect, make me almost certain he was in
+London that year; but I will not be so certain
+of the time he died, which I did not hear of till
+long after it happened. When his health and
+faculties began to decline, he went to France,
+and after to Bath, in hope his health might be
+restored, but without success. I never saw him
+after his sister removed him from M&rsquo;Donald&rsquo;s
+madhouse at Chelsea to Chichester, where he
+soon sunk into a deplorable state of idiotism,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xxvi' name='page_xxvi'></a>xxvi</span>
+which, when I was told, shocked me exceedingly;
+and, even now, the remembrance of a
+man for whom I had a particular friendship, and
+in whose company I have passed so many pleasant
+happy hours, gives me a severe shock.
+Since it is in consequence of your own request,
+Sir, that I write this long farrago, I expect you
+will overlook all inaccuracies. I am, Sir,</p>
+<p class='ralign'>&ldquo;Your very humble servant,<span class='rindent4'>&nbsp;</span><br />
+&ldquo;<span class='smcap'>John Ragsdale</span>.</p>
+<p class='smaller'>&ldquo;Mr. William Hymers, Queen&rsquo;s College, Oxford.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The following communication, by Thomas Warton,
+was also found among the papers of Mr.
+Hymers. A few passages, concerning various
+readings, are omitted.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;I often saw Collins in London in 1750.
+This was before his illness. He then told me
+of his intended History of the Revival of
+Learning, and proposed a scheme of a review,
+to be called the Clarendon Review, and to be
+printed at the university press, under the conduct
+and authority of the university. About Easter,
+the next year, I was in London; when, being
+given over, and supposed to be dying, he desired
+to see me, that he might take his last leave of
+me; but he grew better; and in the summer he
+sent me a letter on some private business, which
+I have now by me, dated Chichester, June 9,
+1751, written in a fine hand, and without the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xxvii' name='page_xxvii'></a>xxvii</span>
+least symptom of a disordered or debilitated understanding.
+In 1754, he came to Oxford for
+change of air and amusement, where he stayed a
+month; I saw him frequently, but he was so
+weak and low, that he could not bear conversation.
+Once he walked from his lodgings, opposite
+Christ Church, to Trinity College, but
+supported by his servant. The same year, in
+September, I and my brother visited him at Chichester,
+where he lived, in the cathedral cloisters,
+with his sister. The first day he was in high
+spirits at intervals, but exerted himself so much
+that he could not see us the second. Here he
+showed us an Ode to Mr. John Home, on his
+leaving England for Scotland, in the octave stanza,
+very long, and beginning,</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>Home, thou return&rsquo;st from Thames.</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>I remember there was a beautiful description of
+the spectre of a man drowned in the night, or, in
+the language of the old Scotch superstitions,
+seized by the angry spirit of the waters, appearing
+to his wife with pale blue cheek, &amp;c. Mr.
+Home has no copy of it. He also showed us
+another ode, of two or three four-lined stanzas,
+called the Bell of Arragon; on a tradition that,
+anciently, just before the king of Spain died, the
+great bell of the cathedral of Sarragossa, in Arragon,
+tolled spontaneously. It began thus:</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xxviii' name='page_xxviii'></a>xxviii</span></div>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>The bell of Arragon, they say,</p>
+<p>Spontaneous speaks the fatal day.</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>Soon afterwards were these lines:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>Whatever dark aerial power,</p>
+<p>Commission&rsquo;d, haunts the gloomy tower.</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>The last stanza consisted of a moral transition to
+his own death and knell, which he called &lsquo;some
+simpler bell.&rsquo; I have seen all his odes already
+published in his own handwriting; they had the
+marks of repeated correction: he was perpetually
+changing his epithets. Dr. Warton, my brother,
+has a few fragments of some other odes, but
+too loose and imperfect for publication, yet containing
+traces of high imagery.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In illustration of what Dr. Johnson has related,
+that during his last malady he was a great
+reader of the Bible, I am favoured with the following
+anecdote from the Reverend Mr. Shenton,
+Vicar of St. Andrews, at Chichester, by whom
+Collins was buried: &lsquo;Walking in my vicaral garden
+one Sunday evening, during Collins&rsquo;s last
+illness, I heard a female (the servant, I suppose)
+reading the Bible in his chamber. Mr. Collins
+had been accustomed to rave much, and make
+great moanings; but while she was reading, or
+rather attempting to read, he was not only silent
+but attentive likewise, correcting her mistakes,
+which indeed were very frequent, through the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xxix' name='page_xxix'></a>xxix</span>
+whole of the twenty-seventh chapter of Genesis.&rsquo;
+I have just been informed, from undoubted authority,
+that Collins had finished a Preliminary
+Dissertation to be prefixed to his History of the
+Restoration of Learning, and that it was written
+with great judgment, precision, and knowledge of
+the subject.</p>
+<p class='ralign'>&ldquo;T. W.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The overthrow of Collins&rsquo;s mind was too complete
+for it to be restored by variety of scene or
+the attentions of friendship. Thomas Warton
+describes him as being in a weak and low condition,
+and unable to bear conversation, when he
+saw him at Oxford. He was afterwards confined
+in a house for the insane at Chelsea; but before
+September, 1754, he was removed to Chichester,
+under the care of his sister, where he was
+visited by the two Wartons. At this time his
+spirits temporarily rallied; and he adverted with
+delight to literature, showing his guest the Ode
+to Mr. Home on his leaving England for Scotland.
+During Collins&rsquo;s illness Johnson was a frequent
+inquirer after his health, and those inquiries were
+made with a degree of feeling which, as he himself
+hints, may have partly arisen from the dread
+he entertained lest he might be the victim of a
+similar calamity. The following extracts are
+from letters addressed to Joseph Warton:</p>
+<blockquote>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xxx' name='page_xxx'></a>xxx</span></div>
+<p class='ralign'>&ldquo;March 8, 1754.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But how little can we venture to exult in any
+intellectual powers or literary attainments, when
+we consider the condition of poor Collins. I
+knew him a few years ago, full of hopes and full
+of projects, versed in many languages, high in
+fancy, and strong in retention. This busy and
+forcible mind is now under the government of
+those who lately would not have been able to
+comprehend the least and most narrow of its designs.
+What do you hear of him? are there
+hopes of his recovery? or is he to pass the
+remainder of his life in misery and degradation?
+perhaps with complete consciousness of his calamity.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote>
+<p class='ralign'>&ldquo;December 24, 1754.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Poor dear Collins! Let me know whether
+you think it would give him pleasure if I should
+write to him. I have often been near his state,
+and therefore have it in great commiseration.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote>
+<p class='ralign'>&ldquo;April 15, 1756.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What becomes of poor dear Collins? I wrote
+him a letter which he never answered. I suppose
+writing is very troublesome to him. That man is
+no common loss. The moralists all talk of the
+uncertainty of fortune, and the transitoriness of
+beauty; but it is yet more dreadful to consider
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xxxi' name='page_xxxi'></a>xxxi</span>
+that the powers of the mind are equally liable to
+change, that understanding may make its appearance
+and depart, that it may blaze and
+expire.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In this state of mental darkness did Collins
+pass the last six or seven years of his existence,
+in the house now occupied by Mr. Mason, a
+bookseller in Chichester. His malady is described
+by Johnson as being, not so much an alienation
+of mind as a general laxity and feebleness of his
+vital, rather than his intellectual, powers; but his
+disorder seems, from other authorities, to have
+been of a more violent nature. As he was never
+married, he was indebted for protection and
+kindness to his youngest sister; and death, the
+only hope of the afflicted, came to his relief on
+the 12th of June, 1759, in the thirty-ninth year
+of his age, a period of life when the fervour of
+imagination is generally chastened without being
+subdued, and when all the mental powers are in
+their fullest vigour. He was buried in the church
+of St. Andrew, at Chichester, on the 15th of
+June; and the admiration of the public for his
+genius has been manifested by the erection of a
+monument by Flaxman, to his memory, in the
+Cathedral, which is thus described by Mr. Dallaway,
+the historian of Sussex:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Collins is represented as sitting in a reclining
+posture, during a lucid interval of the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xxxii' name='page_xxxii'></a>xxxii</span>
+afflicting malady to which he was subject, with a
+calm and benign aspect, as if seeking refuge
+from his misfortunes in the consolations of the
+gospel, which appears open on a table before
+him, whilst his lyre and one of his best compositions
+lie neglected on the ground. Upon
+the pediment of the table are placed two female
+ideal figures in relief, representing love and pity,
+entwined each in the arms of the other; the proper
+emblems of the genius of his poetry.&rdquo; It
+bears the following epitaph from the pen of
+Hayley:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;Ye who the merits of the dead revere,</p>
+<p>Who hold misfortune&rsquo;s sacred genius dear,</p>
+<p>Regard this tomb, where Collins, hapless name,</p>
+<p>Solicits kindness with a double claim.</p>
+<p>Though nature gave him, and though science taught</p>
+<p>The fire of fancy, and the reach of thought,</p>
+<p>Severely doom&rsquo;d to penury&rsquo;s extreme,</p>
+<p>He pass&rsquo;d in maddening pain life&rsquo;s feverish dream,</p>
+<p>While rays of genius only served to show</p>
+<p>The thickening horror, and exalt his woe.</p>
+<p>Ye walls that echo&rsquo;d to his frantic moan,</p>
+<p>Guard the due records of this grateful stone;</p>
+<p>Strangers to him, enamour&rsquo;d of his lays,</p>
+<p>This fond memorial to his talents raise.</p>
+<p>For this the ashes of a bard require,</p>
+<p>Who touch&rsquo;d the tenderest notes of pity&rsquo;s lyre;</p>
+<p>Who join&rsquo;d pure faith to strong poetic powers;</p>
+<p>Who, in reviving reason&rsquo;s lucid hours,</p>
+<p>Sought on one book his troubled mind to rest,</p>
+<p>And rightly deem&rsquo;d the book of God the best.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>Collins&rsquo;s character has been portrayed by all
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xxxiii' name='page_xxxiii'></a>xxxiii</span>
+his biographers in very agreeable colours. He
+was amiable and virtuous, and was as much
+courted for his popular manners as for the charms
+of his conversation. The associate of Johnson,
+Armstrong, Hill, Garrick, Quin, Foote, the two
+Wartons, and Thomson, and the friend of several
+of these eminent men, he must have possessed
+many of the qualities by which they were distinguished;
+for though an adviser may be chosen
+from a very different class of persons, genius will
+only herd with genius. Johnson has honoured
+him by saying, that &ldquo;his morals were pure and
+his opinions pious;&rdquo; and though he hints that
+his habits were sometimes at variance with these
+characteristics, he assigns the aberration to the
+temptations of want, and the society into which
+poverty sometimes drives the best disposed persons,
+adding, that he &ldquo;preserved the sources
+of action unpolluted, that his principles were
+never shaken, that his distinctions of right and
+wrong were never confounded, and that his faults
+had nothing of malignity or design, but proceeded
+from some unexpected pressure or casual
+temptation.&rdquo; A higher eulogium, from so rigid
+a moralist, could not be pronounced on a man
+whose life was, for many years, unsettled and
+perplexed; and those only who have experienced
+the pressure of pecuniary necessities can be aware
+of the difficulty of resisting meanness, or avoiding
+vice, if not in the sense in which these terms are
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xxxiv' name='page_xxxiv'></a>xxxiv</span>
+usually understood, at least in a sense to which
+they may as properly be applied&ndash;&ndash;that of refusing
+to prostitute talents to purposes foreign to the
+conviction and taste of their possessor.</p>
+<p>On this mainly depend the annoyances and
+dangers of him who seeks a subsistence from his
+pen. The opinions which he may be desirous to
+express, or the subject he may be capable of
+illustrating, may not be popular, and the more
+important or learned they be, the more likely is
+such to be the case. Of course his labours would
+be rejected by publishers, who cannot buy what
+will not sell; hence no alternative remains but for
+him to manufacture marketable commodities; and
+when the <i>popular</i> taste of the present, as well as
+of former times, is remembered, the degradation
+to which a man of high intellect must often submit,
+when he neglects that for which nature and
+study peculiarly qualified him, for what is in
+general demand, may be easily conceived. It is
+not requisite to advert to the taste of the age
+in which we live, farther than to allude to the
+class of works which issues from the bazaars of
+<i>fashionable</i> publishers, and to ask, when such
+are alone in request, what would have been the
+fate, had they lived in our own times, of Johnson,
+Pope, Dryden, Addison, and the other ornaments
+of the golden age of literature? But if even in
+that age the Odes of Collins were too abstracted
+from mundane feelings, too rich in imagery, and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xxxv' name='page_xxxv'></a>xxxv</span>
+too strongly marked by the fervour of inspiration
+to be generally appreciated, his chance of being
+so, by the public generally, is at this moment
+less; and the only hope of his obtaining that
+popularity to which he is unquestionably entitled,
+is by placing his works within the reach of all,
+and, more especially, by acquainting the multitude
+with the opinion entertained of him, by those
+whose judgments they have the sense to venerate,
+since they are sometimes willing to receive, on the
+credit of another, that which they have not themselves
+the discrimination or feeling to perceive.</p>
+<p>An anecdote is related of Collins which, if true,
+proves that he felt the neglect with which his
+Odes were treated with the indignation natural
+to an enthusiastic temper. Having purchased
+the unsold copies of the first edition from the
+booksellers, he set fire to them with his own
+hand, as if to revenge himself on the apathy and
+ignorance of the public.</p>
+<p>It is unnecessary to append to the Memoir of
+Collins many observations on the character of his
+poetry, because its peculiar beauties, and the
+qualities by which it is distinguished, are described
+with considerable force and eloquence by
+Sir Egerton Brydges, in the Essay prefixed to
+this edition. Campbell&rsquo;s remarks on the same
+subject cannot be forgotten; and other critics of
+the highest reputation have concurred in ascribing
+to Collins a conception and genius scarcely exceeded
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xxxvi' name='page_xxxvi'></a>xxxvi</span>
+by any English poet. To say that Sir
+Egerton Brydges&rsquo;s Essay exaggerates the merit
+of some of his productions may produce the retort
+which has been made to Johnson&rsquo;s criticism, that
+he was too deficient in feeling to be capable of
+appreciating the excellence of the pieces which
+he censures. It is not, however, inconsistent
+with a high respect for Collins, to ascribe every
+possible praise to that unrivaled production, the
+Ode to the Passions, to feel deeply the beauty,
+the pathos, and the sublime conceptions of the
+Odes to Evening, to Pity, to Simplicity, and a
+few others, and yet to be sensible of the occasional
+obscurity and imperfections of his imagery
+in other pieces, to find it difficult to discover the
+meaning of some passages, to think the opening
+of four of his odes which commence with the
+common-place invocation of &ldquo;O thou,&rdquo; and the
+alliteration by which so many lines are disfigured,
+blemishes too serious to be forgotten, unless the
+judgment be drowned in the full tide of generous
+and enthusiastic admiration of the great and extraordinary
+beauties by which these faults are
+more than redeemed.</p>
+<p>That these defects are to be ascribed to haste
+it would be uncandid to deny; but haste is no
+apology for such faults in productions which
+scarcely fill a hundred pages, and which their
+author had ample opportunities to remove.</p>
+<p>It may also be thought heterodoxy by the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xxxvii' name='page_xxxvii'></a>xxxvii</span>
+band, which, if small in numbers, is distinguished
+by taste, feeling, and genius, to concur in Collins&rsquo;s
+opinion, when he expressed himself dissatisfied
+with his Eclogues; for, though they are not without
+merit, it is very doubtful if they would have lived,
+even till this time, but for the Odes with which
+they are published, notwithstanding the zeal of
+Dr. Langhorne, who is in raptures over passages
+the excellence of which is not very conspicuous.
+To give a preference to the Verses to Sir Thomas
+Hanmer, of which all that Langhorne could find
+to say is, &ldquo;that the versification is easy and
+genteel, and the allusions always poetical,&rdquo; and
+especially to the Ode addressed to Mr. Home,
+on the superstition of the Highlands, over the
+Eclogues, may possibly be deemed to betray a
+corrupt taste, since it is an admission which is, it
+is believed, made for the first time. In that Ode,
+among a hundred other beautiful verses, the following
+address to Tasso has seldom been surpassed:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;Prevailing Poet! whose undoubting mind</p>
+<p>Believed the magic wonders which he sung!</p>
+<p>Hence, at each sound, imagination glows!</p>
+<p>Hence, at each picture, vivid life starts here!</p>
+<p>Hence, his warm lay with softest sweetness flows!</p>
+<p>Melting it flows, pure, murmuring, strong, and clear,</p>
+<p>And fills the impassion&rsquo;d heart, and wins the harmonious ear!&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>The picture of the swain drowned in a fen, and
+the grief of his widow, possessing every charm
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xxxviii' name='page_xxxviii'></a>xxxviii</span>
+which simplicity and tenderness can bestow, and
+give to that Ode claims to admiration which, if
+admitted, have been hitherto conceded in silence.</p>
+<p>From the coincidence between Collins&rsquo;s love of,
+and addresses to, Music, his residence at Oxford,
+and from internal evidence, Some Verses on Our
+Late Taste in Music, which appeared in the Gentleman&rsquo;s
+Magazine for 1740, and there said to
+be &ldquo;by a Gentleman of Oxford,&rdquo; are printed in
+this edition of Collins&rsquo;s works, not, however, as
+positively his, but as being so likely to be written
+by him, as to justify their being brought to the
+notice of his readers.</p>
+<p>A poet, and not to have felt the tender passion,
+would be a creature which the world has never
+yet seen. It is said that Collins was extremely
+fond of a young lady who was born the day
+before him, and who did not return his affection;
+and that, punning upon his misfortune, he observed,
+&ldquo;he came into the world a day after the
+fair.&rdquo; The lady is supposed to have been Miss
+Elizabeth Goddard, the intended bride of Colonel
+Ross, to whom he addressed his beautiful Ode on
+the death of that Officer at the battle of Fontenoy,
+at which time she was on a visit to the family of
+the Earl of Tankerville, who then resided at Up-Park,
+near Chichester, a place that overlooks the
+little village of Harting, mentioned in the Ode.</p>
+<p>Collins&rsquo;s person was of the middle size and
+well formed; of a light complexion, with gray,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xxxix' name='page_xxxix'></a>xxxix</span>
+weak eyes. His mind was deeply imbued with
+classical literature, and he understood the Italian,
+French, and Spanish languages. He was well
+read, and was particularly conversant with early
+English writers, and to an ardent love of literature
+he united, as is manifest from many of his
+pieces, a passionate devotion to Music, that</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;Sphere-descended maid,</p>
+<p>Friend of Pleasure, Wisdom&rsquo;s aid.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>His family, which were very respectable, were
+established at Chichester in the sixteenth century
+as tradesmen of the higher order, and his immediate
+ancestor was mayor of that city in 1619:<a name='FNanchor_0007' id='FNanchor_0007'></a><a href='#Footnote_0007' class='fnanchor'>[7]</a>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xl' name='page_xl'></a>xl</span>
+his mother&rsquo;s relations appear to have been of a
+superior condition in life.<a name='FNanchor_0008' id='FNanchor_0008'></a><a href='#Footnote_0008' class='fnanchor'>[8]</a> Collins lost his father
+in 1734, and on the 5th of July, 1744, his mother
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xli' name='page_xli'></a>xli</span>
+died. He was an only son: of his two sisters,
+Elizabeth, the eldest, died unmarried, and Anne,
+the youngest, who took care of him when he was
+bereft of reason, married first Mr. Hugh Sempill,
+who died in 1762, and secondly the Rev.
+Dr. Thomas Durnford, and died at Chichester in
+November, 1789. Her character is thus described
+on the authority of Mr. Park: &ldquo;The Reverend
+Mr. Durnford, who resided at Chichester, and
+was the son of Dr. Durnford, informed me, in
+August, 1795, that the sister of Collins loved
+money to excess, and evinced so outrageous an
+aversion to her brother, because he squandered
+or gave away to the boys in the cloisters whatever
+money he had, that she destroyed, in a
+paroxysm of resentment, all his papers, and
+whatever remained of his enthusiasm for poetry,
+as far as she could. Mr. Hayley told me, when
+I visited him at Eartham, that he had obtained
+from her a small drawing by Collins, but it possessed
+no other value than as a memorial that
+the bard had attempted to handle the pencil as
+well as the pen.&rdquo;<a name='FNanchor_0009' id='FNanchor_0009'></a><a href='#Footnote_0009' class='fnanchor'>[9]</a> That Mrs. Durnford was indifferent
+to her brother&rsquo;s fame, is stated by
+others, and Sir Egerton Brydges, in his Essay,
+has made some just observations on the circumstance.</p>
+<p>This Memoir must not be closed without an
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xlii' name='page_xlii'></a>xlii</span>
+expression of acknowledgment to the Bishop of
+Hereford, to the President of Magdalen College,
+to H. Gabell, Esq., and to I. Sanden, Esq., of
+Chichester, for the desire which they were so
+good as to manifest that this account of Collins
+might be more satisfactory than it is; and if his
+admirers consider that his present biographer has
+not done sufficient justice to his memory, an antidote
+to the injury will be found in the fervent
+and unqualified admiration which Sir Egerton
+Brydges has evinced for his genius.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xliii' name='page_xliii'></a>xliii</span>
+<a name='AN_ESSAY_ON_THE_GENIUS_AND_POEMS_OF_COLLINS__BY_SIR_EGERTON_BRYDGES__BART' id='AN_ESSAY_ON_THE_GENIUS_AND_POEMS_OF_COLLINS__BY_SIR_EGERTON_BRYDGES__BART'></a>
+<h2>AN ESSAY ON THE GENIUS AND POEMS OF COLLINS.</h2>
+<h3> BY SIR EGERTON BRYDGES,<br /> BART.</h3>
+</div>
+<p>Collins is the founder of a new school of poetry,
+of a high class. It is true that, unless Buckhurst
+and Spenser had gone before him, he could not
+have written as he has done; yet he is an inventor
+very distinct from both. He calls his odes descriptive
+and allegorical; and this characterises
+them truly, but too generally. The personification
+of abstract qualities had never been so happily
+executed before; the pure spirituality of the conception,
+the elegance and force of the language,
+the harmony and variety of the numbers, were
+all executed with a felicity which none before or
+since have reached. That these poems did not
+at once captivate the public attention cannot be
+accounted for by any cause hitherto assigned.
+We may not wonder that the multitude did not
+at once perceive their full beauties; but that,
+among readers of taste and learning, there should
+not have been found a sufficient number to set
+the example of admiration, is very extraordinary.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xliv' name='page_xliv'></a>xliv</span>
+In addition to all their other high merits, the
+mere novelty of thought and manner were sufficient
+to excite immediate notice. Nor was
+there any thing in Collins&rsquo;s station or character
+to create prejudices against the probability that
+beautiful effusions of genius might be struck out
+by his hand. His education at the college of
+Winchester, his fame at Oxford, his associates in
+London, all were fair preludes to the production
+of beautiful poetry. Indeed, he had already
+produced beautiful poetry in his Oriental Eclogues,
+four years before his Odes appeared.
+These were, it is admitted, of a different cast
+from his Odes, and of a gentleness and chastity
+of thought and diction, which he himself was
+conscious, some years afterwards, did not very
+well represent the gorgeousness of eastern composition.</p>
+<p>It was a crisis when there was a fair opening
+for new candidates for the laurel. The uniformity
+of Pope&rsquo;s style began already to pall upon
+the public ear. Thomson was indolent, and
+Young eccentric; Gray had not yet appeared on
+the stage; and Akenside&rsquo;s metaphysical subject
+and diffuse style were not calculated to engross
+the general taste. Johnson had taken possession
+of the field of satire, but there are too many
+readers of enthusiastic mind to be satisfied with
+satire. The pedantry and uncouthness of Walter
+Harte had precluded him from ever being a favourite
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xlv' name='page_xlv'></a>xlv</span>
+with the public; Shenstone had not yet
+risen into fame; and Lyttelton was engrossed by
+politics. When, therefore, Collins&rsquo;s Odes appeared,
+all speculation would have anticipated
+that they must have been successful. But we
+must recollect that they did not excite the admiration
+of Johnson; and that Gray did not read
+them with that unqualified approval which his
+native taste would have inspired. This singularity
+must be accounted for by other causes
+than their want of merit.</p>
+<p>The disappointment of Collins was so keen and
+deep, that he not only burned the unsold copies
+with his own hand, but soon fell into a melancholy
+which ended in insanity. Many persons
+have affected to comment on this result with an
+unfeeling ignorance of human nature, and, more
+especially, of fervid genius. It is, undoubtedly,
+highly dangerous to give the entire reins to imagination;
+the discipline of a constant exercise
+of reason is not only salutary, but necessary.
+But one can easily conceive how the indulgence
+of that state of mind which produced Collins&rsquo;s
+Odes could end in an entire overthrow of the
+intellect, when embittered by a defect of the
+principal objects of his worldly ambition. He is
+said to have been puffed up by a vanity which
+prompted him to expect that all eyes would be
+upon him, and all voices lifted in his praise.
+Such was the conception of a vulgar observer of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xlvi' name='page_xlvi'></a>xlvi</span>
+the human character. Why should it have been
+vanity that prompted this hope? It was a consciousness
+of merit, of those brilliant powers which
+produced the Ode to the Passions! was ever a
+voice content which sung to those who would not
+hear, which was condemned</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;To waste its sweetness on the desert air?&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>Spenser&rsquo;s power of personification is copious
+beyond example; but it is seldom sufficiently
+select; rich as it is in imagination, it too commonly
+wants taste and delicacy; it has the fault
+of coarseness, which Burke&rsquo;s images in prose two
+centuries afterwards, sometimes fell into. But
+Collins&rsquo;s images are as pure, and of as exquisite
+delicacy, as they are spiritual. They are not
+human beings invested with some of the attributes
+of angels, but the whole figure is purely angelic,
+and of a higher order of creation; in this they
+are distinct even from the admirable personifications
+of Gray, because they are less earthly. The
+Ode to the Passions is, by universal consent,
+the noblest of Collins&rsquo;s productions, because it
+exhibits a much more extended invention, not of
+one passion only, but of all the passions combined,
+acting, according to the powers of each,
+to one end. The execution, also, is the happiest,
+each particular passion is drawn with inimitable
+force and compression. Let us take only <span class='smcap'>Fear</span>
+and <span class='smcap'>Despair</span>, each dashed out in four lines,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xlvii' name='page_xlvii'></a>xlvii</span>
+of which every word is like inspiration. Beautiful
+as Spenser is, and sometimes sublime, yet
+he redoubles his touches too much, and often
+introduces some coarse feature or expression,
+which destroys the spell. Spenser, indeed, has
+other merits of splendid and inexhaustible invention,
+which render it impossible to put Collins on
+a par with him: but we must not estimate merit
+by mere quantity: if a poet produces but one
+short piece, which is perfect, he must be placed
+according to its quality. And surely there is not
+a single figure in Collins&rsquo;s Ode to the Passions
+which is not perfect, both in conception and
+language. He has had many imitators, but no
+one has ever approached him in his own department.</p>
+<p>The Ode to Evening is, perhaps, the next in
+point of merit. It is quite of a different cast; it
+is descriptive of natural scenery; and such a
+scene of enchanting repose was never exhibited
+by Claude, or any other among the happiest of
+painters. Though a mere verbal description can
+never rival a fine picture in a mere address to the
+material part of our nature, yet it far eclipses it
+with those who have the endowment of a brilliant
+fancy, because it gratifies their taste, selection,
+and sentiment. Delightful, therefore, as it is to
+look upon a Claude, it is more delightful to look
+upon this description. It is vain to attempt to
+analyse the charm of this Ode; it is so subtle,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xlviii' name='page_xlviii'></a>xlviii</span>
+that it escapes analysis. Its harmony is so perfect,
+that it requires no rhyme: the objects are
+so happily chosen, and the simple epithets convey
+ideas and feelings so congenial to each other, as to
+throw the reader into the very mood over which
+the personified being so beautifully designed presides.
+No other poem on the same subject has
+the same magic. It assuredly suggested some
+images and a tone of expression to Gray in his
+Elegy.</p>
+<p>The Ode on the Poetical Character is here and
+there a little involved and obscure; but its general
+conception is magnificent, and beaming
+that spirit of inventive enthusiasm, which alone
+can cherish the poet&rsquo;s powers, and bring forth
+the due fruits. Collins never touched the lyre
+but he was borne away by the inspiration under
+which he laboured. The Dirge in Cymbeline,
+the lines on Thomson, and the Ode on Colonel
+Ross breathe such a beautiful simplicity of pathos,
+and yet are so highly poetical and graceful in
+every thought and tone, that, exquisitely polished
+as they are, and without one superfluous or one
+prosaic word, they never once betray the artifices
+of composition. The extreme transparency of
+the words and thoughts would induce a vulgar
+reader to consider them trite, while they are the
+expression of a genius so refined as to be all essence
+of spirit. In Gray, excellent as he is, we
+continually encounter the marks of labour and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xlix' name='page_xlix'></a>xlix</span>
+effort, and occasional crudeness, which shows
+that effort had not always succeeded, such as
+&ldquo;iron hand and torturing hour;&rdquo; but nothing of
+this kind occurs in the principal poems of Collins.
+There is a fire of mind which supersedes labour,
+and produces what labour cannot. It has been
+said that Collins is neither sublime nor pathetic;
+but only ingenious and fanciful. The truth is,
+that he was cast in the very mould of sublimity
+and pathos. He lived in an atmosphere above
+the earth, and breathed only in a visionary world.
+He was conversant with nothing else, and this
+must have been the secret by which he produced
+compositions so entirely spiritual. He who has
+daily intercourse with the world, and feels the
+vulgar human passions, cannot be in a humour
+to write poems which do not partake of earthly
+coarseness.</p>
+<p>It may be asked, <i>cui bono?</i> what is the moral
+use of such poems as these? Whatever refines the
+intellect improves the heart; whatever augments
+and fortifies the spiritual part of our nature raises
+us in the rank of created beings. And what
+poems are more calculated to refine our intellect,
+and increase our spirituality, than the poems of
+Collins? To embody, in a brilliant manner, the
+most beautiful abstractions, to put them into
+action, and to add to them splendour, harmony,
+strength, and purity of language, is to complete
+a task as admirable for its use and its delight, as
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_l' name='page_l'></a>l</span>
+it is difficult to be executed. No one can receive
+the intellectual gratification which such works
+are capable of producing without being the better
+for it. The understanding was never yet roused
+to the conception of such pure and abstract
+thinking without an elevation of the whole nature
+of the being so roused. The expression of subtle
+and evanescent ideas, carried to its perfection, is
+among the very noblest and most exalted studies
+with which the human mind can be conversant.</p>
+<p>It has been the fashion of our own age to beat
+out works into twentyfold and fiftyfold the size
+of those of Collins. I do not quarrel with that
+fashion; each fashion has its use: and my own
+taste induces me to perceive the value and many
+attractions of long narrative poems, full of human
+passions and practical wisdom. The matter is
+more desirable than the workmanship; and much
+of occasional carelessness in the language may
+be forgiven, for fertility of natural and just
+thought and interest of story. But this in no
+degree diminishes the value of those gems, which,
+though of the smallest size, comprehend perfections
+of every kind. It is easier to work upon a
+large field than a small one,&ndash;&ndash;one where is</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;Ample room and verge enough</p>
+<p>The characters of hell to trace.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>But these diffuse productions are not calculated
+to give the same sort of pleasure as the gems.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_li' name='page_li'></a>li</span>
+How difficult was the path chosen by Collins is
+sufficiently proved by the want of success of all
+who have entered the same walk: Gray&rsquo;s was
+not the same, as I shall endeavour presently to
+show. In the miscellany of Dodsley and other
+collectors will be found numerous attempts at
+Allegorical Odes: they are almost all nauseous
+failures&ndash;&ndash;without originality or distinctness of
+conception; bald in their language, lame in their
+numbers, and repulsive from their insipidity of
+ideas.</p>
+<p>Gray&rsquo;s personifications can scarcely be called
+allegorical, they have so much of humanity about
+them. He dealt in all the noble and melancholy
+feelings of the human heart: he never for
+one moment forgot to be a moralist: he was
+constantly under the influence of powerful sympathy
+for the miseries of man&rsquo;s life; and wrote
+from the overflow of his bosom rather than of his
+imagination. It is true that his imagination presented
+the pictures to him; but it was his heart
+which impelled him to speak. Take the Ode on
+the Prospect of Eton College; there is not one
+word which did not break from the bottom of
+his heart. The multitude cannot enter into the
+visionary world of Collins: all who have a spark
+of virtuous human feelings can sympathize with
+Gray. It is impossible to deny that of these two
+beautiful poets Gray is the most instructive as a
+moralist; but Gray is not so original as Collins,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_lii' name='page_lii'></a>lii</span>
+not so inventive, not so perfect in his language,
+and has not so much the fire and flow of inspiration.</p>
+<p>When Collins is spoken of as one of the <i>minor</i>
+poets, it is a sad misapplication of the term.
+Unless he be minor because the number and size
+of his poems is small, no one is less a minor
+poet. In him every word is poetry, and poetry
+either sublime or pathetic. He does not rise to
+the sublimity of Milton or Dante, or reach the
+graceful tenderness of Petrarch; but he has a
+visionary invention of his own, to which there is
+no rival. As long as the language lasts, every
+richly gifted and richly cultivated mind will read
+him with intense and wondering rapture; and
+will not cease to entertain the conviction, from
+his example, if from no other, that true poetry of
+the higher orders is real inspiration.</p>
+<p>It will occur to many readers, on perusing these
+passages of exalted praise, that Johnson has
+spoken of Collins in a very different manner.
+Almost fifty years have elapsed since Johnson&rsquo;s
+final criticism on him appeared in his Lives of
+the Poets. It disgusted me so much at the time,
+and the disgust continued so violent, that for a
+long period it blinded me to all his stupendous
+merits, because it evinced not only bad taste
+but unamiable feelings. I cannot yet either
+justify it, or account for it. He speaks of Collins
+having sought for splendour without attaining
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_liii' name='page_liii'></a>liii</span>
+it&ndash;&ndash;of clogging his lines with consonants, and of
+mistaking inversion of language for poetry. Not
+one of these faults belongs to Collins. In almost
+all his poems the words follow their natural order,
+and are mellifluous beyond those of almost any
+other verse writer. If the Passions are not described
+with splendour, there is no such thing as
+splendour. If the beauties which he sought and
+attained are unnatural and extravagant, then the
+tests of correctness and good taste which have
+been hitherto set up must be abandoned.</p>
+<p>This severe criticism is the more extraordinary
+because Johnson professed a warm personal
+friendship for Collins; he professes admiration
+of his talents, learning, and taste, as well as
+of his disposition and heart, and speaks of his
+afflicting ill health with a passionate tenderness
+which has seldom been equalled in beauty, pathos,
+and force of language. That he could love
+him personally with such fondness, but be blind
+to his splendid and unrivaled genius, is utterly
+beyond my power to account for. Who can say
+that Johnson wanted taste when we read his
+sublime and acute criticisms on Milton, Dryden,
+and Pope? Was it that he roused all the faculties
+of his judgment when he spoke of these
+great men of past times; yet, that when he
+descended to his contemporaries, he indulged his
+feelings rather than his intellect, and suffered
+himself to be overcome by the evil passions of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_liv' name='page_liv'></a>liv</span>
+envy and contempt? His natural taste was, probably,
+not the best; when his criticisms were
+perfect he had tasked his intellect rather than his
+feelings. He was a man of general wisdom and
+undoubted genius, but not a very nice scholar,
+and he prided himself upon his every-day sense,
+his practical knowledge, rather than those visionary
+musings which he thought a dangerous indulgence
+of imagination. He could not put the
+compositions of Collins among the mere curiosities
+of literature, but he permitted himself to
+depreciate habits of mental excursion which he
+had not himself cultivated.</p>
+<p>It was not till more than twenty years after
+Collins&rsquo;s death that his Ode on the Superstitions
+of the Highlands was recovered. The two Wartons
+had seen it, and spoke highly of it to Johnson
+and others. About 1781, or 1782, a copy
+was found among the papers of Dr. Carlysle,
+with a chasm of two or three stanzas. The public
+deemed it equal to the expectations which had
+been raised of it; for my part I will confess
+that I was always deeply disappointed at it.
+There are in it occasional traces of Collins&rsquo;s genius
+and several good lines&ndash;&ndash;but none grand&ndash;&ndash;none
+of that felicitous flow and inspired vigour
+which mark the Ode to the Passions and other
+of his lyrics&ndash;&ndash;none of that happy personification
+of abstract conceptions which is the characteristic
+of his genius. The majority of the lines lag and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_lv' name='page_lv'></a>lv</span>
+move heavily, and do not seem to me to rise
+much above mediocrity in the expression. The
+subject was attractive, and might have afforded
+space for the wild excursions of Collins&rsquo;s creative
+powers. As to the edition of Bell, in which it is
+pretended that the lost stanzas have been recovered,
+I have no more doubt that they are <i>spurious</i>
+than that I did not write them myself: I
+will not dwell upon this subject, but only mention
+that it is quite impossible Collins could write
+&ldquo;<i>Fate</i> gave the <i>fatal</i> blow,&rdquo; and &ldquo;bowing to
+Freedom&rsquo;s <i>yoke</i>;&rdquo; and such a line as</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;In the first year of the first George&rsquo;s reign,&rdquo; &amp;c.</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>There is not one line among these interpolated
+stanzas which it is possible that Collins could
+have written.</p>
+<p>Mr. Ragdale relates that Collins was in the
+habit of writing numerous fragments, and then
+throwing them into the flames. Jackson, of
+Exeter, says the same of John Bampfylde. A
+sensitive mind is scarce ever satisfied with the
+reception it meets, when, in first heat of composition,
+it hopes to delight some listener, to which
+it first communicates its new effusions. It almost
+always considers itself to be &ldquo;damn&rsquo;d by
+faint praise.&rdquo; I have known fervid authors who,
+if they read or communicated a piece before it
+was finished, never went on with it. They
+thought it became blown upon, and turned from
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_lvi' name='page_lvi'></a>lvi</span>
+it with coldness, disgust, and despair. Yet the
+hearer is commonly not in fault: who can satisfy
+the warm hopes of aspiring and restless genius?</p>
+<p>The Wartons have expressed themselves with
+praise and affection of Collins, but not, I think,
+with the entire admiration which was due to him.
+Joseph Warton was a good-natured and generous-minded
+man, but something of rivalry lurked in
+his bosom; and the fraternal partiality of Thomas
+Warton had the same effect. The younger brother
+seems to have thought that Joseph&rsquo;s genius was
+equal to that of Collins. Gray had the critical
+acumen to discern the difference; but still he in
+no degree does justice to Collins. He accuses
+him of want of taste and selection, which is a
+surprising charge; and the more so, because Gray
+did not disdain to borrow from him. Gray&rsquo;s
+fault was an affected fastidiousness, as appears
+by the slighting manner in which he speaks of
+Thomson&rsquo;s Castle of Indolence on its first appearance,
+as well as of Akenside&rsquo;s Pleasures of
+Imagination, and Shenstone&rsquo;s Elegies. That
+Gray had exquisite taste, and was a perfect
+scholar, no one can doubt.</p>
+<p>Collins lived thirteen years after the publication
+of his Odes. It does not appear that he produced
+any thing after this publication. How
+soon his grand mental malady extinguished his
+literary powers, I do not exactly know, nor is
+it recorded, whether any part of it arose from
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_lvii' name='page_lvii'></a>lvii</span>
+bodily disorders. Medical men have never agreed
+regarding this most deplorable of human afflictions.
+In Collins&rsquo;s case it probably arose from
+the mind. On such an intellectual temperament
+the extinction of the visions which Hope had
+painted to him seems to have been sufficient to
+produce that derangement, which first enfeebled,
+and then perverted and annihilated his faculties.
+The account given by Johnson is different from
+that supplied by Mr. Ragdale and another anonymous
+communication.</p>
+<p>He had, perhaps, lucid intervals in which he
+discovered nothing but weakness and exhaustion.
+But he appears to have sometimes had fits of
+violence and despair. It seems that he was an
+enthusiastic admirer of Shakespeare, and a great
+reader of black letter books. It may be inferred
+that his studies were not entirely given up during
+his malady; but it is a subject of great wonder
+and regret that the Wartons, the intimate friends
+both of his better and darker days, have left no
+particular memorials of him. He had a sister,
+lately, if not still, living, from whom, though
+of a very uncongenial nature, something might
+surely have been gathered. But there is a familiarity
+which, by destroying admiration, destroys
+the perception of what will interest others. There
+are few of our poets of rare genius, of whose
+private life and character much is known. Little
+is known of Spenser, Shakespeare, and Milton:
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_lviii' name='page_lviii'></a>lviii</span>
+not much even of Thomson. More is known of
+Gray by the medium of his beautiful letters;
+but when Southey, Wordsworth, and Scott are
+gone, posterity will know every particular of
+them; and, even now, know much which fills
+them with delight and admiration. But let us
+know something in good time, also of the new
+candidates for poetical fame!</p>
+<p>If the life of a poet is not in accordance with
+his song, it may be suspected that the song itself
+is not genuine. Who can be a poet, and yet be
+a worldling in his passions and habits? An artificial
+poet is a disgusting dealer in trifles: nothing
+but the predominance of strong and unstimulated
+feeling will give that inspiration without
+which it is worse than an empty sound. When
+the passion is factitious, the excitement has always
+an immoral tendency; but the delineation
+of real and amiable sentiments calls up a sympathy
+in other bosoms which thus confirms and
+fixes them where they would otherwise die away.
+The memory may preserve what is artificial, but,
+when it becomes stale, it turns to offensiveness,
+and thus breeds an alienation from literature
+itself.</p>
+<p>That Collins has continued to increase in fame
+as years have passed away, is the most decisive
+of all proofs that his poems have the pure and
+sterling merit which began to be ascribed to them
+soon after his death. M. Bonstetten tells me
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_lix' name='page_lix'></a>lix</span>
+that Gray died without a suspicion of the high
+rank he was thereafter to hold in the annals of
+British genius? What did poor Collins think
+when he submitted his sublime odes to the flames?
+He must have had fits of confidence, even then,
+in himself; but intermixed with gloom and despair,
+and curses of the wretched doom of his birth!
+Is it sufficient that a man should wrap himself
+up in himself, and be content if the poetry creates
+itself and expires in his own heart? We strike
+the lyre to excite sympathy, and, if no one will
+hear, will any one not feel that he strikes in
+vain; and that the talent given us is useless,
+and even painful? But who can be assured that
+he has the talent if no one acknowledges it?
+To have it, and not to be assured that we have
+it, is a restless fire that burns to consume us.</p>
+<p>Let no one envy the endowments, if he looks
+at the fate, of poets. Let him contemplate Spenser,
+Denham, Rochester, Otway, Collins, Chatterton,
+Burns, Kirke White, Bloomfield, Shelley,
+Keats, and Byron, besides those of foreign countries!
+Perhaps Collins was the most unhappy of
+all; as he was assuredly one of the most inspired
+and most amiable.</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;In woful measures wan Despair&ndash;&ndash;</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Low sullen sounds his grief beguiled,</p>
+<p>A solemn, strange, and mingled air;</p>
+<p class='indent2'>&rsquo;Twas sad by fits, by starts &rsquo;twas wild.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_lx' name='page_lx'></a>lx</span></div>
+<p>Langhorne&rsquo;s edition of Collins first appeared
+in 1765, accompanied by observations which
+have been generally appended to subsequent editions.
+These observations have commonly borne
+the character of feebleness and affectation; they
+have a sort of pedantic prettiness, which is somewhat
+repulsive, but they do not want ingenuity,
+or justness of criticism. Part of them, at least,
+had previously appeared in the Monthly Review,
+probably written by Langhorne. Langhorne was
+not deficient himself in poetical genius, but is
+principally remembered by a single beautiful
+stanza, &ldquo;Cold on Canadian hills,&rdquo; &amp;c. From
+the time of Langhorne&rsquo;s first edition, Collins became
+a popular poet; a miniature edition appeared
+soon after that of Langhorne; and as
+long as I can remember books, which goes
+back at least to the year 1770, Collins&rsquo;s poems
+were almost universally on the lips of readers of
+English poetry. That Cowper, in 1784, should
+speak of him as &ldquo;a poet of no great fame,&rdquo;
+proves nothing, since Cowper&rsquo;s long seclusion
+from the world had made him utterly ignorant
+of contemporary literature. The negative inference,
+from the omission of Beattie, is not of
+much weight. I cannot recollect the date of
+the article in the Monthly Review; but, as it
+appears that Collins survived till 1759, I suspect
+it was before Collins&rsquo;s death. It was in
+September, 1754, that the Wartons visited him
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_lxi' name='page_lxi'></a>lxi</span>
+at Chichester: in that year he paid a visit to
+Oxford, when it appears that he was suffering
+under exhausture, not alienation, of mind.</p>
+<p>The critics, and, among the rest, Mrs. Barbauld
+and Campbell, have ascribed to him &ldquo;frequent
+obscurity;&rdquo; this is unjust,&ndash;&ndash;his general
+characteristic is lucidness and transparency: he
+is never obscure, unless in the Ode to Liberty,
+and, perhaps, in a few passages of the Ode on
+the Manners. Campbell&rsquo;s criticism is, otherwise,
+worthy of this beautiful poet, whom he
+praises with congenial spirit. When Hazlitt
+speaks of the &ldquo;tinsel and splendid patchwork&rdquo;
+of Collins, &ldquo;mixed with the solid, sterling ore of
+his genius,&rdquo; he speaks of a base material not to
+be found there. In Collins there is no tinsel or
+patchwork, one of his excellencies is, that the
+whole of every piece is of one web; there are no
+joinings or meaner threads. There is no height
+to which Collins might not have risen, had he
+lived long, had his mind continued sound, and
+had he persevered in exercising his genius.
+Campbell remarks that, at the same age, Milton
+had written nothing which could eclipse his productions.</p>
+<p>Of the two communications regarding Collins,
+to which I have already alluded, one anonymous,
+the other by a Mr. John Ragsdale, I must say
+something more. The first, signed V., appeared
+in the Gentleman&rsquo;s Magazine, with the date of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_lxii' name='page_lxii'></a>lxii</span>
+the 20th Jan. 1781. I well remember its publication,
+and with what eagerness I read it. I
+suspect it was at the very crisis of the appearance
+of the last portion of Johnson&rsquo;s Lives, but possibly
+a year earlier. I perused it with a mixture
+of delight, melancholy, and disgust; the first
+passage which struck me was this: &ldquo;As he
+brought with him [to Oxford], for so the whole
+tone of his conversation discovered, too high an
+opinion of his school acquisitions and a sovereign
+contempt for all academic studies and discipline,
+he never looked with any complacency on his
+situation in the University, but was always complaining
+of the dulness of a college life. In
+short, he threw up his demyship, and going to
+London, commenced a man of the town, spending
+his time in all the dissipation of Ranelagh,
+Vauxhall, and the playhouses; and was romantic
+enough to suppose that his superior abilities
+would draw the attention of the great world, by
+means of whom he was to make his fortune,&rdquo;
+&amp;c., &amp;c.&ndash;&ndash;&ldquo;Thus was lost to the world this unfortunate
+person, in the prime of life, without
+availing himself of fine abilities, which, if properly
+improved, must have raised him to the top
+of any profession, and have rendered him a blessing
+to his friends, and an ornament to his country.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The vulgarity and narrow-mindedness of this
+last paragraph filled me with indignation and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_lxiii' name='page_lxiii'></a>lxiii</span>
+contempt. In a selfish point of view Collins
+might, unquestionably, have done better by binding
+himself to the trammels of a profession; but
+would he have been more an honor to his friends
+and an ornament to his country? Are the fruits
+of genius he has left behind no ornament or use
+to his country? Professional men, for the most
+part, live for themselves, and not for the world.
+Who now remembers Lord Camden, Lord Thurlow,
+Lord Rosslyn, Lord Kenyon, Lord Ellenborough,
+or a hundred episcopal or medical characters,
+all rich and famous in their day?</p>
+<p>The character of his person and habits we
+read with deep interest. &ldquo;He was passionately
+fond of music, good-natured, and affable, warm
+in his friendships, and visionary in his pursuits;
+and, as long as I knew him, very temperate in
+his eating and drinking. He was of a moderate
+stature, of a light and clear complexion, with
+gray eyes, so very weak at times as hardly to
+bear a candle in the room, and often raising
+within him apprehensions of blindness.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The letter from Mr. John Ragsdale is addressed
+to Mr. William Hymers, Queen&rsquo;s College, Oxford,
+dated &ldquo;Hill Street, Richmond, in Surrey,
+July, 1783.&rdquo; He appears to have been a tradesman
+in Bond Street; and he surveyed the character
+of Collins (with whom he was familiar)
+with a tradesman&rsquo;s eye. He reproached the poet
+with idleness, not because he was lingering and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_lxiv' name='page_lxiv'></a>lxiv</span>
+losing his time on the road to fame, but because
+he omitted to get money by his pen. &ldquo;To raise
+a present subsistence,&rdquo; says Ragsdale, &ldquo;he set
+about writing his Odes; and having a general
+invitation to my house, he frequently passed
+whole days there, which he employed in writing
+them, and as frequently burning what he had
+written after he had read them to me: many of
+them, which pleased me, I struggled to preserve,
+but without effect; for, pretending he would
+alter them, he got them from me, and thrust
+them into the fire.&rdquo; That he wrote the Odes to
+gain a present subsistence is but the tradesman&rsquo;s
+mistaken comment.</p>
+<p>Gray was about four years older than Collins,
+and he survived him twelve years; he appears to
+have spent these years in gloominess and spleen;
+but we know not what intense pleasures he received
+from his solitary studies, from the improvement
+of his mind, from that exquisite taste and
+increasing erudition of which every day added to
+the stores. The enthusiasm of Collins was more
+active and adventurous, and his erudition probably
+more acute. Timidity and fastidiousness
+were great defects in Gray; they kept down his
+invention, and made him resort to the wealth of
+others, when he could better have relied upon
+himself. But as to borrowing expressions and
+simple materials, no genius ever did otherwise;
+it is the new and happy combination in which
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_lxv' name='page_lxv'></a>lxv</span>
+lies the invention. It may be doubted which are
+now most popular, the Odes of Collins or of
+Gray. On the one hand, what is most abstract
+is least calculated for the general reader; on the
+other hand, the variety of learned allusions in
+Gray renders the style and thoughts of his most
+celebrated Odes less simple, less direct, and less
+easily comprehended at once; but then his deep
+morality, the touching strokes which go immediately
+to the heart, his sensibility to the common
+sorrows of human life, his powerful reflection of
+the sentiments which &ldquo;come home to every one&rsquo;s
+business and bosom,&rdquo; form an attraction which
+perhaps turns the scale in his favour. Of both
+these sublime poets the correctness of composition
+renders the writings a national good.</p>
+<p>The French Revolution, which affected and
+partly reversed the minds of all Europe, produced
+a new era in our literature. There was good as
+well as evil in the new force thus infused into the
+human intellect. Our poetry had generally become
+tame and trite; a sort of languid mechanism
+had brought it into contempt; it was very little
+read, and still less esteemed. This might be not
+merely the effect, but also the cause of a deficiency
+of striking genius in the candidates for
+the laurel. Collins and Gray were dead; Mason
+had hung up the lyre; and Thomas Warton was
+then thought too laboured and quaint; Hayley
+had succeeded beyond expectation by a return to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_lxvi' name='page_lxvi'></a>lxvi</span>
+moral and didactic poetry at a moment when the
+public was satiated by vile imitations of lyrical
+and descriptive composition; but Cowper gave a
+new impulse to the curiosity of poetical readers,
+by a natural train of thought and the unlaboured
+effusions of genuine feeling. There is no doubt
+that a fearful regard to models stifles all force
+and preeminent merit. The burst of the French
+Revolution set the faculties of all young persons
+free. It was dangerous to secondary talents, and
+only led them into extravagances and absurdities.
+To Wordsworth, Southey, Scott, it was the
+removal of a weight, which would have hid the
+fire of their genius. But the exuberance of their
+inexhaustible minds in no degree lessens the value
+of the more reserved models of excellence of a
+tamer age. The contrast of their varied attractions
+supplies the reader with opposite kinds of
+merit, which delight and improve the more by
+this very opposition.</p>
+<p>Authors seldom estimate each other rightly in
+their lifetimes. The race of poets, of whom the
+last died with the century, had little friendship,
+or even acquaintance among themselves; or
+rather, they broke into little sets of two and
+three, which narrowed their opinions and their
+hearts; Gray and Mason, Johnson and the two
+Wartons, Cowper and Hayley, Darwin and Miss
+Seward; but Shenstone, Beattie, Akenside, Burns,
+Mrs. Carter, Mrs. Smith, &amp;c. stood alone. This
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_lxvii' name='page_lxvii'></a>lxvii</span>
+is not desirable. Innumerable advantages spring
+from frank and generous communication. Collins
+and Gray had not the most remote personal
+knowledge of each other. Gray never mentions
+Dr. Sneyd Davies, a poet and an Etonian, nearly
+contemporary; nor Nicholas Hardinge, a scholar
+and a poet also. Mundy, the author of Needwood
+Forest, passed a long life in the country,
+totally removed from poets and literati, except
+the small coterie of Miss Seward, at Litchfield.
+The lives of poets would be the most amusing of
+all biography, if the materials were less scanty:
+it is strange that so few of them have left any
+ample records of themselves; of many not even
+a letter or fragment of memorials is preserved.
+None of Cowley&rsquo;s letters, a mode of composition
+in which he is said to have eminently excelled,
+have come down to us. Of Prior, Tickell, Thomson,
+Young, Dyer, Akenside, the Wartons, there
+are few of any importance known to be in existence.
+Those of Hayley, which Dr. J. Johnson
+has brought forward, are not of the interest which
+might have been expected. Mrs. Carter&rsquo;s are
+excellent, and many of Beattie&rsquo;s amusing and
+amiable: it had been well for Miss Seward if
+most of hers had been consigned to the flames.
+Those of Charlotte Smith it has not been thought
+prudent to give to the public. The greater part
+of those of Lord Byron, which Moore has hitherto
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_lxviii' name='page_lxviii'></a>lxviii</span>
+put forth, had better have been spared: they are
+written in false taste, and are under a factitious
+character: in general, the prose style of poets is
+admirable;&ndash;&ndash;it was not Lord Byron&rsquo;s excellence.
+We have no specimens of the prose of Collins:
+it is grievous that he did not execute his project
+of The History of the Revival of Literature, or of
+the Lives for the Biographia Britannica, which
+he undertook. Poets of research are, of all
+authors, best qualified to write biography with
+sagacity and eloquence; they see into the human
+heart, and detect its most secret movements; and
+if there be a class of literature more amusing and
+more instructive than another, it is well written
+biography.</p>
+<p>We have a few poets who have not possessed
+erudition; for genius will overcome all deficiencies
+of art and labour, such as Shakespeare, Chatterton,
+Burns, and Bloomfield: but it cannot be
+questioned that erudition is a mighty aid. Milton
+could never have been what he was without profound
+and laborious erudition. Another necessary
+knowledge is the knowledge of the human heart,
+which no industry and learning will give. It is
+an intuitive gift, which mainly depends on an
+acute and correct imagination, and a sympathetic
+sensibility of the human passions. Among the
+innumerable rich endowments of Shakespeare this
+was the first; it was the predominant brilliance
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_lxix' name='page_lxix'></a>lxix</span>
+of his knowledge which gave him correctness of
+description, sentiment, and observation, and clearness,
+force, and eloquence of language.</p>
+<p>Collins had only reached the age of twenty-six
+when his Odes were published: what inconceivable
+power would the maturity of age have given
+him? It is lamentable that he had no familiar
+friend and companion from that period capable
+of apprehending and remembering his conversations.
+In his lucid intervals he must have said
+many wise, many learned, and many brilliant
+things; perhaps his very disease, in its vacillation
+between light and darkness, may have struck out
+many unexpected and surprising beauties, which
+common attendants were utterly incapable of
+appreciating. The flushes of the mind under the
+unnatural impulses of malady are sometimes inimitably
+splendid. His reason, at times, was
+sound, for his reason was fervid to the last. But
+it is said that his shrieks sometimes resounded
+through the cathedral cloisters of Chichester till
+the horror of those who heard him was insupportable.</p>
+<p>All these speculations may appear tedious to
+those whose curiosity is confined to facts: but
+new facts regarding Collins are not to be had:
+and what are facts unless they are accompanied
+by reflections, conclusions, and sentiments? The
+use of facts is to teach us to think, to judge, and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_lxx' name='page_lxx'></a>lxx</span>
+to feel: and facts, regarding men of genius, are
+valuable in enabling us to contemplate how far
+the gifts of high intellect contribute to our happiness,
+or afford guides for the rest of mankind;
+in what respects they have the possessors upon
+an equality with the herd of the people; and
+where they expose them to temptations from
+which others are free. For these purposes the
+ill fated Collins is a melancholy illustration: the
+Muse had touched the lips of his infancy, and
+infused her spirit into him; she had given him a
+piercing understanding, and an amiable disposition
+and temper; she enabled him to come forth
+with poetry of the first class, in the earliest bloom
+of youth; and to deserve, if not to win, the envied
+laurel, which millions have reached at in
+vain! What seeming glories and blessings were
+these! Yet to how few was so much misery dispensed
+as to this once envied being! May we
+not hope that his spirit now has its mighty
+reward?</p>
+<p>Let it not be denied that there is high virtue in
+the culture of the mind, when directed to pure
+and elevated objects, and accustoming itself to
+travel in lofty paths! The mind cannot attain
+the necessary refinement, nor have its sight
+cleared of the film of earthly grossness, unless
+the heart throws off the dregs of coarser feeling,
+and keeps its wings afloat on a lighter and airier
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_lxxi' name='page_lxxi'></a>lxxi</span>
+atmosphere. It may be said, that there have
+been bad men who have been great poets: but
+this position remains to be proved. The dissolute
+men who have written verses have not been
+great poets. Were Dante, Petrarch, Tasso,
+Spenser, Shakespeare, Dryden, Pope, Thomson,
+Burns, bad men? We know that Milton&rsquo;s character
+was great and holy, whatever were his
+politics: and who could be more virtuous than
+Gray, Beattie, Cowper, and Kirke White? And
+have we not virtuous poets among the living,&ndash;&ndash;men
+whose native splendour and intellectual culture
+have almost purified them into spirits? Let
+us never cease to meditate on the dejected inspiration,
+which could pour forth such strains as
+these:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>&ldquo;With eyes upraised, as one inspired,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Pale Melancholy sat retired;</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And from her wild sequester&rsquo;d seat,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>In notes by distance made more sweet,</p>
+<p>Pour&rsquo;d through the mellow horn her pensive soul:</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And, dashing soft from rocks around,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Bubbling runnels join&rsquo;d the sound;</p>
+<p>Through glades and glooms the mingled measures stole,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Or o&rsquo;er some haunted stream with fond delay</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Round a holy calm diffusing,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Love of peace and lonely musing,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>In hollow murmurs died away.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>There are those who will think the praises thus
+bestowed upon Collins extravagant. It is now
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_lxxii' name='page_lxxii'></a>lxxii</span>
+sixty years since I became familiar with him;
+and I still think of him with unabated admiration.
+When the calm judgment of age confirms
+the passion of youth and boyhood, we cannot be
+much mistaken in the merit we ascribe to him
+who is the object of it.</p>
+<p class='ralign'>S. E. B.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<a name='ORIENTAL_ECLOGUES_WRITTEN_ORIGINALLY_FOR_THE_ENTERTAINMENT_OF_THE_LADIES_OF_TAURIS' id='ORIENTAL_ECLOGUES_WRITTEN_ORIGINALLY_FOR_THE_ENTERTAINMENT_OF_THE_LADIES_OF_TAURIS'></a>
+<h2>ORIENTAL ECLOGUES.</h2>
+<h3>WRITTEN ORIGINALLY FOR THE ENTERTAINMENT OF THE LADIES OF TAURIS.</h3>
+</div>
+<p class='center'>AND NOW TRANSLATED.</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;Ubi primus equis Oriens adflavit anhelis.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
+<p class='ralign'><span class='smcap'>Virg.</span></p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>The First Edition was entitled, &ldquo;Persian Eclogues,
+written originally for the Entertainment of the Ladies of
+Tauris. And now first translated, &amp;c.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>Quod si non hic tantus fructus ostenderetur, et si ex
+his studiis delectatio sola peteretur; tamen, ut opinor,
+hanc animi remissionem humanissimam ac liberalissimam
+judicaretis.</p>
+<p class='ralign'><i><span class='smcap'>Cic.</span> pro Arch. Poeta.</i>&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<a name='PREFACE' id='PREFACE'></a>
+<h3>PREFACE.</h3>
+</div>
+<p>It is with the writings of mankind, in some measure,
+as with their complexions or their dress;
+each nation hath a peculiarity in all these, to distinguish
+it from the rest of the world.</p>
+<p>The gravity of the Spaniard, and the levity of
+the Frenchman, are as evident in all their productions
+as in their persons themselves; and the
+style of my countrymen is as naturally strong and
+nervous, as that of an Arabian or Persian is rich
+and figurative.</p>
+<p>There is an elegancy and wildness of thought
+which recommends all their compositions; and
+our geniuses are as much too cold for the entertainment
+of such sentiments, as our climate is
+for their fruits and spices. If any of these beauties
+are to be found in the following Eclogues, I
+hope my reader will consider them as an argument
+of their being original. I received them at
+the hands of a merchant, who had made it his
+business to enrich himself with the learning, as
+well as the silks and carpets of the Persians.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_2' name='page_2'></a>2</span>
+The little information I could gather concerning
+their author, was, that his name was Abdallah,
+and that he was a native of Tauris.</p>
+<p>It was in that city that he died of a distemper
+fatal in those parts, whilst he was engaged in
+celebrating the victories of his favourite monarch,
+the great Abbas.<a name='FNanchor_0010' id='FNanchor_0010'></a><a href='#Footnote_0010' class='fnanchor'>[10]</a> As to the Eclogues themselves,
+they give a very just view of the miseries
+and inconveniences, as well as the felicities, that
+attend one of the finest countries in the East.</p>
+<p>The time of writing them was probably in the
+beginning of Sha Sultan Hosseyn&rsquo;s reign, the
+successor of Sefi or Solyman the Second.</p>
+<p>Whatever defects, as, I doubt not, there will
+be many, fall under the reader&rsquo;s observation, I
+hope his candour will incline him to make the
+following reflection:</p>
+<p>That the works of Orientals contain many peculiarities,
+and that, through defect of language,
+few European translators can do them justice.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_3' name='page_3'></a>3</span>
+<a name='ORIENTAL_ECLOGUES' id='ORIENTAL_ECLOGUES'></a>
+<h2>ORIENTAL ECLOGUES.</h2>
+</div>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<a name='ECLOGUE_I_SELIM_OR_THE_SHEPHERDS_MORAL' id='ECLOGUE_I_SELIM_OR_THE_SHEPHERDS_MORAL'></a>
+<h3>ECLOGUE I.</h3>
+<h4>SELIM; OR, THE SHEPHERD&rsquo;S MORAL.</h4>
+</div>
+<p class='center'><span class='smcap'>Scene</span>, A valley near Bagdat.<br />
+<span class='smcap'>Time</span>, The morning.</p>
+<table summary='' class='widthall'><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&lsquo;Ye Persian maids, attend your poet&rsquo;s lays,</p>
+<p>And hear how shepherds pass their golden days.</p>
+<p>Not all are blest, whom fortune&rsquo;s hand sustains</p>
+<p>With wealth in courts, nor all that haunt the plains:</p>
+<p>Well may your hearts believe the truths I tell; <span class="linenum">5</span></p>
+<p>&rsquo;Tis virtue makes the bliss, where&rsquo;er we dwell.&rsquo;</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>Thus Selim sung, by sacred Truth inspired;</p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>No praise the youth, but hers alone desired:</p>
+</div>
+<p>Nor praise, but such as Truth bestow&rsquo;d, desired:</p>
+<p>Wise in himself, his meaning songs convey&rsquo;d</p>
+<p>Informing morals to the shepherd maid; <span class="linenum">10</span></p>
+<p>Or taught the swains that surest bliss to find,</p>
+<p>What groves nor streams bestow, a virtuous mind.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_4' name='page_4'></a>4</span></p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p class='indent2'>When sweet and odorous, like an eastern bride,</p>
+</div>
+<p class='indent2'>When sweet and blushing, like a virgin bride,</p>
+<p>The radiant morn resumed her orient pride;</p>
+<p>When wanton gales along the valleys play, <span class="linenum">15</span></p>
+<p>Breathe on each flower, and bear their sweets away;</p>
+<p>By Tigris&rsquo; wandering waves he sat, and sung</p>
+<p>This useful lesson for the fair and young.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>&lsquo;Ye Persian dames,&rsquo; he said, &lsquo;to you belong&ndash;&ndash;</p>
+<p>Well may they please&ndash;&ndash;the morals of my song: <span class="linenum">20</span></p>
+<p>No fairer maids, I trust, than you are found,</p>
+<p>Graced with soft arts, the peopled world around!</p>
+<p>The morn that lights you, to your loves supplies</p>
+<p>Each gentler ray delicious to your eyes:</p>
+<p>For you those flowers her fragrant hands bestow; <span class="linenum">25</span></p>
+<p>And yours the love that kings delight to know.</p>
+<p>Yet think not these, all beauteous as they are,</p>
+<p>The best kind blessings heaven can grant the fair!</p>
+<p>Who trust alone in beauty&rsquo;s feeble ray</p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>Balsora&rsquo;s pearls have more of worth than they:</p>
+</div>
+<p>Boast but the worth<a name='FNanchor_0011' id='FNanchor_0011'></a><a href='#Footnote_0011' class='fnanchor'>[11]</a> Balsora&rsquo;s pearls display: <span class="linenum">30</span></p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>Drawn from the deep, they sparkle to the sight,</p>
+<p>And all-unconscious shoot a lustrous light:</p>
+</div>
+<p>Drawn from the deep we own their surface bright,</p>
+<p>But, dark within, they drink no lustrous light:</p>
+<p>Such are the maids, and such the charms they boast,</p>
+<p>By sense unaided, or to virtue lost.</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_5' name='page_5'></a>5</span></p>
+<p>Self-flattering sex! your hearts believe in vain <span class="linenum">35</span></p>
+<p>That love shall blind, when once he fires, the swain;</p>
+<p>Or hope a lover by your faults to win,</p>
+<p>As spots on ermine beautify the skin:</p>
+<p>Who seeks secure to rule, be first her care</p>
+<p>Each softer virtue that adorns the fair; <span class="linenum">40</span></p>
+<p>Each tender passion man delights to find,</p>
+<p>The loved perfections of a female mind!</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>&lsquo;Blest were the days when Wisdom held her reign,</p>
+<p>And shepherds sought her on the silent plain!</p>
+<p>With Truth she wedded in the secret grove, <span class="linenum">45</span></p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>The fair-eyed Truth, and daughters bless&rsquo;d their love.</p>
+</div>
+<p>Immortal Truth, and daughters bless&rsquo;d their love.</p>
+<p>O haste, fair maids! ye Virtues, come away!</p>
+<p>Sweet Peace and Plenty lead you on your way!</p>
+<p>The balmy shrub, for you shall love our shore,</p>
+<p>By Ind excell&rsquo;d, or Araby, no more. <span class="linenum">50</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>&lsquo;Lost to our fields, for so the fates ordain,</p>
+<p>The dear deserters shall return again.</p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>O come, thou Modesty, as they decree,</p>
+<p>The rose may then improve her blush by thee.</p>
+</div>
+<p>Come thou, whose thoughts as limpid springs are clear,</p>
+<p>To lead the train, sweet Modesty, appear:</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_6' name='page_6'></a>6</span></p>
+<p>Here make thy court amidst our rural scene, <span class="linenum">55</span></p>
+<p>And shepherd girls shall own thee for their queen:</p>
+<p>With thee be Chastity, of all afraid,</p>
+<p>Distrusting all, a wise suspicious maid,</p>
+<p>But man the most:&ndash;&ndash;not more the mountain doe</p>
+<p>Holds the swift falcon for her deadly foe. <span class="linenum">60</span></p>
+<p>Cold is her breast, like flowers that drink the dew;</p>
+<p>A silken veil conceals her from the view.</p>
+<p>No wild desires amidst thy train be known;</p>
+<p>But Faith, whose heart is fix&rsquo;d on one alone:</p>
+<p>Desponding Meekness, with her downcast eyes, <span class="linenum">65</span></p>
+<p>And friendly Pity, full of tender sighs;</p>
+<p>And Love the last: by these your hearts approve;</p>
+<p>These are the virtues that must lead to love.&rsquo;</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>Thus sung the swain, and eastern legends say</p>
+</div>
+<p class='indent2'>Thus sung the swain; and ancient legends say</p>
+<p>The maids of Bagdat verified the lay: <span class="linenum">70</span></p>
+<p>Dear to the plains, the Virtues came along,</p>
+<p>The shepherds loved, and Selim bless&rsquo;d his song.</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_7' name='page_7'></a>7</span>
+<a name='ECLOGUE_II_HASSAN_OR_THE_CAMEL_DRIVER' id='ECLOGUE_II_HASSAN_OR_THE_CAMEL_DRIVER'></a>
+<h3>ECLOGUE II.</h3>
+<h4>HASSAN; OR, THE CAMEL DRIVER.</h4>
+</div>
+<p class='center'><span class='smcap'>Scene</span>, The desert.<br />
+<span class='smcap'>Time</span>, Midday.</p>
+<table summary='' class='widthall'><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>In silent horror o&rsquo;er the desert waste</p>
+</div>
+<p>In silent horror o&rsquo;er the boundless waste</p>
+<p>The driver Hassan with his camels past:</p>
+<p>One cruise of water on his back he bore,</p>
+<p>And his light scrip contain&rsquo;d a scanty store;</p>
+<p>A fan of painted feathers in his hand, <span class="linenum">5</span></p>
+<p>To guard his shaded face from scorching sand.</p>
+<p>The sultry sun had gain&rsquo;d the middle sky,</p>
+<p>And not a tree, and not an herb was nigh;</p>
+<p>The beasts with pain their dusty way pursue;</p>
+<p>Shrill roar&rsquo;d the winds, and dreary was the view! <span class="linenum">10</span></p>
+<p>With desperate sorrow wild, the affrighted man</p>
+<p>Thrice sigh&rsquo;d, thrice struck his breast, and thus began:</p>
+<p class='indent2'>&lsquo;Sad was the hour, and luckless was the day,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>&lsquo;When first from Schiraz&rsquo; walls I bent my way!&rsquo;</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_8' name='page_8'></a>8</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>&lsquo;Ah! little thought I of the blasting wind, <span class="linenum">15</span></p>
+<p>The thirst, or pinching hunger, that I find!</p>
+<p>Bethink thee, Hassan, where shall thirst assuage,</p>
+<p>When fails this cruise, his unrelenting rage?</p>
+<p>Soon shall this scrip its precious load resign;</p>
+<p>Then what but tears and hunger shall be thine? <span class="linenum">20</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>&lsquo;Ye mute companions of my toils, that bear</p>
+<p>In all my griefs a more than equal share!</p>
+<p>Here, where no springs in murmurs break away,</p>
+<p>Or moss-crown&rsquo;d fountains mitigate the day,</p>
+<p>In vain ye hope the green delights to know, <span class="linenum">25</span></p>
+<p>Which plains more blest, or verdant vales bestow:</p>
+<p>Here rocks alone, and tasteless sands, are found,</p>
+<p>And faint and sickly winds for ever howl around.</p>
+<p class='indent2'>&lsquo;Sad was the hour, and luckless was the day,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>&lsquo;When first from Schiraz&rsquo; walls I bent my way!&rsquo; <span class="linenum">30</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>&lsquo;Curst be the gold and silver which persuade</p>
+<p>Weak men to follow far fatiguing trade!</p>
+<p>The lily peace outshines the silver store,</p>
+<p>And life is dearer than the golden ore:</p>
+<p>Yet money tempts us o&rsquo;er the desert brown, <span class="linenum">35</span></p>
+<p>To every distant mart and wealthy town.</p>
+<p>Full oft we tempt the land, and oft the sea;</p>
+<p>And are we only yet repaid by thee?</p>
+<p>Ah! why was ruin so attractive made?</p>
+<p>Or why fond man so easily betray&rsquo;d? <span class="linenum">40</span></p>
+<p>Why heed we not, whilst mad we haste along,</p>
+<p>The gentle voice of peace, or pleasure&rsquo;s song?</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_9' name='page_9'></a>9</span></p>
+<p>Or wherefore think the flowery mountain&rsquo;s side,</p>
+<p>The fountain&rsquo;s murmurs, and the valley&rsquo;s pride,</p>
+<p>Why think we these less pleasing to behold <span class="linenum">45</span></p>
+<p>Than dreary deserts, if they lead to gold?</p>
+<p class='indent2'>&lsquo;Sad was the hour, and luckless was the day,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>&lsquo;When first from Schiraz&rsquo; walls I bent my way!&rsquo;</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>&lsquo;O cease, my fears!&ndash;&ndash;all frantic as I go,</p>
+<p>When thought creates unnumber&rsquo;d scenes of woe, <span class="linenum">50</span></p>
+<p>What if the lion in his rage I meet!&ndash;&ndash;</p>
+<p>Oft in the dust I view his printed feet:</p>
+<p>And, fearful! oft, when day&rsquo;s declining light</p>
+<p>Yields her pale empire to the mourner night,</p>
+<p>By hunger roused, he scours the groaning plain, <span class="linenum">55</span></p>
+<p>Gaunt wolves and sullen tigers in his train:</p>
+<p>Before them Death with shrieks directs their way,</p>
+<p>Fills the wild yell, and leads them to their prey.</p>
+<p class='indent2'>&lsquo;Sad was the hour, and luckless was the day,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>&lsquo;When first from Schiraz&rsquo; walls I bent my way!&rsquo; <span class="linenum">60</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>&lsquo;At that dead hour the silent asp shall creep,</p>
+<p>If aught of rest I find, upon my sleep:</p>
+<p>Or some swoln serpent twist his scales around,</p>
+<p>And wake to anguish with a burning wound.</p>
+<p>Thrice happy they, the wise contented poor, <span class="linenum">65</span></p>
+<p>From lust of wealth, and dread of death secure!</p>
+<p>They tempt no deserts, and no griefs they find;</p>
+<p>Peace rules the day, where reason rules the mind.</p>
+<p class='indent2'>&lsquo;Sad was the hour, and luckless was the day,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>&lsquo;When first from Schiraz&rsquo; walls I bent my way!&rsquo; <span class="linenum">70</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_10' name='page_10'></a>10</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>&lsquo;O hapless youth!&ndash;&ndash;for she thy love hath won,</p>
+<p>The tender Zara will be most undone!</p>
+<p>Big swell&rsquo;d my heart, and own&rsquo;d the powerful maid,</p>
+<p>When fast she dropt her tears, as thus she said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Farewell the youth whom sighs could not detain; <span class="linenum">75</span></p>
+<p>Whom Zara&rsquo;s breaking heart implored in vain!</p>
+<p>Yet, as thou go&rsquo;st, may every blast arise</p>
+<p>Weak and unfelt, as these rejected sighs!</p>
+<p>Safe o&rsquo;er the wild, no perils mayst thou see,</p>
+<p>No griefs endure, nor weep, false youth, like me.&rdquo; <span class="linenum">80</span></p>
+<p>O let me safely to the fair return,</p>
+<p>Say, with a kiss, she must not, shall not mourn;</p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>Go teach my heart to lose its painful fears.</p>
+</div>
+<p>O! let me teach my heart to lose its fears,</p>
+<p>Recall&rsquo;d by Wisdom&rsquo;s voice, and Zara&rsquo;s tears.&rsquo;</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>He said, and call&rsquo;d on heaven to bless the day, <span class="linenum">85</span></p>
+<p>When back to Schiraz&rsquo; walls he bent his way.</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_11' name='page_11'></a>11</span>
+<a name='ECLOGUE_III_ABRA_OR_THE_GEORGIAN_SULTANA' id='ECLOGUE_III_ABRA_OR_THE_GEORGIAN_SULTANA'></a>
+<h3>ECLOGUE III.</h3>
+<h4>ABRA; OR, THE GEORGIAN SULTANA.</h4>
+</div>
+<p class='center'><span class='smcap'>Scene</span>, A forest.<br />
+<span class='smcap'>Time</span>, The evening.</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>In Georgia&rsquo;s land, where Tefflis&rsquo; towers are seen,</p>
+<p>In distant view, along the level green,</p>
+<p>While evening dews enrich the glittering glade,</p>
+<p>And the tall forests cast a longer shade,</p>
+<p>What time &rsquo;tis sweet o&rsquo;er fields of rice to stray, <span class="linenum">5</span></p>
+<p>Or scent the breathing maize at setting day;</p>
+<p>Amidst the maids of Zagen&rsquo;s peaceful grove,</p>
+<p>Emyra sung the pleasing cares of love.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>Of Abra first began the tender strain,</p>
+<p>Who led her youth with flocks upon the plain. <span class="linenum">10</span></p>
+<p>At morn she came those willing flocks to lead,</p>
+<p>Where lilies rear them in the watery mead;</p>
+<p>From early dawn the livelong hours she told,</p>
+<p>Till late at silent eve she penn&rsquo;d the fold.</p>
+<p>Deep in the grove, beneath the secret shade, <span class="linenum">15</span></p>
+<p>A various wreath of odorous flowers she made:</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_12' name='page_12'></a>12</span></p>
+<p>Gay-motley&rsquo;d<a name='FNanchor_0012' id='FNanchor_0012'></a><a href='#Footnote_0012' class='fnanchor'>[12]</a> pinks and sweet jonquils she chose,</p>
+<p>The violet blue that on the moss-bank grows;</p>
+<p>All sweet to sense, the flaunting rose was there;</p>
+<p>The finish&rsquo;d chaplet well adorn&rsquo;d her hair. <span class="linenum">20</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>Great Abbas chanced that fated morn to stray,</p>
+<p>By love conducted from the chase away;</p>
+<p>Among the vocal vales he heard her song,</p>
+<p>And sought, the vales and echoing groves among;</p>
+<p>At length he found, and woo&rsquo;d the rural maid; <span class="linenum">25</span></p>
+<p>She knew the monarch, and with fear obey&rsquo;d.</p>
+<p class='indent2'>&lsquo;Be every youth like royal Abbas moved,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>&lsquo;And every Georgian maid like Abra loved!&rsquo;</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>The royal lover bore her from the plain;</p>
+<p>Yet still her crook and bleating flock remain: <span class="linenum">30</span></p>
+<p>Oft, as she went, she backward turn&rsquo;d her view,</p>
+<p>And bade that crook and bleating flock adieu.</p>
+<p>Fair, happy maid! to other scenes remove,</p>
+<p>To richer scenes of golden power and love!</p>
+<p>Go leave the simple pipe and shepherd&rsquo;s strain; <span class="linenum">35</span></p>
+<p>With love delight thee, and with Abbas reign!</p>
+<p class='indent2'>&lsquo;Be every youth like royal Abbas moved,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>&lsquo;And every Georgian maid like Abra loved!&rsquo;</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_13' name='page_13'></a>13</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>Yet, &rsquo;midst the blaze of courts, she fix&rsquo;d her love</p>
+<p>On the cool fountain, or the shady grove; <span class="linenum">40</span></p>
+<p>Still, with the shepherd&rsquo;s innocence, her mind</p>
+<p>To the sweet vale, and flowery mead, inclined;</p>
+<p>And oft as spring renew&rsquo;d the plains with flowers,</p>
+<p>Breathed his soft gales, and led the fragrant hours,</p>
+<p>With sure return she sought the sylvan scene, <span class="linenum">45</span></p>
+<p>The breezy mountains, and the forests green.</p>
+<p>Her maids around her moved, a duteous band!</p>
+<p>Each bore a crook, all rural, in her hand:</p>
+<p>Some simple lay, of flocks and herds, they sung;</p>
+<p>With joy the mountain and the forest rung. <span class="linenum">50</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>&lsquo;Be every youth like royal Abbas moved,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>&lsquo;And every Georgian maid like Abra loved!&rsquo;</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>And oft the royal lover left the care</p>
+<p>And thorns of state, attendant on the fair;</p>
+<p>Oft to the shades and low-roof&rsquo;d cots retired, <span class="linenum">55</span></p>
+<p>Or sought the vale where first his heart was fired:</p>
+<p>A russet mantle, like a swain, he wore,</p>
+<p>And thought of crowns, and busy courts, no more.</p>
+<p class='indent2'>&lsquo;Be every youth like royal Abbas moved,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>&lsquo;And every Georgian maid like Abra loved!&rsquo; <span class="linenum">60</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>Blest was the life that royal Abbas led:</p>
+<p>Sweet was his love, and innocent his bed.</p>
+<p>What if in wealth the noble maid excel?</p>
+<p>The simple shepherd girl can love as well.</p>
+<p>Let those who rule on Persia&rsquo;s jewel&rsquo;d throne <span class="linenum">65</span></p>
+<p>Be famed for love, and gentlest love alone;</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_14' name='page_14'></a>14</span></p>
+<p>Or wreathe, like Abbas, full of fair renown,</p>
+<p>The lover&rsquo;s myrtle with the warrior&rsquo;s crown.</p>
+<p>O happy days! the maids around her say;</p>
+<p>O haste, profuse of blessings, haste away! <span class="linenum">70</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>&lsquo;Be every youth like royal Abbas moved,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>&lsquo;And every Georgian maid like Abra loved!&rsquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_15' name='page_15'></a>15</span>
+<a name='ECLOGUE_IV_AGIB_AND_SECANDER_OR_THE_FUGITIVES' id='ECLOGUE_IV_AGIB_AND_SECANDER_OR_THE_FUGITIVES'></a>
+<h3>ECLOGUE IV.</h3>
+<h4>AGIB AND SECANDER; OR, THE FUGITIVES.</h4>
+</div>
+<p class='center'><span class='smcap'>Scene</span>, A mountain in Circassia.<br />
+<span class='smcap'>Time</span>, Midnight.</p>
+<table summary='' class='widthall'><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>In fair Circassia, where, to love inclined,</p>
+<p>Each swain was blest, for every maid was kind;</p>
+<p>At that still hour, when awful midnight reigns,</p>
+<p>And none, but wretches, haunt the twilight plains;</p>
+<p>What time the moon had hung her lamp on high, <span class="linenum">5</span></p>
+<p>And past in radiance through the cloudless sky;</p>
+<p>Sad, o&rsquo;er the dews, two brother shepherds fled,</p>
+<p>Where wildering fear and desperate sorrow led:</p>
+<p>Fast as they press&rsquo;d their flight, behind them lay</p>
+<p>Wide ravaged plains, and valleys stole away: <span class="linenum">10</span></p>
+<p>Along the mountain&rsquo;s bending sides they ran,</p>
+<p>Till, faint and weak, Secander thus began.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='center'><span class='smcaplc'>SECANDER.</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>O stay thee, Agib, for my feet deny,</p>
+<p>No longer friendly to my life, to fly.</p>
+<p>Friend of my heart, O turn thee and survey! <span class="linenum">15</span></p>
+<p>Trace our sad flight through all its length of way</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_16' name='page_16'></a>16</span></p>
+<p>And first review that long extended plain,</p>
+<p>And yon wide groves, already past with pain!</p>
+<p>Yon ragged cliff, whose dangerous path we tried!</p>
+<p>And, last, this lofty mountain&rsquo;s weary side! <span class="linenum">20</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='center'><span class='smcaplc'>AGIB.</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>Weak as thou art, yet, hapless, must thou know</p>
+<p>The toils of flight, or some severer woe!</p>
+<p>Still, as I haste, the Tartar shouts behind,</p>
+<p>And shrieks and sorrows load the saddening wind:</p>
+<p>In rage of heart, with ruin in his hand, <span class="linenum">25</span></p>
+<p>He blasts our harvests, and deforms our land.</p>
+<p>Yon citron grove, whence first in fear we came,</p>
+<p>Droops its fair honors to the conquering flame:</p>
+<p>Far fly the swains, like us, in deep despair,</p>
+<p>And leave to ruffian bands their fleecy care. <span class="linenum">30</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='center'><span class='smcaplc'>SECANDER.</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>Unhappy land, whose blessings tempt the sword,</p>
+<p>In vain, unheard, thou call&rsquo;st thy Persian lord!</p>
+<p>In vain thou court&rsquo;st him, helpless, to thine aid,</p>
+<p>To shield the shepherd, and protect the maid!</p>
+<p>Far off, in thoughtless indolence resign&rsquo;d, <span class="linenum">35</span></p>
+<p>Soft dreams of love and pleasure soothe his mind:</p>
+<p>&rsquo;Midst fair sultanas lost in idle joy,</p>
+<p>No wars alarm him, and no fears annoy.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='center'><span class='smcaplc'>AGIB.</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>Yet these green hills, in summer&rsquo;s sultry heat,</p>
+<p>Have lent the monarch oft a cool retreat. <span class="linenum">40</span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_17' name='page_17'></a>17</span></p>
+<p>Sweet to the sight is Zabran&rsquo;s flowery plain,</p>
+<p>And once by maids and shepherds loved in vain!</p>
+<p>No more the virgins shall delight to rove</p>
+<p>By Sargis&rsquo; banks, or Irwan&rsquo;s shady grove;</p>
+<p>On Tarkie&rsquo;s mountain catch the cooling gale, <span class="linenum">45</span></p>
+<p>Or breathe the sweets of Aly&rsquo;s flowery vale:</p>
+<p>Fair scenes! but, ah! no more with peace possest,</p>
+<p>With ease alluring, and with plenty blest!</p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>No more the shepherds&rsquo; whitening seats appear,</p>
+</div>
+<p>No more the shepherds&rsquo; whitening tents appear,</p>
+<p>Nor the kind products of a bounteous year; <span class="linenum">50</span></p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>No more the dale, with snowy blossoms crown&rsquo;d!</p>
+</div>
+<p>No more the date, with snowy blossoms crown&rsquo;d!</p>
+<p>But ruin spreads her baleful fires around.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='center'><span class='smcaplc'>SECANDER.</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>In vain Circassia boasts her spicy groves,</p>
+<p>For ever famed for pure and happy loves:</p>
+<p>In vain she boasts her fairest of the fair, <span class="linenum">55</span></p>
+<p>Their eyes&rsquo; blue languish, and their golden hair!</p>
+<p>Those eyes in tears their fruitless grief must send;</p>
+<p>Those hairs the Tartar&rsquo;s cruel hand shall rend.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='center'><span class='smcaplc'>AGIB.</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>Ye Georgian swains, that piteous learn from far</p>
+<p>Circassia&rsquo;s ruin, and the waste of war; <span class="linenum">60</span></p>
+<p>Some weightier arms than crooks and staves prepare,</p>
+<p>To shield your harvests, and defend your fair:</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_18' name='page_18'></a>18</span></p>
+<p>The Turk and Tartar like designs pursue,</p>
+<p>Fix&rsquo;d to destroy, and steadfast to undo.</p>
+<p>Wild as his land, in native deserts bred, <span class="linenum">65</span></p>
+<p>By lust incited, or by malice led,</p>
+<p>The villain Arab, as he prowls for prey,</p>
+<p>Oft marks with blood and wasting flames the way;</p>
+<p>Yet none so cruel as the Tartar foe,</p>
+<p>To death inured, and nurst in scenes of woe. <span class="linenum">70</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>He said; when loud along the vale was heard</p>
+<p>A shriller shriek, and nearer fires appear&rsquo;d:</p>
+<p>The affrighted shepherds, through the dews of night,</p>
+<p>Wide o&rsquo;er the moonlight hills renew&rsquo;d their flight.</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p class='center smcaplc'>END OF THE ECLOGUES.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_19' name='page_19'></a>19</span>
+<a name='ODES_ON_SEVERAL_DESCRIPTIVE_AND_ALLEGORICAL_SUBJECTS' id='ODES_ON_SEVERAL_DESCRIPTIVE_AND_ALLEGORICAL_SUBJECTS'></a>
+<h2>ODES</h2>
+<h3>ON SEVERAL DESCRIPTIVE AND ALLEGORICAL SUBJECTS.</h3>
+</div>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p><span lang="el" title="Ei&ecirc;n heurysiep&ecirc;s anageisthai">&Epsilon;&iota;&eta;&nu; &epsilon;&#8017;&rho;&upsilon;&sigma;&iota;&epsilon;&pi;&eta;&sigmaf; &alpha;&nu;&alpha;&gamma;&epsilon;&iota;&sigma;&theta;&alpha;&iota;</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="Prosphoros en Moisan diphr&ocirc;:">&Pi;&rho;&omicron;&sigma;&phi;&omicron;&rho;&omicron;&sigmaf; &epsilon;&nu; &Mu;&omicron;&iota;&sigma;&alpha;&nu; &delta;&iota;&phi;&rho;&omega;:</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="Tolma de kai amphilaph&ecirc;s dynamis">&Tau;&omicron;&lambda;&mu;&alpha; &delta;&epsilon; &kappa;&alpha;&iota; &alpha;&mu;&phi;&iota;&lambda;&alpha;&phi;&eta;&sigmaf; &delta;&upsilon;&nu;&alpha;&mu;&iota;&sigmaf;</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="Espoito.">&Epsilon;&sigma;&pi;&omicron;&iota;&tau;&omicron;.</span></p>
+<p class='ralign'><span lang="el" title="Pindar. Olymp. Th.">&Pi;&iota;&nu;&delta;&alpha;&rho;. &Omicron;&lambda;&upsilon;&mu;&pi;. &Theta;.</span></p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_21' name='page_21'></a>21</span>
+<a name='ODES' id='ODES'></a>
+<h2>ODES.</h2>
+</div>
+<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
+<a name='ODE_TO_PITY' id='ODE_TO_PITY'></a>
+<h3>ODE TO PITY.</h3>
+</div>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>O thou, the friend of man, assign&rsquo;d</p>
+<p>With balmy hands his wounds to bind,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And charm his frantic woe:</p>
+<p>When first Distress, with dagger keen,</p>
+<p>Broke forth to waste his destined scene, <span class="linenum">5</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>His wild unsated foe!</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>By Pella&rsquo;s<a name='FNanchor_0013' id='FNanchor_0013'></a><a href='#Footnote_0013' class='fnanchor'>[13]</a> bard, a magic name,</p>
+<p>By all the griefs his thought could frame,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Receive my humble rite:</p>
+<p>Long, Pity, let the nations view <span class="linenum">10</span></p>
+<p>The sky-worn robes of tenderest blue,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And eyes of dewy light!</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_22' name='page_22'></a>22</span></p>
+<p>But wherefore need I wander wide</p>
+<p>To old Ilissus&rsquo; distant side,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Deserted stream, and mute? <span class="linenum">15</span></p>
+<p>Wild Arun<a name='FNanchor_0014' id='FNanchor_0014'></a><a href='#Footnote_0014' class='fnanchor'>[14]</a> too has heard thy strains,</p>
+<p>And Echo, &rsquo;midst my native plains,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Been soothed by Pity&rsquo;s lute.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>There first the wren thy myrtles shed</p>
+<p>On gentlest Otway&rsquo;s infant head, <span class="linenum">20</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>To him thy cell was shown;</p>
+<p>And while he sung the female heart,</p>
+<p>With youth&rsquo;s soft notes unspoil&rsquo;d by art,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Thy turtles mix&rsquo;d their own.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>Come, Pity, come, by Fancy&rsquo;s aid, <span class="linenum">25</span></p>
+<p>E&rsquo;en now my thoughts, relenting maid,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Thy temple&rsquo;s pride design:</p>
+<p>Its southern site, its truth complete,</p>
+<p>Shall raise a wild enthusiast heat</p>
+<p class='indent2'>In all who view the shrine. <span class="linenum">30</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>There Picture&rsquo;s toils shall well relate</p>
+<p>How chance, or hard involving fate,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>O&rsquo;er mortal bliss prevail:</p>
+<p>The buskin&rsquo;d Muse shall near her stand,</p>
+<p>And sighing prompt her tender hand, <span class="linenum">35</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>With each disastrous tale.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_23' name='page_23'></a>23</span></p>
+<p>There let me oft, retired by day,</p>
+<p>In dreams of passion melt away,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Allow&rsquo;d with thee to dwell:</p>
+<p>There waste the mournful lamp of night, <span class="linenum">40</span></p>
+<p>Till, Virgin, thou again delight</p>
+<p class='indent2'>To hear a British shell!</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_24' name='page_24'></a>24</span>
+<a name='ODE_TO_FEAR' id='ODE_TO_FEAR'></a>
+<h3>ODE TO FEAR.</h3>
+</div>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>Thou, to whom the world unknown,</p>
+<p>With all its shadowy shapes, is shown;</p>
+<p>Who seest, appall&rsquo;d, the unreal scene,</p>
+<p>While Fancy lifts the veil between:</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Ah Fear! ah frantic Fear! <span class="linenum">5</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>I see, I see thee near.</p>
+<p>I know thy hurried step, thy haggard eye!</p>
+<p>Like thee I start; like thee disorder&rsquo;d fly.</p>
+<p>For, lo, what monsters in thy train appear!</p>
+<p>Danger, whose limbs of giant mould <span class="linenum">10</span></p>
+<p>What mortal eye can fix&rsquo;d behold?</p>
+<p>Who stalks his round, an hideous form,</p>
+<p>Howling amidst the midnight storm;</p>
+<p>Or throws him on the ridgy steep</p>
+<p>Of some loose hanging rock to sleep: <span class="linenum">15</span></p>
+<p>And with him thousand phantoms join&rsquo;d,</p>
+<p>Who prompt to deeds accursed the mind:</p>
+<p>And those, the fiends, who, near allied,</p>
+<p>O&rsquo;er Nature&rsquo;s wounds, and wrecks, preside;</p>
+<p>Whilst Vengeance, in the lurid air, <span class="linenum">20</span></p>
+<p>Lifts her red arm, exposed and bare:</p>
+<p>On whom that ravening<a name='FNanchor_0015' id='FNanchor_0015'></a><a href='#Footnote_0015' class='fnanchor'>[15]</a> brood of Fate,</p>
+<p>Who lap the blood of sorrow, wait:</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_25' name='page_25'></a>25</span></p>
+<p>Who, Fear, this ghastly train can see,</p>
+<p>And look not madly wild, like thee! <span class="linenum">25</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='center'><span class='smcaplc'>EPODE.</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>In earliest Greece, to thee, with partial choice,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>The grief-full Muse addrest her infant tongue;</p>
+<p>The maids and matrons, on her awful voice,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Silent and pale, in wild amazement hung.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>Yet he, the bard<a name='FNanchor_0016' id='FNanchor_0016'></a><a href='#Footnote_0016' class='fnanchor'>[16]</a> who first invoked thy name, <span class="linenum">30</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>Disdain&rsquo;d in Marathon its power to feel:</p>
+<p>For not alone he nursed the poet&rsquo;s flame,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>But reach&rsquo;d from Virtue&rsquo;s hand the patriot&rsquo;s steel.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>But who is he whom later garlands grace,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Who left a while o&rsquo;er Hybla&rsquo;s dews to rove, <span class="linenum">35</span></p>
+<p>With trembling eyes thy dreary steps to trace,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Where thou and furies shared the baleful grove?</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>Wrapt in thy cloudy veil, the incestuous<a name='FNanchor_0017' id='FNanchor_0017'></a><a href='#Footnote_0017' class='fnanchor'>[17]</a> queen</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Sigh&rsquo;d the sad call<a name='FNanchor_0018' id='FNanchor_0018'></a><a href='#Footnote_0018' class='fnanchor'>[18]</a> her son and husband heard,</p>
+<p>When once alone it broke the silent scene, <span class="linenum">40</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>And he the wretch of Thebes no more appear&rsquo;d.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_26' name='page_26'></a>26</span></p>
+<p>O Fear, I know thee by my throbbing heart:</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Thy withering power inspired each mournful line:</p>
+<p>Though gentle Pity claim her mingled part,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Yet all the thunders of the scene are thine! <span class="linenum">45</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='center'><span class='smcaplc'>ANTISTROPHE.</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>Thou who such weary lengths hast past,</p>
+<p>Where wilt thou rest, mad Nymph, at last?</p>
+<p>Say, wilt thou shroud in haunted cell,</p>
+<p>Where gloomy Rape and Murder dwell?</p>
+<p class='indent4'>Or, in some hollow&rsquo;d seat, <span class="linenum">50</span></p>
+<p class='indent4'>&rsquo;Gainst which the big waves beat,</p>
+<p>Hear drowning seamen&rsquo;s cries, in tempests brought?</p>
+<p>Dark power, with shuddering meek submitted thought,</p>
+<p>Be mine to read the visions old</p>
+<p>Which thy awakening bards have told: <span class="linenum">55</span></p>
+<p>And, lest thou meet my blasted view,</p>
+<p>Hold each strange tale devoutly true;</p>
+<p>Ne&rsquo;er be I found, by thee o&rsquo;erawed,</p>
+<p>In that thrice hallow&rsquo;d eve, abroad,</p>
+<p>When ghosts, as cottage maids believe, <span class="linenum">60</span></p>
+<p>Their pebbled beds permitted leave;</p>
+<p>And goblins haunt, from fire, or fen,</p>
+<p>Or mine, or flood, the walks of men!</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>O thou, whose spirit most possest</p>
+<p>The sacred seat of Shakespeare&rsquo;s breast! <span class="linenum">65</span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_27' name='page_27'></a>27</span></p>
+<p>By all that from thy prophet broke,</p>
+<p>In thy divine emotions spoke;</p>
+<p>Hither again thy fury deal,</p>
+<p>Teach me but once like him to feel:</p>
+<p>His cypress wreath my meed decree, <span class="linenum">70</span></p>
+<p>And I, O Fear, will dwell with thee!</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_28' name='page_28'></a>28</span>
+<a name='ODE_TO_SIMPLICITY' id='ODE_TO_SIMPLICITY'></a>
+<h3>ODE TO SIMPLICITY.</h3>
+</div>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>O thou, by Nature taught</p>
+<p class='indent2'>To breathe her genuine thought,</p>
+<p>In numbers warmly pure, and sweetly strong;</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Who first, on mountains wild,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>In Fancy, loveliest child, <span class="linenum">5</span></p>
+<p>Thy babe, or Pleasure&rsquo;s, nursed the powers of song!</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>Thou, who, with hermit heart,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Disdain&rsquo;st the wealth of art,</p>
+<p>And gauds, and pageant weeds, and trailing pall;</p>
+<p class='indent2'>But com&rsquo;st a decent maid, <span class="linenum">10</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>In attic robe array&rsquo;d,</p>
+<p>O chaste, unboastful Nymph, to thee I call!</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>By all the honey&rsquo;d store</p>
+<p class='indent2'>On Hybla&rsquo;s thymy shore;</p>
+<p>By all her blooms, and mingled murmurs dear; <span class="linenum">15</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>By her<a name='FNanchor_0019' id='FNanchor_0019'></a><a href='#Footnote_0019' class='fnanchor'>[19]</a> whose lovelorn woe,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>In evening musings slow,</p>
+<p>Soothed sweetly sad Electra&rsquo;s poet&rsquo;s ear:</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_29' name='page_29'></a>29</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>By old Cephisus deep,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Who spread his wavy sweep, <span class="linenum">20</span></p>
+<p>In warbled wanderings, round thy green retreat;</p>
+<p class='indent2'>On whose enamel&rsquo;d side,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>When holy Freedom died,</p>
+<p>No equal haunt allured thy future feet.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>O sister meek of Truth, <span class="linenum">25</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>To my admiring youth,</p>
+<p>Thy sober aid and native charms infuse!</p>
+<p class='indent2'>The flowers that sweetest breathe,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Though Beauty cull&rsquo;d the wreath,</p>
+<p>Still ask thy hand to range their order&rsquo;d hues. <span class="linenum">30</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>While Rome could none esteem</p>
+<p class='indent2'>But virtue&rsquo;s patriot theme,</p>
+<p>You lov&rsquo;d her hills, and led her laureat band:</p>
+<p class='indent2'>But staid to sing alone</p>
+<p class='indent2'>To one distinguish&rsquo;d throne; <span class="linenum">35</span></p>
+<p>And turn&rsquo;d thy face, and fled her alter&rsquo;d land.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>No more, in hall or bower,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>The Passions own thy power,</p>
+<p>Love, only Love her forceless numbers mean:</p>
+<p class='indent2'>For thou hast left her shrine; <span class="linenum">40</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>Nor olive more, nor vine,</p>
+<p>Shall gain thy feet to bless the servile scene.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>Though taste, though genius, bless</p>
+<p class='indent2'>To some divine excess,</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_30' name='page_30'></a>30</span></p>
+<p>Faints the cold work till thou inspire the whole; <span class="linenum">45</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>What each, what all supply,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>May court, may charm, our eye;</p>
+<p>Thou, only thou, canst raise the meeting soul!</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>Of these let others ask,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>To aid some mighty task, <span class="linenum">50</span></p>
+<p>I only seek to find thy temperate vale;</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Where oft my reed might sound</p>
+<p class='indent2'>To maids and shepherds round,</p>
+<p>And all thy sons, O Nature, learn my tale.</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_31' name='page_31'></a>31</span>
+<a name='ODE_ON_THE_POETICAL_CHARACTER' id='ODE_ON_THE_POETICAL_CHARACTER'></a>
+<h3>ODE ON THE POETICAL CHARACTER.</h3>
+</div>
+<table summary='' class='widthall'><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>As once,&ndash;&ndash;if, not with light regard,</p>
+<p>I read aright that gifted bard,</p>
+<p>&ndash;&ndash;Him whose school above the rest</p>
+<p>His loveliest elfin queen has blest;&ndash;&ndash;</p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>She then shall dress a sweeter sod</p>
+</div>
+<p>One, only one, unrival&rsquo;d<a name='FNanchor_0020' id='FNanchor_0020'></a><a href='#Footnote_0020' class='fnanchor'>[20]</a> fair, <span class="linenum">5</span></p>
+<p>Might hope the magic girdle wear,</p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>By hands unseen the knell is rung;</p>
+</div>
+<p>At solemn turney hung on high,</p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>By fairy forms their dirge is sung;</p>
+</div>
+<p>The wish of each love-darting eye;</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ndash;&ndash;Lo! to each other nymph, in turn, applied,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>As if, in air unseen, some hovering hand, <span class="linenum">10</span></p>
+<p>Some chaste and angel friend to virgin fame,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>With whisper&rsquo;d spell had burst the starting band,</p>
+<p>It left unblest her loathed dishonour&rsquo;d side;</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Happier, hopeless Fair, if never</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Her baffled hand, with vain endeavour, <span class="linenum">15</span></p>
+<p>Had touch&rsquo;d that fatal zone to her denied!</p>
+<p>Young Fancy thus, to me divinest name,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>To whom, prepared and bathed in heaven,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>The cest of amplest power is given:</p>
+<p class='indent2'>To few the godlike gift assigns, <span class="linenum">20</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>To gird their blest prophetic loins,</p>
+<p>And gaze her visions wild, and feel unmix&rsquo;d her flame!</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_32' name='page_32'></a>32</span></p>
+<p>The band, as fairy legends say,</p>
+<p>Was wove on that creating day,</p>
+<p>When He, who call&rsquo;d with thought to birth <span class="linenum">25</span></p>
+<p>Yon tented sky, this laughing earth,</p>
+<p>And dress&rsquo;d with springs and forests tall,</p>
+<p>And pour&rsquo;d the main engirting all,</p>
+<p>Long by the loved enthusiast woo&rsquo;d,</p>
+<p>Himself in some diviner mood, <span class="linenum">30</span></p>
+<p>Retiring, sat with her alone,</p>
+<p>And placed her on his sapphire throne;</p>
+<p>The whiles, the vaulted shrine around,</p>
+<p>Seraphic wires were heard to sound,</p>
+<p>Now sublimest triumph swelling, <span class="linenum">35</span></p>
+<p>Now on love and mercy dwelling;</p>
+<p>And she, from out the veiling cloud,</p>
+<p>Breathed her magic notes aloud:</p>
+<p>And thou, thou rich-hair&rsquo;d youth of morn,</p>
+<p>And all thy subject life was born! <span class="linenum">40</span></p>
+<p>The dangerous passions kept aloof,</p>
+<p>Far from the sainted growing woof:</p>
+<p>But near it sat ecstatic Wonder,</p>
+<p>Listening the deep applauding thunder;</p>
+<p>And Truth, in sunny vest array&rsquo;d, <span class="linenum">45</span></p>
+<p>By whose the tarsel&rsquo;s eyes were made;</p>
+<p>All the shadowy tribes of mind,</p>
+<p>In braided dance, their murmurs join&rsquo;d,</p>
+<p>And all the bright uncounted powers</p>
+<p>Who feed on heaven&rsquo;s ambrosial flowers. <span class="linenum">50</span></p>
+<p>&ndash;&ndash;Where is the bard whose soul can now</p>
+<p>Its high presuming hopes avow?</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_33' name='page_33'></a>33</span></p>
+<p>Where he who thinks, with rapture blind,</p>
+<p>This hallow&rsquo;d work for him design&rsquo;d?</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>High on some cliff, to heaven up-piled, <span class="linenum">55</span></p>
+<p>Of rude access, of prospect wild,</p>
+<p>Where, tangled round the jealous steep,</p>
+<p>Strange shades o&rsquo;erbrow the valleys deep,</p>
+<p>And holy Genii guard the rock,</p>
+<p>Its glooms embrown, its springs unlock, <span class="linenum">60</span></p>
+<p>While on its rich ambitious head,</p>
+<p>An Eden, like his own, lies spread:</p>
+<p>I view that oak, the fancied glades among,</p>
+<p>By which, as Milton lay, his evening ear,</p>
+<p>From many a cloud that dropp&rsquo;d ethereal dew, <span class="linenum">65</span></p>
+<p>Nigh sphered in heaven, its native strains could hear;</p>
+<p>On which that ancient trump he reach&rsquo;d was hung:</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Thither oft, his glory greeting,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>From Waller&rsquo;s myrtle shades retreating,</p>
+<p>With many a vow from Hope&rsquo;s aspiring tongue, <span class="linenum">70</span></p>
+<p>My trembling feet his guiding steps pursue;</p>
+<p class='indent2'>In vain&ndash;&ndash;Such bliss to one alone,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Of all the sons of soul, was known;</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And Heaven, and Fancy, kindred powers,</p>
+<p>Have now o&rsquo;erturn&rsquo;d the inspiring bowers; <span class="linenum">75</span></p>
+<p>Or curtain&rsquo;d close such scene from every future view.</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_34' name='page_34'></a>34</span>
+<a name='ODE_WRITTEN_IN_THE_BEGINNING_OF_THE_YEAR_1746' id='ODE_WRITTEN_IN_THE_BEGINNING_OF_THE_YEAR_1746'></a>
+<h3>ODE,</h3>
+<h4>WRITTEN IN THE BEGINNING OF THE YEAR 1746.</h4>
+</div>
+<table summary='' class='widthall'><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>How sleep the brave, who sink to rest,</p>
+<p>By all their country&rsquo;s wishes bless&rsquo;d!</p>
+<p>When Spring, with dewy fingers cold,</p>
+<p>Returns to deck their hallow&rsquo;d mould,</p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>She then shall dress a sweeter sod</p>
+</div>
+<p>She there shall dress a sweeter sod <span class="linenum">5</span></p>
+<p>Than Fancy&rsquo;s feet have ever trod.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>By hands unseen the knell is rung;</p>
+</div>
+<p>By fairy hands their knell is rung;</p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>By fairy forms their dirge is sung;</p>
+</div>
+<p>By forms unseen their dirge is sung;</p>
+<p>There Honour comes, a pilgrim-gray,</p>
+<p>To bless the turf that wraps their clay; <span class="linenum">10</span></p>
+<p>And Freedom shall awhile repair,</p>
+<p>To dwell a weeping hermit there!</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_35' name='page_35'></a>35</span>
+<a name='ODE_TO_MERCY' id='ODE_TO_MERCY'></a>
+<h3>ODE TO MERCY.</h3>
+</div>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='center'><span class='smcaplc'>STROPHE.</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>O Thou, who sitt&rsquo;st a smiling bride</p>
+<p class='indent2'>By Valour&rsquo;s arm&rsquo;d and awful side,</p>
+<p>Gentlest of sky-born forms, and best adored;</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Who oft with songs, divine to hear,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Winn&rsquo;st from his fatal grasp the spear, <span class="linenum">5</span></p>
+<p>And hidest in wreaths of flowers his bloodless sword!</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Thou who, amidst the deathful field,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>By godlike chiefs alone beheld,</p>
+<p>Oft with thy bosom bare art found,</p>
+<p>Pleading for him the youth who sinks to ground: <span class="linenum">10</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>See, Mercy, see, with pure and loaded hands,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Before thy shrine my country&rsquo;s genius stands,</p>
+<p>And decks thy altar still, though pierced with many a wound.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='center'><span class='smcaplc'>ANTISTROPHE.</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>When he whom even our joys provoke,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>The fiend of nature join&rsquo;d his yoke, <span class="linenum">15</span></p>
+<p>And rush&rsquo;d in wrath to make our isle his prey;</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Thy form, from out thy sweet abode,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>O&rsquo;ertook him on his blasted road,</p>
+<p>And stopp&rsquo;d his wheels, and look&rsquo;d his rage away.</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_36' name='page_36'></a>36</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>I see recoil his sable steeds, <span class="linenum">20</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>That bore him swift to salvage deeds,</p>
+<p>Thy tender melting eyes they own;</p>
+<p>O maid, for all thy love to Britain shown,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Where Justice bars her iron tower,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>To thee we build a roseate bower; <span class="linenum">25</span></p>
+<p>Thou, thou shalt rule our queen, and share our monarch&rsquo;s throne!</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_37' name='page_37'></a>37</span>
+<a name='ODE_TO_LIBERTY' id='ODE_TO_LIBERTY'></a>
+<h3>ODE TO LIBERTY.</h3>
+</div>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='center'><span class='smcaplc'>STROPHE.</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>Who shall awake the Spartan fife,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And call in solemn sounds to life,</p>
+<p>The youths, whose locks divinely spreading,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Like vernal hyacinths in sullen hue,</p>
+<p>At once the breath of fear and virtue shedding, <span class="linenum">5</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>Applauding Freedom loved of old to view?</p>
+<p>What new Alc&aelig;us,<a name='FNanchor_0021' id='FNanchor_0021'></a><a href='#Footnote_0021' class='fnanchor'>[21]</a> fancy-blest,</p>
+<p>Shall sing the sword, in myrtles drest,</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_38' name='page_38'></a>38</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>At Wisdom&rsquo;s shrine awhile its flame concealing,</p>
+<p>(What place so fit to seal a deed renown&rsquo;d?) <span class="linenum">10</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>Till she her brightest lightnings round revealing,</p>
+<p>It leap&rsquo;d in glory forth, and dealt her prompted wound!</p>
+<p class='indent6'>O goddess, in that feeling hour,</p>
+<p class='indent4'>When most its sounds would court thy ears,</p>
+<p class='indent6'>Let not my shell&rsquo;s misguided power<a name='FNanchor_0022' id='FNanchor_0022'></a><a href='#Footnote_0022' class='fnanchor'>[22]</a> <span class="linenum">15</span></p>
+<p class='indent4'>E&rsquo;er draw thy sad, thy mindful tears.</p>
+<p>No, Freedom, no, I will not tell</p>
+<p>How Rome, before thy weeping face,</p>
+<p>With heaviest sound, a giant-statue, fell,</p>
+<p>Push&rsquo;d by a wild and artless race <span class="linenum">20</span></p>
+<p>From off its wide ambitious base,</p>
+<p>When Time his northern sons of spoil awoke,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And all the blended work of strength and grace,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>With many a rude repeated stroke,</p>
+<p>And many a barbarous yell, to thousand fragments broke. <span class="linenum">25</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='center'><span class='smcaplc'>EPODE.</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>Yet, even where&rsquo;er the least appear&rsquo;d,</p>
+<p>The admiring world thy hand revered;</p>
+<p>Still, &rsquo;midst the scatter&rsquo;d states around,</p>
+<p>Some remnants of her strength were found;</p>
+<p>They saw, by what escaped the storm, <span class="linenum">30</span></p>
+<p>How wondrous rose her perfect form;</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_39' name='page_39'></a>39</span></p>
+<p>How in the great, the labour&rsquo;d whole,</p>
+<p>Each mighty master pour&rsquo;d his soul!</p>
+<p>For sunny Florence, seat of art,</p>
+<p>Beneath her vines preserved a part, <span class="linenum">35</span></p>
+<p>Till they,<a name='FNanchor_0023' id='FNanchor_0023'></a><a href='#Footnote_0023' class='fnanchor'>[23]</a> whom Science loved to name,</p>
+<p>(O who could fear it?) quench&rsquo;d her flame.</p>
+<p>And lo, an humbler relic laid</p>
+<p>In jealous Pisa&rsquo;s olive shade!</p>
+<p>See small Marino<a name='FNanchor_0024' id='FNanchor_0024'></a><a href='#Footnote_0024' class='fnanchor'>[24]</a> joins the theme, <span class="linenum">40</span></p>
+<p>Though least, not last in thy esteem:</p>
+<p>Strike, louder strike the ennobling strings</p>
+<p>To those,<a name='FNanchor_0025' id='FNanchor_0025'></a><a href='#Footnote_0025' class='fnanchor'>[25]</a> whose merchant sons were kings;</p>
+<p>To him,<a name='FNanchor_0026' id='FNanchor_0026'></a><a href='#Footnote_0026' class='fnanchor'>[26]</a> who, deck&rsquo;d with pearly pride,</p>
+<p>In Adria weds his green-hair&rsquo;d bride; <span class="linenum">45</span></p>
+<p>Hail, port of glory, wealth, and pleasure,</p>
+<p>Ne&rsquo;er let me change this Lydian measure:</p>
+<p>Nor e&rsquo;er her former pride relate,</p>
+<p>To sad Liguria&rsquo;s<a name='FNanchor_0027' id='FNanchor_0027'></a><a href='#Footnote_0027' class='fnanchor'>[27]</a> bleeding state.</p>
+<p>Ah no! more pleased thy haunts I seek, <span class="linenum">50</span></p>
+<p>On wild Helvetia&rsquo;s<a name='FNanchor_0028' id='FNanchor_0028'></a><a href='#Footnote_0028' class='fnanchor'>[28]</a> mountains bleak:</p>
+<p>(Where, when the favour&rsquo;d of thy choice,</p>
+<p>The daring archer heard thy voice;</p>
+<p>Forth from his eyrie roused in dread,</p>
+<p>The ravening eagle northward fled:) <span class="linenum">55</span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_40' name='page_40'></a>40</span></p>
+<p>Or dwell in willow&rsquo;d meads more near,</p>
+<p>With those to whom thy stork<a name='FNanchor_0029' id='FNanchor_0029'></a><a href='#Footnote_0029' class='fnanchor'>[29]</a> is dear:</p>
+<p>Those whom the rod of Alva bruised,</p>
+<p>Whose crown a British queen<a name='FNanchor_0030' id='FNanchor_0030'></a><a href='#Footnote_0030' class='fnanchor'>[30]</a> refused!</p>
+<p>The magic works, thou feel&rsquo;st the strains, <span class="linenum">60</span></p>
+<p>One holier name alone remains;</p>
+<p>The perfect spell shall then avail,</p>
+<p>Hail, nymph, adored by Britain, hail!</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='center'><span class='smcaplc'>ANTISTROPHE.</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>Beyond the measure vast of thought,</p>
+<p>The works the wizard time has wrought! <span class="linenum">65</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>The Gaul, &rsquo;tis held of antique story,</p>
+<p>Saw Britain link&rsquo;d to his now adverse strand,<a name='FNanchor_0031' id='FNanchor_0031'></a><a href='#Footnote_0031' class='fnanchor'>[31]</a></p>
+<p class='indent2'>No sea between, nor cliff sublime and hoary,</p>
+<p>He pass&rsquo;d with unwet feet through all our land.</p>
+<p class='indent2'>To the blown Baltic then, they say, <span class="linenum">70</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>The wild waves found another way,</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_41' name='page_41'></a>41</span></p>
+<p>Where Orcas howls, his wolfish mountains rounding;</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Till all the banded west at once &rsquo;gan rise,</p>
+<p>A wide wild storm even nature&rsquo;s self confounding,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Withering her giant sons with strange uncouth surprise. <span class="linenum">75</span></p>
+<p class='indent4'>This pillar&rsquo;d earth so firm and wide,</p>
+<p class='indent6'>By winds and inward labours torn,</p>
+<p class='indent4'>In thunders dread was push&rsquo;d aside,</p>
+<p class='indent6'>And down the shouldering billows borne.</p>
+<p>And see, like gems, her laughing train, <span class="linenum">80</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>The little isles on every side,</p>
+<p>Mona,<a name='FNanchor_0032' id='FNanchor_0032'></a><a href='#Footnote_0032' class='fnanchor'>[32]</a> once hid from those who search the main,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Where thousand elfin shapes abide,</p>
+<p>And Wight who checks the westering tide,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>For thee consenting heaven has each bestow&rsquo;d, <span class="linenum">85</span></p>
+<p>A fair attendant on her sovereign pride:</p>
+<p class='indent2'>To thee this blest divorce she owed,</p>
+<p>For thou hast made her vales thy loved, thy last abode!</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_42' name='page_42'></a>42</span></p>
+<p class='center'><span class='smcaplc'>SECOND EPODE.</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>Then too, &rsquo;tis said, an hoary pile,</p>
+<p>&rsquo;Midst the green navel of our isle, <span class="linenum">90</span></p>
+<p>Thy shrine in some religious wood,</p>
+<p>O soul-enforcing goddess, stood!</p>
+<p>There oft the painted native&rsquo;s feet</p>
+<p>Were wont thy form celestial meet:</p>
+<p>Though now with hopeless toil we trace <span class="linenum">95</span></p>
+<p>Time&rsquo;s backward rolls, to find its place;</p>
+<p>Whether the fiery-tress&eacute;d Dane,</p>
+<p>Or Roman&rsquo;s self o&rsquo;erturn&rsquo;d the fane,</p>
+<p>Or in what heaven-left age it fell,</p>
+<p>&rsquo;Twere hard for modern song to tell. <span class="linenum">100</span></p>
+<p>Yet still, if Truth those beams infuse,</p>
+<p>Which guide at once, and charm the Muse,</p>
+<p>Beyond yon braided clouds that lie,</p>
+<p>Paving the light embroider&rsquo;d sky,</p>
+<p>Amidst the bright pavilion&rsquo;d plains, <span class="linenum">105</span></p>
+<p>The beauteous model still remains.</p>
+<p>There, happier than in islands blest,</p>
+<p>Or bowers by spring or Hebe drest,</p>
+<p>The chiefs who fill our Albion&rsquo;s story,</p>
+<p>In warlike weeds, retired in glory, <span class="linenum">110</span></p>
+<p>Hear their consorted Druids sing</p>
+<p>Their triumphs to the immortal string.</p>
+<p class='indent2'>How may the poet now unfold</p>
+<p>What never tongue or numbers told?</p>
+<p>How learn delighted, and amazed, <span class="linenum">115</span></p>
+<p>What hands unknown that fabric raised?</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_43' name='page_43'></a>43</span></p>
+<p>Even now before his favour&rsquo;d eyes,</p>
+<p>In gothic pride, it seems to rise!</p>
+<p>Yet Gr&aelig;cia&rsquo;s graceful orders join,</p>
+<p>Majestic through the mix&rsquo;d design: <span class="linenum">120</span></p>
+<p>The secret builder knew to choose</p>
+<p>Each sphere-found gem of richest hues;</p>
+<p>Whate&rsquo;er heaven&rsquo;s purer mould contains,</p>
+<p>When nearer suns emblaze its veins;</p>
+<p>There on the walls the patriot&rsquo;s sight <span class="linenum">125</span></p>
+<p>May ever hang with fresh delight,</p>
+<p>And, graved with some prophetic rage,</p>
+<p>Read Albion&rsquo;s fame through every age.</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Ye forms divine, ye laureat band,</p>
+<p>That near her inmost altar stand! <span class="linenum">130</span></p>
+<p>Now soothe her to her blissful train</p>
+<p>Blithe Concord&rsquo;s social form to gain;</p>
+<p>Concord, whose myrtle wand can steep</p>
+<p>Even Anger&rsquo;s bloodshot eyes in sleep;</p>
+<p>Before whose breathing bosom&rsquo;s balm <span class="linenum">135</span></p>
+<p>Rage drops his steel, and storms grow calm:</p>
+<p>Her let our sires and matrons hoar</p>
+<p>Welcome to Briton&rsquo;s ravaged shore;</p>
+<p>Our youths, enamour&rsquo;d of the fair,</p>
+<p>Play with the tangles of her hair, <span class="linenum">140</span></p>
+<p>Till, in one loud applauding sound,</p>
+<p>The nations shout to her around,</p>
+<p>O how supremely art thou blest,</p>
+<p>Thou, lady&ndash;&ndash;thou shalt rule the west!</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_44' name='page_44'></a>44</span>
+<a name='ODE_TO_A_LADY_ON_THE_DEATH_OF_COLONEL_ROSS_IN_THE_ACTION_OF_FONTENOY___WRITTEN_IN_MAY_1745' id='ODE_TO_A_LADY_ON_THE_DEATH_OF_COLONEL_ROSS_IN_THE_ACTION_OF_FONTENOY___WRITTEN_IN_MAY_1745'></a>
+<h3>ODE TO A LADY,</h3>
+<h4><span class='smcaplc'>ON THE DEATH OF COLONEL ROSS, IN THE ACTION OF FONTENOY.</span><br /><br />Written in May, 1745.</h4>
+</div>
+<table summary='' class='widthall'><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>While, lost to all his former mirth,</p>
+<p>Britannia&rsquo;s genius bends to earth,</p>
+<p class='indent4'>And mourns the fatal day:</p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>While sunk in grief he strives to tear</p>
+</div>
+<p>While stain&rsquo;d with blood he strives to tear</p>
+<p>Unseemly from his sea-green hair <span class="linenum">5</span></p>
+<p class='indent4'>The wreaths of cheerful May:</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>The thoughts which musing Pity pays,</p>
+<p>And fond Remembrance loves to raise,</p>
+<p class='indent4'>Your faithful hours attend;</p>
+<p>Still Fancy, to herself unkind, <span class="linenum">10</span></p>
+<p>Awakes to grief the soften&rsquo;d mind,</p>
+<p class='indent4'>And points the bleeding friend.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>By rapid Scheld&rsquo;s descending wave</p>
+<p>His country&rsquo;s vows shall bless the grave,</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_45' name='page_45'></a>45</span></p>
+<p class='indent4'>Where&rsquo;er the youth is laid: <span class="linenum">15</span></p>
+<p>That sacred spot the village hind</p>
+<p>With every sweetest turf shall bind,</p>
+<p class='indent4'>And Peace protect the shade.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>E&rsquo;en now regardful of his doom</p>
+<p>Applauding Honour haunts his tomb,</p>
+<p class='indent4'>With shadowy trophies crown&rsquo;d:</p>
+<p>Whilst Freedom&rsquo;s form beside her roves,</p>
+<p>Majestic through the twilight groves,</p>
+<p class='indent4'>And calls her heroes round.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p><span class="smaller smcap"><i>2<sup>nd</sup> variation of Verse 19</i></span></p>
+<p>O&rsquo;er him, whose doom thy virtues grieve,</p>
+<p>A&euml;rial forms shall sit at eve,</p>
+<p class='indent4'>And bend the pensive head;</p>
+<p>And, fallen to save his injured land,</p>
+<p>Imperial Honour&rsquo;s awful hand</p>
+<p class='indent4'>Shall point his lonely bed.</p>
+</div>
+<p>Blest youth, regardful of thy doom,</p>
+<p>A&euml;rial hands shall build thy tomb, <span class="linenum">20</span></p>
+<p class='indent4'>With shadowy trophies crown&rsquo;d;</p>
+<p>Whilst Honour bathed in tears shall rove</p>
+<p>To sigh thy name through every grove,</p>
+<p class='indent4'>And call his heroes round.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>The warlike dead of every age, <span class="linenum">25</span></p>
+<p>Who fill the fair recording page,</p>
+<p class='indent4'>Shall leave their sainted rest;</p>
+<p>And, half reclining on his spear,</p>
+<p>Each wondering chief by turns appear,</p>
+<p class='indent4'>To hail the blooming guest: <span class="linenum">30</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_46' name='page_46'></a>46</span></p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>Old Edward&rsquo;s sons, untaught to yield,</p>
+</div>
+<p>Old Edward&rsquo;s sons, unknown to yield,</p>
+<p>Shall crowd from Cressy&rsquo;s laurel&rsquo;d field,</p>
+<p class='indent4'>And gaze with fix&rsquo;d delight;</p>
+<p>Again for Britain&rsquo;s wrongs they feel,</p>
+<p>Again they snatch the gleamy steel, <span class="linenum">35</span></p>
+<p class='indent4'>And wish the avenging fight.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>But lo, where, sunk in deep despair,</p>
+<p>Her garments torn, her bosom bare,</p>
+<p class='indent4'>Impatient Freedom lies!</p>
+<p>Her matted tresses madly spread, <span class="linenum">40</span></p>
+<p>To every sod, which wraps the dead,</p>
+<p class='indent4'>She turns her joyless eyes.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>Ne&rsquo;er shall she leave that lowly ground</p>
+<p>Till notes of triumph bursting round</p>
+<p class='indent4'>Proclaim her reign restored: <span class="linenum">45</span></p>
+<p>Till William seek the sad retreat,</p>
+<p>And, bleeding at her sacred feet,</p>
+<p class='indent4'>Present the sated sword.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>If, drawn by all a lover&rsquo;s art,</p>
+</div>
+<p>If, weak to soothe so soft a heart,</p>
+<p>These pictured glories nought impart, <span class="linenum">50</span></p>
+<p class='indent4'>To dry thy constant tear:</p>
+<p>If, yet, in Sorrow&rsquo;s distant eye,</p>
+<p>Exposed and pale thou see&rsquo;st him lie,</p>
+<p class='indent4'>Wild War insulting near:</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_47' name='page_47'></a>47</span></p>
+<p>Where&rsquo;er from time thou court&rsquo;st relief, <span class="linenum">55</span></p>
+<p>The Muse shall still, with social grief,</p>
+<p class='indent4'>Her gentlest promise keep;</p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>Even humble Harting&rsquo;s cottaged vale</p>
+</div>
+<p>Even humbled Harting&rsquo;s cottaged vale<a name='FNanchor_0033' id='FNanchor_0033'></a><a href='#Footnote_0033' class='fnanchor'>[33]</a></p>
+<p>Shall learn the sad repeated tale,</p>
+<p class='indent4'>And bid her shepherds weep. <span class="linenum">60</span></p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_48' name='page_48'></a>48</span>
+<a name='ODE_TO_EVENING' id='ODE_TO_EVENING'></a>
+<h3>ODE TO EVENING.</h3>
+</div>
+<table summary='' class='widthall'><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>If aught of oaten stop, or pastoral song,</p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>May hope, O pensive Eve, to soothe thine ear,</p>
+</div>
+<p>May hope, chaste Eve, to soothe thy modest ear,</p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p class='indent4'>Like thy own solemn springs,</p>
+</div>
+<p class='indent4'>Like thy own brawling springs,</p>
+<p class='indent4'>Thy springs, and dying gales;</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>O Nymph reserved, while now the bright-hair&rsquo;d sun <span class="linenum">5</span></p>
+<p>Sits in yon western tent, whose cloudy skirts,</p>
+<p class='indent4'>With brede ethereal wove,</p>
+<p class='indent4'>O&rsquo;erhang his wavy bed:</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>While air is hush&rsquo;d, save where the weak-eyed bat</p>
+</div>
+<p>Now air is hush&rsquo;d, save where the weak-eyed bat</p>
+<p>With short shrill shriek flits by on leathern wing; <span class="linenum">10</span></p>
+<p class='indent4'>Or where the beetle winds</p>
+<p class='indent4'>His small but sullen horn,</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_49' name='page_49'></a>49</span></p>
+<p>As oft he rises &rsquo;midst the twilight path,</p>
+<p>Against the pilgrim borne in heedless hum:</p>
+<p class='indent4'>Now teach me, maid composed, <span class="linenum">15</span></p>
+<p class='indent4'>To breathe some soften&rsquo;d strain,</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>Whose numbers, stealing through thy darkening vale,</p>
+<p>May not unseemly with its stillness suit;</p>
+<p class='indent4'>As, musing slow, I hail</p>
+<p class='indent4'>Thy genial loved return! <span class="linenum">20</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>For when thy folding-star arising shows</p>
+<p>His paly circlet, at his warning lamp</p>
+<p class='indent4'>The fragrant Hours, and Elves</p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p class='indent4'>Who slept in flowers the day,</p>
+</div>
+<p class='indent4'>Who slept in buds the day,</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>And many a Nymph who wreathes her brows with sedge, <span class="linenum">25</span></p>
+<p>And sheds the freshening dew, and, lovelier still,</p>
+<p class='indent4'>The pensive Pleasures sweet,</p>
+<p class='indent4'>Prepare thy shadowy car.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>Then lead, calm vot&rsquo;ress, where some sheety lake</p>
+<p>Cheers the lone heath, or some time-hallow&rsquo;d pile,</p>
+</div>
+<p>Then let me rove some wild and heathy scene;</p>
+<p>Or find some ruin, &rsquo;midst its dreary dells, <span class="linenum">30</span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_50' name='page_50'></a>50</span></p>
+<p class='indent4'>Whose walls more awful nod</p>
+<p class='indent4'>By thy religious gleams.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>But when chill blustering winds, or driving rain,</p>
+<p>Forbid my willing feet, be mine the hut,</p>
+</div>
+<p>Or, if chill blustering winds, or driving rain,</p>
+<p>Prevent my willing feet, be mine the hut,</p>
+<p class='indent4'>That, from the mountain&rsquo;s side, <span class="linenum">35</span></p>
+<p class='indent4'>Views wilds, and swelling floods,</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>And hamlets brown, and dim-discover&rsquo;d spires;</p>
+<p>And hears their simple bell, and marks o&rsquo;er all</p>
+<p class='indent4'>Thy dewy fingers draw</p>
+<p class='indent4'>The gradual dusky veil. <span class="linenum">40</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>While Spring shall pour his showers, as oft he wont,</p>
+<p>And bathe thy breathing tresses, meekest Eve!</p>
+<p class='indent4'>While Summer loves to sport</p>
+<p class='indent4'>Beneath thy lingering light;</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>While sallow Autumn fills thy lap with leaves; <span class="linenum">45</span></p>
+<p>Or Winter, yelling through the troublous air,</p>
+<p class='indent4'>Affrights thy shrinking train,</p>
+<p class='indent4'>And rudely rends thy robes;</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_51' name='page_51'></a>51</span></p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>So long, sure-found beneath the sylvan shed,</p>
+<p>Shall Fancy, Friendship, Science, rose-lipp&rsquo;d Health,</p>
+<p class='indent4'>Thy gentlest influence own,</p>
+<p class='indent4'>And hymn thy favourite name!</p>
+</div>
+<p>So long, regardful of thy quiet rule,</p>
+<p>Shall Fancy, Friendship, Science, smiling Peace, <span class="linenum">50</span></p>
+<p class='indent4'>Thy gentlest influence own,</p>
+<p class='indent4'>And love thy favourite name!</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_52' name='page_52'></a>52</span>
+<a name='ODE_TO_PEACE' id='ODE_TO_PEACE'></a>
+<h3>ODE TO PEACE.</h3>
+</div>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>O thou, who bad&rsquo;st thy turtles bear</p>
+<p>Swift from his grasp thy golden hair,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And sought&rsquo;st thy native skies;</p>
+<p>When War, by vultures drawn from far,</p>
+<p>To Britain bent his iron car, <span class="linenum">5</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>And bade his storms arise!</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>Tired of his rude tyrannic sway,</p>
+<p>Our youth shall fix some festive day,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>His sullen shrines to burn:</p>
+<p>But thou who hear&rsquo;st the turning spheres, <span class="linenum">10</span></p>
+<p>What sounds may charm thy partial ears,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And gain thy blest return!</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>O Peace, thy injured robes up-bind!</p>
+<p>O rise! and leave not one behind</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Of all thy beamy train; <span class="linenum">15</span></p>
+<p>The British Lion, goddess sweet,</p>
+<p>Lies stretch&rsquo;d on earth to kiss thy feet,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And own thy holier reign.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_53' name='page_53'></a>53</span></p>
+<p>Let others court thy transient smile,</p>
+<p>But come to grace thy western isle, <span class="linenum">20</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>By warlike Honour led;</p>
+<p>And, while around her ports rejoice,</p>
+<p>While all her sons adore thy choice,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>With him for ever wed!</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_54' name='page_54'></a>54</span>
+<a name='THE_MANNERS_AN_ODE' id='THE_MANNERS_AN_ODE'></a>
+<h3>THE MANNERS.</h3>
+<h4>AN ODE.</h4>
+</div>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>Farewell, for clearer ken design&rsquo;d,</p>
+<p>The dim-discover&rsquo;d tracts of mind;</p>
+<p>Truths which, from action&rsquo;s paths retired,</p>
+<p>My silent search in vain required!</p>
+<p>No more my sail that deep explores; <span class="linenum">5</span></p>
+<p>No more I search those magic shores;</p>
+<p>What regions part the world of soul,</p>
+<p>Or whence thy streams, Opinion, roll:</p>
+<p>If e&rsquo;er I round such fairy field,</p>
+<p>Some power impart the spear and shield, <span class="linenum">10</span></p>
+<p>At which the wizard Passions fly;</p>
+<p>By which the giant Follies die!</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>Farewell the porch whose roof is seen</p>
+<p>Arch&rsquo;d with the enlivening olive&rsquo;s green:</p>
+<p>Where Science, prank&rsquo;d in tissued vest, <span class="linenum">15</span></p>
+<p>By Reason, Pride, and Fancy drest,</p>
+<p>Comes, like a bride, so trim array&rsquo;d,</p>
+<p>To wed with Doubt in Plato&rsquo;s shade!</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>Youth of the quick uncheated sight,</p>
+<p>Thy walks, Observance, more invite! <span class="linenum">20</span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_55' name='page_55'></a>55</span></p>
+<p>O thou who lovest that ampler range,</p>
+<p>Where life&rsquo;s wide prospects round thee change,</p>
+<p>And, with her mingling sons allied,</p>
+<p>Throw&rsquo;st the prattling page aside,</p>
+<p>To me, in converse sweet, impart <span class="linenum">25</span></p>
+<p>To read in man the native heart;</p>
+<p>To learn, where Science sure is found,</p>
+<p>From Nature as she lives around;</p>
+<p>And, gazing oft her mirror true,</p>
+<p>By turns each shifting image view! <span class="linenum">30</span></p>
+<p>Till meddling Art&rsquo;s officious lore</p>
+<p>Reverse the lessons taught before;</p>
+<p>Alluring from a safer rule,</p>
+<p>To dream in her enchanted school:</p>
+<p>Thou, Heaven, whate&rsquo;er of great we boast, <span class="linenum">35</span></p>
+<p>Hast blest this social science most.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>Retiring hence to thoughtful cell,</p>
+<p>As Fancy breathes her potent spell,</p>
+<p>Not vain she finds the charmful task,</p>
+<p>In pageant quaint, in motley mask; <span class="linenum">40</span></p>
+<p>Behold, before her musing eyes,</p>
+<p>The countless Manners round her rise;</p>
+<p>While, ever varying as they pass,</p>
+<p>To some Contempt applies her glass:</p>
+<p>With these the white-robed maids combine; <span class="linenum">45</span></p>
+<p>And those the laughing satyrs join!</p>
+<p>But who is he whom now she views,</p>
+<p>In robe of wild contending hues?</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_56' name='page_56'></a>56</span></p>
+<p>Thou by the Passions nursed, I greet</p>
+<p>The comic sock that binds thy feet! <span class="linenum">50</span></p>
+<p>O Humour, thou whose name is known</p>
+<p>To Britain&rsquo;s favour&rsquo;d isle alone:</p>
+<p>Me too amidst thy band admit;</p>
+<p>There where the young-eyed healthful Wit,</p>
+<p>(Whose jewels in his crisp&eacute;d hair <span class="linenum">55</span></p>
+<p>Are placed each other&rsquo;s beams to share;</p>
+<p>Whom no delights from thee divide)</p>
+<p>In laughter loosed, attends thy side.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>By old Miletus,<a name='FNanchor_0034' id='FNanchor_0034'></a><a href='#Footnote_0034' class='fnanchor'>[34]</a> who so long</p>
+<p>Has ceased his love-inwoven song; <span class="linenum">60</span></p>
+<p>By all you taught the Tuscan maids,</p>
+<p>In changed Italia&rsquo;s modern shades;</p>
+<p>By him<a name='FNanchor_0035' id='FNanchor_0035'></a><a href='#Footnote_0035' class='fnanchor'>[35]</a> whose knight&rsquo;s distinguish&rsquo;d name</p>
+<p>Refined a nation&rsquo;s lust of fame;</p>
+<p>Whose tales e&rsquo;en now, with echoes sweet, <span class="linenum">65</span></p>
+<p>Castilia&rsquo;s Moorish hills repeat;</p>
+<p>Or him<a name='FNanchor_0036' id='FNanchor_0036'></a><a href='#Footnote_0036' class='fnanchor'>[36]</a> whom Seine&rsquo;s blue nymphs deplore,</p>
+<p>In watchet weeds on Gallia&rsquo;s shore;</p>
+<p>Who drew the sad Sicilian maid,</p>
+<p>By virtues in her sire betray&rsquo;d. <span class="linenum">70</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_57' name='page_57'></a>57</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>O Nature boon, from whom proceed</p>
+<p>Each forceful thought, each prompted deed;</p>
+<p>If but from thee I hope to feel,</p>
+<p>On all my heart imprint thy seal!</p>
+<p>Let some retreating cynic find <span class="linenum">75</span></p>
+<p>Those oft-turn&rsquo;d scrolls I leave behind:</p>
+<p>The Sports and I this hour agree,</p>
+<p>To rove thy scene-full world with thee!</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_58' name='page_58'></a>58</span>
+<a name='THE_PASSIONS_AN_ODE_FOR_MUSIC' id='THE_PASSIONS_AN_ODE_FOR_MUSIC'></a>
+<h3>THE PASSIONS.</h3>
+<h4>AN ODE FOR MUSIC.</h4>
+</div>
+<p class='center'>Performed at Oxford, with Hayes&rsquo;s music, in 1750.</p>
+<table summary='' class='widthall'><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>When Music, heavenly maid, was young,</p>
+<p>While yet in early Greece she sung,</p>
+<p>The Passions oft, to hear her shell,</p>
+<p>Throng&rsquo;d around her magic cell,</p>
+<p>Exulting, trembling, raging, fainting, <span class="linenum">5</span></p>
+<p>Possest beyond the Muse&rsquo;s painting:</p>
+<p>By turns they felt the glowing mind</p>
+<p>Disturb&rsquo;d, delighted, raised, refined;</p>
+<p>Till once, &rsquo;tis said, when all were fired,</p>
+<p>Fill&rsquo;d with fury, rapt, inspired, <span class="linenum">10</span></p>
+<p>From the supporting myrtles round</p>
+<p>They snatch&rsquo;d her instruments of sound;</p>
+<p>And, as they oft had heard apart</p>
+<p>Sweet lessons of her forceful art,</p>
+<p>Each (for Madness ruled the hour) <span class="linenum">15</span></p>
+<p>Would prove his own expressive power.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>First Fear his hand, its skill to try,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Amid the chords bewilder&rsquo;d laid,</p>
+<p>And back recoil&rsquo;d, he knew not why,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>E&rsquo;en at the sound himself had made. <span class="linenum">20</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_59' name='page_59'></a>59</span></p>
+<p>Next Anger rush&rsquo;d; his eyes on fire,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>In lightnings own&rsquo;d his secret stings:</p>
+<p>In one rude clash he struck the lyre,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And swept with hurried hand the strings.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>With woful measures wan Despair <span class="linenum">25</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>Low, sullen sounds his grief beguiled;</p>
+<p>A solemn, strange, and mingled air;</p>
+<p class='indent2'>&rsquo;Twas sad by fits, by starts &rsquo;twas wild.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>But thou, O Hope, with eyes so fair,</p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p class='indent2'>What was thy delightful measure?</p>
+</div>
+<p class='indent2'>What was thy delighted measure? <span class="linenum">30</span></p>
+<p>Still it whisper&rsquo;d promised pleasure,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And bade the lovely scenes at distance hail!</p>
+<p>Still would her touch the strain prolong;</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And from the rocks, the woods, the vale,</p>
+<p>She call&rsquo;d on Echo still, through all the song; <span class="linenum">35</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>And, where her sweetest theme she chose,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>A soft responsive voice was heard at every close,</p>
+<p>And Hope enchanted smiled, and waved her golden hair.</p>
+<p>And longer had she sung;&ndash;&ndash;but, with a frown,</p>
+<p class='indent4'>Revenge impatient rose: <span class="linenum">40</span></p>
+<p>He threw his blood-stain&rsquo;d sword, in thunder, down;</p>
+<p class='indent4'>And, with a withering look,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>The war-denouncing trumpet took,</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_60' name='page_60'></a>60</span></p>
+<p>And blew a blast so loud and dread,</p>
+<p>Were ne&rsquo;er prophetic sounds so full of woe! <span class="linenum">45</span></p>
+<p class='indent4'>And, ever and anon, he beat</p>
+<p class='indent4'>The doubling drum, with furious heat;</p>
+<p>And though sometimes, each dreary pause between,</p>
+<p class='indent4'>Dejected Pity, at his side,</p>
+<p class='indent4'>Her soul-subduing voice applied, <span class="linenum">50</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>Yet still he kept his wild unalter&rsquo;d mein,</p>
+<p>While each strain&rsquo;d ball of sight seem&rsquo;d bursting from his head.</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Thy numbers, Jealousy, to nought were fix&rsquo;d;</p>
+<p class='indent4'>Sad proof of thy distressful state;</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Of differing themes the veering song was mix&rsquo;d; <span class="linenum">55</span></p>
+<p class='indent4'>And now it courted Love, now raving call&rsquo;d on Hate.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>With eyes upraised, as one inspired,</p>
+<p>Pale Melancholy sate retired;</p>
+<p>And, from her wild sequester&rsquo;d seat,</p>
+<p>In notes by distance made more sweet, <span class="linenum">60</span></p>
+<p>Pour&rsquo;d through the mellow horn her pensive soul:</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And, dashing soft from rocks around,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Bubbling runnels join&rsquo;d the sound;</p>
+<p>Through glades and glooms the mingled measure stole,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Or, o&rsquo;er some haunted stream, with fond delay, <span class="linenum">65</span></p>
+<p class='indent4'>Round an holy calm diffusing,</p>
+<p class='indent4'>Love of Peace, and lonely musing,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>In hollow murmurs died away.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_61' name='page_61'></a>61</span></p>
+<p>But O! how alter&rsquo;d was its sprightlier tone,</p>
+<p>When Cheerfulness, a nymph of healthiest hue, <span class="linenum">70</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>Her bow across her shoulder flung,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Her buskins gemm&rsquo;d with morning dew,</p>
+<p>Blew an inspiring air, that dale and thicket rung,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>The hunter&rsquo;s call, to Faun and Dryad known!</p>
+<p>The oak-crown&rsquo;d Sisters, and their chaste-eyed Queen, <span class="linenum">75</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>Satyrs and Sylvan Boys, were seen,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Peeping from forth their alleys green:</p>
+<p>Brown Exercise rejoiced to hear;</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And Sport leapt up, and seized his beechen spear.</p>
+<p>Last came Joy&rsquo;s ecstatic trial: <span class="linenum">80</span></p>
+<p>He, with viny crown advancing,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>First to the lively pipe his hand addrest;</p>
+<p>But soon he saw the brisk awakening viol,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Whose sweet entrancing voice he loved the best;</p>
+<p>They would have thought who heard the strain <span class="linenum">85</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>They saw, in Tempe&rsquo;s vale, her native maids,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Amidst the festal sounding shades,</p>
+<p>To some unwearied minstrel dancing,</p>
+<p>While, as his flying fingers kiss&rsquo;d the strings,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Love framed with Mirth a gay fantastic round: <span class="linenum">90</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>Loose were her tresses seen, her zone unbound;</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And he, amidst his frolic play,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>As if he would the charming air repay,</p>
+<p>Shook thousand odours from his dewy wings.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>O Music! sphere-descended maid, <span class="linenum">95</span></p>
+<p>Friend of Pleasure, Wisdom&rsquo;s aid!</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_62' name='page_62'></a>62</span></p>
+<p>Why, goddess! why, to us denied,</p>
+<p>Lay&rsquo;st thou thy ancient lyre aside?</p>
+<p>As, in that loved Athenian bower,</p>
+<p>You learn&rsquo;d an all commanding power, <span class="linenum">100</span></p>
+<p>Thy mimic soul, O Nymph endear&rsquo;d,</p>
+<p>Can well recall what then it heard;</p>
+<p>Where is thy native simple heart,</p>
+<p>Devote to Virtue, Fancy, Art?</p>
+<p>Arise, as in that elder time, <span class="linenum">105</span></p>
+<p>Warm, energetic, chaste, sublime!</p>
+<p>Thy wonders, in that godlike age,</p>
+<p>Fill thy recording Sister&rsquo;s page&ndash;&ndash;</p>
+<p>&rsquo;Tis said, and I believe the tale,</p>
+<p>Thy humblest reed could more prevail, <span class="linenum">110</span></p>
+<p>Had more of strength, diviner rage,</p>
+<p>Than all which charms this laggard age;</p>
+<p>E&rsquo;en all at once together found,</p>
+<p>Cecilia&rsquo;s mingled world of sound&ndash;&ndash;</p>
+<p>O bid our vain endeavours cease; <span class="linenum">115</span></p>
+<p>Revive the just designs of Greece:</p>
+<p>Return in all thy simple state!</p>
+<p>Confirm the tales her sons relate!</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_63' name='page_63'></a>63</span>
+<a name='ODE_ON_THE_DEATH_OF_THOMSON_THE_SCENE_IS_SUPPOSED_TO_LIE_ON_THE_THAMES_NEAR_RICHMOND' id='ODE_ON_THE_DEATH_OF_THOMSON_THE_SCENE_IS_SUPPOSED_TO_LIE_ON_THE_THAMES_NEAR_RICHMOND'></a>
+<h3>ODE ON THE DEATH OF THOMSON.</h3>
+<h4>THE SCENE IS SUPPOSED TO LIE ON THE THAMES NEAR RICHMOND.</h4>
+</div>
+<table summary='' class='widthall'><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>In yonder grave a Druid lies,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Where slowly winds the stealing wave;</p>
+<p>The year&rsquo;s best sweets shall duteous rise</p>
+<p class='indent2'>To deck its poet&rsquo;s sylvan grave.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>In yon deep bed of whispering reeds <span class="linenum">5</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>His airy harp<a name='FNanchor_0037' id='FNanchor_0037'></a><a href='#Footnote_0037' class='fnanchor'>[37]</a> shall now be laid,</p>
+<p>That he, whose heart in sorrow bleeds,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>May love through life the soothing shade.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>Then maids and youths shall linger here,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And while its sounds at distance swell, <span class="linenum">10</span></p>
+<p>Shall sadly seem in pity&rsquo;s ear</p>
+<p class='indent2'>To hear the woodland pilgrim&rsquo;s knell.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_64' name='page_64'></a>64</span></p>
+<p>Remembrance oft shall haunt the shore</p>
+<p class='indent2'>When Thames in summer wreaths is drest,</p>
+<p>And oft suspend the dashing oar, <span class="linenum">15</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>To bid his gentle spirit rest!</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>And oft, as ease and health retire</p>
+<p class='indent2'>To breezy lawn, or forest deep,</p>
+<p>The friend shall view yon whitening<a name='FNanchor_0038' id='FNanchor_0038'></a><a href='#Footnote_0038' class='fnanchor'>[38]</a> spire</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And &rsquo;mid the varied landscape weep. <span class="linenum">20</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>But thou who own&rsquo;st that earthly bed,</p>
+</div>
+<p>But thou, who own&rsquo;st that earthy bed,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Ah! what will every dirge avail;</p>
+<p>Or tears, which love and pity shed,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>That mourn beneath the gliding sail?</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>Yet lives there one, whose heedless eye <span class="linenum">25</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>Shall scorn thy pale shrine glimmering near?</p>
+<p>With him, sweet bard, may fancy die,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And joy desert the blooming year.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>But thou, lorn stream, whose sullen tide</p>
+<p class='indent2'>No sedge-crown&rsquo;d sisters now attend, <span class="linenum">30</span></p>
+<p>Now waft me from the green hill&rsquo;s side,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Whose cold turf hides the buried friend!</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_65' name='page_65'></a>65</span></p>
+<p>And see, the fairy valleys fade;</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Dun night has veil&rsquo;d the solemn view!</p>
+<p>Yet once again, dear parted shade, <span class="linenum">35</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>Meek Nature&rsquo;s Child, again adieu!</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>The genial meads,<a name='FNanchor_0039' id='FNanchor_0039'></a><a href='#Footnote_0039' class='fnanchor'>[39]</a> assign&rsquo;d to bless</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Thy life, shall mourn thy early doom;</p>
+<p>Their hinds and shepherd-girls shall dress,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>With simple hands, thy rural tomb. <span class="linenum">40</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>Long, long, thy stone and pointed clay</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Shall melt the musing Briton&rsquo;s eyes:</p>
+<p>O! vales and wild woods, shall he say,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>In yonder grave your Druid lies!</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_66' name='page_66'></a>66</span>
+<a name='ODE_ON_THE_POPULAR_SUPERSTITIONS_OF_THE_HIGHLANDS_OF_SCOTLAND_CONSIDERED_AS_THE_SUBJECT_OF_POETRY_INSCRIBED_TO_MR_JOHN_HOME' id='ODE_ON_THE_POPULAR_SUPERSTITIONS_OF_THE_HIGHLANDS_OF_SCOTLAND_CONSIDERED_AS_THE_SUBJECT_OF_POETRY_INSCRIBED_TO_MR_JOHN_HOME'></a>
+<h3>ODE ON THE POPULAR SUPERSTITIONS OF THE HIGHLANDS OF SCOTLAND;</h3>
+<h4>CONSIDERED AS THE SUBJECT OF POETRY; INSCRIBED TO MR. JOHN HOME.</h4>
+</div>
+<table summary='' class='widthall'><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='center'>I.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>Home, thou return&rsquo;st from Thames, whose Naiads long</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Have seen thee lingering with a fond delay,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>&rsquo;Mid those soft friends, whose hearts, some future day,</p>
+<p>Shall melt, perhaps, to hear thy tragic song.<a name='FNanchor_0040' id='FNanchor_0040'></a><a href='#Footnote_0040' class='fnanchor'>[40]</a></p>
+<p>Go, not unmindful of that cordial youth<a name='FNanchor_0041' id='FNanchor_0041'></a><a href='#Footnote_0041' class='fnanchor'>[41]</a> <span class="linenum">5</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>Whom, long endear&rsquo;d, thou leavest by Levant&rsquo;s side;</p>
+<p>Together let us wish him lasting truth,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And joy untainted with his destined bride.</p>
+<p>Go! nor regardless, while these numbers boast</p>
+<p class='indent2'>My short-lived bliss, forget my social name; <span class="linenum">10</span></p>
+<p>But think, far off, how, on the southern coast,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>I met thy friendship with an equal flame!</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_67' name='page_67'></a>67</span></p>
+<p>Fresh to that soil thou turn&rsquo;st, where every vale</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Shall prompt the poet, and his song demand:</p>
+<p>To thee thy copious subjects ne&rsquo;er shall fail; <span class="linenum">15</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>Thou need&rsquo;st but take thy pencil to thy hand,</p>
+<p>And paint what all believe, who own thy genial land.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='center'>II.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>There must thou wake perforce thy Doric quill;</p>
+<p class='indent2'>&rsquo;Tis Fancy&rsquo;s land to which thou sett&rsquo;st thy feet;</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Where still, &rsquo;tis said, the fairy people meet, <span class="linenum">20</span></p>
+<p>Beneath each birken shade, on mead or hill;</p>
+<p>There, each trim lass, that skims the milky store,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>To the swart tribes their creamy bowls allots;</p>
+<p>By night they sip it round the cottage door,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>While airy minstrels warble jocund notes. <span class="linenum">25</span></p>
+<p>There, every herd, by sad experience, knows</p>
+<p class='indent2'>How, wing&rsquo;d with fate, their elf-shot arrows fly,</p>
+<p>When the sick ewe her summer food foregoes,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Or, stretch&rsquo;d on earth, the heart-smit heifers lie.</p>
+<p>Such airy beings awe the untutor&rsquo;d swain: <span class="linenum">30</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>Nor thou, though learn&rsquo;d, his homelier thoughts neglect;</p>
+<p>Let thy sweet muse the rural faith sustain;</p>
+<p class='indent2'>These are the themes of simple, sure effect,</p>
+<p>That add new conquests to her boundless reign,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And fill, with double force, her heart-commanding strain. <span class="linenum">35</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_68' name='page_68'></a>68</span></p>
+<p class='center'>III.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>E&rsquo;en yet preserved, how often mayst thou hear,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Where to the pole the Boreal mountains run,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Taught by the father, to his listening son,</p>
+<p>Strange lays, whose power had charm&rsquo;d a Spenser&rsquo;s ear.</p>
+<p>At every pause, before thy mind possest, <span class="linenum">40</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>Old Runic bards shall seem to rise around,</p>
+<p>With uncouth lyres, in many-colour&rsquo;d vest,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Their matted hair with boughs fantastic crown&rsquo;d:</p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>Whether thou bidst the well taught hind relate</p>
+</div>
+<p>Whether thou bidst the well taught hind repeat</p>
+<p class='indent2'>The choral dirge, that mourns some chieftain brave, <span class="linenum">45</span></p>
+<p>When every shrieking maid her bosom beat,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And strew&rsquo;d with choicest herbs his scented grave!</p>
+<p>Or whether, sitting in the shepherd&rsquo;s shiel,<a name='FNanchor_0042' id='FNanchor_0042'></a><a href='#Footnote_0042' class='fnanchor'>[42]</a></p>
+<p class='indent2'>Thou hear&rsquo;st some sounding tale of war&rsquo;s alarms;</p>
+<p>When at the bugle&rsquo;s call, with fire and steel, <span class="linenum">50</span></p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p class='indent2'>The sturdy clans pour&rsquo;d forth their bony swarms,</p>
+</div>
+<p class='indent2'>The sturdy clans pour&rsquo;d forth their brawny swarms,</p>
+<p>And hostile brothers met, to prove each other&rsquo;s arms.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_69' name='page_69'></a>69</span></p>
+<p class='center'>IV.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&rsquo;Tis thine to sing, how, framing hideous spells,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>In Sky&rsquo;s lone isle, the gifted wizard seer,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Lodged in the wintry cave with Fate&rsquo;s fell spear, <span class="linenum">55</span></p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>Or in the gloom of Uist&rsquo;s dark forest dwells:</p>
+</div>
+<p>Or in the depth of Uist&rsquo;s dark forest dwells:</p>
+<p class='indent2'>How they, whose sight such dreary dreams engross,</p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>With their own visions oft afflicted droop,</p>
+</div>
+<p>With their own visions oft astonish&rsquo;d droop,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>When, o&rsquo;er the watery strath, or quaggy moss,</p>
+<p>They see the gliding ghosts unbodied troop. <span class="linenum">60</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>Or, if in sports, or on the festive green,</p>
+<p>Their destined glance some fated youth descry,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Who now, perhaps, in lusty vigour seen,</p>
+<p>And rosy health, shall soon lamented die.</p>
+<p class='indent2'>For them the viewless forms of air obey; <span class="linenum">65</span></p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>Their bidding mark, and at their beck repair:</p>
+</div>
+<p>Their bidding heed, and at their beck repair:</p>
+<p class='indent2'>They know what spirit brews the stormful day,</p>
+<p>And heartless, oft like moody madness, stare</p>
+<p>To see the phantom train their secret work prepare.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='center'>V.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>To monarchs dear, some hundred miles astray, <span class="linenum">70</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>Oft have they seen Fate give the fatal blow!</p>
+<p class='indent2'>The seer, in Sky, shriek&rsquo;d as the blood did flow,</p>
+<p>When headless Charles warm on the scaffold lay!</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_70' name='page_70'></a>70</span></p>
+<p>As Boreas threw his young Aurora<a name='FNanchor_0043' id='FNanchor_0043'></a><a href='#Footnote_0043' class='fnanchor'>[43]</a> forth,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>In the first year of the first George&rsquo;s reign, <span class="linenum">75</span></p>
+<p>And battles raged in welkin of the North,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>They mourn&rsquo;d in air, fell, fell Rebellion slain!</p>
+<p>And as, of late, they joy&rsquo;d in Preston&rsquo;s fight,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Saw, at sad Falkirk, all their hopes near crown&rsquo;d!</p>
+<p>They raved! divining, through their second sight,<a name='FNanchor_0044' id='FNanchor_0044'></a><a href='#Footnote_0044' class='fnanchor'>[44]</a> <span class="linenum">80</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>Pale, red Culloden, where these hopes were drown&rsquo;d!</p>
+<p>Illustrious William!<a name='FNanchor_0045' id='FNanchor_0045'></a><a href='#Footnote_0045' class='fnanchor'>[45]</a> Britain&rsquo;s guardian name!</p>
+<p class='indent2'>One William saved us from a tyrant&rsquo;s stroke;</p>
+<p>He, for a sceptre, gain&rsquo;d heroic fame,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>But thou, more glorious, Slavery&rsquo;s chain hast broke, <span class="linenum">85</span></p>
+<p>To reign a private man, and bow to Freedom&rsquo;s yoke!</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='center'>VI.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>These, too, thou&rsquo;lt sing! for well thy magic muse</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Can to the topmost heaven of grandeur soar;</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Or stoop to wail the swain that is no more!</p>
+<p>Ah, homely swains! your homeward steps ne&rsquo;er lose; <span class="linenum">90</span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_71' name='page_71'></a>71</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>Let not dank Will<a name='FNanchor_0046' id='FNanchor_0046'></a><a href='#Footnote_0046' class='fnanchor'>[46]</a> mislead you to the heath;</p>
+<p>Dancing in mirky night, o&rsquo;er fen and lake,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>He glows, to draw you downward to your death,</p>
+<p>In his bewitch&rsquo;d, low, marshy, willow brake!</p>
+<p>What though far off, from some dark dell espied, <span class="linenum">95</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>His glimmering mazes cheer the excursive sight,</p>
+<p>Yet turn, ye wanderers, turn your steps aside,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Nor trust the guidance of that faithless light;</p>
+<p>For watchful, lurking, &rsquo;mid the unrustling reed,</p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p class='indent2'>At those sad hours the wily monster lies;</p>
+</div>
+<p class='indent2'>At those mirk hours the wily monster lies, <span class="linenum">100</span></p>
+<p>And listens oft to hear the passing steed,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And frequent round him rolls his sullen eyes,</p>
+<p>If chance his savage wrath may some weak wretch surprise.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='center'>VII.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>Ah, luckless swain, o&rsquo;er all unblest, indeed!</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Whom late bewilder&rsquo;d in the dank, dark fen, <span class="linenum">105</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>Far from his flocks, and smoking hamlet, then!</p>
+<p>To that sad spot where hums the sedgy weed:</p>
+<p class='indent2'>On him, enraged, the fiend, in angry mood,</p>
+<p>Shall never look with pity&rsquo;s kind concern,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>But instant, furious, raise the whelming flood <span class="linenum">110</span></p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>O&rsquo;er its drowned bank, forbidding all return!</p>
+</div>
+<p>O&rsquo;er its drown&rsquo;d banks, forbidding all return!</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_72' name='page_72'></a>72</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>Or, if he meditate his wish&rsquo;d escape,</p>
+<p>To some dim hill, that seems uprising near,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>To his faint eye the grim and grisly shape,</p>
+<p>In all its terrors clad, shall wild appear. <span class="linenum">115</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>Meantime the watery surge shall round him rise,</p>
+<p>Pour&rsquo;d sudden forth from every swelling source!</p>
+<p class='indent2'>What now remains but tears and hopeless sighs?</p>
+<p>His fear-shook limbs have lost their youthly force,</p>
+<p>And down the waves he floats, a pale and breathless corse! <span class="linenum">120</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='center'>VIII.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>For him in vain his anxious wife shall wait,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Or wander forth to meet him on his way;</p>
+<p>For him in vain at to-fall of the day,</p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p class='indent2'>His babes shall linger at the cottage gate!</p>
+</div>
+<p class='indent2'>His babes shall linger at the unclosing gate!</p>
+<p>Ah, ne&rsquo;er shall he return! Alone, if night <span class="linenum">125</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>Her travel&rsquo;d limbs in broken slumbers steep,</p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>With dropping willows drest, his mournful sprite</p>
+</div>
+<p>With drooping willows drest, his mournful sprite</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Shall visit sad, perchance, her silent sleep:</p>
+<p>Then he, perhaps, with moist and watery hand,</p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p class='indent2'>Shall seem to press her cold and shuddering cheek,</p>
+</div>
+<p class='indent2'>Shall fondly seem to press her shuddering cheek, <span class="linenum">130</span></p>
+<p>And with his blue swoln face before her stand,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And, shivering cold, these piteous accents speak:</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_73' name='page_73'></a>73</span></p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>Proceed, dear wife, thy daily toils pursue,</p>
+</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Pursue, dear wife, thy daily toils pursue,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>At dawn or dusk, industrious as before;</p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>Nor e&rsquo;er of me one hapless thought renew,</p>
+</div>
+<p>Nor e&rsquo;er of me one helpless thought renew, <span class="linenum">135</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>While I lie weltering on the osier&rsquo;d shore,</p>
+<p>Drown&rsquo;d by the Kelpie&rsquo;s<a name='FNanchor_0047' id='FNanchor_0047'></a><a href='#Footnote_0047' class='fnanchor'>[47]</a> wrath, nor e&rsquo;er shall aid thee more!&rdquo;</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='center'>IX.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>Unbounded is thy range; with varied stile</p>
+</div>
+<p>Unbounded is thy range; with varied skill</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Thy muse may, like those feathery tribes which spring</p>
+<p class='indent2'>From their rude rocks, extend her skirting wing <span class="linenum">140</span></p>
+<p>Round the moist marge of each cold Hebrid isle,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>To that hoar pile<a name='FNanchor_0048' id='FNanchor_0048'></a><a href='#Footnote_0048' class='fnanchor'>[48]</a> which still its ruins shows:</p>
+<p>In whose small vaults a pigmy folk is found,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Whose bones the delver with his spade upthrows,</p>
+<p>And culls them, wondering, from the hallow&rsquo;d ground! <span class="linenum">145</span></p>
+<p>Or thither,<a name='FNanchor_0049' id='FNanchor_0049'></a><a href='#Footnote_0049' class='fnanchor'>[49]</a> where, beneath the showery west,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>The mighty kings of three fair realms are laid;</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_74' name='page_74'></a>74</span></p>
+<p>Once foes, perhaps, together now they rest,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>No slaves revere them, and no wars invade:</p>
+<p>Yet frequent now, at midnight&rsquo;s solemn hour, <span class="linenum">150</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>The rifted mounds their yawning cells unfold,</p>
+<p>And forth the monarchs stalk with sovereign power,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>In pageant robes, and wreath&rsquo;d with sheeny gold,</p>
+<p>And on their twilight tombs a&euml;rial council hold.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='center'>X.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>But, oh, o&rsquo;er all, forget not Kilda&rsquo;s race, <span class="linenum">155</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>On whose bleak rocks, which brave the wasting tides,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Fair Nature&rsquo;s daughter, Virtue, yet abides.</p>
+<p>Go! just, as they, their blameless manners trace!</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Then to my ear transmit some gentle song,</p>
+<p>Of those whose lives are yet sincere and plain, <span class="linenum">160</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>Their bounded walks the rugged cliffs along,</p>
+<p>And all their prospect but the wintry main.</p>
+<p class='indent2'>With sparing temperance, at the needful time,</p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>They drain the sainted spring; or, hunger-prest,</p>
+</div>
+<p>They drain the scented spring; or, hunger-prest,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Along the Atlantic rock, undreading climb, <span class="linenum">165</span></p>
+<p>And of its eggs despoil the solan&rsquo;s<a name='FNanchor_0050' id='FNanchor_0050'></a><a href='#Footnote_0050' class='fnanchor'>[50]</a> nest.</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_75' name='page_75'></a>75</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>Thus, blest in primal innocence, they live</p>
+<p>Sufficed, and happy with that frugal fare</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Which tasteful toil and hourly danger give.</p>
+<p>Hard is their shallow soil, and bleak and bare; <span class="linenum">170</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>Nor ever vernal bee was heard to murmur there!</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='center'>XI.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>Nor need&rsquo;st thou blush that such false themes engage</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Thy gentle mind, of fairer stores possest;</p>
+<p class='indent2'>For not alone they touch the village breast,</p>
+<p>But fill&rsquo;d, in elder time, the historic page. <span class="linenum">175</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>There, Shakespeare&rsquo;s self, with every garland crown&rsquo;d,</p>
+<p>Flew to those fairy climes his fancy sheen,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>In musing hour; his wayward sisters found,</p>
+<p>And with their terrors drest the magic scene.</p>
+<p class='indent2'>From them he sung, when, &rsquo;mid his bold design, <span class="linenum">180</span></p>
+<p>Before the Scot, afflicted, and aghast!</p>
+<p class='indent2'>The shadowy kings of Banquo&rsquo;s fated line</p>
+<p>Through the dark cave in gleamy pageant pass&rsquo;d.</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Proceed! nor quit the tales which, simply told,</p>
+<p>Could once so well my answering bosom pierce; <span class="linenum">185</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>Proceed, in forceful sounds, and colours bold,</p>
+<p>The native legends of thy land rehearse;</p>
+<p>To such adapt thy lyre, and suit thy powerful verse.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='center'>XII.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>In scenes like these, which, daring to depart</p>
+<p class='indent2'>From sober truth, are still to nature true, <span class="linenum">190</span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_76' name='page_76'></a>76</span></p>
+<p>And call forth fresh delight to Fancy&rsquo;s view,</p>
+<p>The heroic muse employ&rsquo;d her Tasso&rsquo;s art!</p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p class='indent2'>How have I trembled, when, at Tancred&rsquo;s side,</p>
+<p>Like him I stalk&rsquo;d, and all his passions felt;</p>
+<p class='indent2'>When charm&rsquo;d by Ismen, through the forest wide,</p>
+<p>Bark&rsquo;d in each plant a talking spirit dwelt!</p>
+</div>
+<p class='indent2'>How have I trembled, when, at Tancred&rsquo;s stroke,</p>
+<p>Its gushing blood the gaping cypress pour&rsquo;d!</p>
+<p class='indent2'>When each live plant with mortal accents spoke, <span class="linenum">195</span></p>
+<p>And the wild blast upheaved the vanish&rsquo;d sword!</p>
+<p class='indent2'>How have I sat, when piped the pensive wind,</p>
+<p>To hear his harp by British Fairfax strung!</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Prevailing poet! whose undoubting mind</p>
+<p>Believed the magic wonders which he sung! <span class="linenum">200</span></p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p class='indent2'>Hence, sure to charm, his early numbers flow,</p>
+<p>Though strong, yet sweet&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;</p>
+<p>Though faithful, sweet; though strong, of simple kind.</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Hence, with each theme, he bids the bosom glow,</p>
+<p>While his warm lays an easy passage find,</p>
+<p>Pour&rsquo;d through each inmost nerve, and lull the harmonious ear.</p>
+</div>
+<p class='indent2'>Hence, at each sound, imagination glows!</p>
+<p>Hence, at each picture, vivid life starts here!</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Hence his warm lay with softest sweetness flows!</p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>Melting it flows, pure, numerous, strong, and clear,</p>
+</div>
+<p>Melting it flows, pure, murmuring, strong, and clear,</p>
+<p>And fills the impassion&rsquo;d heart, and wins the harmonious ear! <span class="linenum">205</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_77' name='page_77'></a>77</span></p>
+<p class='center'>XIII.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>All hail, ye scenes that o&rsquo;er my soul prevail!</p>
+<p>Ye splendid friths and lakes, which, far away,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Are by smooth Annan<a href='#Footnote_0051' class='fnanchor'>[51]</a> fill&rsquo;d or pastoral Tay,<a href='#Footnote_0051' class='fnanchor'>[51]</a></p>
+<p>Or Don&rsquo;s<a name='FNanchor_0051' id='FNanchor_0051'></a><a href='#Footnote_0051' class='fnanchor'>[51]</a> romantic springs at distance hail!</p>
+<p>The time shall come, when I, perhaps, may tread <span class="linenum">210</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>Your lowly glens, o&rsquo;erhung with spreading broom;</p>
+<p>Or, o&rsquo;er your stretching heaths, by Fancy led;</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Or, o&rsquo;er your mountains creep, in awful gloom!</p>
+<p>Then will I dress once more the faded bower,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Where Jonson<a name='FNanchor_0052' id='FNanchor_0052'></a><a href='#Footnote_0052' class='fnanchor'>[52]</a> sat in Drummond&rsquo;s classic shade; <span class="linenum">215</span></p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>Or crop from Tiviot&rsquo;s dale each&ndash;&ndash;</p>
+</div>
+<p>Or crop, from Tiviotdale, each lyric flower,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And mourn, on Yarrow&rsquo;s banks, where Willy&rsquo;s laid!</p>
+<p>Meantime, ye powers that on the plains which bore</p>
+<p class='indent2'>The cordial youth, on Lothian&rsquo;s plains,<a name='FNanchor_0053' id='FNanchor_0053'></a><a href='#Footnote_0053' class='fnanchor'>[53]</a> attend!&ndash;&ndash;</p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>Where&rsquo;er he dwell, on hill, or lowly muir,</p>
+</div>
+<p>Where&rsquo;er Home dwells, on hill, or lowly moor, <span class="linenum">220</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>To him I lose, your kind protection lend,</p>
+<p>And, touch&rsquo;d with love like mine, preserve my absent friend!</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_78' name='page_78'></a>78</span>
+<a name='AN_EPISTLE_ADDRESSED_TO_SIR_THOMAS_HANMER_ON_HIS_EDITION_OF_SHAKESPEARES_WORKS' id='AN_EPISTLE_ADDRESSED_TO_SIR_THOMAS_HANMER_ON_HIS_EDITION_OF_SHAKESPEARES_WORKS'></a>
+<h3>AN EPISTLE,</h3>
+<h4>ADDRESSED TO SIR THOMAS HANMER, ON HIS EDITION OF SHAKESPEARE&rsquo;S WORKS.</h4>
+</div>
+<table summary='' class='widthall'><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'><span class='smcap'>Sir,</span></p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>While, own&rsquo;d by you, with smiles the Muse surveys</p>
+<p>The expected triumph of her sweetest lays:</p>
+<p>While, stretch&rsquo;d at ease, she boasts your guardian aid,</p>
+<p>Secure, and happy in her sylvan shade:</p>
+<p>Excuse her fears, who scarce a verse bestows,</p>
+<p>In just remembrance of the debt she owes;</p>
+<p>With conscious, &amp;c.</p>
+</div>While, born to bring the Muse&rsquo;s happier days
+<p>A patriot&rsquo;s hand protects a poet&rsquo;s lays,</p>
+<p>While nursed by you she sees her myrtles bloom,</p>
+<p>Green and unwither&rsquo;d o&rsquo;er his honour&rsquo;d tomb;</p>
+<p>Excuse her doubts, if yet she fears to tell <span class="linenum">5</span></p>
+<p>What secret transports in her bosom swell:</p>
+<p>With conscious awe she hears the critic&rsquo;s fame,</p>
+<p>And blushing hides her wreath at Shakespeare&rsquo;s name.</p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>Long slighted Fancy with a mother&rsquo;s care</p>
+<p>Wept o&rsquo;er his works, and felt the last despair:</p>
+<p>Torn from her head, she saw the roses fall,</p>
+<p>By all deserted, though admired by all:</p>
+</div>
+<p>Hard was the lot those injured strains endured,</p>
+<p>Unown&rsquo;d by Science, and by years obscured: <span class="linenum">10</span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_79' name='page_79'></a>79</span></p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>And &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; she cried, &ldquo;shall Science still resign</p>
+<p>Whate&rsquo;er is Nature&rsquo;s, and whate&rsquo;er is mine?</p>
+<p>Shall Taste and Art but show a cold regard,</p>
+<p>And scornful Pride reject the unletter&rsquo;d bard?</p>
+<p>Ye myrtled nymphs, who own my gentle reign,</p>
+<p>Tune the sweet lyre, and grace my airy train,</p>
+<p>If, where ye rove, your searching eyes have known</p>
+<p>One perfect mind, which judgment calls its own;</p>
+<p>There every breast its fondest hopes must bend,</p>
+<p>And every Muse with tears await her friend.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&rsquo;Twas then fair Isis from her stream arose,</p>
+<p>In kind compassion of her sister&rsquo;s woes.</p>
+<p>&rsquo;Twas then she promised to the mourning maid</p>
+<p>The immortal honours which thy hands have paid:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My best loved son,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;shall yet restore</p>
+<p>Thy ruin&rsquo;d sweets, and Fancy weep no more.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Each rising art by slow gradation moves;</p>
+<p>Toil builds, &amp;c.</p>
+</div>
+<p>Fair Fancy wept; and echoing sighs confess&rsquo;d</p>
+<p>A fix&rsquo;d despair in every tuneful breast.</p>
+<p>Not with more grief the afflicted swains appear,</p>
+<p>When wintry winds deform the plenteous year;</p>
+<p>When lingering frosts the ruin&rsquo;d seats invade <span class="linenum">15</span></p>
+<p>Where Peace resorted, and the Graces play&rsquo;d.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>Each rising art by just gradation moves,</p>
+<p>Toil builds on toil, and age on age improves:</p>
+<p>The Muse alone unequal dealt her rage,</p>
+<p>And graced with noblest pomp her earliest stage. <span class="linenum">20</span></p>
+<p>Preserved through time, the speaking scenes impart</p>
+<p>Each changeful wish of Ph&aelig;dra&rsquo;s tortured heart;</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_80' name='page_80'></a>80</span></p>
+<p>Or paint the curse that mark&rsquo;d the Theban&rsquo;s<a name='FNanchor_0054' id='FNanchor_0054'></a><a href='#Footnote_0054' class='fnanchor'>[54]</a> reign,</p>
+<p>A bed incestuous, and a father slain.</p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>Line after line our pitying eyes o&rsquo;erflow,</p>
+</div>
+<p>With kind concern our pitying eyes o&rsquo;erflow, <span class="linenum">25</span></p>
+<p>Trace the sad tale, and own another&rsquo;s woe.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p class='indent2'>To Rome removed, with equal power to please,</p>
+</div>
+<p class='indent2'>To Rome removed, with wit secure to please,</p>
+<p>The comic Sisters kept their native ease:</p>
+<p>With jealous fear, declining Greece beheld</p>
+<p>Her own Menander&rsquo;s art almost excell&rsquo;d; <span class="linenum">30</span></p>
+<p>But every Muse essay&rsquo;d to raise in vain</p>
+<p>Some labour&rsquo;d rival of her tragic strain:</p>
+<p>Ilissus&rsquo; laurels, though transferr&rsquo;d with toil,</p>
+<p>Droop&rsquo;d their fair leaves, nor knew the unfriendly soil.</p>
+<p class='indent2'>As Arts expired, resistless Dulness rose; <span class="linenum">35</span></p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>When Rome herself, her envied glories dead,</p>
+<p>No more imperial, stoop&rsquo;d her conquer&rsquo;d head;</p>
+<p>Luxuriant Florence chose a softer theme,</p>
+<p>While all was peace, by Arno&rsquo;s silver stream.</p>
+<p>With sweeter notes the Etrurian vales complain&rsquo;d,</p>
+<p>And arts reviving told a Cosmo reign&rsquo;d.</p>
+<p>Their wanton lyres the bards of Provence strung,</p>
+<p>Sweet flow&rsquo;d the lays, but love was all they sung.</p>
+<p>The gay, &amp;c.</p>
+</div>
+<p>Goths, Priests, or Vandals,&ndash;&ndash;all were Learning&rsquo;s foes.</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_81' name='page_81'></a>81</span></p>
+<p>Till Julius<a name='FNanchor_0055' id='FNanchor_0055'></a><a href='#Footnote_0055' class='fnanchor'>[55]</a> first recall&rsquo;d each exiled maid,</p>
+<p>And Cosmo own&rsquo;d them in the Etrurian shade:</p>
+<p>Then, deeply skill&rsquo;d in love&rsquo;s engaging theme,</p>
+<p>The soft Proven&ccedil;al pass&rsquo;d to Arno&rsquo;s stream: <span class="linenum">40</span></p>
+<p>With graceful ease the wanton lyre he strung;</p>
+<p>Sweet flow&rsquo;d the lays&ndash;&ndash;but love was all he sung.</p>
+<p>The gay description could not fail to move,</p>
+<p>For, led by nature, all are friends to love.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p class='indent2'>But Heaven, still rising in its works, decreed</p>
+</div>
+<p class='indent2'>But Heaven, still various in its works, decreed <span class="linenum">45</span></p>
+<p>The perfect boast of time should last succeed.</p>
+<p>The beauteous union must appear at length,</p>
+<p>Of Tuscan fancy, and Athenian strength:</p>
+<p>One greater Muse Eliza&rsquo;s reign adorn,</p>
+<p>And e&rsquo;en a Shakespeare to her fame be born! <span class="linenum">50</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>Yet ah! so bright her morning&rsquo;s opening ray,</p>
+<p>In vain our Britain hoped an equal day!</p>
+<p>No second growth the western isle could bear,</p>
+<p>At once exhausted with too rich a year.</p>
+<p>Too nicely Jonson knew the critic&rsquo;s part; <span class="linenum">55</span></p>
+<p>Nature in him was almost lost in art.</p>
+<p>Of softer mould the gentle Fletcher came,</p>
+<p>The next in order, as the next in name;</p>
+<p>With pleased attention, &rsquo;midst his scenes we find</p>
+<p>Each glowing thought that warms the female mind; <span class="linenum">60</span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_82' name='page_82'></a>82</span></p>
+<p>Each melting sigh, and every tender tear;</p>
+<p>The lover&rsquo;s wishes, and the virgin&rsquo;s fear.</p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>His every strain the Loves and Graces own;</p>
+</div>
+<p>His every strain<a name='FNanchor_0056' id='FNanchor_0056'></a><a href='#Footnote_0056' class='fnanchor'>[56]</a> the Smiles and Graces own;</p>
+<p>But stronger Shakespeare felt for man alone:</p>
+<p>Drawn by his pen, our ruder passions stand <span class="linenum">65</span></p>
+<p>The unrival&rsquo;d picture of his early hand.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>With<a name='FNanchor_0057' id='FNanchor_0057'></a><a href='#Footnote_0057' class='fnanchor'>[57]</a> gradual steps and slow, exacter France</p>
+<p>Saw Art&rsquo;s fair empire o&rsquo;er her shores advance:</p>
+<p>By length of toil a bright perfection knew,</p>
+<p>Correctly bold, and just in all she drew: <span class="linenum">70</span></p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>Till late Corneille from epick Lucan brought</p>
+<p>The full expression, and the Roman thought:</p>
+</div>
+<p>Till late Corneille, with Lucan&rsquo;s<a name='FNanchor_0058' id='FNanchor_0058'></a><a href='#Footnote_0058' class='fnanchor'>[58]</a> spirit fired,</p>
+<p>Breathed the free strain, as Rome and he inspired:</p>
+<p>And classic judgment gain&rsquo;d to sweet Racine</p>
+<p>The temperate strength of Maro&rsquo;s chaster line.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>But wilder far the British laurel spread, <span class="linenum">75</span></p>
+<p>And wreaths less artful crown our poet&rsquo;s head.</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_83' name='page_83'></a>83</span></p>
+<p>Yet he alone to every scene could give</p>
+<p>The historian&rsquo;s truth, and bid the manners live.</p>
+<p>Waked at his call I view, with glad surprise,</p>
+<p>Majestic forms of mighty monarchs rise. <span class="linenum">80</span></p>
+<p>There Henry&rsquo;s trumpets spread their loud alarms,</p>
+<p>And laurel&rsquo;d Conquest waits her hero&rsquo;s arms.</p>
+<p>Here gentler Edward claims a pitying sigh,</p>
+<p>Scarce born to honours, and so soon to die!</p>
+<p>Yet shall thy throne, unhappy infant, bring <span class="linenum">85</span></p>
+<p>No beam of comfort to the guilty king:</p>
+<p>The time<a name='FNanchor_0059' id='FNanchor_0059'></a><a href='#Footnote_0059' class='fnanchor'>[59]</a> shall come when Glo&rsquo;ster&rsquo;s heart shall bleed,</p>
+<p>In life&rsquo;s last hours, with horror of the deed;</p>
+<p>When dreary visions shall at last present</p>
+<p>Thy vengeful image in the midnight tent: <span class="linenum">90</span></p>
+<p>Thy hand unseen the secret death shall bear,</p>
+<p>Blunt the weak sword, and break the oppressive spear!</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>Where&rsquo;er we turn, by Fancy charm&rsquo;d, we find</p>
+<p>Some sweet illusion of the cheated mind.</p>
+<p>Oft, wild of wing, she calls the soul to rove <span class="linenum">95</span></p>
+<p>With humbler nature, in the rural grove;</p>
+<p>Where swains contented own the quiet scene,</p>
+<p>And twilight fairies tread the circled green:</p>
+<p>Dress&rsquo;d by her hand, the woods and valleys smile,</p>
+<p>And Spring diffusive decks the enchanted isle. <span class="linenum">100</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_84' name='page_84'></a>84</span></p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p class='indent2'>O, blest in all that genius gives to charm,</p>
+<p>Whose morals mend us, and whose passions warm!</p>
+<p>Oft let my youth attend thy various page,</p>
+<p>Where rich invention rules the unbounded stage:</p>
+<p>There every scene the poet&rsquo;s warmth may raise,</p>
+<p>And melting music find the softest lays:</p>
+<p>O, might the Muse with equal ease persuade</p>
+<p>Expressive Picture to adopt thine aid!</p>
+<p>Some powerful Raphael should again appear,</p>
+<p>And arts consenting fix their empire here.</p>
+</div>
+<p class='indent2'>O, more than all in powerful genius blest,</p>
+<p>Come, take thine empire o&rsquo;er the willing breast!</p>
+<p>Whate&rsquo;er the wounds this youthful heart shall feel,</p>
+<p>Thy songs support me, and thy morals heal!</p>
+<p>There every thought the poet&rsquo;s warmth may raise, <span class="linenum">105</span></p>
+<p>There native music dwells in all the lays.</p>
+<p>O might some verse with happiest skill persuade</p>
+<p>Expressive Picture to adopt thine aid!</p>
+<p>What wondrous draughts might rise from every page!</p>
+<p>What other Raphaels charm a distant age! <span class="linenum">110</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p class='indent2'>Methinks e&rsquo;en now I view some fair design,</p>
+<p>Where breathing Nature lives in every line;</p>
+<p>Chaste and subdued, the modest colours lie,</p>
+<p>In fair proportion to the approving eye:</p>
+<p>And see where Anthony lamenting stands,</p>
+<p>In fixt distress, and spreads his pleading hands:</p>
+<p>O&rsquo;er the pale corse the warrior seems to bend,</p>
+</div>
+<p class='indent2'>Methinks e&rsquo;en now I view some free design,</p>
+<p>Where breathing Nature lives in every line:</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_85' name='page_85'></a>85</span></p>
+<p>Chaste and subdued the modest lights decay,</p>
+<p>Steal into shades, and mildly melt away.</p>
+<p>And see where Anthony,<a name='FNanchor_0060' id='FNanchor_0060'></a><a href='#Footnote_0060' class='fnanchor'>[60]</a> in tears approved, <span class="linenum">115</span></p>
+<p>Guards the pale relics of the chief he loved:</p>
+<p>O&rsquo;er the cold corse the warrior seems to bend,</p>
+<p>Deep sunk in grief, and mourns his murder&rsquo;d friend!</p>
+<p>Still as they press, he calls on all around,</p>
+<p>Lifts the torn robe, and points the bleeding wound. <span class="linenum">120</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>But who<a name='FNanchor_0061' id='FNanchor_0061'></a><a href='#Footnote_0061' class='fnanchor'>[61]</a> is he, whose brows exalted bear</p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>A rage impatient, and a fiercer air?</p>
+<p>E&rsquo;en now his thoughts with eager vengeance doom</p>
+<p>The last sad ruin of ungrateful Rome.</p>
+<p>Till, slow advancing o&rsquo;er the tented plain,</p>
+<p>In sable weeds, appear the kindred train:</p>
+<p>The frantic mother leads their wild despair,</p>
+<p>Beats her swoln breast, and rends her silver hair;</p>
+<p>And see, he yields! the tears unbidden start,</p>
+<p>And conscious nature claims the unwilling heart!</p>
+<p>O&rsquo;er all the man conflicting passions rise;</p>
+</div>
+<p>A wrath impatient, and a fiercer air?</p>
+<p>Awake to all that injured worth can feel,</p>
+<p>On his own Rome he turns the avenging steel;</p>
+<p>Yet shall not war&rsquo;s insatiate fury fall <span class="linenum">125</span></p>
+<p>(So heaven ordains it) on the destined wall.</p>
+<p>See the fond mother, &rsquo;midst the plaintive train,</p>
+<p>Hung on his knees, and prostrate on the plain!</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_86' name='page_86'></a>86</span></p>
+<p>Touch&rsquo;d to the soul, in vain he strives to hide</p>
+<p>The son&rsquo;s affection, in the Roman&rsquo;s pride: <span class="linenum">130</span></p>
+<p>O&rsquo;er all the man conflicting passions rise;</p>
+<p>Rage grasps the sword, while Pity melts the eyes.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>Thus generous Critic, as thy Bard inspires,</p>
+<p>The sister Arts shall nurse their drooping fires;</p>
+<p>Each from his scenes her stores alternate bring, <span class="linenum">135</span></p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>Spread the fair tints, or wake the vocal string:</p>
+</div>
+<p>Blend the fair tints, or wake the vocal string:</p>
+<p>Those sibyl leaves, the sport of every wind,</p>
+<p>(For poets ever were a careless kind,)</p>
+<p>By thee disposed, no farther toil demand,</p>
+<p>But, just to Nature, own thy forming hand. <span class="linenum">140</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>So spread o&rsquo;er Greece, the harmonious whole unknown,</p>
+<p>E&rsquo;en Homer&rsquo;s numbers charm&rsquo;d by parts alone.</p>
+<p>Their own Ulysses scarce had wander&rsquo;d more,</p>
+<p>By winds and waters cast on every shore:</p>
+<p>When, raised by fate, some former Hanmer join&rsquo;d <span class="linenum">145</span></p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>Each beauteous image of the tuneful mind;</p>
+</div>
+<p>Each beauteous image of the boundless mind;</p>
+<p>And bade, like thee, his Athens ever claim</p>
+<p>A fond alliance with the Poet&rsquo;s name.</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p class='smaller lalign'><span class='indent2'>&nbsp;</span>Oxford, Dec. 3,<br />
+<span class='indent6'>&nbsp;</span>1743.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_87' name='page_87'></a>87</span>
+<a name='DIRGE_IN_CYMBELINE_SUNG_BY_GUIDERUS_AND_ARVIRAGUS_OVER_FIDELE_SUPPOSED_TO_BE_DEAD' id='DIRGE_IN_CYMBELINE_SUNG_BY_GUIDERUS_AND_ARVIRAGUS_OVER_FIDELE_SUPPOSED_TO_BE_DEAD'></a>
+<h3>DIRGE IN CYMBELINE,</h3>
+<h4>SUNG BY GUIDERUS AND ARVIRAGUS OVER FIDELE, SUPPOSED TO BE DEAD.</h4>
+</div>
+<table summary='' class='widthall'><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>To fair Pastora&rsquo;s grassy tomb</p>
+</div>
+<p>To fair Fidele&rsquo;s grassy tomb</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Soft maids and village hinds shall bring</p>
+<p>Each opening sweet of earliest bloom,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And rifle all the breathing spring.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>No wailing ghost shall dare appear <span class="linenum">5</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>To vex with shrieks this quiet grove;</p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>But shepherd swains assemble here,</p>
+</div>
+<p>But shepherd lads assemble here,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And melting virgins own their love.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>No wither&rsquo;d witch shall here be seen;</p>
+<p class='indent2'>No goblins lead their nightly crew: <span class="linenum">10</span></p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>But female fays shall haunt the green,</p>
+</div>
+<p>The female fays shall haunt the green,</p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p class='indent2'>And dress thy bed with pearly dew!</p>
+</div>
+<p class='indent2'>And dress thy grave with pearly dew!</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_88' name='page_88'></a>88</span></p>
+<p>The redbreast oft, at evening hours,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Shall kindly lend his little aid,</p>
+<p>With hoary moss, and gather&rsquo;d flowers, <span class="linenum">15</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>To deck the ground where thou art laid.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>When chiding winds, and beating rain,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>In tempest shake the sylvan cell;</p>
+<p>Or &rsquo;midst the flocks, on every plain,</p>
+</div>
+<p>When howling winds, and beating rain,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>In tempests shake the sylvan cell;</p>
+<p>Or &rsquo;midst the chase, on every plain,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>The tender thought on thee shall dwell; <span class="linenum">20</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>Each lovely scene shall thee restore;</p>
+</div>
+<p>Each lonely scene shall thee restore;</p>
+<p class='indent2'>For thee the tear be duly shed;</p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p>Beloved till life could charm no more,</p>
+</div>
+<p>Beloved till life can charm no more,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And mourn&rsquo;d till Pity&rsquo;s self be dead.</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_89' name='page_89'></a>89</span>
+<a name='VERSES_WRITTEN_ON_A_PAPER_WHICH_CONTAINED_A_PIECE_OF_BRIDECAKE_GIVEN_TO_THE_AUTHOR_BY_A_LADY' id='VERSES_WRITTEN_ON_A_PAPER_WHICH_CONTAINED_A_PIECE_OF_BRIDECAKE_GIVEN_TO_THE_AUTHOR_BY_A_LADY'></a>
+<h3>VERSES</h3>
+<h4>WRITTEN ON A PAPER WHICH CONTAINED A PIECE OF BRIDE-CAKE, GIVEN TO THE AUTHOR BY A LADY.</h4>
+</div>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>Ye curious hands, that, hid from vulgar eyes,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>By search profane shall find this hallow&rsquo;d cake,</p>
+<p>With virtue&rsquo;s awe forbear the sacred prize,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Nor dare a theft, for love and pity&rsquo;s sake!</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>This precious relic, form&rsquo;d by magic power, <span class="linenum">5</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>Beneath her shepherd&rsquo;s haunted pillow laid,</p>
+<p>Was meant by love to charm the silent hour,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>The secret present of a matchless maid.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>The Cyprian queen, at Hymen&rsquo;s fond request,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Each nice ingredient chose with happiest art; <span class="linenum">10</span></p>
+<p>Fears, sighs, and wishes of the enamour&rsquo;d breast,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And pains that please, are mix&rsquo;d in every part.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>With rosy hand the spicy fruit she brought,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>From Paphian hills, and fair Cythera&rsquo;s isle;</p>
+<p>And temper&rsquo;d sweet with these the melting thought, <span class="linenum">15</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>The kiss ambrosial, and the yielding smile.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_90' name='page_90'></a>90</span></p>
+<p>Ambiguous looks, that scorn and yet relent,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Denials mild, and firm unalter&rsquo;d truth;</p>
+<p>Reluctant pride, and amorous faint consent,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And meeting ardours, and exulting youth. <span class="linenum">20</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>Sleep, wayward God! hath sworn, while these remain,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>With flattering dreams to dry his nightly tear,</p>
+<p>And cheerful Hope, so oft invoked in vain,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>With fairy songs shall soothe his pensive ear.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>If, bound by vows to Friendship&rsquo;s gentle side, <span class="linenum">25</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>And fond of soul, thou hop&rsquo;st an equal grace,</p>
+<p>If youth or maid thy joys and griefs divide,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>O, much entreated, leave this fatal place!</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>Sweet Peace, who long hath shunn&rsquo;d my plaintive day,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Consents at length to bring me short delight, <span class="linenum">30</span></p>
+<p>Thy careless steps may scare her doves away,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And Grief with raven note usurp the night.</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_91' name='page_91'></a>91</span>
+<a name='TO_MISS_AURELIA_CR_ON_HER_WEEPING_AT_HER_SISTERS_WEDDING' id='TO_MISS_AURELIA_CR_ON_HER_WEEPING_AT_HER_SISTERS_WEDDING'></a>
+<h3>TO MISS AURELIA C&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;R,</h3>
+<h4>ON HER WEEPING AT HER SISTER&rsquo;S WEDDING.</h4>
+</div>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>Cease, fair Aurelia, cease to mourn,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Lament not Hannah&rsquo;s happy state;</p>
+<p>You may be happy in your turn,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And seize the treasure you regret.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>With Love united Hymen stands, <span class="linenum">5</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>And softly whispers to your charms,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Meet but your lover in my bands,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>You&rsquo;ll find your sister in his arms.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<a name='SONNET' id='SONNET'></a>
+<h3>SONNET.</h3>
+</div>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>When Ph&oelig;be form&rsquo;d a wanton smile,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>My soul! it reach&rsquo;d not here:</p>
+<p>Strange, that thy peace, thou trembler, flies</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Before a rising tear!</p>
+<p>From &rsquo;midst the drops, my love is born, <span class="linenum">5</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>That o&rsquo;er those eyelids rove:</p>
+<p>Thus issued from a teeming wave</p>
+<p class='indent2'>The fabled queen of love.</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_92' name='page_92'></a>92</span>
+<a name='SONG_THE_SENTIMENTS_BORROWED_FROM_SHAKESPEARE' id='SONG_THE_SENTIMENTS_BORROWED_FROM_SHAKESPEARE'></a>
+<h3>SONG.</h3>
+<h4>THE SENTIMENTS BORROWED FROM SHAKESPEARE.<a name='FNanchor_0062' id='FNanchor_0062'></a><a href='#Footnote_0062' class='fnanchor'>[62]</a></h4>
+</div>
+<table summary='' class='widthall'><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>Young Damon of the vale is dead,</p>
+<div class='variation'>
+<p class='indent2'>Ye lowland hamlets, moan;</p>
+</div>
+<p class='indent2'>Ye lowly hamlets, moan;</p>
+<p>A dewy turf lies o&rsquo;er his head,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And at his feet a stone.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>His shroud, which Death&rsquo;s cold damps destroy, <span class="linenum">5</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>Of snow-white threads was made:</p>
+<p>All mourn&rsquo;d to see so sweet a boy</p>
+<p class='indent2'>In earth for ever laid.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>Pale pansies o&rsquo;er his corpse were placed,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Which, pluck&rsquo;d before their time, <span class="linenum">10</span></p>
+<p>Bestrew&rsquo;d the boy, like him to waste</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And wither in their prime.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_93' name='page_93'></a>93</span></p>
+<p>But will he ne&rsquo;er return, whose tongue</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Could tune the rural lay?</p>
+<p>Ah, no! his bell of peace is rung, <span class="linenum">15</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>His lips are cold as clay.</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>They bore him out at twilight hour,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>The youth who loved so well:</p>
+<p>Ah, me! how many a true love shower</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Of kind remembrance fell! <span class="linenum">20</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>Each maid was woe&ndash;&ndash;but Lucy chief,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Her grief o&rsquo;er all was tried;</p>
+<p>Within his grave she dropp&rsquo;d in grief,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And o&rsquo;er her loved one died.</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_94' name='page_94'></a>94</span>
+<a name='ON_OUR_LATE_TASTE_IN_MUSIC' id='ON_OUR_LATE_TASTE_IN_MUSIC'></a>
+<h3>ON OUR LATE TASTE IN MUSIC.<a name='FNanchor_0063' id='FNanchor_0063'></a><a href='#Footnote_0063' class='fnanchor'>[63]</a></h3>
+</div>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;Quid vocis modulamen inane juvabat</p>
+<p>Verborum sensusque vacans numerique loquacis?&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
+<p class='ralign'><span class='smcap'>Milton.</span></p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>Britons! away with the degenerate pack!</p>
+<p>Waft, western winds! the foreign spoilers back!</p>
+<p>Enough has been in wild amusements spent,</p>
+<p>Let British verse and harmony content!</p>
+<p>No music once could charm you like your own, <span class="linenum">5</span></p>
+<p>Then tuneful Robinson,<a name='FNanchor_0064' id='FNanchor_0064'></a><a href='#Footnote_0064' class='fnanchor'>[64]</a> and Tofts were known;</p>
+<p>Then Purcell touched the strings, while numbers hung</p>
+<p>Attentive to the sounds&ndash;&ndash;and blest the song!</p>
+<p>E&rsquo;en gentle Weldon taught us manly notes,</p>
+<p>Beyond the enervate thrills of Roman throats! <span class="linenum">10</span></p>
+<p>Notes, foreign luxury could ne&rsquo;er inspire,</p>
+<p>That animate the soul, and swell the lyre!</p>
+<p>That mend, and not emasculate our hearts,</p>
+<p>And teach the love of freedom and of arts.</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_95' name='page_95'></a>95</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>Nor yet, while guardian Ph&oelig;bus gilds our isle, <span class="linenum">15</span></p>
+<p>Does heaven averse await the muses&rsquo; toil;</p>
+<p>Cherish but once our worth of native race,</p>
+<p>The sister-arts shall soon display their face!</p>
+<p>Even half discouraged through the gloom they strive,</p>
+<p>Smile at neglect, and o&rsquo;er oblivion live. <span class="linenum">20</span></p>
+<p>See Handel, careless of a foreign fame,</p>
+<p>Fix on our shore, and boast a Briton&rsquo;s name:</p>
+<p>While, placed marmoric in the vocal grove,<a name='FNanchor_0065' id='FNanchor_0065'></a><a href='#Footnote_0065' class='fnanchor'>[65]</a></p>
+<p>He guides the measures listening throngs approve.</p>
+<p>Mark silence at the voice of Arne confess&rsquo;d, <span class="linenum">25</span></p>
+<p>Soft as the sweet enchantress rules the breast;</p>
+<p>As when transported Venice lent an ear,</p>
+<p>Camilla&rsquo;s charms to view, and accents hear!<a name='FNanchor_0066' id='FNanchor_0066'></a><a href='#Footnote_0066' class='fnanchor'>[66]</a></p>
+<p>So while she varies the impassion&rsquo;d song,</p>
+<p>Alternate motions on the bosom throng! <span class="linenum">30</span></p>
+<p>As heavenly Milton<a name='FNanchor_0067' id='FNanchor_0067'></a><a href='#Footnote_0067' class='fnanchor'>[67]</a> guides her magic voice,</p>
+<p>And virtue thus convey&rsquo;d allures the choice.</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Discard soft nonsense in a slavish tongue,</p>
+<p>The strain insipid, and the thought unknown;</p>
+<p>From truth and nature form the unerring test; <span class="linenum">35</span></p>
+<p>Be what is manly, chaste, and good the best!</p>
+<p>&rsquo;Tis not to ape the songsters of the groves,</p>
+<p>Through all the quiverings of their wanton loves;</p>
+<p>&rsquo;Tis not the enfeebled thrill, or warbled shake,</p>
+<p>The heart can strengthen, or the soul awake! <span class="linenum">40</span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_96' name='page_96'></a>96</span></p>
+<p>But where the force of energy is found</p>
+<p>When the sense rises on the wings of sound;</p>
+<p>When reason, with the charms of music twined,</p>
+<p>Through the enraptured ear informs the mind;</p>
+<p>Bids generous love or soft compassion glow, <span class="linenum">45</span></p>
+<p>And forms a tuneful Paradise below!</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Oh Britons! if the honour still you boast,</p>
+<p>No longer purchase follies at such cost!</p>
+<p>No longer let unmeaning sounds invite</p>
+<p>To visionary scenes of false delight: <span class="linenum">50</span></p>
+<p>When, shame to sense! we see the hero&rsquo;s rage</p>
+<p>Lisp&rsquo;d on the tongue, and danced along the stage!</p>
+<p>Or hear in eunuch sounds a hero squeak,</p>
+<p>While kingdoms rise or fall upon a shake!</p>
+<p>Let them at home to slavery&rsquo;s painted train, <span class="linenum">55</span></p>
+<p>With siren art, repeat the pleasing strain:</p>
+<p>While we, like wise Ulysses, close our ear</p>
+<p>To songs which liberty forbids to hear!</p>
+<p>Keep, guardian gales, the infectious guests away,</p>
+<p>To charm where priests direct, and slaves obey. <span class="linenum">60</span></p>
+<p>Madrid, or wanton Rome, be their delight;</p>
+<p>There they may warble as their poets write.</p>
+<p>The temper of our isle, though cold, is clear;</p>
+<p>And such our genius, noble though severe.</p>
+<p>Our Shakespeare scorn&rsquo;d the trifling rules of art, <span class="linenum">65</span></p>
+<p>But knew to conquer and surprise the heart!</p>
+<p>In magic chains the captive thought to bind,</p>
+<p>And fathom all the depths of human kind!</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Too long, our shame, the prostituted herd</p>
+<p>Our sense have bubbled, and our wealth have shared. <span class="linenum">70</span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_97' name='page_97'></a>97</span></p>
+<p>Too long the favourites of our vulgar great</p>
+<p>Have bask&rsquo;d in luxury, and lived in state!</p>
+<p>In Tuscan wilds now let them villas rear<a name='FNanchor_0068' id='FNanchor_0068'></a><a href='#Footnote_0068' class='fnanchor'>[68]</a></p>
+<p>Ennobled by the charity we spare.</p>
+<p>There let them warble in the tainted breeze, <span class="linenum">75</span></p>
+<p>Or sing like widow&rsquo;d orphans to the trees:</p>
+<p>There let them chant their incoherent dreams,</p>
+<p>Where howls Charybdis, and where Scylla screams!</p>
+<p>Or where Avernus, from his darksome round,</p>
+<p>May echo to the winds the blasted sound! <span class="linenum">80</span></p>
+<p class='indent2'>As fair Alcyone,<a name='FNanchor_0069' id='FNanchor_0069'></a><a href='#Footnote_0069' class='fnanchor'>[69]</a> with anguish press&rsquo;d,</p>
+<p>Broods o&rsquo;er the British main with tuneful breast,</p>
+<p>Beneath the white-brow&rsquo;d cliff protected sings,</p>
+<p>Or skims the azure plain with painted wings!</p>
+<p>Grateful, like her, to nature, and as just, <span class="linenum">85</span></p>
+<p>In our domestic blessings let us trust;</p>
+<p>Keep for our sons fair learning&rsquo;s honour&rsquo;d prize,</p>
+<p>Till the world own the worth they now despise!</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<a name='OBSERVATIONS_ON_THE_ORIENTAL_ECLOGUES_AND_ODES_BY_DR_LANGHORNE' id='OBSERVATIONS_ON_THE_ORIENTAL_ECLOGUES_AND_ODES_BY_DR_LANGHORNE'></a>
+<h2>OBSERVATIONS ON THE ORIENTAL ECLOGUES AND ODES.</h2>
+<h3>BY DR. LANGHORNE.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
+<a name='OBSERVATIONS_ON_THE_ORIENTAL_ECLOGUES' id='OBSERVATIONS_ON_THE_ORIENTAL_ECLOGUES'></a>
+<h2>OBSERVATIONS ON THE ORIENTAL ECLOGUES.</h2>
+</div>
+<p>The genius of the pastoral, as well as of every
+other respectable species of poetry, had its origin
+in the east, and from thence was transplanted by
+the muses of Greece; but whether from the continent
+of the Lesser Asia, or from Egypt, which,
+about the era of the Grecian pastoral, was the
+hospitable nurse of letters, it is not easy to determine.
+From the subjects, and the manner of
+Theocritus, one would incline to the latter opinion,
+while the history of Bion is in favour of the
+former.</p>
+<p>However, though it should still remain a doubt
+through what channel the pastoral traveled westward,
+there is not the least shadow of uncertainty
+concerning its oriental origin.</p>
+<p>In those ages which, guided by sacred chronology,
+from a comparative view of time, we call
+the early ages, it appears, from the most authentic
+historians, that the chiefs of the people employed
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_102' name='page_102'></a>102</span>
+themselves in rural exercises, and that astronomers
+and legislators were at the same time shepherds.
+Thus Strabo informs us, that the history
+of the creation was communicated to the Egyptians
+by a Chaldean shepherd.</p>
+<p>From these circumstances it is evident, not only
+that such shepherds were capable of all the dignity
+and elegance peculiar to poetry, but that
+whatever poetry they attempted would be of the
+pastoral kind; would take its subjects from those
+scenes of rural simplicity in which they were conversant,
+and, as it was the offspring of harmony
+and nature, would employ the powers it derived
+from the former, to celebrate the beauty and benevolence
+of the latter.</p>
+<p>Accordingly we find that the most ancient
+poems treat of agriculture, astronomy, and other
+objects within the rural and natural systems.</p>
+<p>What constitutes the difference between the
+georgic and the pastoral, is love and the colloquial
+or dramatic form of composition peculiar to
+the latter; this form of composition is sometimes
+dispensed with, and love and rural imagery alone
+are thought sufficient to distinguish the pastoral.
+The tender passion, however, seems to be essential
+to this species of poetry, and is hardly ever
+excluded from those pieces that were intended to
+come under this denomination: even in those
+eclogues of the Am&oelig;bean kind, whose only purport
+is a trial of skill between contending shepherds,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_103' name='page_103'></a>103</span>
+love has its usual share, and the praises of
+their respective mistresses are the general subjects
+of the competitors.</p>
+<p>It is to be lamented, that scarce any oriental
+compositions of this kind have survived the ravages
+of ignorance, tyranny, and time; we cannot
+doubt that many such have been extant, possibly
+as far down as that fatal period, never to be mentioned
+in the world of letters without horror,
+when the glorious monuments of human ingenuity
+perished in the ashes of the Alexandrian
+library.</p>
+<p>Those ingenious Greeks, whom we call the
+parents of pastoral poetry, were, probably, no
+more than imitators, of imitators that derived
+their harmony from higher and remoter sources,
+and kindled their poetical fires at those then unextinguished
+lamps which burned within the tombs
+of oriental genius.</p>
+<p>It is evident that Homer has availed himself of
+those magnificent images and descriptions so frequently
+to be met with in the books of the Old
+Testament; and why may not Theocritus, Moschus,
+and Bion have found their archetypes in
+other eastern writers, whose names have perished
+with their works? yet, though it may not be
+illiberal to admit such a supposition, it would
+certainly be invidious to conclude, what the malignity
+of cavillers alone could suggest with regard
+to Homer, that they destroyed the sources from
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_104' name='page_104'></a>104</span>
+which they borrowed, and, as it is fabled of the
+young of the pelican, drained their supporters to
+death.</p>
+<p>As the Septuagint translation of the Old Testament
+was performed at the request, and under
+the patronage, of Ptolemy Philadelphus, it were
+not to be wondered if Theocritus, who was entertained
+at that prince&rsquo;s court, had borrowed some
+part of his pastoral imagery from the poetical
+passages of those books. I think it can hardly
+be doubted that the Sicilian poet had in his eye
+certain expressions of the prophet Isaiah, when
+he wrote the following lines:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p><span lang="el" title="Nyn ia men phoreoite batoi, phoreoite d' akanthai.">&Nu;&upsilon;&nu; &iota;&alpha; &mu;&epsilon;&nu; &phi;&omicron;&rho;&epsilon;&omicron;&iota;&tau;&epsilon; &beta;&alpha;&tau;&omicron;&iota;, &phi;&omicron;&rho;&epsilon;&omicron;&iota;&tau;&epsilon; &delta;&rsquo; &alpha;&kappa;&alpha;&nu;&theta;&alpha;&iota;.</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="Ha de kala Narkissos ep' arkeuthoisi komasai;">&#7945; &delta;&epsilon; &kappa;&alpha;&lambda;&alpha; &Nu;&alpha;&rho;&kappa;&iota;&sigma;&sigma;&omicron;&sigmaf; &epsilon;&pi;&rsquo; &alpha;&rho;&kappa;&epsilon;&upsilon;&theta;&omicron;&iota;&sigma;&iota; &kappa;&omicron;&mu;&alpha;&sigma;&alpha;&iota;;</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="Panta d' enalla genoito, kai ha pitus ochnas eneikai">&Pi;&alpha;&nu;&tau;&alpha; &delta;&rsquo; &epsilon;&nu;&alpha;&lambda;&lambda;&alpha; &gamma;&epsilon;&nu;&omicron;&iota;&tau;&omicron;, &kappa;&alpha;&iota; &#7937; &pi;&iota;&tau;&upsilon;&sigmaf; &omicron;&chi;&nu;&alpha;&sigmaf; &epsilon;&nu;&epsilon;&iota;&kappa;&alpha;&iota;</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;kai t&ocirc;s kynas h&ocirc;laphos helkoi.">&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&kappa;&alpha;&iota; &tau;&omega;&sigmaf; &kappa;&upsilon;&nu;&alpha;&sigmaf; &#8033;&lambda;&alpha;&phi;&omicron;&sigmaf; &#7953;&lambda;&kappa;&omicron;&iota;.</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>Let vexing brambles the blue violet bear,</p>
+<p>On the rude thorn Narcissus dress his hair,</p>
+<p>All, all reversed&ndash;&ndash;The pine with pears be crown&rsquo;d,</p>
+<p>And the bold deer shall drag the trembling hound.</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>The cause, indeed, of these phenomena is very
+different in the Greek from what it is in the Hebrew
+poet; the former employing them on the
+death, the latter on the birth, of an important
+person: but the marks of imitation are nevertheless
+obvious.</p>
+<p>It might, however, be expected, that if Theocritus
+had borrowed at all from the sacred writers,
+the celebrated pastoral epithalamium of Solomon,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_105' name='page_105'></a>105</span>
+so much within his own walk of poetry, would
+not certainly have escaped his notice. His epithalamium
+on the marriage of Helena, moreover,
+gave him an open field for imitation; therefore,
+if he has any obligations to the royal bard, we
+may expect to find them there. The very opening
+of the poem is in the spirit of the Hebrew
+song:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p><span lang="el" title="Hout&ocirc; d&ecirc; pr&ocirc;iza katedrathes, &ocirc; phile gambre;">&Omicron;&upsilon;&tau;&omega; &delta;&eta; &pi;&rho;&omega;&iota;&zeta;&alpha; &kappa;&alpha;&tau;&epsilon;&delta;&rho;&alpha;&theta;&epsilon;&sigmaf;, &omega; &phi;&iota;&lambda;&epsilon; &gamma;&alpha;&mu;&beta;&rho;&epsilon;;</span></p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>The colour of imitation is still stronger in the following
+passage:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p><span lang="el" title="A&ocirc;s antelloisa kalon diephaine pros&ocirc;pon,">&Alpha;&omega;&sigmaf; &alpha;&nu;&tau;&epsilon;&lambda;&lambda;&omicron;&iota;&sigma;&alpha; &kappa;&alpha;&lambda;&omicron;&nu; &delta;&iota;&epsilon;&phi;&alpha;&iota;&nu;&epsilon; &pi;&rho;&omicron;&sigma;&omega;&pi;&omicron;&nu;,</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="Potnia nyx hate, leukon ear cheim&ocirc;nos anentos?">&Pi;&omicron;&tau;&nu;&iota;&alpha; &nu;&upsilon;&xi; &#7937;&tau;&epsilon;, &lambda;&epsilon;&upsilon;&kappa;&omicron;&nu; &epsilon;&alpha;&rho; &chi;&epsilon;&iota;&mu;&omega;&nu;&omicron;&sigmaf; &alpha;&nu;&epsilon;&nu;&tau;&omicron;&sigmaf;;</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="H&ocirc;de kai ha chrysea Helena diephainet' en amin,">H&omega;&delta;&epsilon; &kappa;&alpha;&iota; &#7937; &chi;&rho;&upsilon;&sigma;&epsilon;&alpha; &#7961;&lambda;&epsilon;&nu;&alpha; &delta;&iota;&epsilon;&phi;&alpha;&iota;&nu;&epsilon;&tau;&rsquo; &epsilon;&nu; &alpha;&mu;&iota;&nu;,</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="Pieira megala hat' anedrame kosmos aroura.">&Pi;&iota;&epsilon;&iota;&rho;&alpha; &mu;&epsilon;&gamma;&alpha;&lambda;&alpha; &#7937;&tau;&rsquo; &alpha;&nu;&epsilon;&delta;&rho;&alpha;&mu;&epsilon; &kappa;&omicron;&sigma;&mu;&omicron;&sigmaf; &alpha;&rho;&omicron;&upsilon;&rho;&alpha;.</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="H&ecirc; kap&ocirc; kyparissos, &ecirc; harmati Thessalos hippos.">H&eta; &kappa;&alpha;&pi;&omega; &kappa;&upsilon;&pi;&alpha;&rho;&iota;&sigma;&sigma;&omicron;&sigmaf;, &eta; &#7937;&rho;&mu;&alpha;&tau;&iota; &Theta;&epsilon;&sigma;&sigma;&alpha;&lambda;&omicron;&sigmaf; &#7985;&pi;&pi;&omicron;&sigmaf;.</span></p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>This description of Helen is infinitely above the
+style and figure of the Sicilian pastoral: &ldquo;She is
+like the rising of the golden morning, when the
+night departeth, and when the winter is over and
+gone. She resembleth the cypress in the garden,
+the horse in the chariots of Thessaly.&rdquo; These
+figures plainly declare their origin; and others,
+equally imitative, might be pointed out in the
+same idyllium.</p>
+<p>This beautiful and luxuriant marriage pastoral
+of Solomon is the only perfect form of the oriental
+eclogue that has survived the ruins of time; a
+happiness for which it is, probably, more indebted
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_106' name='page_106'></a>106</span>
+to its sacred character than to its intrinsic merit.
+Not that it is by any means destitute of poetical
+excellence: like all the eastern poetry, it is bold,
+wild, and unconnected in its figures, allusions,
+and parts, and has all that graceful and magnificent
+daring which characterizes its metaphorical
+and comparative imagery.</p>
+<p>In consequence of these peculiarities, so ill
+adapted to the frigid genius of the north, Mr.
+Collins could make but little use of it as a precedent
+for his Oriental Eclogues; and even in his
+third eclogue, where the subject is of a similar
+nature, he has chosen rather to follow the mode
+of the Doric and the Latian pastoral.</p>
+<p>The scenery and subjects then of the foregoing
+eclogues alone are oriental; the style and colouring
+are purely European; and, for this reason,
+the author&rsquo;s preface, in which he intimates that
+he had the originals from a merchant who traded
+to the east, is omitted, as being now altogether
+superfluous.<a name='FNanchor_0070' id='FNanchor_0070'></a><a href='#Footnote_0070' class='fnanchor'>[70]</a></p>
+<p>With regard to the merit of these eclogues, it
+may justly be asserted, that in simplicity of description
+and expression, in delicacy and softness
+of numbers, and in natural and unaffected tenderness,
+they are not to be equaled by any thing
+of the pastoral kind in the English language.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_107' name='page_107'></a>107</span>
+<a name='ECLOGUE_I' id='ECLOGUE_I'></a>
+<h3>ECLOGUE I.</h3>
+</div>
+<p>This eclogue, which is entitled Selim, or the
+Shepherd&rsquo;s Moral, as there is nothing dramatic in
+the subject, may be thought the least entertaining
+of the four: but it is by no means the least
+valuable. The moral precepts which the intelligent
+shepherd delivers to his fellow-swains, and
+the virgins their companions, are such as would
+infallibly promote the happiness of the pastoral
+life.</p>
+<p>In impersonating the private virtues, the poet
+has observed great propriety, and has formed
+their genealogy with the most perfect judgment,
+when he represents them as the daughters of
+truth and wisdom.</p>
+<p>The characteristics of modesty and chastity are
+extremely happy and <i>peinturesque</i>:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;Come thou, whose thoughts as limpid springs are clear,</p>
+<p>To lead the train, sweet Modesty, appear;</p>
+<p>With thee be Chastity, of all afraid,</p>
+<p>Distrusting all, a wise, suspicious maid;</p>
+<p>Cold is her breast, like flowers that drink the dew;</p>
+<p>A silken veil conceals her from the view.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_108' name='page_108'></a>108</span></div>
+<p>The two similes borrowed from rural objects are
+not only much in character, but perfectly natural
+and expressive. There is, notwithstanding, this
+defect in the former, that it wants a peculiar propriety;
+for purity of thought may as well be
+applied to chastity as to modesty; and from this
+instance, as well as from a thousand more, we
+may see the necessity of distinguishing, in characteristic
+poetry, every object by marks and
+attributes peculiarly its own.</p>
+<p>It cannot be objected to this eclogue, that it
+wants both those essential criteria of the pastoral,
+love and the drama; for though it partakes not
+of the latter, the former still retains an interest in
+it, and that too very material, as it professedly
+consults the virtue and happiness of the lover,
+while it informs what are the qualities</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;that must lead to love.</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_109' name='page_109'></a>109</span>
+<a name='ECLOGUE_II' id='ECLOGUE_II'></a>
+<h3>ECLOGUE II.</h3>
+</div>
+<p>All the advantages that any species of poetry
+can derive from the novelty of the subject and
+scenery, this eclogue possesses. The route of a
+camel-driver is a scene that scarce could exist in
+the imagination of a European, and of its attendant
+distresses he could have no idea.&ndash;&ndash;These
+are very happily and minutely painted by our descriptive
+poet. What sublime simplicity of expression!
+what nervous plainness in the opening
+of the poem!</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;In silent horror o&rsquo;er the boundless waste</p>
+<p>The driver Hassan with his camels past.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>The magic pencil of the poet brings the whole
+scene before us at once, as it were by enchantment;
+and in this single couplet we feel all the
+effect that arises from the terrible wildness of a
+region unenlivened by the habitations of men.
+The verses that describe so minutely the camel-driver&rsquo;s
+little provisions have a touching influence
+on the imagination, and prepare the reader to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_110' name='page_110'></a>110</span>
+enter more feelingly into his future apprehensions
+of distress:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;Bethink thee, Hassan, where shall thirst assuage,</p>
+<p>When fails this cruise, his unrelenting rage!&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>It is difficult to say whether his apostrophe to the
+&ldquo;mute companions of his toils&rdquo; is more to be admired
+for the elegance and beauty of the poetical
+imagery, or for the tenderness and humanity of
+the sentiment. He who can read it without being
+affected, will do his heart no injustice if he concludes
+it to be destitute of sensibility:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;Ye mute companions of my toils, that bear</p>
+<p>In all my griefs a more than equal share!</p>
+<p>Here, where no springs in murmurs break away,</p>
+<p>Or moss-crown&rsquo;d fountains mitigate the day,</p>
+<p>In vain ye hope the green delights to know,</p>
+<p>Which plains more blest, or verdant vales, bestow:</p>
+<p>Here rocks alone and tasteless sands are found,</p>
+<p>And faint and sickly winds for ever howl around.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>Yet in these beautiful lines there is a slight error,
+which writers of the greatest genius very frequently
+fall into.&ndash;&ndash;It will be needless to observe
+to the accurate reader, that in the fifth and sixth
+verses there is a verbal pleonasm where the poet
+speaks of the <i>green</i> delights of <i>verdant</i> vales.
+There is an oversight of the same kind in the
+Manners, an Ode, where the poet says,</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;Seine&rsquo;s blue nymphs deplore</p>
+<p>In watchet weeds&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_111' name='page_111'></a>111</span></div>
+<p>This fault is indeed a common one, but to a
+reader of taste it is nevertheless disgustful; and
+it is mentioned here, as the error of a man of
+genius and judgment, that men of genius and
+judgment may guard against it.</p>
+<p>Mr. Collins speaks like a true poet, as well in
+sentiment as expression, when, with regard to the
+thirst of wealth, he says,</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;Why heed we not, while mad we haste along,</p>
+<p>The gentle voice of Peace, or Pleasure&rsquo;s song?</p>
+<p>Or wherefore think the flowery mountain&rsquo;s side,</p>
+<p>The fountain&rsquo;s murmurs, and the valley&rsquo;s pride,</p>
+<p>Why think we these less pleasing to behold,</p>
+<p>Than dreary deserts, if they lead to gold?&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>But however just these sentiments may appear
+to those who have not revolted from nature and
+simplicity, had the author proclaimed them in
+Lombard Street, or Cheapside, he would not have
+been complimented with the understanding of the
+bellman.&ndash;&ndash;A striking proof, that our own particular
+ideas of happiness regulate our opinions
+concerning the sense and wisdom of others!</p>
+<p>It is impossible to take leave of this most beautiful
+eclogue, without paying the tribute of admiration
+so justly due to the following nervous
+lines:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;What if the lion in his rage I meet!&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;</p>
+<p>Oft in the dust I view his printed feet:</p>
+<p>And, fearful! oft, when day&rsquo;s declining light</p>
+<p>Yields her pale empire to the mourner night,</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_112' name='page_112'></a>112</span></p>
+<p>By hunger roused, he scours the groaning plain,</p>
+<p>Gaunt wolves and sullen tigers in his train:</p>
+<p>Before them death with shrieks directs their way,</p>
+<p>Fills the wild yell, and leads them to their prey.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>This, amongst many other passages to be met
+with in the writings of Collins, shows that his
+genius was perfectly capable of the grand and
+magnificent in description, notwithstanding what
+a learned writer has advanced to the contrary.
+Nothing, certainly, could be more greatly conceived,
+or more adequately expressed, than the
+image in the last couplet.</p>
+<p>The deception, sometimes used in rhetoric and
+poetry, which presents us with an object or sentiment
+contrary to what we expected, is here introduced
+to the greatest advantage:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;Farewell the youth, whom sighs could not detain,</p>
+<p>Whom Zara&rsquo;s breaking heart implored in vain!</p>
+<p>Yet, as thou go&rsquo;st, may every blast arise&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;</p>
+<p>Weak and unfelt as these rejected sighs!&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>But this, perhaps, is rather an artificial prettiness,
+than a real or natural beauty.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_113' name='page_113'></a>113</span>
+<a name='ECLOGUE_III' id='ECLOGUE_III'></a>
+<h3>ECLOGUE III.</h3>
+</div>
+<p>That innocence, and native simplicity of manners,
+which, in the first eclogue, was allowed to
+constitute the happiness of love, is here beautifully
+described in its effects. The sultan of Persia
+marries a Georgian shepherdess, and finds in her
+embraces that genuine felicity which unperverted
+nature alone can bestow. The most natural and
+beautiful parts of this eclogue are those where
+the fair sultana refers with so much pleasure to
+her pastoral amusements, and those scenes of
+happy innocence in which she had passed her
+early years; particularly when, upon her first
+departure,</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;Oft as she went, she backward turned her view,</p>
+<p>And bade that crook and bleating flock adieu.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>This picture of amiable simplicity reminds one of
+that passage where Proserpine, when carried off
+by Pluto, regrets the loss of the flowers she has
+been gathering:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;Collecti flores tunicis cecidere remissis:</p>
+<p>Tantaque simplicitas puerilibus adfuit annis,</p>
+<p>H&aelig;c quoque virgineum movit jactura dolorem.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_114' name='page_114'></a>114</span>
+<a name='ECLOGUE_IV' id='ECLOGUE_IV'></a>
+<h3>ECLOGUE IV.</h3>
+</div>
+<p>The beautiful but unfortunate country where the
+scene of this pathetic eclogue is laid, had been
+recently torn in pieces by the depredations of its
+savage neighbours, when Mr. Collins so affectingly
+described its misfortunes. This ingenious
+man had not only a pencil to portray, but a heart
+to feel for the miseries of mankind; and it is
+with the utmost tenderness and humanity he
+enters into the narrative of Circassia&rsquo;s ruin, while
+he realizes the scene, and brings the present
+drama before us. Of every circumstance that
+could possibly contribute to the tender effect this
+pastoral was designed to produce, the poet has
+availed himself with the utmost art and address.
+Thus he prepares the heart to pity the distresses
+of Circassia, by representing it as the scene of
+the happiest love:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;In fair Circassia, where, to love inclined,</p>
+<p>Each swain was blest, for every maid was kind.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>To give the circumstance of the dialogue a more
+affecting solemnity, he makes the time midnight,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_115' name='page_115'></a>115</span>
+and describes the two shepherds in the very act
+of flight from the destruction that swept over
+their country:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;Sad o&rsquo;er the dews, two brother shepherds fled,</p>
+<p>Where wildering fear and desperate sorrow led.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>There is a beauty and propriety in the epithet
+wildering, which strikes us more forcibly, the
+more we consider it.</p>
+<p>The opening of the dialogue is equally happy,
+natural, and unaffected; when one of the shepherds,
+weary and overcome with the fatigue of
+flight, calls upon his companion to review the
+length of way they had passed. This is certainly
+painting from nature, and the thoughts, however
+obvious, or destitute of refinement, are perfectly
+in character. But as the closest pursuit of nature
+is the surest way to excellence in general, and to
+sublimity in particular, in poetical description, so
+we find that this simple suggestion of the shepherd
+is not unattended with magnificence. There
+is a grandeur and variety in the landscape he
+describes:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;And first review that long extended plain,</p>
+<p>And yon wide groves, already past with pain!</p>
+<p>Yon ragged cliff, whose dangerous path we tried!</p>
+<p>And, last, this lofty mountain&rsquo;s weary side!&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>There is, in imitative harmony, an act of expressing
+a slow and difficult movement by adding to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_116' name='page_116'></a>116</span>
+the usual number of pauses in a verse. This is
+observable in the line that describes the ascent
+of the mountain:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>And last || this lofty mountain&rsquo;s || weary side ||.</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>Here we find the number of pauses, or musical
+bars, which, in an heroic verse, is commonly two,
+increased to three.</p>
+<p>The liquid melody, and the numerous sweetness
+of expression, in the following descriptive lines, is
+almost inimitably beautiful:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;Sweet to the sight is Zabran&rsquo;s flowery plain,</p>
+<p>And once by nymphs and shepherds loved in vain!</p>
+<p>No more the virgins shall delight to rove</p>
+<p>By Sargis&rsquo; banks, or Irwan&rsquo;s shady grove;</p>
+<p>On Tarkie&rsquo;s mountain catch the cooling gale,</p>
+<p>Or breathe the sweets of Aly&rsquo;s flowery vale.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>Nevertheless, in this delightful landscape there is
+an obvious fault; there is no distinction between
+the plain of Zabran and the vale of Aly; they
+are both flowery, and consequently undiversified.
+This could not proceed from the poet&rsquo;s want of
+judgment, but from inattention: it had not occurred
+to him that he had employed the epithet
+flowery twice within so short a compass; an
+oversight which those who are accustomed to
+poetical, or, indeed, to any other species of composition,
+know to be very possible.</p>
+<p>Nothing can be more beautifully conceived, or
+more pathetically expressed, than the shepherd&rsquo;s
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_117' name='page_117'></a>117</span>
+apprehensions for his fair countrywomen, exposed
+to the ravages of the invaders:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;In vain Circassia boasts her spicy groves,</p>
+<p>For ever famed for pure and happy loves:</p>
+<p>In vain she boasts her fairest of the fair,</p>
+<p>Their eyes&rsquo; blue languish, and their golden hair!</p>
+<p>Those eyes in tears their fruitless grief shall send;</p>
+<p>Those hairs the Tartar&rsquo;s cruel hand shall rend.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>There is certainly some very powerful charm in
+the liquid melody of sounds. The editor of these
+poems could never read or hear the following
+verse repeated, without a degree of pleasure otherwise
+entirely unaccountable:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;Their eyes&rsquo; blue languish, and their golden hair.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>Such are the Oriental Eclogues, which we leave
+with the same kind of anxious pleasure we feel
+upon a temporary parting with a beloved friend.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_118' name='page_118'></a>118</span>
+<a name='OBSERVATIONS_ON_THE_ODES_DESCRIPTIVE_AND_ALLEGORICAL' id='OBSERVATIONS_ON_THE_ODES_DESCRIPTIVE_AND_ALLEGORICAL'></a>
+<h2>OBSERVATIONS</h2>
+<h3>ON THE ODES, DESCRIPTIVE AND ALLEGORICAL.</h3>
+</div>
+<p>The genius of Collins was capable of every degree
+of excellence in lyric poetry, and perfectly
+qualified for that high province of the muse.
+Possessed of a native ear for all the varieties of
+harmony and modulation, susceptible of the finest
+feelings of tenderness and humanity, but, above
+all, carried away by that high enthusiasm which
+gives to imagination its strongest colouring, he
+was at once capable of soothing the ear with the
+melody of his numbers, of influencing the passions
+by the force of his pathos, and of gratifying the
+fancy by the luxury of description.</p>
+<p>In consequence of these powers, but, more
+particularly, in consideration of the last, he chose
+such subjects for his lyric essays as were most
+favourable for the indulgence of description and
+allegory; where he could exercise his powers in
+moral and personal painting; where he could
+exert his invention in conferring new attributes
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_119' name='page_119'></a>119</span>
+on images or objects already known, and described
+by a determinate number of characteristics;
+where he might give an uncommon &eacute;clat to his
+figures, by placing them in happier attitudes, or
+in more advantageous lights, and introduce new
+forms from the moral and intellectual world into
+the society of impersonated beings.</p>
+<p>Such, no doubt, were the privileges which the
+poet expected, and such were the advantages he
+derived from the descriptive and allegorical nature
+of his themes.</p>
+<p>It seems to have been the whole industry of
+our author, (and it is, at the same time, almost
+all the claim to moral excellence his writings can
+boast,) to promote the influence of the social virtues,
+by painting them in the fairest and happiest
+lights.</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;Melior fieri tuendo&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>would be no improper motto to his poems in
+general; but of his lyric poems it seems to be
+the whole moral tendency and effect. If, therefore,
+it should appear to some readers, that he
+has been more industrious to cultivate description
+than sentiment, it may be observed, that his
+descriptions themselves are sentimental, and answer
+the whole end of that species of writing, by
+embellishing every feature of virtue, and by conveying,
+through the effects of the pencil, the
+finest moral lessons to the mind.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_120' name='page_120'></a>120</span></div>
+<p>Horace speaks of the fidelity of the ear in preference
+to the uncertainty of the eye; but if the
+mind receives conviction, it is certainly of very
+little importance through what medium, or by
+which of the senses it is conveyed. The impressions
+left on the imagination may possibly be
+thought less durable than the deposits of the
+memory, but it may very well admit of a question,
+whether a conclusion of reason, or an impression
+of imagination, will soonest make it sway to the
+heart. A moral precept, conveyed in words, is
+only an account of truth in its effects; a moral
+picture is truth exemplified; and which is most
+likely to gain upon the affections, it may not be
+difficult to determine.</p>
+<p>This, however, must be allowed, that those
+works approach the nearest to perfection which
+unite these powers and advantages; which at
+once influence the imagination, and engage the
+memory; the former by the force of animated
+and striking description, the latter by a brief, but
+harmonious conveyance of precept: thus, while
+the heart is influenced through the operation of
+the passions or the fancy, the effect, which might
+otherwise have been transient, is secured by the
+co&ouml;perating power of the memory, which treasures
+up in a short aphorism the moral of the
+scene.</p>
+<p>This is a good reason, and this, perhaps, is the
+only reason that can be given, why our dramatic
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_121' name='page_121'></a>121</span>
+performances should generally end with a chain
+of couplets. In these the moral of the whole
+piece is usually conveyed; and that assistance
+which the memory borrows from rhyme, as it was
+probably the original cause of it, gives it usefulness
+and propriety even there.</p>
+<p>After these apologies for the descriptive turn
+of the following odes, something remains to be
+said on the origin and use of allegory in poetical
+composition.</p>
+<p>By this we are not to understand the trope in
+the schools, which is defined aliud verbis, aliud
+sensu ostendere; and of which Quintilian says,
+usus est, ut tristia dicamus melioribus verbis,
+aut bon&aelig; rei gratia qu&aelig;dam contrariis significemus,
+&amp;c. It is not the verbal, but the sentimental
+allegory, not allegorical expression (which,
+indeed, might come under the term of metaphor),
+but allegorical imagery, that is here in question.</p>
+<p>When we endeavour to trace this species of
+figurative sentiment to its origin, we find it coeval
+with literature itself. It is generally agreed, that
+the most ancient productions are poetical; and
+it is certain that the most ancient poems abound
+with allegorical imagery.</p>
+<p>If, then, it be allowed that the first literary
+productions were poetical; we shall have little or
+no difficulty in discovering the origin of allegory.</p>
+<p>At the birth of letters, in the transition from
+hieroglyphical to literal expression, it is not to be
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_122' name='page_122'></a>122</span>
+wondered if the custom of expressing ideas by
+personal images, which had so long prevailed,
+should still retain its influence on the mind,
+though the use of letters had rendered the practical
+application of it superfluous. Those who
+had been accustomed to express strength by the
+image of an elephant, swiftness by that of a panther,
+and courage by that of a lion, would make
+no scruple of substituting, in letters, the symbols
+for the ideas they had been used to represent.</p>
+<p>Here we plainly see the origin of allegorical
+expression, that it arose from the ashes of hieroglyphics;
+and if to the same cause we should
+refer that figurative boldness of style and imagery
+which distinguish the oriental writings, we shall,
+perhaps, conclude more justly, than if we should
+impute it to the superior grandeur of eastern
+genius.</p>
+<p>From the same source with the verbal, we are
+to derive the sentimental allegory, which is nothing
+more than a continuation of the metaphorical
+or symbolical expression of the several agents
+in an action, or the different objects in a scene.</p>
+<p>The latter most peculiarly comes under the
+denomination of allegorical imagery; and in this
+species of allegory, we include the impersonation
+of passions, affections, virtues, and vices, &amp;c. on
+account of which, principally, the following odes
+were properly termed, by their author, allegorical.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_123' name='page_123'></a>123</span></div>
+<p>With respect to the utility of this figurative
+writing, the same arguments that have been advanced
+in favour of descriptive poetry will be of
+weight likewise here. It is, indeed, from impersonation,
+or, as it is commonly termed, personification,
+that poetical description borrows its chief
+powers and graces. Without the aid of this,
+moral and intellectual painting would be flat and
+unanimated, and even the scenery of material
+objects would be dull, without the introduction
+of fictitious life.</p>
+<p>These observations will be most effectually
+illustrated by the sublime and beautiful odes that
+occasioned them; in those it will appear how
+happily this allegorical painting may be executed
+by the genuine powers of poetical genius, and
+they will not fail to prove its force and utility by
+passing through the imagination to the heart.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_124' name='page_124'></a>124</span>
+<a name='ODE_TO_PITY_1' id='ODE_TO_PITY_1'></a>
+<h3>ODE TO PITY.</h3>
+</div>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;By Pella&rsquo;s bard, a magic name,</p>
+<p>By all the griefs his thoughts could frame,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Receive my humble rite:</p>
+<p>Long, Pity, let the nations view</p>
+<p>Thy sky-worn robes of tenderest blue,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And eyes of dewy light!&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>The propriety of invoking Pity, through the
+mediation of Euripides, is obvious.&ndash;&ndash;That admirable
+poet had the keys of all the tender passions,
+and therefore could not but stand in the highest
+esteem with a writer of Mr. Collins&rsquo;s sensibility.&ndash;&ndash;He
+did, indeed, admire him as much as Milton
+professedly did, and probably for the same reasons;
+but we do not find that he has copied him
+so closely as the last mentioned poet has sometimes
+done, and particularly in the opening of
+Samson Agonistes, which is an evident imitation
+of the following passage in the Ph&oelig;niss&aelig;:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p><span lang="el" title="H&ecirc;gou paroithe, thygater, h&ocirc;s typhl&ocirc; podi">H&eta;&gamma;&omicron;&upsilon; &pi;&alpha;&rho;&omicron;&iota;&theta;&epsilon;, &theta;&upsilon;&gamma;&alpha;&tau;&epsilon;&rho;, &#8033;&sigmaf; &tau;&upsilon;&phi;&lambda;&omega; &pi;&omicron;&delta;&iota;</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="Ophthalmos ei su, nautiloisin astron h&ocirc;s?">&Omicron;&phi;&theta;&alpha;&lambda;&mu;&omicron;&sigmaf; &epsilon;&iota; &sigma;&upsilon;, &nu;&alpha;&upsilon;&tau;&iota;&lambda;&omicron;&iota;&sigma;&iota;&nu; &alpha;&sigma;&tau;&rho;&omicron;&nu; &#8033;&sigmaf;;</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="Deur' eis to leuron pedon ichnos titheis' emon,">&Delta;&epsilon;&upsilon;&rho;&rsquo; &epsilon;&iota;&sigmaf; &tau;&omicron; &lambda;&epsilon;&upsilon;&rho;&omicron;&nu; &pi;&epsilon;&delta;&omicron;&nu; &iota;&chi;&nu;&omicron;&sigmaf; &tau;&iota;&theta;&epsilon;&iota;&sigmaf;&rsquo; &epsilon;&mu;&omicron;&nu;,</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="Probaine&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;">&Pi;&rho;&omicron;&beta;&alpha;&iota;&nu;&epsilon;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;</span></p>
+<p class='ralign'>Act. III. Sc. I.</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>The &ldquo;eyes of dewy light&rdquo; is one of the happiest
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_125' name='page_125'></a>125</span>
+strokes of imagination, and may be ranked among
+those expressions which</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;&ndash;&ndash;give us back the image of the mind.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;Wild Arun too has heard thy strains,</p>
+<p>And Echo, &rsquo;midst my native plains,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Been soothed by Pity&rsquo;s lute.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;There first the wren thy myrtles shed</p>
+<p>On gentlest Otway&rsquo;s infant head.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>Sussex, in which county the Arun is a small
+river, had the honour of giving birth to Otway
+as well as to Collins: both these poets, unhappily,
+became the objects of that pity by which
+their writings are distinguished. There was a
+similitude in their genius and in their sufferings.
+There was a resemblance in the misfortunes and
+in the dissipation of their lives; and the circumstances
+of their death cannot be remembered
+without pain.</p>
+<p>The thought of painting in the temple of Pity
+the history of human misfortunes, and of drawing
+the scenes from the tragic muse, is very happy,
+and in every respect worthy the imagination of
+Collins.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_126' name='page_126'></a>126</span>
+<a name='ODE_TO_FEAR_1' id='ODE_TO_FEAR_1'></a>
+<h3>ODE TO FEAR.</h3>
+</div>
+<p>Mr. Collins, who had often determined to
+apply himself to dramatic poetry, seems here,
+with the same view, to have addressed one of the
+principal powers of the drama, and to implore
+that mighty influence she had given to the genius
+of Shakespeare:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;Hither again thy fury deal,</p>
+<p>Teach me but once like him to feel:</p>
+<p>His cypress wreath my meed decree,</p>
+<p>And I, O Fear, will dwell with thee!&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>In the construction of this nervous ode, the
+author has shown equal power of judgment and
+imagination. Nothing can be more striking than
+the violent and abrupt abbreviation of the measure
+in the fifth and sixth verses, when he feels
+the strong influence of the power he invokes:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah Fear! ah frantic Fear!</p>
+<p>I see, I see thee near.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>The editor of these poems has met with nothing
+in the same species of poetry, either in his own,
+or in any other language, equal, in all respects,
+to the following description of Danger:
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_127' name='page_127'></a>127</span></p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;Danger whose limbs of giant mould</p>
+<p>What mortal eye can fix&rsquo;d behold?</p>
+<p>Who stalks his round, an hideous form,</p>
+<p>Howling amidst the midnight storm,</p>
+<p>Or throws him on the ridgy steep</p>
+<p>Of some loose hanging rock to sleep.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>It is impossible to contemplate the image conveyed
+in the two last verses, without those emotions
+of terror it was intended to excite. It has,
+moreover, the entire advantage of novelty to
+recommend it; for there is too much originality
+in all the circumstances, to suppose that the
+author had in his eye that description of the
+penal situation of Catiline in the ninth &AElig;neid:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;Te, Catilina, minaci</p>
+<p>Pendentem scopulo.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>The archetype of the English poet&rsquo;s idea was in
+Nature, and, probably, to her alone he was indebted
+for the thought. From her, likewise, he
+derived that magnificence of conception, that
+horrible grandeur of imagery, displayed in the
+following lines:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;And those, the fiends, who, near allied,</p>
+<p>O&rsquo;er Nature&rsquo;s wounds and wrecks preside;</p>
+<p>While Vengeance in the lurid air</p>
+<p>Lifts her red arm, exposed and bare:</p>
+<p>On whom that ravening brood of fate,</p>
+<p>Who lap the blood of sorrow, wait.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>That nutritive enthusiasm, which cherishes the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_128' name='page_128'></a>128</span>
+seeds of poetry, and which is, indeed, the only
+soil wherein they will grow to perfection, lays
+open the mind to all the influences of fiction. A
+passion for whatever is greatly wild or magnificent
+in the works of nature seduces the imagination
+to attend to all that is extravagant, however unnatural.
+Milton was notoriously fond of high
+romance and gothic diableries; and Collins, who
+in genius and enthusiasm bore no very distant
+resemblance to Milton, was wholly carried away
+by the same attachments.</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;Be mine to read the visions old,</p>
+<p>Which thy awakening bards have told:</p>
+<p>And, lest thou meet my blasted view,</p>
+<p>Hold each strange tale devoutly true.&rdquo;</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;On that thrice hallow&rsquo;d eve,&rdquo; &amp;c.</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>There is an old traditionary superstition, that on
+St. Mark&rsquo;s eve, the forms of all such persons as
+shall die within the ensuing year make their
+solemn entry into the churches of their respective
+parishes, as St. Patrick swam over the Channel,
+without their heads.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_129' name='page_129'></a>129</span>
+<a name='ODE_TO_SIMPLICITY_1' id='ODE_TO_SIMPLICITY_1'></a>
+<h3>ODE TO SIMPLICITY.</h3>
+</div>
+<p>The measure of the ancient ballad seems to have
+been made choice of for this ode, on account of
+the subject; and it has, indeed, an air of simplicity,
+not altogether unaffecting:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>&ldquo;By all the honey&rsquo;d store</p>
+<p class='indent2'>On Hybla&rsquo;s thymy shore,</p>
+<p>By all her blooms, and mingled murmurs dear,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>By her whose lovelorn woe,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>In evening musings slow,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Sooth&rsquo;d sweetly sad Electra&rsquo;s poet&rsquo;s ear.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>This allegorical imagery of the honeyed store, the
+blooms, and mingled murmurs of Hybla, alluding
+to the sweetness and beauty of the Attic poetry,
+has the finest and the happiest effect: yet, possibly,
+it will bear a question, whether the ancient
+Greek tragedians had a general claim to simplicity
+in any thing more than the plans of their
+drama. Their language, at least, was infinitely
+metaphorical; yet it must be owned that they
+justly copied nature and the passions, and so far,
+certainly, they were entitled to the palm of true
+simplicity; the following most beautiful speech
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_130' name='page_130'></a>130</span>
+of Polynices will be a monument of this, so long
+as poetry shall last:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p><span lang="el" title="&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;polydakrys d' aphikom&ecirc;n">&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&pi;&omicron;&lambda;&upsilon;&delta;&alpha;&kappa;&rho;&upsilon;&sigmaf; &delta;&rsquo; &alpha;&phi;&iota;&kappa;&omicron;&mu;&eta;&nu;</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="Chronios id&ocirc;n melathra, kai b&ocirc;mous the&ocirc;n,">&Chi;&rho;&omicron;&nu;&iota;&omicron;&sigmaf; &iota;&delta;&omega;&nu; &mu;&epsilon;&lambda;&alpha;&theta;&rho;&alpha;, &kappa;&alpha;&iota; &beta;&omega;&mu;&omicron;&upsilon;&sigmaf; &theta;&epsilon;&omega;&nu;,</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="Gymnasia th' oisin enetraph&ecirc;n, Dirk&ecirc;s, th' hyd&ocirc;r,">&Gamma;&upsilon;&mu;&nu;&alpha;&sigma;&iota;&alpha; &theta;&rsquo; &omicron;&iota;&sigma;&iota;&nu; &epsilon;&nu;&epsilon;&tau;&rho;&alpha;&phi;&eta;&nu;, &Delta;&iota;&rho;&kappa;&eta;&sigmaf;, &theta;&rsquo; &#8017;&delta;&omega;&rho;,</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="H&ocirc;n ou dikai&ocirc;s apelatheis, xen&ecirc;n polin">H&omega;&nu; &omicron;&upsilon; &delta;&iota;&kappa;&alpha;&iota;&omega;&sigmaf; &alpha;&pi;&epsilon;&lambda;&alpha;&theta;&epsilon;&iota;&sigmaf;, &xi;&epsilon;&nu;&eta;&nu; &pi;&omicron;&lambda;&iota;&nu;</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="Nai&ocirc;, di' oss&ocirc;n nam ech&ocirc;n dakryrrhooun.">&Nu;&alpha;&iota;&omega;, &delta;&iota;&rsquo; &omicron;&sigma;&sigma;&omega;&nu; &nu;&alpha;&mu; &epsilon;&chi;&omega;&nu; &delta;&alpha;&kappa;&rho;&upsilon;&rho;&#8165;&omicron;&omicron;&upsilon;&nu;.</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="All' ek gar algous algos au, se derkomai">&Alpha;&lambda;&lambda;&rsquo; &epsilon;&kappa; &gamma;&alpha;&rho; &alpha;&lambda;&gamma;&omicron;&upsilon;&sigmaf; &alpha;&lambda;&gamma;&omicron;&sigmaf; &alpha;&upsilon;, &sigma;&epsilon; &delta;&epsilon;&rho;&kappa;&omicron;&mu;&alpha;&iota;</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="Kara xyr&ecirc;kes, kai peplous melanchimous">&Kappa;&alpha;&rho;&alpha; &xi;&upsilon;&rho;&eta;&kappa;&epsilon;&sigmaf;, &kappa;&alpha;&iota; &pi;&epsilon;&pi;&lambda;&omicron;&upsilon;&sigmaf; &mu;&epsilon;&lambda;&alpha;&gamma;&chi;&iota;&mu;&omicron;&upsilon;&sigmaf;</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="Echousan.">&Epsilon;&chi;&omicron;&upsilon;&sigma;&alpha;&nu;.</span></p>
+<p class='ralign'>Eurip. Ph&oelig;niss. ver. 369.</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>22 &ldquo;But staid to sing alone</p>
+<p>33 To one distinguish&rsquo;d throne.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>The poet cuts off the prevalence of simplicity
+among the Romans with the reign of Augustus;
+and, indeed, it did not continue much longer,
+most of the compositions, after that date, giving
+into false and artificial ornament.</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>&ldquo;No more, in hall or bower,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>The passions own thy power,</p>
+<p>Love, only love, her forceless numbers mean.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>In these lines the writings of the Proven&ccedil;al poets
+are principally alluded to, in which simplicity is
+generally sacrificed to the rhapsodies of romantic
+love.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_131' name='page_131'></a>131</span>
+<a name='ODE_ON_THE_POETICAL_CHARACTER_1' id='ODE_ON_THE_POETICAL_CHARACTER_1'></a>
+<h3>ODE ON THE POETICAL CHARACTER.</h3>
+</div>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>Procul! O! procul este profani!</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>This ode is so infinitely abstracted and replete
+with high enthusiasm, that it will find few readers
+capable of entering into the spirit of it, or of
+relishing its beauties. There is a style of sentiment
+as utterly unintelligible to common capacities,
+as if the subject were treated in an unknown
+language; and it is on the same account that
+abstracted poetry will never have many admirers.</p>
+<p>The authors of such poems must be content
+with the approbation of those heaven-favoured
+geniuses, who, by a similarity of taste and sentiment,
+are enabled to penetrate the high mysteries
+of inspired fancy, and to pursue the loftiest flights
+of enthusiastic imagination. Nevertheless, the
+praise of the distinguished few is certainly preferable
+to the applause of the undiscerning million;
+for all praise is valuable in proportion to the
+judgment of those who confer it.</p>
+<p>As the subject of this ode is uncommon, so are
+the style and expression highly metaphorical and
+abstracted: thus the sun is called &ldquo;the rich-hair&rsquo;d
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_132' name='page_132'></a>132</span>
+youth of morn,&rdquo; the ideas are termed
+&ldquo;the shadowy tribes of mind,&rdquo; &amp;c. We are
+struck with the propriety of this mode of expression
+here, and it affords us new proofs of the
+analogy that subsists between language and sentiment.</p>
+<p>Nothing can be more loftily imagined than the
+creation of the cestus of Fancy in this ode: the
+allegorical imagery is rich and sublime: and the
+observation, that the dangerous passions kept aloof
+during the operation, is founded on the strictest
+philosophical truth: for poetical fancy can exist
+only in minds that are perfectly serene, and in
+some measure abstracted from the influences of
+sense.</p>
+<p>The scene of Milton&rsquo;s &ldquo;inspiring hour&rdquo; is perfectly
+in character, and described with all those
+wild-wood appearances of which the great poet
+was so enthusiastically fond:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;I view that oak, the fancied glades among,</p>
+<p>By which as Milton lay, his evening ear,</p>
+<p>Nigh sphered in heaven, its native strains could hear.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_133' name='page_133'></a>133</span>
+<a name='ODE_WRITTEN_IN_THE_YEAR_1746' id='ODE_WRITTEN_IN_THE_YEAR_1746'></a>
+<h3>ODE,</h3>
+<h4>WRITTEN IN THE YEAR 1746.</h4>
+</div>
+<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
+<a name='ODE_TO_MERCY_1' id='ODE_TO_MERCY_1'></a>
+<h3>ODE TO MERCY.</h3>
+</div>
+<p>The Ode written in 1746, and the Ode to Mercy,
+seem to have been written on the same occasion,
+viz. the late rebellion; the former in memory of
+those heroes who fell in defence of their country,
+the latter to excite sentiments of compassion in
+favour of those unhappy and deluded wretches
+who became a sacrifice to public justice.</p>
+<p>The language and imagery of both are very
+beautiful; but the scene and figures described,
+in the strophe of the Ode to Mercy, are exquisitely
+striking, and would afford a painter one of
+the finest subjects in the world.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_134' name='page_134'></a>134</span>
+<a name='ODE_TO_LIBERTY_1' id='ODE_TO_LIBERTY_1'></a>
+<h3>ODE TO LIBERTY.</h3>
+</div>
+<p>The ancient states of Greece, perhaps the only
+ones in which a perfect model of liberty ever
+existed, are naturally brought to view in the
+opening of the poem:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;Who shall awake the Spartan fife,</p>
+<p>And call in solemn sounds to life,</p>
+<p>The youths, whose locks divinely spreading,</p>
+<p>Like vernal hyacinths in sullen hue.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>There is something extremely bold in this imagery
+of the locks of the Spartan youths, and greatly
+superior to that description Jocasta gives us of
+the hair of Polynices:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p><span lang="el" title="Bostrych&ocirc;n te kyanochr&ocirc;ta chaitas">&Beta;&omicron;&sigma;&tau;&rho;&upsilon;&chi;&omega;&nu; &tau;&epsilon; &kappa;&upsilon;&alpha;&nu;&omicron;&chi;&rho;&omega;&tau;&alpha; &chi;&alpha;&iota;&tau;&alpha;&sigmaf;</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="Plokamon&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;">&Pi;&lambda;&omicron;&kappa;&alpha;&mu;&omicron;&nu;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;</span></p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;What new Alc&aelig;us, fancy-blest,</p>
+<p>Shall sing the sword, in myrtles drest,&rdquo; &amp;c.</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>This alludes to a fragment of Alc&aelig;us still remaining,
+in which the poet celebrates Harmodius and
+Aristogiton, who slew the tyrant Hipparchus, and
+thereby restored the liberty of Athens.</p>
+<p>The fall of Rome is here most nervously described
+in one line</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;With heaviest sound, a giant statue, fell.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_135' name='page_135'></a>135</span></div>
+<p>The thought seems altogether new, and the imitative
+harmony in the structure of the verse is
+admirable.</p>
+<p>After bewailing the ruin of ancient liberty, the
+poet considers the influence it has retained, or
+still retains, among the moderns; and here the
+free republics of Italy naturally engage his attention.&ndash;&ndash;Florence,
+indeed, only to be lamented on
+account of losing its liberty under those patrons
+of letters, the Medicean family; the jealous Pisa,
+justly so called, in respect to its long impatience
+and regret under the same yoke; and the small
+Marino, which, however unrespectable with regard
+to power or extent of territory, has, at least, this
+distinction to boast, that it has preserved its
+liberty longer than any other state, ancient or
+modern, having, without any revolution, retained
+its present mode of government near fourteen
+hundred years. Moreover the patron saint who
+founded it, and from whom it takes its name,
+deserves this poetical record, as he is, perhaps,
+the only saint that ever contributed to the establishment
+of freedom.</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;Nor e&rsquo;er her former pride relate</p>
+<p>To sad Liguria&rsquo;s bleeding state.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>In these lines the poet alludes to those ravages
+in the state of Genoa, occasioned by the unhappy
+divisions of the Guelphs and Gibelines.</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;When the favour&rsquo;d of thy choice,</p>
+<p>The daring archer heard thy voice.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_136' name='page_136'></a>136</span></div>
+<p>For an account of the celebrated event referred
+to in these verses, see Voltaire&rsquo;s Epistle to the
+King of Prussia.</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;Those whom the rod of Alva bruised,</p>
+<p>Whose crown a British queen refused!&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>The Flemings were so dreadfully oppressed by
+this sanguinary general of Philip the Second, that
+they offered their sovereignty to Elizabeth; but,
+happily for her subjects, she had policy and magnanimity
+enough to refuse it. Desormeaux, in
+his Abr&eacute;g&eacute; Chronologique de l&rsquo;Histoire d&rsquo;Espagne,
+thus describes the sufferings of the Flemings:
+&ldquo;Le duc d&rsquo;Albe achevoit de r&eacute;duire les Flamands
+au d&eacute;sespoir. Apr&egrave;s avoir inond&eacute; les &eacute;chafauds
+du sang le plus noble et le plus pr&eacute;cieux, il faisoit
+construire des citadelles en divers endroits,
+et vouloit &eacute;tablir l&rsquo;Alcavala, ce tribute on&eacute;reux
+qui avoit &eacute;t&eacute; longtems en usage parmi les Espagnols.&rdquo;&ndash;&ndash;<i>Abr&eacute;g.
+Chron. tom. iv.</i></p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='center'>&ldquo;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;Mona,</p>
+<p>Where thousand elfin shapes abide.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>Mona is properly the Roman name of the Isle of
+Anglesey, anciently so famous for its Druids;
+but sometimes, as in this place, it is given to the
+Isle of Man. Both these isles still retain much
+of the genius of superstition, and are now the
+only places where there is the least chance of
+finding a fairy.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_137' name='page_137'></a>137</span>
+<a name='ODE_TO_A_LADY_ON_THE_DEATH_OF_COLONEL_ROSS_IN_THE_ACTION_OF_FONTENOY' id='ODE_TO_A_LADY_ON_THE_DEATH_OF_COLONEL_ROSS_IN_THE_ACTION_OF_FONTENOY'></a>
+<h3>ODE TO A LADY,</h3>
+<h4>ON THE DEATH OF COLONEL ROSS, IN THE ACTION OF FONTENOY.</h4>
+</div>
+<p>The iambic kind of numbers in which this ode
+is conceived seems as well calculated for tender
+and plaintive subjects, as for those where strength
+or rapidity is required.&ndash;&ndash;This, perhaps, is owing
+to the repetition of the strain in the same stanza;
+for sorrow rejects variety, and affects a uniformity
+of complaint. It is needless to observe,
+that this ode is replete with harmony, spirit, and
+pathos; and there surely appears no reason why
+the seventh and eighth stanzas should be omitted
+in that copy printed in Dodsley&rsquo;s Collection of
+Poems.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_138' name='page_138'></a>138</span>
+<a name='ODE_TO_EVENING_1' id='ODE_TO_EVENING_1'></a>
+<h3>ODE TO EVENING.</h3>
+</div>
+<p>The blank ode has for some time solicited admission
+into the English poetry; but its efforts,
+hitherto, seem to have been in vain, at least its
+reception has been no more than partial. It
+remains a question, then, whether there is not
+something in the nature of blank verse less
+adapted to the lyric than to the heroic measure,
+since, though it has been generally received in
+the latter, it is yet unadopted in the former. In
+order to discover this, we are to consider the different
+modes of these different species of poetry.
+That of the heroic is uniform; that of the lyric is
+various; and in these circumstances of uniformity
+and variety probably lies the cause why blank
+verse has been successful in the one, and unacceptable
+in the other. While it presented itself
+only in one form, it was familiarized to the ear
+by custom; but where it was obliged to assume
+the different shapes of the lyric muse, it seemed
+still a stranger of uncouth figure, was received
+rather with curiosity than pleasure, and entertained
+without that ease or satisfaction which
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_139' name='page_139'></a>139</span>
+acquaintance and familiarity produce.&ndash;&ndash;Moreover,
+the heroic blank verse obtained a sanction
+of infinite importance to its general reception,
+when it was adopted by one of the greatest poets
+the world ever produced, and was made the
+vehicle of the noblest poem that ever was written.
+When this poem at length extorted that applause
+which ignorance and prejudice had united to
+withhold, the versification soon found its imitators,
+and became more generally successful than
+even in those countries from whence it was imported.
+But lyric blank verse had met with no
+such advantages; for Mr. Collins, whose genius
+and judgment in harmony might have given it so
+powerful an effect, has left us but one specimen
+of it in the Ode to Evening.</p>
+<p>In the choice of his measure he seems to have
+had in his eye Horace&rsquo;s Ode to Pyrrha; for this
+ode bears the nearest resemblance to that mixed
+kind of the asclepiad and pherecratic verse; and
+that resemblance in some degree reconciles us to
+the want of rhyme, while it reminds us of those
+great masters of antiquity, whose works had no
+need of this whimsical jingle of sounds.</p>
+<p>From the following passage one might be induced
+to think that the poet had it in view to
+render his subject and his versification suitable to
+each other on this occasion, and that, when he
+addressed himself to the sober power of Evening,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_140' name='page_140'></a>140</span>
+he had thought proper to lay aside the foppery
+of rhyme:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>&ldquo;Now teach me, maid composed,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>To breathe some soften&rsquo;d strain,</p>
+<p>Whose numbers, stealing through thy darkening vale,</p>
+<p>May not unseemly with its stillness suit,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>As, musing slow, I hail</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Thy genial loved return!&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>But whatever were the numbers or the versification
+of this ode, the imagery and enthusiasm it
+contains could not fail of rendering it delightful.
+No other of Mr. Collins&rsquo;s odes is more generally
+characteristic of his genius. In one place we discover
+his passion for visionary beings:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;For when thy folding-star arising shows</p>
+<p>His paly circlet, at his warning lamp</p>
+<p class='indent2'>The fragrant Hours, and Elves</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Who slept in buds the day,</p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>And many a Nymph who wreathes her brows with sedge,</p>
+<p>And sheds the freshening dew, and, lovelier still,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>The pensive Pleasures sweet,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Prepare thy shadowy car.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>In another we behold his strong bias to melancholy:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;Then let me rove some wild and heathy scene,</p>
+<p>Or find some ruin &rsquo;midst its dreary dells,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Whose walls more awful nod</p>
+<p class='indent2'>By thy religious gleams.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_141' name='page_141'></a>141</span></div>
+<p>Then appears his taste for what is wildly grand
+and magnificent in nature; when, prevented by
+storms from enjoying his evening walk, he wishes
+for a situation,</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;That from the mountain&rsquo;s side</p>
+<p>Views wilds and swelling floods;&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>And through the whole, his invariable attachment
+to the expression of painting:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;and marks o&rsquo;er all</p>
+<p>Thy dewy fingers draw</p>
+<p>The gradual dusky veil.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>It might be a sufficient encomium on this beautiful
+ode to observe, that it has been particularly
+admired by a lady to whom nature has given the
+most perfect principles of taste. She has not
+even complained of the want of rhyme in it; a
+circumstance by no means unfavourable to the
+cause of lyric blank verse; for surely, if a fair
+reader can endure an ode without bells and
+chimes, the masculine genius may dispense with
+them.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_142' name='page_142'></a>142</span>
+<a name='THE_MANNERS_AN_ODE_1' id='THE_MANNERS_AN_ODE_1'></a>
+<h3>THE MANNERS.</h3>
+<h4>AN ODE.</h4>
+</div>
+<p>From the subject and sentiments of this ode, it
+seems not improbable that the author wrote it
+about the time when he left the university; when,
+weary with the pursuit of academical studies, he
+no longer confined himself to the search of theoretical
+knowledge, but commenced the scholar of
+humanity, to study nature in her works, and man
+in society.</p>
+<p>The following farewell to Science exhibits a
+very just as well as striking picture: for however
+exalted in theory the Platonic doctrines may appear,
+it is certain that Platonism and Pyrrhonism
+are nearly allied:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;Farewell the porch, whose roof is seen,</p>
+<p>Arch&rsquo;d with the enlivening olive&rsquo;s green:</p>
+<p>Where Science, prank&rsquo;d in tissued vest,</p>
+<p>By Reason, Pride, and Fancy drest,</p>
+<p>Comes like a bride, so trim array&rsquo;d,</p>
+<p>To wed with Doubt in Plato&rsquo;s shade!&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_143' name='page_143'></a>143</span></div>
+<p>When the mind goes in pursuit of visionary systems,
+it is not far from the regions of doubt; and
+the greater its capacity to think abstractedly, to
+reason and refine, the more it will be exposed to,
+and bewildered in, uncertainty.&ndash;&ndash;From an enthusiastic
+warmth of temper, indeed, we may for
+a while be encouraged to persist in some favourite
+doctrine, or to adhere to some adopted system;
+but when that enthusiasm, which is founded on
+the vivacity of the passions, gradually cools and
+dies away with them, the opinions it supported
+drop from us, and we are thrown upon the inhospitable
+shore of doubt.&ndash;&ndash;A striking proof of
+the necessity of some moral rule of wisdom and
+virtue, and some system of happiness established
+by unerring knowledge, and unlimited power.</p>
+<p>In the poet&rsquo;s address to Humour in this ode
+there is one image of singular beauty and propriety.
+The ornaments in the hair of Wit are of
+such a nature, and disposed in such a manner, as
+to be perfectly symbolical and characteristic:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;Me too amidst thy band admit,</p>
+<p>There where the young-eyed healthful Wit,</p>
+<p>(Whose jewels in his crisped hair</p>
+<p>Are placed each other&rsquo;s beams to share,</p>
+<p>Whom no delights from thee divide)</p>
+<p>In laughter loosed, attends thy side.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>Nothing could be more expressive of wit, which
+consists in a happy collision of comparative and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_144' name='page_144'></a>144</span>
+relative images, than this reciprocal reflection of
+light from the disposition of the jewels.</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;O Humour, thou whose name is known</p>
+<p>To Britain&rsquo;s favour&rsquo;d isle alone.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>The author could only mean to apply this to the
+time when he wrote, since other nations had produced
+works of great humour, as he himself acknowledges
+afterwards.</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;By old Miletus,&rdquo; &amp;c.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By all you taught the Tuscan maids,&rdquo; &amp;c.</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>The Milesian and Tuscan romances were by no
+means distinguished for humour; but as they
+were the models of that species of writing in
+which humour was afterwards employed, they are,
+probably for that reason only, mentioned here.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_145' name='page_145'></a>145</span>
+<a name='THE_PASSIONS_AN_ODE_FOR_MUSIC_1' id='THE_PASSIONS_AN_ODE_FOR_MUSIC_1'></a>
+<h3>THE PASSIONS.</h3>
+<h4>AN ODE FOR MUSIC.</h4>
+</div>
+<p>If the music which was composed for this ode
+had equal merit with the ode itself, it must have
+been the most excellent performance of the kind
+in which poetry and music have, in modern
+times, united. Other pieces of the same nature
+have derived their greatest reputation from the
+perfection of the music that accompanied them,
+having in themselves little more merit than that
+of an ordinary ballad: but in this we have the
+whole soul and power of poetry&ndash;&ndash;expression that,
+even without the aid of music, strikes to the
+heart; and imagery of power enough to transport
+the attention, without the forceful alliance of corresponding
+sounds! what, then, must have been
+the effect of these united!</p>
+<p>It is very observable, that though the measure
+is the same, in which the musical efforts of Fear,
+Anger, and Despair are described, yet, by the
+variation of the cadence, the character and operation
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_146' name='page_146'></a>146</span>
+of each is strongly expressed: thus particularly
+of Despair:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;With woful measures wan Despair&ndash;&ndash;</p>
+<p class='indent2'>Low, sullen sounds his grief beguiled,</p>
+<p>A solemn, strange, and mingled air,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>&rsquo;Twas sad by fits, by starts &rsquo;twas wild.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>He must be a very unskilful composer who could
+not catch the power of imitative harmony from
+these lines!</p>
+<p>The picture of Hope that follows this is beautiful
+almost beyond imitation. By the united
+powers of imagery and harmony, that delightful
+being is exhibited with all the charms and graces
+that pleasure and fancy have appropriated to
+her:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>Relegat, qui semel percurrit;</p>
+<p>Qui nunquam legit, legat.</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;But thou, O Hope, with eyes so fair,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>What was thy delighted measure!</p>
+<p>Still it whisper&rsquo;d promised pleasure,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And bade the lovely scenes at distance hail!</p>
+<p>Still would her touch the strain prolong,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And from the rocks, the woods, the vale,</p>
+<p>She call&rsquo;d on Echo still through all the song;</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And where her sweetest theme she chose,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>A soft responsive voice was heard at every close,</p>
+<p>And Hope enchanted smiled, and waved her golden hair.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>In what an exalted light does the above stanza
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_147' name='page_147'></a>147</span>
+place this great master of poetical imagery and
+harmony! what varied sweetness of numbers!
+what delicacy of judgment and expression! how
+characteristically does Hope prolong her strain,
+repeat her soothing closes, call upon her associate
+Echo for the same purposes, and display every
+pleasing grace peculiar to her!</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&ldquo;And Hope enchanted smiled, and waved her golden hair.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>Legat, qui nunquam legit;</p>
+<p>Qui semel percurrit, relegat.</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>The descriptions of Joy, Jealousy, and Revenge
+are excellent, though not equally so. Those of
+Melancholy and Cheerfulness are superior to
+every thing of the kind; and, upon the whole,
+there may be very little hazard in asserting, that
+this is the finest ode in the English language.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_148' name='page_148'></a>148</span>
+<a name='AN_EPISTLE_TO_SIR_THOMAS_HANMER_ON_HIS_EDITION_OF_SHAKESPEARES_WORKS' id='AN_EPISTLE_TO_SIR_THOMAS_HANMER_ON_HIS_EDITION_OF_SHAKESPEARES_WORKS'></a>
+<h3>AN EPISTLE</h3>
+<h4>TO SIR THOMAS HANMER, ON HIS EDITION OF SHAKESPEARE&rsquo;S WORKS.</h4>
+</div>
+<p>This poem was written by our author at the
+university, about the time when Sir Thomas Hanmer&rsquo;s
+pompous edition of Shakespeare was printed
+at Oxford. If it has not so much merit as the
+rest of his poems, it has still more than the subject
+deserves. The versification is easy and genteel,
+and the allusions always poetical. The
+character of the poet Fletcher in particular is
+very justly drawn in this epistle.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_149' name='page_149'></a>149</span>
+<a name='DIRGE_IN_CYMBELINE_ODE_ON_THE_DEATH_OF_THOMSON' id='DIRGE_IN_CYMBELINE_ODE_ON_THE_DEATH_OF_THOMSON'></a>
+<h3>DIRGE IN CYMBELINE.</h3>
+<h4>ODE ON THE DEATH OF THOMSON.</h4>
+</div>
+<p>Mr. Collins had skill to complain. Of that
+mournful melody, and those tender images, which
+are the distinguishing excellencies of such pieces
+as bewail departed friendship, or beauty, he was
+an almost unequaled master. He knew perfectly
+to exhibit such circumstances, peculiar to
+the objects, as awaken the influences of pity;
+and while, from his own great sensibility, he felt
+what he wrote, he naturally addressed himself to
+the feelings of others.</p>
+<p>To read such lines as the following, all-beautiful
+and tender as they are, without corresponding
+emotions of pity, is surely impossible:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p class='indent2'>&ldquo;The tender thought on thee shall dwell;</p>
+<p>Each lonely scene shall thee restore,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>For thee the tear be duly shed;</p>
+<p>Beloved till life can charm no more,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And mourn&rsquo;d till Pity&rsquo;s self be dead.&rdquo;</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>The Ode on the Death of Thomson seems to have
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_150' name='page_150'></a>150</span>
+been written in an excursion to Richmond by
+water. The rural scenery has a proper effect in
+an ode to the memory of a poet, much of whose
+merit lay in descriptions of the same kind; and
+the appellations of &ldquo;Druid,&rdquo; and &ldquo;meek Nature&rsquo;s
+child,&rdquo; are happily characteristic. For the
+better understanding of this ode, it is necessary
+to remember, that Mr. Thomson lies buried in
+the church of Richmond.</p>
+<p class='center padtop'><b>THE END.</b></p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<hr class='fn' />
+<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
+<a name='FOOTNOTES' id='FOOTNOTES'></a>
+<h2>FOOTNOTES:</h2>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0001' id='Footnote_0001'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0001'><span class='label'>[1]</span></a>
+<p>21st March, 1740.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0002' id='Footnote_0002'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0002'><span class='label'>[2]</span></a>
+<p>Afterwards republished with the title of &ldquo;Oriental Eclogues.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0003' id='Footnote_0003'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0003'><span class='label'>[3]</span></a>
+<p>D&rsquo;Israeli, in his &ldquo;Calamities of Authors,&rdquo; vol. ii. p. 201.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0004' id='Footnote_0004'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0004'><span class='label'>[4]</span></a>
+<p>June 7th, 1746.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0005' id='Footnote_0005'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0005'><span class='label'>[5]</span></a>
+<p>Mr. Joseph Warton, now Dr. Warton, head master of
+Winton school, was at the same time second upon roll; and
+Mr. Mulso, now [1781] prebendary of the church of Winton,
+third upon roll.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0006' id='Footnote_0006'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0006'><span class='label'>[6]</span></a>
+<p>Hampton, the translator of Polybius.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0007' id='Footnote_0007'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0007'><span class='label'>[7]</span></a>
+<p>Dallaway&rsquo;s Sussex, vol. i. p. 185&ndash;&ndash;The arms of the family
+of Collins are there said to have been, &ldquo;Azure a griffin
+segreant or;&rdquo; but in Sir William Burrell&rsquo;s MS. Collections
+for a History of Sussex, in the British Museum, the field is
+described as being vert. From those manuscripts which are
+marked &ldquo;Additional MSS.&rdquo; Nos. 5697 to 5699, the following
+notices of the Poet&rsquo;s family have been extracted.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p class='center'>REGISTER OF ST. ANDREW&rsquo;S, CHICHESTER.</p>
+<p class='center smcaplc'>BAPTISM.</p>
+<p class='lalign'>Elizabeth, daughter of Mr. George Collins, 8th October, 1763.</p>
+<p class='center smcaplc'>BURIALS.</p>
+<p class='lalign'>Mrs. Elizabeth Collins [the poet&rsquo;s mother], 6th July, 1744.<br />
+William Collins, Gent. [the Poet], 15th June, 1759.</p>
+<p class='center'>REGISTER OF ST. PETER THE GREAT,
+CHICHESTER.</p>
+<p class='center smcaplc'>BAPTISMS.</p>
+<p class='lalign'>Charles, son of Roger Collins, 8th February, 1645.<br />
+George, son of Mr. George Collins, 28th December, 1647.<br />
+Humphrey, son of Mr. Richard Collins, 20th Dec. 1648.<br />
+George, son of Mr. George Collins, 7th September, 1651.<br />
+Christian, daughter of Mr. Richard Collins, 1st Sept. 1652.<br />
+John, son of Mr. Richard Collins, senior, 13th Dec. 1652.<br />
+Elizabeth, daughter of Mr. Richard Collins, sen. 16th May, 1656.<br />
+Joan, daughter of Mr. Richard Collins, jun. 12th Dec. 1656.<br />
+Judith, daughter of Mr. Collins, Vicar Choral, 17th April, 1667.<br />
+Elizabeth, daughter of Mr. William Collins, 6th March, 1704.</p>
+<p class='center smcaplc'>MARRIAGES.</p>
+<p class='lalign'>Mr. Charles Collins and Mrs. Elizabeth Cardiff, 14th April, 1696.</p>
+<p class='center'>BURIALS.</p>
+<p class='lalign'>&ndash;&ndash;&ndash; wife of Mr. William Collins, 10th December, 1650.<br />
+Susan, wife of Mr. Richard Collins, 3rd December, 1657.<br />
+Mr. George Collins, 10th January, 1669.<br />
+Mrs. Collins of St. Olave&rsquo;s Parish, 19th July, 1696.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>There are monumental inscriptions in St. Andrew&rsquo;s Church,
+Chichester, to the Poet&rsquo;s father, mother, maternal uncle,
+Colonel Martyn, and sister, Mrs. Durnford.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0008' id='Footnote_0008'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0008'><span class='label'>[8]</span></a>
+<p>So much of the will of Colonel Edmund Martyn as relates
+to the Poet and his sister has been already cited, but
+the testator&rsquo;s situation in life and the respectability of his
+family are best shown by other parts of that document. He
+describes himself as a lieutenant-colonel in his Majesty&rsquo;s
+service, lying sick in the city of Chichester. To his niece
+Elizabeth, the wife of Thomas Napper, of Itchenor in Sussex,
+he bequeathed 100<i>l.</i> His copyhold estates of the manors of
+Selsey, and Somerly, in that county, to his nephew, Abraham
+Martyn, the youngest son of his late only brother, Henry
+Martyn, and to his servant, John Hipp, he gave his wearing
+apparel and ten pounds.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0009' id='Footnote_0009'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0009'><span class='label'>[9]</span></a>
+<p>Dyce&rsquo;s edition of Collins, 1827, p. 39.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0010' id='Footnote_0010'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0010'><span class='label'>[10]</span></a>
+<p>In the Persian tongue, Abbas signifieth &ldquo;the father of
+the people.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0011' id='Footnote_0011'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0011'><span class='label'>[11]</span></a>
+<p>The gulf of that name, famous for the pearl fishery.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0012' id='Footnote_0012'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0012'><span class='label'>[12]</span></a>
+<p>That these flowers are found in very great abundance in
+some of the provinces of Persia, see the Modern History of
+the ingenious Mr. Salmon. C.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0013' id='Footnote_0013'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0013'><span class='label'>[13]</span></a>
+<p>Euripides, of whom Aristotle pronounces, on a comparison
+of him with Sophocles, that he was the greater master
+of the tender passions,
+<span lang="el" title="&ecirc;n tragik&ocirc;teros">&eta;&nu; &tau;&rho;&alpha;&gamma;&iota;&kappa;&omega;&tau;&epsilon;&rho;&omicron;&sigmaf;</span>. C.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0014' id='Footnote_0014'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0014'><span class='label'>[14]</span></a>
+<p>The river Arun runs by the village of Trotton in Sussex,
+where Otway had his birth.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0015' id='Footnote_0015'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0015'><span class='label'>[15]</span></a>
+<p>Alluding to the
+<span lang="el" title="Kynas aphyktous">&Kappa;&upsilon;&nu;&alpha;&sigmaf; &alpha;&phi;&upsilon;&kappa;&tau;&omicron;&upsilon;&sigmaf;</span>
+of Sophocles. See
+the Electra. C.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0016' id='Footnote_0016'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0016'><span class='label'>[16]</span></a>
+<p>&AElig;schylus. C.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0017' id='Footnote_0017'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0017'><span class='label'>[17]</span></a>
+<p>Jocasta. C.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0018' id='Footnote_0018'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0018'><span class='label'>[18]</span></a>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p><span lang="el" title="&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;oud' et' &ocirc;r&ocirc;rei bo&ecirc;,">&omicron;&upsilon;&delta;&rsquo; &epsilon;&tau;&rsquo; &omega;&rho;&omega;&rho;&epsilon;&iota; &beta;&omicron;&eta;,</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="&Ecirc;n men si&ocirc;p&ecirc;; phthegma d' exaiphn&ecirc;s tinos">&Eta;&nu; &mu;&epsilon;&nu; &sigma;&iota;&omega;&pi;&eta;; &phi;&theta;&epsilon;&gamma;&mu;&alpha; &delta;&rsquo; &epsilon;&xi;&alpha;&iota;&phi;&nu;&eta;&sigmaf; &tau;&iota;&nu;&omicron;&sigmaf;</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="Th&ocirc;uxen auton, h&ocirc;ste pantas orthias">&Theta;&omega;&upsilon;&xi;&epsilon;&nu; &alpha;&upsilon;&tau;&omicron;&nu;, &#8033;&sigma;&tau;&epsilon; &pi;&alpha;&nu;&tau;&alpha;&sigmaf; &omicron;&rho;&theta;&iota;&alpha;&sigmaf;</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="St&ecirc;sai phob&ocirc; deisantas exaiphn&ecirc;s trichas.">&Sigma;&tau;&eta;&sigma;&alpha;&iota; &phi;&omicron;&beta;&omega; &delta;&epsilon;&iota;&sigma;&alpha;&nu;&tau;&alpha;&sigmaf; &epsilon;&xi;&alpha;&iota;&phi;&nu;&eta;&sigmaf; &tau;&rho;&iota;&chi;&alpha;&sigmaf;.</span></p>
+</div><div class='stanza'>
+<p>See the &OElig;dip. Colon. of Sophocles. C.</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0019' id='Footnote_0019'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0019'><span class='label'>[19]</span></a>
+<p>The
+<span lang="el" title="a&ecirc;d&ocirc;n">&alpha;&eta;&delta;&omega;&nu;</span>,
+or nightingale, for which Sophocles seems
+to have entertained a peculiar fondness. C.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0020' id='Footnote_0020'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0020'><span class='label'>[20]</span></a>
+<p>Florimel. See Spenser, Leg. 4th. C.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0021' id='Footnote_0021'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0021'><span class='label'>[21]</span></a>
+<p>Alluding to that beautiful fragment of Alc&aelig;us:</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p><span lang="el" title="En myrtou kladi to xiphos phor&ecirc;s&ocirc;,">&Epsilon;&nu; &mu;&upsilon;&rho;&tau;&omicron;&upsilon; &kappa;&lambda;&alpha;&delta;&iota; &tau;&omicron; &xi;&iota;&phi;&omicron;&sigmaf; &phi;&omicron;&rho;&eta;&sigma;&omega;,</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="H&ocirc;sper Harmodios k' Aristogeit&ocirc;n,">H&omega;&sigma;&pi;&epsilon;&rho; &#7945;&rho;&mu;&omicron;&delta;&iota;&omicron;&sigmaf; &kappa;&rsquo; &Alpha;&rho;&iota;&sigma;&tau;&omicron;&gamma;&epsilon;&iota;&tau;&omega;&nu;,</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="Hote ton tyrannon ktanet&ecirc;n.">&#8009;&tau;&epsilon; &tau;&omicron;&nu; &tau;&upsilon;&rho;&alpha;&nu;&nu;&omicron;&nu; &kappa;&tau;&alpha;&nu;&epsilon;&tau;&eta;&nu;.</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="Isonomous t' Ath&ecirc;nas epoi&ecirc;sat&ecirc;n.">&Iota;&sigma;&omicron;&nu;&omicron;&mu;&omicron;&upsilon;&sigmaf; &tau;&rsquo; &Alpha;&theta;&eta;&nu;&alpha;&sigmaf; &epsilon;&pi;&omicron;&iota;&eta;&sigma;&alpha;&tau;&eta;&nu;.</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="Philtath' Harmodi' ou ti pou tethn&ecirc;kas,">&Phi;&iota;&lambda;&tau;&alpha;&theta;&rsquo; &#7945;&rho;&mu;&omicron;&delta;&iota;&rsquo; &omicron;&upsilon; &tau;&iota; &pi;&omicron;&upsilon; &tau;&epsilon;&theta;&nu;&eta;&kappa;&alpha;&sigmaf;,</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="N&ecirc;sois d' en makar&ocirc;n se phasin einai,">&Nu;&eta;&sigma;&omicron;&iota;&sigmaf; &delta;&rsquo; &epsilon;&nu; &mu;&alpha;&kappa;&alpha;&rho;&omega;&nu; &sigma;&epsilon; &phi;&alpha;&sigma;&iota;&nu; &epsilon;&iota;&nu;&alpha;&iota;,</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="Hina per pod&ocirc;k&ecirc;s Achileus,">&#7993;&nu;&alpha; &pi;&epsilon;&rho; &pi;&omicron;&delta;&omega;&kappa;&eta;&sigmaf; &Alpha;&chi;&iota;&lambda;&epsilon;&upsilon;&sigmaf;,</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="Tydeid&ecirc;n te phasin Diom&ecirc;dea.">&Tau;&upsilon;&delta;&epsilon;&iota;&delta;&eta;&nu; &tau;&epsilon; &phi;&alpha;&sigma;&iota;&nu; &Delta;&iota;&omicron;&mu;&eta;&delta;&epsilon;&alpha;.</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="En myrtou kladi to xiphos phor&ecirc;s&ocirc;,">&Epsilon;&nu; &mu;&upsilon;&rho;&tau;&omicron;&upsilon; &kappa;&lambda;&alpha;&delta;&iota; &tau;&omicron; &xi;&iota;&phi;&omicron;&sigmaf; &phi;&omicron;&rho;&eta;&sigma;&omega;,</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="&Ocirc;sper Harmodios k' Aristogeit&ocirc;n,">&Omega;&sigma;&pi;&epsilon;&rho; &#7945;&rho;&mu;&omicron;&delta;&iota;&omicron;&sigmaf; &kappa;&rsquo; &Alpha;&rho;&iota;&sigma;&tau;&omicron;&gamma;&epsilon;&iota;&tau;&omega;&nu;,</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="Hot' Ath&ecirc;nai&ecirc;s en Thysiais">&#8009;&tau;&rsquo; &Alpha;&theta;&eta;&nu;&alpha;&iota;&eta;&sigmaf; &epsilon;&nu; &Theta;&upsilon;&sigma;&iota;&alpha;&iota;&sigmaf;</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="Andra tyrannon Hipparchon ekainet&ecirc;n.">&Alpha;&nu;&delta;&rho;&alpha; &tau;&upsilon;&rho;&alpha;&nu;&nu;&omicron;&nu; &#7993;&pi;&pi;&alpha;&rho;&chi;&omicron;&nu; &epsilon;&kappa;&alpha;&iota;&nu;&epsilon;&tau;&eta;&nu;.</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="Aei sph&ocirc;n kleos essetai kat' aian,">&Alpha;&epsilon;&iota; &sigma;&phi;&omega;&nu; &kappa;&lambda;&epsilon;&omicron;&sigmaf; &epsilon;&sigma;&sigma;&epsilon;&tau;&alpha;&iota; &kappa;&alpha;&tau;&rsquo; &alpha;&iota;&alpha;&nu;,</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="Philtath' Harmodie, k' Aristogeit&ocirc;n,">&Phi;&iota;&lambda;&tau;&alpha;&theta;&rsquo; &#7945;&rho;&mu;&omicron;&delta;&iota;&epsilon;, &kappa;&rsquo; &Alpha;&rho;&iota;&sigma;&tau;&omicron;&gamma;&epsilon;&iota;&tau;&omega;&nu;,</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="Hoti ton tyrannon ktaneton,">&#8009;&tau;&iota; &tau;&omicron;&nu; &tau;&upsilon;&rho;&alpha;&nu;&nu;&omicron;&nu; &kappa;&tau;&alpha;&nu;&epsilon;&tau;&omicron;&nu;,</span></p>
+<p><span lang="el" title="Isonomous t' Ath&ecirc;nas epoi&ecirc;saton.">&Iota;&sigma;&omicron;&nu;&omicron;&mu;&omicron;&upsilon;&sigmaf; &tau;&rsquo; &Alpha;&theta;&eta;&nu;&alpha;&sigmaf; &epsilon;&pi;&omicron;&iota;&eta;&sigma;&alpha;&tau;&omicron;&nu;.</span></p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0022' id='Footnote_0022'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0022'><span class='label'>[22]</span></a>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p><span lang="el" title="M&ecirc; m&ecirc; tauta leg&ocirc;mes, ha dakryon &ecirc;gage D&ecirc;oi.">&Mu;&eta; &mu;&eta; &tau;&alpha;&upsilon;&tau;&alpha; &lambda;&epsilon;&gamma;&omega;&mu;&epsilon;&sigmaf;, &#7937; &delta;&alpha;&kappa;&rho;&upsilon;&omicron;&nu; &eta;&gamma;&alpha;&gamma;&epsilon; &Delta;&eta;&omicron;&iota;.</span></p>
+<p class='ralign'>Callimach. <span lang="el" title="Hymnos eis D&ecirc;m&ecirc;tra">&#8025;&mu;&nu;&omicron;&sigmaf; &epsilon;&iota;&sigmaf; &Delta;&eta;&mu;&eta;&tau;&rho;&alpha;</span>. C.</p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0023' id='Footnote_0023'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0023'><span class='label'>[23]</span></a>
+<p>The family of the Medici. C.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0024' id='Footnote_0024'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0024'><span class='label'>[24]</span></a>
+<p>The little republic of San Marino. C.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0025' id='Footnote_0025'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0025'><span class='label'>[25]</span></a>
+<p>The Venetians. C.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0026' id='Footnote_0026'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0026'><span class='label'>[26]</span></a>
+<p>The Doge of Venice. C.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0027' id='Footnote_0027'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0027'><span class='label'>[27]</span></a>
+<p>Genoa. C.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0028' id='Footnote_0028'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0028'><span class='label'>[28]</span></a>
+<p>Switzerland. C.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0029' id='Footnote_0029'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0029'><span class='label'>[29]</span></a>
+<p>The Dutch, amongst whom there are very severe penalties
+for those who are convicted of killing this bird. They
+are kept tame in almost all their towns, and particularly at
+the Hague, of the arms of which they make a part. The
+common people of Holland are said to entertain a superstitious
+sentiment, that if the whole species of them should become
+extinct, they should lose their liberties. C.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0030' id='Footnote_0030'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0030'><span class='label'>[30]</span></a>
+<p>Queen Elizabeth. C.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0031' id='Footnote_0031'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0031'><span class='label'>[31]</span></a>
+<p>This tradition is mentioned by several of our old historians.
+Some naturalists too have endeavoured to support the
+probability of the fact by arguments drawn from the correspondent
+disposition of the two opposite coasts. I do not
+remember that any poetical use has been hitherto made of it.
+C.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0032' id='Footnote_0032'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0032'><span class='label'>[32]</span></a>
+<p>There is a tradition in the Isle of Man, that a mermaid
+becoming enamoured of a young man of extraordinary beauty
+took an opportunity of meeting him one day as he walked on
+the shore, and opened her passion to him, but was received
+with a coldness, occasioned by his horror and surprise at her
+appearance. This, however, was so misconstrued by the sea
+lady, that, in revenge for his treatment of her, she punished
+the whole island by covering it with a mist: so that all who
+attempted to carry on any commerce with it, either never
+arrived at it, but wandered up and down the sea, or were on
+a sudden wrecked upon its cliffs. C.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0033' id='Footnote_0033'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0033'><span class='label'>[33]</span></a>
+<p>Harting, a village adjoining the parish of Trotton, and
+about two miles distant from it.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0034' id='Footnote_0034'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0034'><span class='label'>[34]</span></a>
+<p>Alluding to the Milesian tales, some of the earliest romances.
+C.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0035' id='Footnote_0035'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0035'><span class='label'>[35]</span></a>
+<p>Cervantes. C.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0036' id='Footnote_0036'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0036'><span class='label'>[36]</span></a>
+<p>Monsieur Le Sage, author of the incomparable Adventures
+of Gil Blas de Santillane, who died in Paris in the
+year 1745. C.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0037' id='Footnote_0037'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0037'><span class='label'>[37]</span></a>
+<p>The harp of &AElig;olus, of which see a description in the
+Castle of Indolence. C.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0038' id='Footnote_0038'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0038'><span class='label'>[38]</span></a>
+<p>Richmond Church, in which Thomson was buried. C.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0039' id='Footnote_0039'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0039'><span class='label'>[39]</span></a>
+<p>Mr. Thomson resided in the neighbourhood of Richmond
+some time before his death.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0040' id='Footnote_0040'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0040'><span class='label'>[40]</span></a>
+<p>How truly did Collins predict Home&rsquo;s tragic powers!</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0041' id='Footnote_0041'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0041'><span class='label'>[41]</span></a>
+<p>A gentleman of the name of Barrow, who introduced
+Home to Collins. Ed. 1788.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0042' id='Footnote_0042'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0042'><span class='label'>[42]</span></a>
+<p>A summer hut, built in the high part of the mountains,
+to tend their flocks in the warm season, when the pasture is
+fine. Ed. 1788.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0043' id='Footnote_0043'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0043'><span class='label'>[43]</span></a>
+<p>By young Aurora, Collins undoubtedly meant the first
+appearance of the northern lights, which happened about the
+year 1715; at least it is most highly probable, from this
+peculiar circumstance, that no ancient writer whatever has
+taken any notice of them, nor even any modern one, previous
+to the above period. Ed. 1788.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0044' id='Footnote_0044'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0044'><span class='label'>[44]</span></a>
+<p>Second sight is the term that is used for the divination
+of the highlanders. Ed. 1788.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0045' id='Footnote_0045'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0045'><span class='label'>[45]</span></a>
+<p>The late Duke of Cumberland, who defeated the Pretender
+at the battle of Culloden. Ed. 1788.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0046' id='Footnote_0046'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0046'><span class='label'>[46]</span></a>
+<p>A fiery meteor, called by various names, such as Will
+with the Wisp, Jack with the Lantern, etc. It hovers in the
+air over marshy and fenny places. Ed. 1788.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0047' id='Footnote_0047'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0047'><span class='label'>[47]</span></a>
+<p>The water fiend.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0048' id='Footnote_0048'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0048'><span class='label'>[48]</span></a>
+<p>One of the Hebrides is called the Isle of Pigmies; where
+it is reported, that several miniature bones of the human
+species have been dug up in the ruins of a chapel there.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0049' id='Footnote_0049'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0049'><span class='label'>[49]</span></a>
+<p>Icolmkill, one of the Hebrides, where near sixty of the
+ancient Scottish, Irish, and Norwegian kings are interred.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0050' id='Footnote_0050'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0050'><span class='label'>[50]</span></a>
+<p>An aquatic bird like a goose, on the eggs of which the
+inhabitants of St. Kilda, another of the Hebrides, chiefly
+subsist. Ed. 1788.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0051' id='Footnote_0051'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0051'><span class='label'>[51]</span></a>
+<p>Three rivers in Scotland. Ed. 1788.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0052' id='Footnote_0052'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0052'><span class='label'>[52]</span></a>
+<p>Ben Jonson paid a visit on foot, in 1619, to the Scotch
+poet Drummond, at his seat of Hawthornden, within four
+miles of Edinburgh.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0053' id='Footnote_0053'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0053'><span class='label'>[53]</span></a>
+<p>Barrow, it seems, was at the Edinburgh University,
+which is in the county of Lothian. Ed. 1788.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0054' id='Footnote_0054'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0054'><span class='label'>[54]</span></a>
+<p>The &OElig;dipus of Sophocles.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0055' id='Footnote_0055'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0055'><span class='label'>[55]</span></a>
+<p>Julius the Second, the immediate predecessor of Leo the
+Tenth.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0056' id='Footnote_0056'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0056'><span class='label'>[56]</span></a>
+<p>Their characters are thus distinguished by Mr. Dryden.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0057' id='Footnote_0057'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0057'><span class='label'>[57]</span></a>
+<p>About the time of Shakespeare, the poet Hardy was in
+great repute in France. He wrote, according to Fontenelle,
+six hundred plays. The French poets after him applied
+themselves in general to the correct improvement of the stage,
+which was almost totally disregarded by those of our own
+country, Jonson excepted.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0058' id='Footnote_0058'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0058'><span class='label'>[58]</span></a>
+<p>The favourite author of the elder Corneille.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0059' id='Footnote_0059'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0059'><span class='label'>[59]</span></a>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>Turno tempus erit, magno cum optaverit emptum</p>
+<p>Intactum Pallanta, etc.</p>
+<p class='ralign'><span class='smcap'>Virg.</span></p>
+</div></div>
+</td></tr></table>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0060' id='Footnote_0060'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0060'><span class='label'>[60]</span></a>
+<p>See the tragedy of Julius C&aelig;sar.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0061' id='Footnote_0061'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0061'><span class='label'>[61]</span></a>
+<p>Coriolanus. See Mr. Spence&rsquo;s Dialogue on the Odyssey.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0062' id='Footnote_0062'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0062'><span class='label'>[62]</span></a>
+<p>It is uncertain where this poem appeared. It was inserted
+in the Edinburgh edition of the Poets, 1794. A
+manuscript copy in the collection recently belonging to Mr.
+Upcott, and now in the British Museum, is headed, &ldquo;Written
+by Collins when at Winchester School. From a Manuscript.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0063' id='Footnote_0063'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0063'><span class='label'>[63]</span></a>
+<p>See Memoir, p. xxxviii.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0064' id='Footnote_0064'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0064'><span class='label'>[64]</span></a>
+<p>Now Countess-dowager of Peterborough.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0065' id='Footnote_0065'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0065'><span class='label'>[65]</span></a>
+<p>Vauxhall.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0066' id='Footnote_0066'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0066'><span class='label'>[66]</span></a>
+<p>Vide the Spectator&rsquo;s Letters from Camilla, vol. vi.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0067' id='Footnote_0067'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0067'><span class='label'>[67]</span></a>
+<p>Milton&rsquo;s Comus lately revived.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0068' id='Footnote_0068'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0068'><span class='label'>[68]</span></a>
+<p>Senesino has built a palace near Sienna on an estate
+which carries the title of a Marquisate, but purchased with
+English gold.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0069' id='Footnote_0069'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0069'><span class='label'>[69]</span></a>
+<p>The king-fisher.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_0070' id='Footnote_0070'></a><a href='#FNanchor_0070'><span class='label'>[70]</span></a>
+<p>In the present edition the preface is restored.</p>
+</div>
+<hr class='fn' />
+<div class="trnote">
+<p><b>Transcriber Notes</b></p>
+<p>Archaic and variable spelling is preserved.</p>
+<p>Author&rsquo;s punctuation style is preserved. Quotes in the poetry are sometimes repeated on every line.</p>
+<p>Poetry line numbers regularized.</p>
+<p>Footnote 4&rsquo;s location is approximated.</p>
+<p>This book includes variations of some lines of poems. These are shown along the right side of the screen.</p>
+<p>Sections in Greek will yield a transliteration when the pointer is moved over each line, e.g. <span lang="el" title="Pindar. Olymp. Th.">&Pi;&iota;&nu;&delta;&alpha;&rho;. &Omicron;&lambda;&upsilon;&mu;&pi;. &Theta;.</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<!-- generated by ppg.rb version: ppg0817 -->
+<!-- timestamp: Sun Aug 30 18:35:00 -0400 2009 -->
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Poetical Works of William Collins, by
+William Collins
+
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+Project Gutenberg's The Poetical Works of William Collins, by William Collins
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Poetical Works of William Collins
+ With a Memoir
+
+Author: William Collins
+
+Commentator: Sir Harris Nicolas
+ Sir Egerton Brydges
+
+Release Date: August 31, 2009 [EBook #29879]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK POETICAL WORKS--WILLIAM COLLINS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Katherine Ward, and the
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration: William Collins AEtatis
+
+ Quos primus equis Oriens afflavit anhelis
+ Virg.]
+
+
+
+
+ _THE_
+ POETICAL WORKS
+ OF
+ WILLIAM COLLINS.
+
+ _WITH A MEMOIR._
+
+
+ [Illustration: _Perennis et Fragrans._]
+
+
+
+
+ BOSTON:
+ LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY.
+ 1865.
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS.
+
+ Page
+ Memoir by Sir Harris Nicolas v
+ An Essay on the Genius and Poems of Collins, by Sir Egerton
+ Brydges, Bart. xliii
+
+ ORIENTAL ECLOGUES.
+ Selim; or, The Shepherd's Moral 3
+ Hassan; or, The Camel Driver 7
+ Abra; Or, The Georgian Sultana 11
+ Agib And Secander; or, The Fugitives 15
+
+ ODES.
+ To Pity 21
+ To Fear 24
+ To Simplicity 28
+ On the Poetical Character 31
+ Written in the Beginning of the Year 1746 34
+ To Mercy 35
+ To Liberty 37
+ To a Lady, On the Death of Colonel Ross, written in May,
+ 1745 44
+ To Evening 48
+ To Peace 52
+ The Manners 54
+ The Passions 58
+ On the Death of Thomson 63
+ On the Popular Superstitions of the Highlands of Scotland;
+ considered as the Subject of Poetry; inscribed to Mr.
+ John Home 66
+ An Epistle, addressed to Sir Thomas Hanmer, on his Edition of
+ Shakespeare's Works 78
+ Dirge in Cymbeline, sung by Guiderus and Arviragus over
+ Fidele, supposed to be dead 87
+ Verses written on a Paper which contained a Piece of
+ Bride-cake, given to the Author by a Lady 89
+ To Miss Aurelia C----R, on her Weeping at her Sister's
+ Wedding 91
+ Sonnet 91
+ Song. The Sentiments borrowed from Shakespeare 92
+ On our late Taste in Music 94
+
+ Observations on the Oriental Eclogues, by Dr. Langhorne 101
+ Observations on the Odes, by the same 118
+
+
+
+
+MEMOIR OF COLLINS.
+
+ "A Bard,
+ Who touched the tenderest notes of Pity's lyre."
+ HAYLEY.
+
+
+No one can have reflected on the history of genius without being
+impressed with a melancholy feeling at the obscurity in which the lives
+of the poets of our country are, with few exceptions, involved. That
+they lived, and wrote, and died, comprises nearly all that is known of
+many, and, of others, the few facts which are preserved are often
+records of privations, or sufferings, or errors. The cause of the
+lamentable deficiency of materials for literary biography may, without
+difficulty, be explained. The lives of authors are seldom marked by
+events of an unusual character; and they rarely leave behind them the
+most interesting work a writer could compose, and which would embrace
+nearly all the important facts in his career, a "History of his Books,"
+containing the motives which produced them, the various incidents
+respecting their progress, and a faithful account of the bitter
+disappointment, whether the object was fame or profit, or both, which,
+in most instances, is the result of his labours. Various motives deter
+men from writing such a volume; for, though quacks and charlatans
+readily become auto-biographers, and fill their prefaces with their
+personal concerns, real merit shrinks from such disgusting egotism, and,
+flying to the opposite extreme, leaves no authentic notice of their
+struggles, its hopes, or its disappointments. Nor is the history of
+writers to be expected from their contemporaries; because few will
+venture to anticipate the judgment of posterity, and mankind are usually
+so isolated in self, and so jealous of others, that neither time nor
+inclination admits of their becoming the Boswells of all those whose
+productions excite admiration.
+
+If these remarks be true, surprise cannot be felt, though there is
+abundance of cause for regret, that little is known of a poet whose
+merits were not appreciated until after his decease: whose powers were
+destroyed by a distressing malady at a period of life when literary
+exertions begin to be rewarded and stimulated by popular applause.
+
+For the facts contained in the following Memoir of Collins, the author
+is indebted to the researches of others, as his own, which were very
+extensive, were rewarded by trifling discoveries. Dr. Johnson's Life is
+well known; but the praise of collecting every particular which industry
+and zeal could glean belongs to the Rev. Alexander Dyce, the result of
+whose inquiries may be found in his notes to Johnson's Memoir, prefixed
+to an edition of Collins's works which he lately edited. Those notices
+are now, for the first time, wove into a Memoir of Collins; and in
+leaving it to another to erect a fabric out of the materials which he
+has collected instead of being himself the architect, Mr. Dyce has
+evinced a degree of modesty which those who know him must greatly
+lament.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WILLIAM COLLINS was born at Chichester, on the 25th of December, 1721,
+and was baptized in the parish church of St. Peter the Great, alias
+Subdeanery in that city, on the first of the following January. He was
+the son of William Collins, who was then the Mayor of Chichester, where
+he exercised the trade of a hatter, and lived in a respectable manner.
+His mother was Elizabeth, the sister of a Colonel Martyn, to whose
+bounty the poet was deeply indebted.
+
+Being destined for the church, young Collins was admitted a scholar of
+Winchester College on the 19th of January, 1733, where he was educated
+by Dr. Burton; and in 1740 he stood first on the list of scholars who
+were to be received at New College. No vacancy, however, occurred, and
+the circumstance is said by Johnson to have been the original misfortune
+of his life. He became a commoner of Queen's,[1] whence, on the 29th of
+July, 1741, he was elected a demy of Magdalen College. During his stay
+at Queen's he was distinguished for genius and indolence, and the few
+exercises which he could be induced to write bear evident marks of both
+qualities. He continued at Oxford until he took his bachelor's degree,
+and then suddenly left the University, his motive, as he alleged, being
+that he missed a fellowship, for which he offered himself; but it has
+been assigned to his disgust at the dulness of a college life, and to
+his being involved in debt.
+
+On arriving in London, which was either in 1743 or 1744, he became, says
+Johnson, "a literary adventurer, with many projects in his head and very
+little money in his pocket." Collins was not without some reputation as
+an author when he proposed to adopt the most uncertain and deplorable of
+all professions, that of literature, for a subsistence. Whilst at
+Winchester school he wrote his Eclogues, and had appeared before the
+public in some verses addressed to a lady weeping at her sister's
+marriage, which were printed in the Gentleman's Magazine, Oct. 1739,
+when Collins was in his eighteenth year. In January, 1742, he published
+his Eclogues, under the title of "Persian Eclogues;"[2] and, in
+December, 1743, his "Verses to Sir Thomas Hanmer on his Edition of
+Shakespeare," appeared. To neither did he affix his name, but the latter
+was said to be by "a Gentleman of Oxford."
+
+From the time he settled in London, his mind was more occupied with
+literary projects than with steady application; nor had poesy, for which
+Nature peculiarly designed him, sufficient attractions to chain his
+wavering disposition. It is not certain whether his irresolution arose
+from the annoyance of importunate debtors, or from an original infirmity
+of mind, or from these causes united. A popular writer[3] has defended
+Collins from the charge of irresolution, on the ground that it was but
+"the vacillations of a mind broken and confounded;" and he urges, that
+"he had exercised too constantly the highest faculties of fiction, and
+precipitated himself into the dreariness of real life." But this
+explanation does not account for the want of steadiness which prevented
+Collins from accomplishing the objects he meditated. His mind was
+neither "broken nor confounded," nor had he experienced the bitter pangs
+of neglect, when with the buoyancy of hope, and a full confidence in his
+extraordinary powers, he threw himself on the town, at the age of
+twenty-three, intending to live by the exercise of his talents; but his
+indecision was then as apparent as at any subsequent period, so that, in
+truth, the effect preceded the cause to which it has been assigned.
+
+Mankind are becoming too much accustomed to witness splendid talents and
+great firmness of mind united in the same person to partake the mistaken
+sympathy which so many writers evince for the follies or vices of
+genius; nor will it much longer tolerate the opinion, that the
+possession of the finest imagination, or the highest poetic capacity,
+must necessarily be accompanied by eccentricity. It may, indeed, be
+difficult to convert a poetical temperament into a merchant, or to make
+the man who is destined to delight or astonish mankind by his
+conceptions, sit quietly over a ledger; but the transition from poetry
+to the composition of such works as Collins planned is by no means
+unnatural, and the abandonment of his views respecting them must, in
+justice to his memory, be attributed to a different cause.
+
+The most probable reason is, that these works were mere speculations to
+raise money, and that the idea was not encouraged by the booksellers;
+but if, as Johnson, who knew Collins well, asserts, his character wanted
+decision and perseverance, these defects may have been constitutional,
+and were, perhaps, the germs of the disease which too soon ripened into
+the most frightful of human calamities. Endued with a morbid
+sensibility, which was as ill calculated to court popularity as to bear
+neglect; and wanting that stoical indifference to the opinions of the
+many, which ought to render those who are conscious of the value of
+their productions satisfied with the approbation of the few; Collins was
+too impatient of applause, and too anxious to attain perfection, to be a
+voluminous writer. To plan much rather than to execute any thing; to
+commence to-day an ode, to-morrow a tragedy, and to turn on the
+following morning to a different subject, was the chief occupation of
+his life for several years, during which time he destroyed the principal
+part of the little that he wrote. To a man nearly pennyless, such a life
+must be attended by privations and danger; and he was in the hands of
+bailiffs, possibly not for the first time, very shortly before he became
+independent by the death of his maternal uncle, Colonel Martyn. The
+result proved that his want of firmness and perseverance was natural,
+and did not arise from the uncertainty or narrowness of his fortune; for
+being rescued from imprisonment, on the credit of a translation of
+Aristotle's Poetics, which he engaged to furnish a publisher, a work, it
+may be presumed, peculiarly suited to his genius, he no sooner found
+himself in the possession of money by the death of his relative, than he
+repaid the bookseller, and abandoned the translation for ever.
+
+From the commencement of his career, Collins was, however, an object
+for sympathy instead of censure; and though few refuse their compassion
+to the confirmed lunatic, it is rare that the dreadful state of
+irresolution and misery, which sometimes exist for years before the
+fatal catastrophe, receives either pity or indulgence.
+
+In 1747, Collins published his Odes, to the unrivaled splendour of a few
+of which he is alone indebted for his fame; but neither fame nor profit
+was the immediate result; and the author of the Ode on the Passions had
+little reason to expect, from its reception by the public, that it was
+destined to live as long as the passions themselves animate or distract
+the world.
+
+It is uncertain at what time he undertook to publish a volume of Odes in
+conjunction with Joseph Warton, but the intention is placed beyond
+dispute by the following letter from Warton to his brother. It is
+without a date, but it must have been written before the publication of
+Collins's Odes in 1747, and before the appearance of Dodsley's
+Museum,[4] as it is evident the Ode to a Lady on the Death of Colonel
+Ross, which was inserted in that work, was not then in print.
+
+ "DEAR TOM,
+
+ "You will wonder to see my name in an advertisement next week, so
+ I thought I would apprise you of it. The case was this. Collins
+ met me in Surrey, at Guildford races, when I wrote out for him my
+ odes, and he likewise communicated some of his to me; and being
+ both in very high spirits, we took courage, resolved to join our
+ forces, and to publish them immediately. I flatter myself that I
+ shall lose no honor by this publication, because I believe these
+ odes, as they now stand, are infinitely the best things I ever
+ wrote. You will see a very pretty one of Collins's, on the Death
+ of Colonel Ross before Tournay. It is addressed to a lady who was
+ Ross's intimate acquaintance, and who, by the way, is Miss Bett
+ Goddard. Collins is not to publish the odes unless he gets ten
+ guineas for them. I returned from Milford last night, where I left
+ Collins with my mother and sister, and he sets out to-day for
+ London. I must now tell you, that I have sent him your imitation
+ of Horace's Blandusian Fountain, to be printed amongst ours, and
+ which you shall own or not, as you think proper. I would not have
+ done this without your consent, but because I think it very
+ poetically and correctly done, and will get you honour. You will
+ let me know what the Oxford critics say. Adieu, dear Tom,
+
+ "I am your most affectionate brother,
+ "J. WARTON."
+
+Like so many of Collins's projects this was not executed; but the reason
+of its failure is unknown.
+
+On the death of Thomson, in August, 1748, Collins wrote an ode to his
+memory, which is no less remarkable for its beauty as a composition,
+than for its pathetic tenderness as a memorial of a friend.
+
+The Poet's pecuniary difficulties were removed in 1749, by the death of
+his maternal uncle, Lieutenant-Colonel Edmund Martyn, who, after
+bequeathing legacies to some other relations, ordered the residue of his
+real and personal estate to be divided between his nephew William
+Collins, and his nieces Elizabeth and Anne Collins, and appointed the
+said Elizabeth his executrix, who proved her uncle's will on the 30th of
+May, 1749. Collins's share was, it is said, about two thousand pounds;
+and, as has been already observed, the money came most opportunely: a
+greater calamity even than poverty, however, shortly afterwards
+counterbalanced his good fortune; but the assertion of the writer in the
+Gentleman's Magazine, that his mental aberration arose from his having
+squandered this legacy, appears to be unfounded.
+
+One, and but one, letter of Collins's has ever been printed; nor has a
+careful inquiry after others been successful. It is of peculiar
+interest, as it proves that he wrote an Ode on the Music of the Grecian
+Theatre, but which is unfortunately lost. The honour to which he
+alludes was the setting his Ode on the Passions to music.
+
+ "TO DR. WILLIAM HAYES, PROFESSOR OF MUSIC, OXFORD.
+
+ "SIR,
+
+ "MR. BLACKSTONE of Winchester some time since informed me of the
+ honour you had done me at Oxford last summer; for which I return
+ you my sincere thanks. I have another more perfect copy of the
+ ode; which, had I known your obliging design, I would have
+ communicated to you. Inform me by a line, if you should think one
+ of my better judgment acceptable. In such case I could send you
+ one written on a nobler subject; and which, though I have been
+ persuaded to bring it forth in London, I think more calculated for
+ an audience in the university. The subject is the Music of the
+ Grecian Theatre; in which I have, I hope naturally, introduced the
+ various characters with which the chorus was concerned, as
+ OEdipus, Medea, Electra, Orestes, etc. etc. The composition too is
+ probably more correct, as I have chosen the ancient tragedies for
+ my models, and only copied the most affecting passages in them.
+
+ "In the mean time, you would greatly oblige me by sending the
+ score of the last. If you can get it written, I will readily
+ answer the expense. If you send it with a copy or two of the ode
+ (as printed at Oxford) to Mr. Clarke, at Winchester, he will
+ forward it to me here. I am, Sir,
+
+ "With great respect,
+ "Your obliged humble servant,
+ "WILLIAM COLLINS.
+
+ "Chichester, Sussex, November 8, 1750."
+
+ "P. S. Mr. Clarke past some days here while Mr. Worgan was with
+ me; from whose friendship, I hope, he will receive some
+ advantage."
+
+Soon after this period, the disease which had long threatened to destroy
+Collins's intellects assumed a more decided character; but for some time
+the unhappy poet was the only person who was sensible of the approaching
+calamity. A visit to France was tried in vain; and when Johnson called
+upon him, on his return, an incident occurred which proves that Collins
+wisely sought for consolation against the coming wreck of his faculties,
+from a higher and more certain source than mere human aid. Johnson says,
+"he paid him a visit at Islington, where he was then waiting for his
+sister, whom he had directed to meet him: there was then nothing of
+disorder discernible in his mind by any but himself; but he had
+withdrawn from study, and travelled with no other book than an English
+Testament, such as children carry to the school: when his friend took
+it into his hand, out of curiosity to see what companion a man of
+letters had chosen, 'I have but one book,' said Collins, 'but that is
+the best.'"
+
+To this circumstance Hayley beautifully alludes in his epitaph on him:
+
+ He, "in reviving reason's lucid hours,
+ Sought on _one_ book his troubled mind to rest,
+ And rightly deem'd the Book of God the best."
+
+A journey to Bath proved as useless as the one to France; and in 1754,
+he went to Oxford for change of air and amusement, where he stayed a
+month. It was on this occasion that a friend, whose account of him will
+be given at length, saw him in a distressing state of restraint under
+the walls of Merton College. From the paucity of information respecting
+Collins, the following letters are extremely valuable; and though the
+statements are those of his friends, they may be received without
+suspicion of partiality, because they are free from the high colouring
+by which friendship sometimes perverts truth.
+
+The first of the letters in question was printed in the Gentleman's
+Magazine:
+
+ "Jan. 20, 1781.
+
+ "MR. URBAN,
+
+ "WILLIAM COLLINS, the poet, I was intimately acquainted with, from
+ the time that he came to reside at Oxford. He was the son of a
+ tradesman in the city of Chichester, I think a hatter; and being
+ sent very young to Winchester school, was soon distinguished for
+ his early proficiency, and his turn for elegant composition. About
+ the year 1740, he came off from that seminary first upon roll,[5]
+ and was entered a commoner of Queen's college. There, no vacancy
+ offering for New College, he remained a year or two, and then was
+ chosen demy of Magdalen college; where, I think, he took a degree.
+ As he brought with him, for so the whole turn of his conversation
+ discovered, too high an opinion of his school acquisitions, and a
+ sovereign contempt for all academic studies and discipline, he
+ never looked with any complacency on his situation in the
+ university, but was always complaining of the dulness of a college
+ life. In short, he threw up his demyship, and, going to London,
+ commenced a man of the town, spending his time in all the
+ dissipation of Ranelagh, Vauxhall, and the playhouses; and was
+ romantic enough to suppose that his superior abilities would draw
+ the attention of the great world, by means of whom he was to make
+ his fortune.
+
+ "In this pleasurable way of life he soon wasted his little
+ property, and a considerable legacy left him by a maternal uncle,
+ a colonel in the army, to whom the nephew made a visit in
+ Flanders during the war. While on his tour he wrote several
+ entertaining letters to his Oxford friends, some of which I saw.
+ In London I met him often, and remember he lodged in a little
+ house with a Miss Bundy, at the corner of King's-square-court,
+ Soho, now a warehouse, for a long time together. When poverty
+ overtook him, poor man, he had too much sensibility of temper to
+ bear with misfortunes, and so fell into a most deplorable state of
+ mind. How he got down to Oxford, I do not know; but I myself saw
+ him under Merton wall, in a very affecting situation, struggling,
+ and conveyed by force, in the arms of two or three men, towards
+ the parish of St. Clement, in which was a house that took in such
+ unhappy objects: and I always understood, that not long after he
+ died in confinement; but when, or where, or where he was buried, I
+ never knew.
+
+ "Thus was lost to the world this unfortunate person, in the prime
+ of life, without availing himself of fine abilities, which,
+ properly improved, must have raised him to the top of any
+ profession, and have rendered him a blessing to his friends, and
+ an ornament to his country.
+
+ "Without books, or steadiness and resolution to consult them if he
+ had been possessed of any, he was always planning schemes for
+ elaborate publications, which were carried no further than the
+ drawing up proposals for subscriptions, some of which were
+ published; and in particular, as far as I remember, one for 'a
+ History of the Darker Ages.'
+
+ "He was passionately fond of music; good-natured and affable; warm
+ in his friendships, and visionary in his pursuits; and, as long as
+ I knew him, very temperate in his eating and drinking. He was of
+ moderate stature, of a light and clear complexion, with gray eyes,
+ so very weak at times as hardly to bear a candle in the room; and
+ often raising within him apprehensions of blindness.
+
+ "With an anecdote respecting him, while he was at Magdalen
+ College, I shall close my letter. It happened one afternoon, at a
+ tea visit, that several intelligent friends were assembled at his
+ rooms to enjoy each other's conversation, when in comes a member
+ of a certain college,[6] as remarkable at that time for his brutal
+ disposition as for his good scholarship; who, though he met with a
+ circle of the most peaceable people in the world, was determined
+ to quarrel; and, though no man said a word, lifted up his foot and
+ kicked the tea-table, and all its contents, to the other side of
+ the room. Our poet, though of a warm temper, was so confounded at
+ the unexpected downfall, and so astonished at the unmerited
+ insult, that he took no notice of the aggressor, but getting up
+ from his chair calmly, he began picking up the slices of bread and
+ butter, and the fragments of his china, repeating very mildly,
+
+ Invenias etiam disjecti membra poetae.
+
+ "I am your very humble servant,
+ "V."
+
+The next letter was found among the papers of Mr. William Hymers, of
+Queen's College, Oxford, who was preparing a new edition of the works of
+the poet for publication, when death prevented the completion of his
+design.
+
+ "Hill Street, Richmond in Surrey, July, 1783.
+
+ "SIR,
+
+ "Your favour of the 30th June I did not receive till yesterday.
+ The person who has the care of my house in Bond Street, expecting
+ me there every day, did not send it to Richmond, or I would have
+ answered sooner. As you express a wish to know every particular,
+ however trifling, relating to Mr. William Collins, I will
+ endeavour, so far as can be done by a letter, to satisfy you.
+ There are many little anecdotes, which tell well enough in
+ conversation, but would be tiresome for you to read, or me to
+ write, so shall pass them over. I had formerly several scraps of
+ his poetry, which were suddenly written on particular occasions.
+ These I lent among our acquaintance, who were never civil enough
+ to return them; and being then engaged in extensive business, I
+ forgot to ask for them, and they are lost: all I have remaining of
+ his are about twenty lines, which would require a little history
+ to be understood, being written on trifling subjects. I have a few
+ of his letters, the subjects of which are chiefly on business, but
+ I think there are in them some flights, which strongly mark his
+ character; for which reason I preserved them. There are so few of
+ his intimates now living, that I believe I am the only one who can
+ give a true account of his family and connexions. The principal
+ part of what I write is from my own knowledge, or what I have
+ heard from his nearest relations.
+
+ "His father was not the manufacturer of hats, but the vender. He
+ lived in a genteel style at Chichester; and, I think, filled the
+ office of mayor more than once; he was pompous in his manner; but,
+ at his death, he left his affairs rather embarrassed. Colonel
+ Martyn, his wife's brother, greatly assisted his family, and
+ supported Mr. William Collins at the university, where he stood
+ for a fellowship, which, to his great mortification, he lost, and
+ which was his reason for quitting that place, at least that was
+ his pretext. But he had other reasons: he was in arrears to his
+ bookseller, his tailor, and other tradesmen. But, I believe, a
+ desire to partake of the dissipation and gaiety of London was his
+ principal motive. Colonel Martyn was at this time with his
+ regiment; and Mr. Payne, a near relation, who had the management
+ of the colonel's affairs, had likewise a commission to supply the
+ Collinses with small sums of money. The colonel was the more
+ sparing in this order, having suffered considerably by Alderman
+ Collins, who had formerly been his agent, and, forgetting that his
+ wife's brother's cash was not his own, had applied it to his own
+ use. When Mr. William Collins came from the university, he called
+ on his cousin Payne, gaily dressed, and with a feather in his hat;
+ at which his relation expressed surprise, and told him his
+ appearance was by no means that of a young man who had not a
+ single guinea he could call his own. This gave him great offence;
+ but remembering his sole dependence for subsistence was in the
+ power of Mr. Payne, he concealed his resentment; yet could not
+ refrain from speaking freely behind his back, and saying 'he
+ thought him a d----d dull fellow;' though, indeed, this was an
+ epithet he was pleased to bestow on every one who did not think as
+ he would have them. His frequent demands for a supply obliged Mr.
+ Payne to tell him he must pursue some other line of life, for he
+ was sure Colonel Martyn would be displeased with him for having
+ done so much. This resource being stopped, forced him to set about
+ some work, of which his 'History of the Revival of Learning' was
+ the first; and for which he printed proposals (one of which I
+ have), and took the first subscription money from many of his
+ particular friends: the work was begun, but soon stood still. Both
+ Dr. Johnson and Mr. Langhorne are mistaken when they say, the
+ 'Translation of Aristotle' was never begun: I know the contrary,
+ for some progress was made in both, but most in the latter. From
+ the freedom subsisting between us, we took the liberty of saying
+ any thing to each other. I one day reproached him with idleness;
+ when, to convince me my censure was unjust, he showed me many
+ sheets of his 'Translation of Aristotle,' which he said he had so
+ fully employed himself about, as to prevent him calling on many of
+ his friends so frequently as he used to do. Soon after this he
+ engaged with Mr. Manby, a bookseller on Ludgate Hill, to furnish
+ him with some Lives for the Biographia Britannica, which Manby was
+ then publishing. He showed me some of the lives in embryo; but I
+ do not recollect that any of them came to perfection. To raise a
+ present subsistence he set about writing his odes; and, having a
+ general invitation to my house, he frequently passed whole days
+ there, which he employed in writing them, and as frequently
+ burning what he had written, after reading them to me: many of
+ them, which pleased me, I struggled to preserve, but without
+ effect; for, pretending he would alter them, he got them from me,
+ and thrust them into the fire. He was an acceptable companion
+ every where; and, among the gentlemen who loved him for a genius,
+ I may reckon the Doctors Armstrong, Barrowby, and Hill, Messrs.
+ Quin, Garrick, and Foote, who frequently took his opinion on their
+ pieces before they were seen by the public. He was particularly
+ noticed by the geniuses who frequented the Bedford and Slaughter's
+ Coffee Houses. From his knowledge of Garrick he had the liberty of
+ the scenes and green-room, where he made diverting observations on
+ the vanity and false consequence of that class of people; and his
+ manner of relating them to his particular friends was extremely
+ entertaining. In this manner he lived, with and upon his friends,
+ until the death of Colonel Martyn, who left what fortune he died
+ possessed of unto him and his two sisters. I fear I cannot be
+ certain as to dates, but believe he left the university in the
+ year 43. Some circumstances I recollect, make me almost certain he
+ was in London that year; but I will not be so certain of the time
+ he died, which I did not hear of till long after it happened. When
+ his health and faculties began to decline, he went to France, and
+ after to Bath, in hope his health might be restored, but without
+ success. I never saw him after his sister removed him from
+ M'Donald's madhouse at Chelsea to Chichester, where he soon sunk
+ into a deplorable state of idiotism, which, when I was told,
+ shocked me exceedingly; and, even now, the remembrance of a man
+ for whom I had a particular friendship, and in whose company I
+ have passed so many pleasant happy hours, gives me a severe shock.
+ Since it is in consequence of your own request, Sir, that I write
+ this long farrago, I expect you will overlook all inaccuracies. I
+ am, Sir,
+
+ "Your very humble servant,
+ "JOHN RAGSDALE.
+
+ "Mr. William Hymers, Queen's College, Oxford."
+
+The following communication, by Thomas Warton, was also found among the
+papers of Mr. Hymers. A few passages, concerning various readings, are
+omitted.
+
+ "I often saw Collins in London in 1750. This was before his
+ illness. He then told me of his intended History of the Revival of
+ Learning, and proposed a scheme of a review, to be called the
+ Clarendon Review, and to be printed at the university press, under
+ the conduct and authority of the university. About Easter, the
+ next year, I was in London; when, being given over, and supposed
+ to be dying, he desired to see me, that he might take his last
+ leave of me; but he grew better; and in the summer he sent me a
+ letter on some private business, which I have now by me, dated
+ Chichester, June 9, 1751, written in a fine hand, and without the
+ least symptom of a disordered or debilitated understanding. In
+ 1754, he came to Oxford for change of air and amusement, where he
+ stayed a month; I saw him frequently, but he was so weak and low,
+ that he could not bear conversation. Once he walked from his
+ lodgings, opposite Christ Church, to Trinity College, but
+ supported by his servant. The same year, in September, I and my
+ brother visited him at Chichester, where he lived, in the
+ cathedral cloisters, with his sister. The first day he was in high
+ spirits at intervals, but exerted himself so much that he could
+ not see us the second. Here he showed us an Ode to Mr. John Home,
+ on his leaving England for Scotland, in the octave stanza, very
+ long, and beginning,
+
+ Home, thou return'st from Thames.
+
+ I remember there was a beautiful description of the spectre of a
+ man drowned in the night, or, in the language of the old Scotch
+ superstitions, seized by the angry spirit of the waters, appearing
+ to his wife with pale blue cheek, &c. Mr. Home has no copy of it.
+ He also showed us another ode, of two or three four-lined stanzas,
+ called the Bell of Arragon; on a tradition that, anciently, just
+ before the king of Spain died, the great bell of the cathedral of
+ Sarragossa, in Arragon, tolled spontaneously. It began thus:
+
+ The bell of Arragon, they say,
+ Spontaneous speaks the fatal day.
+
+ Soon afterwards were these lines:
+
+ Whatever dark aerial power,
+ Commission'd, haunts the gloomy tower.
+
+ The last stanza consisted of a moral transition to his own death
+ and knell, which he called 'some simpler bell.' I have seen all
+ his odes already published in his own handwriting; they had the
+ marks of repeated correction: he was perpetually changing his
+ epithets. Dr. Warton, my brother, has a few fragments of some
+ other odes, but too loose and imperfect for publication, yet
+ containing traces of high imagery.
+
+ "In illustration of what Dr. Johnson has related, that during his
+ last malady he was a great reader of the Bible, I am favoured with
+ the following anecdote from the Reverend Mr. Shenton, Vicar of St.
+ Andrews, at Chichester, by whom Collins was buried: 'Walking in my
+ vicaral garden one Sunday evening, during Collins's last illness,
+ I heard a female (the servant, I suppose) reading the Bible in his
+ chamber. Mr. Collins had been accustomed to rave much, and make
+ great moanings; but while she was reading, or rather attempting to
+ read, he was not only silent but attentive likewise, correcting
+ her mistakes, which indeed were very frequent, through the whole
+ of the twenty-seventh chapter of Genesis.' I have just been
+ informed, from undoubted authority, that Collins had finished a
+ Preliminary Dissertation to be prefixed to his History of the
+ Restoration of Learning, and that it was written with great
+ judgment, precision, and knowledge of the subject.
+
+ "T. W."
+
+The overthrow of Collins's mind was too complete for it to be restored
+by variety of scene or the attentions of friendship. Thomas Warton
+describes him as being in a weak and low condition, and unable to bear
+conversation, when he saw him at Oxford. He was afterwards confined in a
+house for the insane at Chelsea; but before September, 1754, he was
+removed to Chichester, under the care of his sister, where he was
+visited by the two Wartons. At this time his spirits temporarily
+rallied; and he adverted with delight to literature, showing his guest
+the Ode to Mr. Home on his leaving England for Scotland. During
+Collins's illness Johnson was a frequent inquirer after his health, and
+those inquiries were made with a degree of feeling which, as he himself
+hints, may have partly arisen from the dread he entertained lest he
+might be the victim of a similar calamity. The following extracts are
+from letters addressed to Joseph Warton:
+
+ "March 8, 1754.
+
+ "But how little can we venture to exult in any intellectual
+ powers or literary attainments, when we consider the condition
+ of poor Collins. I knew him a few years ago, full of hopes and
+ full of projects, versed in many languages, high in fancy, and
+ strong in retention. This busy and forcible mind is now under
+ the government of those who lately would not have been able to
+ comprehend the least and most narrow of its designs. What do
+ you hear of him? are there hopes of his recovery? or is he to
+ pass the remainder of his life in misery and degradation?
+ perhaps with complete consciousness of his calamity."
+
+ "December 24, 1754.
+
+ "Poor dear Collins! Let me know whether you think it would give
+ him pleasure if I should write to him. I have often been near his
+ state, and therefore have it in great commiseration."
+
+ "April 15, 1756.
+
+ "What becomes of poor dear Collins? I wrote him a letter which he
+ never answered. I suppose writing is very troublesome to him. That
+ man is no common loss. The moralists all talk of the uncertainty
+ of fortune, and the transitoriness of beauty; but it is yet more
+ dreadful to consider that the powers of the mind are equally
+ liable to change, that understanding may make its appearance and
+ depart, that it may blaze and expire."
+
+In this state of mental darkness did Collins pass the last six or seven
+years of his existence, in the house now occupied by Mr. Mason, a
+bookseller in Chichester. His malady is described by Johnson as being,
+not so much an alienation of mind as a general laxity and feebleness of
+his vital, rather than his intellectual, powers; but his disorder seems,
+from other authorities, to have been of a more violent nature. As he was
+never married, he was indebted for protection and kindness to his
+youngest sister; and death, the only hope of the afflicted, came to his
+relief on the 12th of June, 1759, in the thirty-ninth year of his age, a
+period of life when the fervour of imagination is generally chastened
+without being subdued, and when all the mental powers are in their
+fullest vigour. He was buried in the church of St. Andrew, at
+Chichester, on the 15th of June; and the admiration of the public for
+his genius has been manifested by the erection of a monument by Flaxman,
+to his memory, in the Cathedral, which is thus described by Mr.
+Dallaway, the historian of Sussex:
+
+"Collins is represented as sitting in a reclining posture, during a
+lucid interval of the afflicting malady to which he was subject, with a
+calm and benign aspect, as if seeking refuge from his misfortunes in the
+consolations of the gospel, which appears open on a table before him,
+whilst his lyre and one of his best compositions lie neglected on the
+ground. Upon the pediment of the table are placed two female ideal
+figures in relief, representing love and pity, entwined each in the arms
+of the other; the proper emblems of the genius of his poetry." It bears
+the following epitaph from the pen of Hayley:
+
+ "Ye who the merits of the dead revere,
+ Who hold misfortune's sacred genius dear,
+ Regard this tomb, where Collins, hapless name,
+ Solicits kindness with a double claim.
+ Though nature gave him, and though science taught
+ The fire of fancy, and the reach of thought,
+ Severely doom'd to penury's extreme,
+ He pass'd in maddening pain life's feverish dream,
+ While rays of genius only served to show
+ The thickening horror, and exalt his woe.
+ Ye walls that echo'd to his frantic moan,
+ Guard the due records of this grateful stone;
+ Strangers to him, enamour'd of his lays,
+ This fond memorial to his talents raise.
+ For this the ashes of a bard require,
+ Who touch'd the tenderest notes of pity's lyre;
+ Who join'd pure faith to strong poetic powers;
+ Who, in reviving reason's lucid hours,
+ Sought on one book his troubled mind to rest,
+ And rightly deem'd the book of God the best."
+
+Collins's character has been portrayed by all his biographers in
+very agreeable colours. He was amiable and virtuous, and was as much
+courted for his popular manners as for the charms of his conversation.
+The associate of Johnson, Armstrong, Hill, Garrick, Quin, Foote, the
+two Wartons, and Thomson, and the friend of several of these eminent
+men, he must have possessed many of the qualities by which they were
+distinguished; for though an adviser may be chosen from a very
+different class of persons, genius will only herd with genius.
+Johnson has honoured him by saying, that "his morals were pure and
+his opinions pious;" and though he hints that his habits were sometimes
+at variance with these characteristics, he assigns the aberration to the
+temptations of want, and the society into which poverty sometimes
+drives the best disposed persons, adding, that he "preserved the
+sources of action unpolluted, that his principles were never shaken,
+that his distinctions of right and wrong were never confounded, and
+that his faults had nothing of malignity or design, but proceeded from
+some unexpected pressure or casual temptation." A higher eulogium,
+from so rigid a moralist, could not be pronounced on a man whose life
+was, for many years, unsettled and perplexed; and those only who have
+experienced the pressure of pecuniary necessities can be aware of
+the difficulty of resisting meanness, or avoiding vice, if not in the
+sense in which these terms are usually understood, at least in a sense
+to which they may as properly be applied--that of refusing to prostitute
+talents to purposes foreign to the conviction and taste of their
+possessor.
+
+On this mainly depend the annoyances and dangers of him who seeks a
+subsistence from his pen. The opinions which he may be desirous to
+express, or the subject he may be capable of illustrating, may not be
+popular, and the more important or learned they be, the more likely is
+such to be the case. Of course his labours would be rejected by
+publishers, who cannot buy what will not sell; hence no alternative
+remains but for him to manufacture marketable commodities; and when the
+_popular_ taste of the present, as well as of former times, is
+remembered, the degradation to which a man of high intellect must often
+submit, when he neglects that for which nature and study peculiarly
+qualified him, for what is in general demand, may be easily conceived.
+It is not requisite to advert to the taste of the age in which we live,
+farther than to allude to the class of works which issues from the
+bazaars of _fashionable_ publishers, and to ask, when such are alone in
+request, what would have been the fate, had they lived in our own times,
+of Johnson, Pope, Dryden, Addison, and the other ornaments of the golden
+age of literature? But if even in that age the Odes of Collins were too
+abstracted from mundane feelings, too rich in imagery, and too strongly
+marked by the fervour of inspiration to be generally appreciated, his
+chance of being so, by the public generally, is at this moment less; and
+the only hope of his obtaining that popularity to which he is
+unquestionably entitled, is by placing his works within the reach of
+all, and, more especially, by acquainting the multitude with the opinion
+entertained of him, by those whose judgments they have the sense to
+venerate, since they are sometimes willing to receive, on the credit of
+another, that which they have not themselves the discrimination or
+feeling to perceive.
+
+An anecdote is related of Collins which, if true, proves that he felt
+the neglect with which his Odes were treated with the indignation
+natural to an enthusiastic temper. Having purchased the unsold copies of
+the first edition from the booksellers, he set fire to them with his own
+hand, as if to revenge himself on the apathy and ignorance of the
+public.
+
+It is unnecessary to append to the Memoir of Collins many observations
+on the character of his poetry, because its peculiar beauties, and the
+qualities by which it is distinguished, are described with considerable
+force and eloquence by Sir Egerton Brydges, in the Essay prefixed to
+this edition. Campbell's remarks on the same subject cannot be
+forgotten; and other critics of the highest reputation have concurred in
+ascribing to Collins a conception and genius scarcely exceeded by any
+English poet. To say that Sir Egerton Brydges's Essay exaggerates the
+merit of some of his productions may produce the retort which has been
+made to Johnson's criticism, that he was too deficient in feeling to be
+capable of appreciating the excellence of the pieces which he censures.
+It is not, however, inconsistent with a high respect for Collins, to
+ascribe every possible praise to that unrivaled production, the Ode to
+the Passions, to feel deeply the beauty, the pathos, and the sublime
+conceptions of the Odes to Evening, to Pity, to Simplicity, and a few
+others, and yet to be sensible of the occasional obscurity and
+imperfections of his imagery in other pieces, to find it difficult to
+discover the meaning of some passages, to think the opening of four of
+his odes which commence with the common-place invocation of "O thou,"
+and the alliteration by which so many lines are disfigured, blemishes
+too serious to be forgotten, unless the judgment be drowned in the full
+tide of generous and enthusiastic admiration of the great and
+extraordinary beauties by which these faults are more than redeemed.
+
+That these defects are to be ascribed to haste it would be uncandid to
+deny; but haste is no apology for such faults in productions which
+scarcely fill a hundred pages, and which their author had ample
+opportunities to remove.
+
+It may also be thought heterodoxy by the band, which, if small in
+numbers, is distinguished by taste, feeling, and genius, to concur in
+Collins's opinion, when he expressed himself dissatisfied with his
+Eclogues; for, though they are not without merit, it is very doubtful if
+they would have lived, even till this time, but for the Odes with which
+they are published, notwithstanding the zeal of Dr. Langhorne, who is in
+raptures over passages the excellence of which is not very conspicuous.
+To give a preference to the Verses to Sir Thomas Hanmer, of which all
+that Langhorne could find to say is, "that the versification is easy and
+genteel, and the allusions always poetical," and especially to the Ode
+addressed to Mr. Home, on the superstition of the Highlands, over the
+Eclogues, may possibly be deemed to betray a corrupt taste, since it is
+an admission which is, it is believed, made for the first time. In that
+Ode, among a hundred other beautiful verses, the following address to
+Tasso has seldom been surpassed:
+
+ "Prevailing Poet! whose undoubting mind
+ Believed the magic wonders which he sung!
+ Hence, at each sound, imagination glows!
+ Hence, at each picture, vivid life starts here!
+ Hence, his warm lay with softest sweetness flows!
+ Melting it flows, pure, murmuring, strong, and clear,
+ And fills the impassion'd heart, and wins the harmonious ear!"
+
+The picture of the swain drowned in a fen, and the grief of his widow,
+possessing every charm which simplicity and tenderness can bestow, and
+give to that Ode claims to admiration which, if admitted, have been
+hitherto conceded in silence.
+
+From the coincidence between Collins's love of, and addresses to, Music,
+his residence at Oxford, and from internal evidence, Some Verses on Our
+Late Taste in Music, which appeared in the Gentleman's Magazine for
+1740, and there said to be "by a Gentleman of Oxford," are printed in
+this edition of Collins's works, not, however, as positively his, but as
+being so likely to be written by him, as to justify their being brought
+to the notice of his readers.
+
+A poet, and not to have felt the tender passion, would be a creature
+which the world has never yet seen. It is said that Collins was
+extremely fond of a young lady who was born the day before him, and who
+did not return his affection; and that, punning upon his misfortune, he
+observed, "he came into the world a day after the fair." The lady is
+supposed to have been Miss Elizabeth Goddard, the intended bride of
+Colonel Ross, to whom he addressed his beautiful Ode on the death of
+that Officer at the battle of Fontenoy, at which time she was on a visit
+to the family of the Earl of Tankerville, who then resided at Up-Park,
+near Chichester, a place that overlooks the little village of Harting,
+mentioned in the Ode.
+
+Collins's person was of the middle size and well formed; of a light
+complexion, with gray, weak eyes. His mind was deeply imbued with
+classical literature, and he understood the Italian, French, and Spanish
+languages. He was well read, and was particularly conversant with early
+English writers, and to an ardent love of literature he united, as is
+manifest from many of his pieces, a passionate devotion to Music, that
+
+ "----Sphere-descended maid,
+ Friend of Pleasure, Wisdom's aid."
+
+His family, which were very respectable, were established at Chichester
+in the sixteenth century as tradesmen of the higher order, and his
+immediate ancestor was mayor of that city in 1619:[7] his mother's
+relations appear to have been of a superior condition in life.[8]
+Collins lost his father in 1734, and on the 5th of July, 1744, his
+mother died. He was an only son: of his two sisters, Elizabeth, the
+eldest, died unmarried, and Anne, the youngest, who took care of him
+when he was bereft of reason, married first Mr. Hugh Sempill, who died
+in 1762, and secondly the Rev. Dr. Thomas Durnford, and died at
+Chichester in November, 1789. Her character is thus described on the
+authority of Mr. Park: "The Reverend Mr. Durnford, who resided at
+Chichester, and was the son of Dr. Durnford, informed me, in August,
+1795, that the sister of Collins loved money to excess, and evinced so
+outrageous an aversion to her brother, because he squandered or gave
+away to the boys in the cloisters whatever money he had, that she
+destroyed, in a paroxysm of resentment, all his papers, and whatever
+remained of his enthusiasm for poetry, as far as she could. Mr. Hayley
+told me, when I visited him at Eartham, that he had obtained from her a
+small drawing by Collins, but it possessed no other value than as a
+memorial that the bard had attempted to handle the pencil as well as the
+pen."[9] That Mrs. Durnford was indifferent to her brother's fame, is
+stated by others, and Sir Egerton Brydges, in his Essay, has made some
+just observations on the circumstance.
+
+This Memoir must not be closed without an expression of acknowledgment
+to the Bishop of Hereford, to the President of Magdalen College, to H.
+Gabell, Esq., and to I. Sanden, Esq., of Chichester, for the desire
+which they were so good as to manifest that this account of Collins
+might be more satisfactory than it is; and if his admirers consider that
+his present biographer has not done sufficient justice to his memory, an
+antidote to the injury will be found in the fervent and unqualified
+admiration which Sir Egerton Brydges has evinced for his genius.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [1] 21st March, 1740.
+
+ [2] Afterwards republished with the title of "Oriental Eclogues."
+
+ [3] D'Israeli, in his "Calamities of Authors," vol. ii. p. 201.
+
+ [4] June 7th, 1746.
+
+ [5] Mr. Joseph Warton, now Dr. Warton, head master of Winton school,
+ was at the same time second upon roll; and Mr. Mulso, now [1781]
+ prebendary of the church of Winton, third upon roll.
+
+ [6] Hampton, the translator of Polybius.
+
+ [7] Dallaway's Sussex, vol. i. p. 185--The arms of the family of
+ Collins are there said to have been, "Azure a griffin segreant
+ or;" but in Sir William Burrell's MS. Collections for a History
+ of Sussex, in the British Museum, the field is described as being
+ vert. From those manuscripts which are marked "Additional MSS."
+ Nos. 5697 to 5699, the following notices of the Poet's family
+ have been extracted.
+
+ REGISTER OF ST. ANDREW'S, CHICHESTER.
+
+ BAPTISM.
+
+ Elizabeth, daughter of Mr. George Collins, 8th October, 1763.
+
+ BURIALS.
+
+ Mrs. Elizabeth Collins [the poet's mother], 6th July, 1744.
+ William Collins, Gent. [the Poet], 15th June, 1759.
+
+ REGISTER OF ST. PETER THE GREAT, CHICHESTER.
+
+ BAPTISMS.
+
+ Charles, son of Roger Collins, 8th February, 1645.
+ George, son of Mr. George Collins, 28th December, 1647.
+ Humphrey, son of Mr. Richard Collins, 20th Dec. 1648.
+ George, son of Mr. George Collins, 7th September, 1651.
+ Christian, daughter of Mr. Richard Collins, 1st Sept. 1652.
+ John, son of Mr. Richard Collins, senior, 13th Dec. 1652.
+ Elizabeth, daughter of Mr. Richard Collins, sen. 16th May, 1656.
+ Joan, daughter of Mr. Richard Collins, jun. 12th Dec. 1656.
+ Judith, daughter of Mr. Collins, Vicar Choral, 17th April, 1667.
+ Elizabeth, daughter of Mr. William Collins, 6th March, 1704.
+
+ MARRIAGES.
+
+ Mr. Charles Collins and Mrs. Elizabeth Cardiff, 14th April, 1696.
+
+ BURIALS.
+
+ ---- wife of Mr. William Collins, 10th December, 1650.
+ Susan, wife of Mr. Richard Collins, 3rd December, 1657.
+ Mr. George Collins, 10th January, 1669.
+ Mrs. Collins of St. Olave's Parish, 19th July, 1696.
+
+ There are monumental inscriptions in St. Andrew's Church,
+ Chichester, to the Poet's father, mother, maternal uncle, Colonel
+ Martyn, and sister, Mrs. Durnford.
+
+ [8] So much of the will of Colonel Edmund Martyn as relates to the Poet
+ and his sister has been already cited, but the testator's
+ situation in life and the respectability of his family are best
+ shown by other parts of that document. He describes himself as a
+ lieutenant-colonel in his Majesty's service, lying sick in the
+ city of Chichester. To his niece Elizabeth, the wife of Thomas
+ Napper, of Itchenor in Sussex, he bequeathed 100_l._ His copyhold
+ estates of the manors of Selsey, and Somerly, in that county, to
+ his nephew, Abraham Martyn, the youngest son of his late only
+ brother, Henry Martyn, and to his servant, John Hipp, he gave his
+ wearing apparel and ten pounds.
+
+ [9] Dyce's edition of Collins, 1827, p. 39.
+
+
+
+
+AN ESSAY ON THE GENIUS AND POEMS OF COLLINS.
+
+ BY SIR EGERTON BRYDGES,
+ BART.
+
+
+Collins is the founder of a new school of poetry, of a high class. It is
+true that, unless Buckhurst and Spenser had gone before him, he could
+not have written as he has done; yet he is an inventor very distinct
+from both. He calls his odes descriptive and allegorical; and this
+characterises them truly, but too generally. The personification of
+abstract qualities had never been so happily executed before; the pure
+spirituality of the conception, the elegance and force of the language,
+the harmony and variety of the numbers, were all executed with a
+felicity which none before or since have reached. That these poems did
+not at once captivate the public attention cannot be accounted for by
+any cause hitherto assigned. We may not wonder that the multitude did
+not at once perceive their full beauties; but that, among readers of
+taste and learning, there should not have been found a sufficient number
+to set the example of admiration, is very extraordinary. In addition to
+all their other high merits, the mere novelty of thought and manner were
+sufficient to excite immediate notice. Nor was there any thing in
+Collins's station or character to create prejudices against the
+probability that beautiful effusions of genius might be struck out by
+his hand. His education at the college of Winchester, his fame at
+Oxford, his associates in London, all were fair preludes to the
+production of beautiful poetry. Indeed, he had already produced
+beautiful poetry in his Oriental Eclogues, four years before his Odes
+appeared. These were, it is admitted, of a different cast from his Odes,
+and of a gentleness and chastity of thought and diction, which he
+himself was conscious, some years afterwards, did not very well
+represent the gorgeousness of eastern composition.
+
+It was a crisis when there was a fair opening for new candidates for the
+laurel. The uniformity of Pope's style began already to pall upon the
+public ear. Thomson was indolent, and Young eccentric; Gray had not yet
+appeared on the stage; and Akenside's metaphysical subject and diffuse
+style were not calculated to engross the general taste. Johnson had
+taken possession of the field of satire, but there are too many readers
+of enthusiastic mind to be satisfied with satire. The pedantry and
+uncouthness of Walter Harte had precluded him from ever being a
+favourite with the public; Shenstone had not yet risen into fame; and
+Lyttelton was engrossed by politics. When, therefore, Collins's Odes
+appeared, all speculation would have anticipated that they must have
+been successful. But we must recollect that they did not excite the
+admiration of Johnson; and that Gray did not read them with that
+unqualified approval which his native taste would have inspired. This
+singularity must be accounted for by other causes than their want of
+merit.
+
+The disappointment of Collins was so keen and deep, that he not only
+burned the unsold copies with his own hand, but soon fell into a
+melancholy which ended in insanity. Many persons have affected to
+comment on this result with an unfeeling ignorance of human nature, and,
+more especially, of fervid genius. It is, undoubtedly, highly dangerous
+to give the entire reins to imagination; the discipline of a constant
+exercise of reason is not only salutary, but necessary. But one can
+easily conceive how the indulgence of that state of mind which produced
+Collins's Odes could end in an entire overthrow of the intellect, when
+embittered by a defect of the principal objects of his worldly ambition.
+He is said to have been puffed up by a vanity which prompted him to
+expect that all eyes would be upon him, and all voices lifted in his
+praise. Such was the conception of a vulgar observer of the human
+character. Why should it have been vanity that prompted this hope? It
+was a consciousness of merit, of those brilliant powers which produced
+the Ode to the Passions! was ever a voice content which sung to those
+who would not hear, which was condemned
+
+ "To waste its sweetness on the desert air?"
+
+Spenser's power of personification is copious beyond example; but it is
+seldom sufficiently select; rich as it is in imagination, it too
+commonly wants taste and delicacy; it has the fault of coarseness, which
+Burke's images in prose two centuries afterwards, sometimes fell into.
+But Collins's images are as pure, and of as exquisite delicacy, as they
+are spiritual. They are not human beings invested with some of the
+attributes of angels, but the whole figure is purely angelic, and of a
+higher order of creation; in this they are distinct even from the
+admirable personifications of Gray, because they are less earthly. The
+Ode to the Passions is, by universal consent, the noblest of Collins's
+productions, because it exhibits a much more extended invention, not of
+one passion only, but of all the passions combined, acting, according to
+the powers of each, to one end. The execution, also, is the happiest,
+each particular passion is drawn with inimitable force and compression.
+Let us take only FEAR and DESPAIR, each dashed out in four lines, of
+which every word is like inspiration. Beautiful as Spenser is, and
+sometimes sublime, yet he redoubles his touches too much, and often
+introduces some coarse feature or expression, which destroys the spell.
+Spenser, indeed, has other merits of splendid and inexhaustible
+invention, which render it impossible to put Collins on a par with him:
+but we must not estimate merit by mere quantity: if a poet produces but
+one short piece, which is perfect, he must be placed according to its
+quality. And surely there is not a single figure in Collins's Ode to the
+Passions which is not perfect, both in conception and language. He has
+had many imitators, but no one has ever approached him in his own
+department.
+
+The Ode to Evening is, perhaps, the next in point of merit. It is quite
+of a different cast; it is descriptive of natural scenery; and such a
+scene of enchanting repose was never exhibited by Claude, or any other
+among the happiest of painters. Though a mere verbal description can
+never rival a fine picture in a mere address to the material part of our
+nature, yet it far eclipses it with those who have the endowment of a
+brilliant fancy, because it gratifies their taste, selection, and
+sentiment. Delightful, therefore, as it is to look upon a Claude, it is
+more delightful to look upon this description. It is vain to attempt to
+analyse the charm of this Ode; it is so subtle, that it escapes
+analysis. Its harmony is so perfect, that it requires no rhyme: the
+objects are so happily chosen, and the simple epithets convey ideas and
+feelings so congenial to each other, as to throw the reader into the
+very mood over which the personified being so beautifully designed
+presides. No other poem on the same subject has the same magic. It
+assuredly suggested some images and a tone of expression to Gray in his
+Elegy.
+
+The Ode on the Poetical Character is here and there a little involved
+and obscure; but its general conception is magnificent, and beaming that
+spirit of inventive enthusiasm, which alone can cherish the poet's
+powers, and bring forth the due fruits. Collins never touched the lyre
+but he was borne away by the inspiration under which he laboured. The
+Dirge in Cymbeline, the lines on Thomson, and the Ode on Colonel Ross
+breathe such a beautiful simplicity of pathos, and yet are so highly
+poetical and graceful in every thought and tone, that, exquisitely
+polished as they are, and without one superfluous or one prosaic word,
+they never once betray the artifices of composition. The extreme
+transparency of the words and thoughts would induce a vulgar reader to
+consider them trite, while they are the expression of a genius so
+refined as to be all essence of spirit. In Gray, excellent as he is, we
+continually encounter the marks of labour and effort, and occasional
+crudeness, which shows that effort had not always succeeded, such as
+"iron hand and torturing hour;" but nothing of this kind occurs in the
+principal poems of Collins. There is a fire of mind which supersedes
+labour, and produces what labour cannot. It has been said that Collins
+is neither sublime nor pathetic; but only ingenious and fanciful. The
+truth is, that he was cast in the very mould of sublimity and pathos. He
+lived in an atmosphere above the earth, and breathed only in a visionary
+world. He was conversant with nothing else, and this must have been the
+secret by which he produced compositions so entirely spiritual. He who
+has daily intercourse with the world, and feels the vulgar human
+passions, cannot be in a humour to write poems which do not partake of
+earthly coarseness.
+
+It may be asked, _cui bono?_ what is the moral use of such poems as
+these? Whatever refines the intellect improves the heart; whatever
+augments and fortifies the spiritual part of our nature raises us in the
+rank of created beings. And what poems are more calculated to refine our
+intellect, and increase our spirituality, than the poems of Collins? To
+embody, in a brilliant manner, the most beautiful abstractions, to put
+them into action, and to add to them splendour, harmony, strength, and
+purity of language, is to complete a task as admirable for its use and
+its delight, as it is difficult to be executed. No one can receive the
+intellectual gratification which such works are capable of producing
+without being the better for it. The understanding was never yet roused
+to the conception of such pure and abstract thinking without an
+elevation of the whole nature of the being so roused. The expression of
+subtle and evanescent ideas, carried to its perfection, is among the
+very noblest and most exalted studies with which the human mind can be
+conversant.
+
+It has been the fashion of our own age to beat out works into twentyfold
+and fiftyfold the size of those of Collins. I do not quarrel with that
+fashion; each fashion has its use: and my own taste induces me to
+perceive the value and many attractions of long narrative poems, full of
+human passions and practical wisdom. The matter is more desirable than
+the workmanship; and much of occasional carelessness in the language may
+be forgiven, for fertility of natural and just thought and interest of
+story. But this in no degree diminishes the value of those gems, which,
+though of the smallest size, comprehend perfections of every kind. It is
+easier to work upon a large field than a small one,--one where is
+
+ "Ample room and verge enough
+ The characters of hell to trace."
+
+But these diffuse productions are not calculated to give the same sort
+of pleasure as the gems. How difficult was the path chosen by Collins
+is sufficiently proved by the want of success of all who have entered
+the same walk: Gray's was not the same, as I shall endeavour presently
+to show. In the miscellany of Dodsley and other collectors will be found
+numerous attempts at Allegorical Odes: they are almost all nauseous
+failures--without originality or distinctness of conception; bald in
+their language, lame in their numbers, and repulsive from their
+insipidity of ideas.
+
+Gray's personifications can scarcely be called allegorical, they have so
+much of humanity about them. He dealt in all the noble and melancholy
+feelings of the human heart: he never for one moment forgot to be a
+moralist: he was constantly under the influence of powerful sympathy for
+the miseries of man's life; and wrote from the overflow of his bosom
+rather than of his imagination. It is true that his imagination
+presented the pictures to him; but it was his heart which impelled him
+to speak. Take the Ode on the Prospect of Eton College; there is not one
+word which did not break from the bottom of his heart. The multitude
+cannot enter into the visionary world of Collins: all who have a spark
+of virtuous human feelings can sympathize with Gray. It is impossible to
+deny that of these two beautiful poets Gray is the most instructive as a
+moralist; but Gray is not so original as Collins, not so inventive, not
+so perfect in his language, and has not so much the fire and flow of
+inspiration.
+
+When Collins is spoken of as one of the _minor_ poets, it is a sad
+misapplication of the term. Unless he be minor because the number and
+size of his poems is small, no one is less a minor poet. In him every
+word is poetry, and poetry either sublime or pathetic. He does not rise
+to the sublimity of Milton or Dante, or reach the graceful tenderness of
+Petrarch; but he has a visionary invention of his own, to which there is
+no rival. As long as the language lasts, every richly gifted and richly
+cultivated mind will read him with intense and wondering rapture; and
+will not cease to entertain the conviction, from his example, if from no
+other, that true poetry of the higher orders is real inspiration.
+
+It will occur to many readers, on perusing these passages of exalted
+praise, that Johnson has spoken of Collins in a very different manner.
+Almost fifty years have elapsed since Johnson's final criticism on him
+appeared in his Lives of the Poets. It disgusted me so much at the time,
+and the disgust continued so violent, that for a long period it blinded
+me to all his stupendous merits, because it evinced not only bad taste
+but unamiable feelings. I cannot yet either justify it, or account for
+it. He speaks of Collins having sought for splendour without attaining
+it--of clogging his lines with consonants, and of mistaking inversion of
+language for poetry. Not one of these faults belongs to Collins. In
+almost all his poems the words follow their natural order, and are
+mellifluous beyond those of almost any other verse writer. If the
+Passions are not described with splendour, there is no such thing as
+splendour. If the beauties which he sought and attained are unnatural
+and extravagant, then the tests of correctness and good taste which have
+been hitherto set up must be abandoned.
+
+This severe criticism is the more extraordinary because Johnson
+professed a warm personal friendship for Collins; he professes
+admiration of his talents, learning, and taste, as well as of his
+disposition and heart, and speaks of his afflicting ill health with a
+passionate tenderness which has seldom been equalled in beauty, pathos,
+and force of language. That he could love him personally with such
+fondness, but be blind to his splendid and unrivaled genius, is utterly
+beyond my power to account for. Who can say that Johnson wanted taste
+when we read his sublime and acute criticisms on Milton, Dryden, and
+Pope? Was it that he roused all the faculties of his judgment when he
+spoke of these great men of past times; yet, that when he descended to
+his contemporaries, he indulged his feelings rather than his intellect,
+and suffered himself to be overcome by the evil passions of envy and
+contempt? His natural taste was, probably, not the best; when his
+criticisms were perfect he had tasked his intellect rather than his
+feelings. He was a man of general wisdom and undoubted genius, but not a
+very nice scholar, and he prided himself upon his every-day sense, his
+practical knowledge, rather than those visionary musings which he
+thought a dangerous indulgence of imagination. He could not put the
+compositions of Collins among the mere curiosities of literature, but he
+permitted himself to depreciate habits of mental excursion which he had
+not himself cultivated.
+
+It was not till more than twenty years after Collins's death that his
+Ode on the Superstitions of the Highlands was recovered. The two Wartons
+had seen it, and spoke highly of it to Johnson and others. About 1781,
+or 1782, a copy was found among the papers of Dr. Carlysle, with a chasm
+of two or three stanzas. The public deemed it equal to the expectations
+which had been raised of it; for my part I will confess that I was
+always deeply disappointed at it. There are in it occasional traces of
+Collins's genius and several good lines--but none grand--none of that
+felicitous flow and inspired vigour which mark the Ode to the Passions
+and other of his lyrics--none of that happy personification of abstract
+conceptions which is the characteristic of his genius. The majority of
+the lines lag and move heavily, and do not seem to me to rise much
+above mediocrity in the expression. The subject was attractive, and
+might have afforded space for the wild excursions of Collins's creative
+powers. As to the edition of Bell, in which it is pretended that the
+lost stanzas have been recovered, I have no more doubt that they are
+_spurious_ than that I did not write them myself: I will not dwell upon
+this subject, but only mention that it is quite impossible Collins could
+write "_Fate_ gave the _fatal_ blow," and "bowing to Freedom's _yoke_;"
+and such a line as
+
+ "In the first year of the first George's reign," &c.
+
+There is not one line among these interpolated stanzas which it is
+possible that Collins could have written.
+
+Mr. Ragdale relates that Collins was in the habit of writing numerous
+fragments, and then throwing them into the flames. Jackson, of Exeter,
+says the same of John Bampfylde. A sensitive mind is scarce ever
+satisfied with the reception it meets, when, in first heat of
+composition, it hopes to delight some listener, to which it first
+communicates its new effusions. It almost always considers itself to be
+"damn'd by faint praise." I have known fervid authors who, if they read
+or communicated a piece before it was finished, never went on with it.
+They thought it became blown upon, and turned from it with coldness,
+disgust, and despair. Yet the hearer is commonly not in fault: who can
+satisfy the warm hopes of aspiring and restless genius?
+
+The Wartons have expressed themselves with praise and affection of
+Collins, but not, I think, with the entire admiration which was due to
+him. Joseph Warton was a good-natured and generous-minded man, but
+something of rivalry lurked in his bosom; and the fraternal partiality
+of Thomas Warton had the same effect. The younger brother seems to have
+thought that Joseph's genius was equal to that of Collins. Gray had the
+critical acumen to discern the difference; but still he in no degree
+does justice to Collins. He accuses him of want of taste and selection,
+which is a surprising charge; and the more so, because Gray did not
+disdain to borrow from him. Gray's fault was an affected fastidiousness,
+as appears by the slighting manner in which he speaks of Thomson's
+Castle of Indolence on its first appearance, as well as of Akenside's
+Pleasures of Imagination, and Shenstone's Elegies. That Gray had
+exquisite taste, and was a perfect scholar, no one can doubt.
+
+Collins lived thirteen years after the publication of his Odes. It does
+not appear that he produced any thing after this publication. How soon
+his grand mental malady extinguished his literary powers, I do not
+exactly know, nor is it recorded, whether any part of it arose from
+bodily disorders. Medical men have never agreed regarding this most
+deplorable of human afflictions. In Collins's case it probably arose
+from the mind. On such an intellectual temperament the extinction of the
+visions which Hope had painted to him seems to have been sufficient to
+produce that derangement, which first enfeebled, and then perverted and
+annihilated his faculties. The account given by Johnson is different
+from that supplied by Mr. Ragdale and another anonymous communication.
+
+He had, perhaps, lucid intervals in which he discovered nothing but
+weakness and exhaustion. But he appears to have sometimes had fits of
+violence and despair. It seems that he was an enthusiastic admirer of
+Shakespeare, and a great reader of black letter books. It may be
+inferred that his studies were not entirely given up during his malady;
+but it is a subject of great wonder and regret that the Wartons, the
+intimate friends both of his better and darker days, have left no
+particular memorials of him. He had a sister, lately, if not still,
+living, from whom, though of a very uncongenial nature, something might
+surely have been gathered. But there is a familiarity which, by
+destroying admiration, destroys the perception of what will interest
+others. There are few of our poets of rare genius, of whose private life
+and character much is known. Little is known of Spenser, Shakespeare,
+and Milton: not much even of Thomson. More is known of Gray by the
+medium of his beautiful letters; but when Southey, Wordsworth, and Scott
+are gone, posterity will know every particular of them; and, even now,
+know much which fills them with delight and admiration. But let us know
+something in good time, also of the new candidates for poetical fame!
+
+If the life of a poet is not in accordance with his song, it may be
+suspected that the song itself is not genuine. Who can be a poet, and
+yet be a worldling in his passions and habits? An artificial poet is a
+disgusting dealer in trifles: nothing but the predominance of strong and
+unstimulated feeling will give that inspiration without which it is
+worse than an empty sound. When the passion is factitious, the
+excitement has always an immoral tendency; but the delineation of real
+and amiable sentiments calls up a sympathy in other bosoms which thus
+confirms and fixes them where they would otherwise die away. The memory
+may preserve what is artificial, but, when it becomes stale, it turns to
+offensiveness, and thus breeds an alienation from literature itself.
+
+That Collins has continued to increase in fame as years have passed
+away, is the most decisive of all proofs that his poems have the pure
+and sterling merit which began to be ascribed to them soon after his
+death. M. Bonstetten tells me that Gray died without a suspicion of the
+high rank he was thereafter to hold in the annals of British genius?
+What did poor Collins think when he submitted his sublime odes to the
+flames? He must have had fits of confidence, even then, in himself; but
+intermixed with gloom and despair, and curses of the wretched doom of
+his birth! Is it sufficient that a man should wrap himself up in
+himself, and be content if the poetry creates itself and expires in his
+own heart? We strike the lyre to excite sympathy, and, if no one will
+hear, will any one not feel that he strikes in vain; and that the talent
+given us is useless, and even painful? But who can be assured that he
+has the talent if no one acknowledges it? To have it, and not to be
+assured that we have it, is a restless fire that burns to consume us.
+
+Let no one envy the endowments, if he looks at the fate, of poets. Let
+him contemplate Spenser, Denham, Rochester, Otway, Collins, Chatterton,
+Burns, Kirke White, Bloomfield, Shelley, Keats, and Byron, besides those
+of foreign countries! Perhaps Collins was the most unhappy of all; as he
+was assuredly one of the most inspired and most amiable.
+
+ "In woful measures wan Despair--
+ Low sullen sounds his grief beguiled,
+ A solemn, strange, and mingled air;
+ 'Twas sad by fits, by starts 'twas wild."
+
+Langhorne's edition of Collins first appeared in 1765, accompanied by
+observations which have been generally appended to subsequent editions.
+These observations have commonly borne the character of feebleness and
+affectation; they have a sort of pedantic prettiness, which is somewhat
+repulsive, but they do not want ingenuity, or justness of criticism.
+Part of them, at least, had previously appeared in the Monthly Review,
+probably written by Langhorne. Langhorne was not deficient himself in
+poetical genius, but is principally remembered by a single beautiful
+stanza, "Cold on Canadian hills," &c. From the time of Langhorne's first
+edition, Collins became a popular poet; a miniature edition appeared
+soon after that of Langhorne; and as long as I can remember books, which
+goes back at least to the year 1770, Collins's poems were almost
+universally on the lips of readers of English poetry. That Cowper, in
+1784, should speak of him as "a poet of no great fame," proves nothing,
+since Cowper's long seclusion from the world had made him utterly
+ignorant of contemporary literature. The negative inference, from the
+omission of Beattie, is not of much weight. I cannot recollect the date
+of the article in the Monthly Review; but, as it appears that Collins
+survived till 1759, I suspect it was before Collins's death. It was in
+September, 1754, that the Wartons visited him at Chichester: in that
+year he paid a visit to Oxford, when it appears that he was suffering
+under exhausture, not alienation, of mind.
+
+The critics, and, among the rest, Mrs. Barbauld and Campbell, have
+ascribed to him "frequent obscurity;" this is unjust,--his general
+characteristic is lucidness and transparency: he is never obscure,
+unless in the Ode to Liberty, and, perhaps, in a few passages of the Ode
+on the Manners. Campbell's criticism is, otherwise, worthy of this
+beautiful poet, whom he praises with congenial spirit. When Hazlitt
+speaks of the "tinsel and splendid patchwork" of Collins, "mixed with
+the solid, sterling ore of his genius," he speaks of a base material not
+to be found there. In Collins there is no tinsel or patchwork, one of
+his excellencies is, that the whole of every piece is of one web; there
+are no joinings or meaner threads. There is no height to which Collins
+might not have risen, had he lived long, had his mind continued sound,
+and had he persevered in exercising his genius. Campbell remarks that,
+at the same age, Milton had written nothing which could eclipse his
+productions.
+
+Of the two communications regarding Collins, to which I have already
+alluded, one anonymous, the other by a Mr. John Ragsdale, I must say
+something more. The first, signed V., appeared in the Gentleman's
+Magazine, with the date of the 20th Jan. 1781. I well remember its
+publication, and with what eagerness I read it. I suspect it was at the
+very crisis of the appearance of the last portion of Johnson's Lives,
+but possibly a year earlier. I perused it with a mixture of delight,
+melancholy, and disgust; the first passage which struck me was this: "As
+he brought with him [to Oxford], for so the whole tone of his
+conversation discovered, too high an opinion of his school acquisitions
+and a sovereign contempt for all academic studies and discipline, he
+never looked with any complacency on his situation in the University,
+but was always complaining of the dulness of a college life. In short,
+he threw up his demyship, and going to London, commenced a man of the
+town, spending his time in all the dissipation of Ranelagh, Vauxhall,
+and the playhouses; and was romantic enough to suppose that his superior
+abilities would draw the attention of the great world, by means of whom
+he was to make his fortune," &c., &c.--"Thus was lost to the world this
+unfortunate person, in the prime of life, without availing himself of
+fine abilities, which, if properly improved, must have raised him to the
+top of any profession, and have rendered him a blessing to his friends,
+and an ornament to his country."
+
+The vulgarity and narrow-mindedness of this last paragraph filled me
+with indignation and contempt. In a selfish point of view Collins
+might, unquestionably, have done better by binding himself to the
+trammels of a profession; but would he have been more an honor to his
+friends and an ornament to his country? Are the fruits of genius he has
+left behind no ornament or use to his country? Professional men, for the
+most part, live for themselves, and not for the world. Who now remembers
+Lord Camden, Lord Thurlow, Lord Rosslyn, Lord Kenyon, Lord Ellenborough,
+or a hundred episcopal or medical characters, all rich and famous in
+their day?
+
+The character of his person and habits we read with deep interest. "He
+was passionately fond of music, good-natured, and affable, warm in his
+friendships, and visionary in his pursuits; and, as long as I knew him,
+very temperate in his eating and drinking. He was of a moderate stature,
+of a light and clear complexion, with gray eyes, so very weak at times
+as hardly to bear a candle in the room, and often raising within him
+apprehensions of blindness."
+
+The letter from Mr. John Ragsdale is addressed to Mr. William Hymers,
+Queen's College, Oxford, dated "Hill Street, Richmond, in Surrey, July,
+1783." He appears to have been a tradesman in Bond Street; and he
+surveyed the character of Collins (with whom he was familiar) with a
+tradesman's eye. He reproached the poet with idleness, not because he
+was lingering and losing his time on the road to fame, but because he
+omitted to get money by his pen. "To raise a present subsistence," says
+Ragsdale, "he set about writing his Odes; and having a general
+invitation to my house, he frequently passed whole days there, which he
+employed in writing them, and as frequently burning what he had written
+after he had read them to me: many of them, which pleased me, I
+struggled to preserve, but without effect; for, pretending he would
+alter them, he got them from me, and thrust them into the fire." That he
+wrote the Odes to gain a present subsistence is but the tradesman's
+mistaken comment.
+
+Gray was about four years older than Collins, and he survived him twelve
+years; he appears to have spent these years in gloominess and spleen;
+but we know not what intense pleasures he received from his solitary
+studies, from the improvement of his mind, from that exquisite taste and
+increasing erudition of which every day added to the stores. The
+enthusiasm of Collins was more active and adventurous, and his erudition
+probably more acute. Timidity and fastidiousness were great defects in
+Gray; they kept down his invention, and made him resort to the wealth of
+others, when he could better have relied upon himself. But as to
+borrowing expressions and simple materials, no genius ever did
+otherwise; it is the new and happy combination in which lies the
+invention. It may be doubted which are now most popular, the Odes of
+Collins or of Gray. On the one hand, what is most abstract is least
+calculated for the general reader; on the other hand, the variety of
+learned allusions in Gray renders the style and thoughts of his most
+celebrated Odes less simple, less direct, and less easily comprehended
+at once; but then his deep morality, the touching strokes which go
+immediately to the heart, his sensibility to the common sorrows of human
+life, his powerful reflection of the sentiments which "come home to
+every one's business and bosom," form an attraction which perhaps turns
+the scale in his favour. Of both these sublime poets the correctness of
+composition renders the writings a national good.
+
+The French Revolution, which affected and partly reversed the minds of
+all Europe, produced a new era in our literature. There was good as well
+as evil in the new force thus infused into the human intellect. Our
+poetry had generally become tame and trite; a sort of languid mechanism
+had brought it into contempt; it was very little read, and still less
+esteemed. This might be not merely the effect, but also the cause of a
+deficiency of striking genius in the candidates for the laurel. Collins
+and Gray were dead; Mason had hung up the lyre; and Thomas Warton was
+then thought too laboured and quaint; Hayley had succeeded beyond
+expectation by a return to moral and didactic poetry at a moment when
+the public was satiated by vile imitations of lyrical and descriptive
+composition; but Cowper gave a new impulse to the curiosity of poetical
+readers, by a natural train of thought and the unlaboured effusions of
+genuine feeling. There is no doubt that a fearful regard to models
+stifles all force and preeminent merit. The burst of the French
+Revolution set the faculties of all young persons free. It was dangerous
+to secondary talents, and only led them into extravagances and
+absurdities. To Wordsworth, Southey, Scott, it was the removal of a
+weight, which would have hid the fire of their genius. But the
+exuberance of their inexhaustible minds in no degree lessens the value
+of the more reserved models of excellence of a tamer age. The contrast
+of their varied attractions supplies the reader with opposite kinds of
+merit, which delight and improve the more by this very opposition.
+
+Authors seldom estimate each other rightly in their lifetimes. The race
+of poets, of whom the last died with the century, had little friendship,
+or even acquaintance among themselves; or rather, they broke into little
+sets of two and three, which narrowed their opinions and their hearts;
+Gray and Mason, Johnson and the two Wartons, Cowper and Hayley, Darwin
+and Miss Seward; but Shenstone, Beattie, Akenside, Burns, Mrs. Carter,
+Mrs. Smith, &c. stood alone. This is not desirable. Innumerable
+advantages spring from frank and generous communication. Collins and
+Gray had not the most remote personal knowledge of each other. Gray
+never mentions Dr. Sneyd Davies, a poet and an Etonian, nearly
+contemporary; nor Nicholas Hardinge, a scholar and a poet also. Mundy,
+the author of Needwood Forest, passed a long life in the country,
+totally removed from poets and literati, except the small coterie of
+Miss Seward, at Litchfield. The lives of poets would be the most amusing
+of all biography, if the materials were less scanty: it is strange that
+so few of them have left any ample records of themselves; of many not
+even a letter or fragment of memorials is preserved. None of Cowley's
+letters, a mode of composition in which he is said to have eminently
+excelled, have come down to us. Of Prior, Tickell, Thomson, Young, Dyer,
+Akenside, the Wartons, there are few of any importance known to be in
+existence. Those of Hayley, which Dr. J. Johnson has brought forward,
+are not of the interest which might have been expected. Mrs. Carter's
+are excellent, and many of Beattie's amusing and amiable: it had been
+well for Miss Seward if most of hers had been consigned to the flames.
+Those of Charlotte Smith it has not been thought prudent to give to the
+public. The greater part of those of Lord Byron, which Moore has
+hitherto put forth, had better have been spared: they are written in
+false taste, and are under a factitious character: in general, the prose
+style of poets is admirable;--it was not Lord Byron's excellence. We
+have no specimens of the prose of Collins: it is grievous that he did
+not execute his project of The History of the Revival of Literature, or
+of the Lives for the Biographia Britannica, which he undertook. Poets of
+research are, of all authors, best qualified to write biography with
+sagacity and eloquence; they see into the human heart, and detect its
+most secret movements; and if there be a class of literature more
+amusing and more instructive than another, it is well written
+biography.
+
+We have a few poets who have not possessed erudition; for genius will
+overcome all deficiencies of art and labour, such as Shakespeare,
+Chatterton, Burns, and Bloomfield: but it cannot be questioned that
+erudition is a mighty aid. Milton could never have been what he was
+without profound and laborious erudition. Another necessary knowledge is
+the knowledge of the human heart, which no industry and learning will
+give. It is an intuitive gift, which mainly depends on an acute and
+correct imagination, and a sympathetic sensibility of the human
+passions. Among the innumerable rich endowments of Shakespeare this was
+the first; it was the predominant brilliance of his knowledge which
+gave him correctness of description, sentiment, and observation, and
+clearness, force, and eloquence of language.
+
+Collins had only reached the age of twenty-six when his Odes were
+published: what inconceivable power would the maturity of age have given
+him? It is lamentable that he had no familiar friend and companion from
+that period capable of apprehending and remembering his conversations.
+In his lucid intervals he must have said many wise, many learned, and
+many brilliant things; perhaps his very disease, in its vacillation
+between light and darkness, may have struck out many unexpected and
+surprising beauties, which common attendants were utterly incapable of
+appreciating. The flushes of the mind under the unnatural impulses of
+malady are sometimes inimitably splendid. His reason, at times, was
+sound, for his reason was fervid to the last. But it is said that his
+shrieks sometimes resounded through the cathedral cloisters of
+Chichester till the horror of those who heard him was insupportable.
+
+All these speculations may appear tedious to those whose curiosity is
+confined to facts: but new facts regarding Collins are not to be had:
+and what are facts unless they are accompanied by reflections,
+conclusions, and sentiments? The use of facts is to teach us to think,
+to judge, and to feel: and facts, regarding men of genius, are valuable
+in enabling us to contemplate how far the gifts of high intellect
+contribute to our happiness, or afford guides for the rest of mankind;
+in what respects they have the possessors upon an equality with the herd
+of the people; and where they expose them to temptations from which
+others are free. For these purposes the ill fated Collins is a
+melancholy illustration: the Muse had touched the lips of his infancy,
+and infused her spirit into him; she had given him a piercing
+understanding, and an amiable disposition and temper; she enabled him to
+come forth with poetry of the first class, in the earliest bloom of
+youth; and to deserve, if not to win, the envied laurel, which millions
+have reached at in vain! What seeming glories and blessings were these!
+Yet to how few was so much misery dispensed as to this once envied
+being! May we not hope that his spirit now has its mighty reward?
+
+Let it not be denied that there is high virtue in the culture of the
+mind, when directed to pure and elevated objects, and accustoming itself
+to travel in lofty paths! The mind cannot attain the necessary
+refinement, nor have its sight cleared of the film of earthly grossness,
+unless the heart throws off the dregs of coarser feeling, and keeps its
+wings afloat on a lighter and airier atmosphere. It may be said, that
+there have been bad men who have been great poets: but this position
+remains to be proved. The dissolute men who have written verses have not
+been great poets. Were Dante, Petrarch, Tasso, Spenser, Shakespeare,
+Dryden, Pope, Thomson, Burns, bad men? We know that Milton's character
+was great and holy, whatever were his politics: and who could be more
+virtuous than Gray, Beattie, Cowper, and Kirke White? And have we not
+virtuous poets among the living,--men whose native splendour and
+intellectual culture have almost purified them into spirits? Let us
+never cease to meditate on the dejected inspiration, which could pour
+forth such strains as these:
+
+ "With eyes upraised, as one inspired,
+ Pale Melancholy sat retired;
+ And from her wild sequester'd seat,
+ In notes by distance made more sweet,
+ Pour'd through the mellow horn her pensive soul:
+ And, dashing soft from rocks around,
+ Bubbling runnels join'd the sound;
+ Through glades and glooms the mingled measures stole,
+ Or o'er some haunted stream with fond delay
+ Round a holy calm diffusing,
+ Love of peace and lonely musing,
+ In hollow murmurs died away."
+
+There are those who will think the praises thus bestowed upon Collins
+extravagant. It is now sixty years since I became familiar with him;
+and I still think of him with unabated admiration. When the calm
+judgment of age confirms the passion of youth and boyhood, we cannot be
+much mistaken in the merit we ascribe to him who is the object of it.
+
+S. E. B.
+
+
+
+
+ORIENTAL ECLOGUES.
+
+WRITTEN ORIGINALLY FOR THE ENTERTAINMENT OF THE LADIES OF TAURIS.
+
+AND NOW TRANSLATED.
+
+ ----Ubi primus equis Oriens adflavit anhelis.
+ VIRG.
+
+
+
+
+The First Edition was entitled, "Persian Eclogues, written originally
+for the Entertainment of the Ladies of Tauris. And now first translated,
+&c.
+
+ Quod si non hic tantus fructus ostenderetur, et si ex his studiis
+ delectatio sola peteretur; tamen, ut opinor, hanc animi
+ remissionem humanissimam ac liberalissimam judicaretis.
+
+ _CIC. pro Arch. Poeta._"
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+It is with the writings of mankind, in some measure, as with their
+complexions or their dress; each nation hath a peculiarity in all these,
+to distinguish it from the rest of the world.
+
+The gravity of the Spaniard, and the levity of the Frenchman, are as
+evident in all their productions as in their persons themselves; and the
+style of my countrymen is as naturally strong and nervous, as that of an
+Arabian or Persian is rich and figurative.
+
+There is an elegancy and wildness of thought which recommends all
+their compositions; and our geniuses are as much too cold for the
+entertainment of such sentiments, as our climate is for their fruits
+and spices. If any of these beauties are to be found in the following
+Eclogues, I hope my reader will consider them as an argument of their
+being original. I received them at the hands of a merchant, who had
+made it his business to enrich himself with the learning, as well as the
+silks and carpets of the Persians. The little information I could
+gather concerning their author, was, that his name was Abdallah, and
+that he was a native of Tauris.
+
+It was in that city that he died of a distemper fatal in those parts,
+whilst he was engaged in celebrating the victories of his favourite
+monarch, the great Abbas.[10] As to the Eclogues themselves, they give a
+very just view of the miseries and inconveniences, as well as the
+felicities, that attend one of the finest countries in the East.
+
+The time of writing them was probably in the beginning of Sha Sultan
+Hosseyn's reign, the successor of Sefi or Solyman the Second.
+
+Whatever defects, as, I doubt not, there will be many, fall under the
+reader's observation, I hope his candour will incline him to make the
+following reflection:
+
+That the works of Orientals contain many peculiarities, and that,
+through defect of language, few European translators can do them
+justice.
+
+
+
+
+ORIENTAL ECLOGUES.
+
+
+ECLOGUE I.
+
+SELIM; OR, THE SHEPHERD'S MORAL.
+
+ SCENE, A valley near Bagdat.
+ TIME, The morning.
+
+
+ 'Ye Persian maids, attend your poet's lays,
+ And hear how shepherds pass their golden days.
+ Not all are blest, whom fortune's hand sustains
+ With wealth in courts, nor all that haunt the plains:
+ Well may your hearts believe the truths I tell; 5
+ 'Tis virtue makes the bliss, where'er we dwell.'
+
+ Thus Selim sung, by sacred Truth inspired;
+ Nor praise, but such as Truth bestow'd, desired:
+ Wise in himself, his meaning songs convey'd
+ Informing morals to the shepherd maid; 10
+ Or taught the swains that surest bliss to find,
+ What groves nor streams bestow, a virtuous mind.
+
+ When sweet and blushing, like a virgin bride,
+ The radiant morn resumed her orient pride;
+ When wanton gales along the valleys play, 15
+ Breathe on each flower, and bear their sweets away;
+ By Tigris' wandering waves he sat, and sung
+ This useful lesson for the fair and young.
+
+ 'Ye Persian dames,' he said, 'to you belong--
+ Well may they please--the morals of my song: 20
+ No fairer maids, I trust, than you are found,
+ Graced with soft arts, the peopled world around!
+ The morn that lights you, to your loves supplies
+ Each gentler ray delicious to your eyes:
+ For you those flowers her fragrant hands bestow; 25
+ And yours the love that kings delight to know.
+ Yet think not these, all beauteous as they are,
+ The best kind blessings heaven can grant the fair!
+ Who trust alone in beauty's feeble ray
+ Boast but the worth[11] Balsora's pearls display: 30
+ Drawn from the deep we own their surface bright,
+ But, dark within, they drink no lustrous light:
+ Such are the maids, and such the charms they boast,
+ By sense unaided, or to virtue lost.
+ Self-flattering sex! your hearts believe in vain 35
+ That love shall blind, when once he fires, the swain;
+ Or hope a lover by your faults to win,
+ As spots on ermine beautify the skin:
+ Who seeks secure to rule, be first her care
+ Each softer virtue that adorns the fair; 40
+ Each tender passion man delights to find,
+ The loved perfections of a female mind!
+
+ 'Blest were the days when Wisdom held her reign,
+ And shepherds sought her on the silent plain!
+ With Truth she wedded in the secret grove, 45
+ Immortal Truth, and daughters bless'd their love.
+ O haste, fair maids! ye Virtues, come away!
+ Sweet Peace and Plenty lead you on your way!
+ The balmy shrub, for you shall love our shore,
+ By Ind excell'd, or Araby, no more. 50
+
+ 'Lost to our fields, for so the fates ordain,
+ The dear deserters shall return again.
+ Come thou, whose thoughts as limpid springs are clear,
+ To lead the train, sweet Modesty, appear:
+ Here make thy court amidst our rural scene, 55
+ And shepherd girls shall own thee for their queen:
+ With thee be Chastity, of all afraid,
+ Distrusting all, a wise suspicious maid,
+ But man the most:--not more the mountain doe
+ Holds the swift falcon for her deadly foe. 60
+ Cold is her breast, like flowers that drink the dew;
+ A silken veil conceals her from the view.
+ No wild desires amidst thy train be known;
+ But Faith, whose heart is fix'd on one alone:
+ Desponding Meekness, with her downcast eyes, 65
+ And friendly Pity, full of tender sighs;
+ And Love the last: by these your hearts approve;
+ These are the virtues that must lead to love.'
+
+ Thus sung the swain; and ancient legends say
+ The maids of Bagdat verified the lay: 70
+ Dear to the plains, the Virtues came along,
+ The shepherds loved, and Selim bless'd his song.
+
+
+VARIATIONS.
+
+ Ver.
+ 8. No praise the youth, but hers alone desired:
+
+ 13. When sweet and odorous, like an eastern bride,
+
+ 30. Balsora's pearls have more of worth than they:
+
+ 31. Drawn from the deep, they sparkle to the sight,
+ And all-unconscious shoot a lustrous light:
+
+ 46. The fair-eyed Truth, and daughters bless'd their love.
+
+ 53. O come, thou Modesty, as they decree,
+ The rose may then improve her blush by thee.
+
+ 69. Thus sung the swain, and eastern legends say
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [10] In the Persian tongue, Abbas signifieth "the father of the
+ people."
+
+ [11] The gulf of that name, famous for the pearl fishery.
+
+
+
+
+ECLOGUE II.
+
+HASSAN; OR, THE CAMEL DRIVER.
+
+ SCENE, The desert.
+ TIME, Midday.
+
+
+ In silent horror o'er the boundless waste
+ The driver Hassan with his camels past:
+ One cruise of water on his back he bore,
+ And his light scrip contain'd a scanty store;
+ A fan of painted feathers in his hand, 5
+ To guard his shaded face from scorching sand.
+ The sultry sun had gain'd the middle sky,
+ And not a tree, and not an herb was nigh;
+ The beasts with pain their dusty way pursue;
+ Shrill roar'd the winds, and dreary was the view! 10
+ With desperate sorrow wild, the affrighted man
+ Thrice sigh'd, thrice struck his breast, and thus began:
+ 'Sad was the hour, and luckless was the day,
+ 'When first from Schiraz' walls I bent my way!'
+
+ 'Ah! little thought I of the blasting wind, 15
+ The thirst, or pinching hunger, that I find!
+ Bethink thee, Hassan, where shall thirst assuage,
+ When fails this cruise, his unrelenting rage?
+ Soon shall this scrip its precious load resign;
+ Then what but tears and hunger shall be thine? 20
+
+ 'Ye mute companions of my toils, that bear
+ In all my griefs a more than equal share!
+ Here, where no springs in murmurs break away,
+ Or moss-crown'd fountains mitigate the day,
+ In vain ye hope the green delights to know, 25
+ Which plains more blest, or verdant vales bestow:
+ Here rocks alone, and tasteless sands, are found,
+ And faint and sickly winds for ever howl around.
+ 'Sad was the hour, and luckless was the day,
+ 'When first from Schiraz' walls I bent my way!' 30
+
+ 'Curst be the gold and silver which persuade
+ Weak men to follow far fatiguing trade!
+ The lily peace outshines the silver store,
+ And life is dearer than the golden ore:
+ Yet money tempts us o'er the desert brown, 35
+ To every distant mart and wealthy town.
+ Full oft we tempt the land, and oft the sea;
+ And are we only yet repaid by thee?
+ Ah! why was ruin so attractive made?
+ Or why fond man so easily betray'd? 40
+ Why heed we not, whilst mad we haste along,
+ The gentle voice of peace, or pleasure's song?
+ Or wherefore think the flowery mountain's side,
+ The fountain's murmurs, and the valley's pride,
+ Why think we these less pleasing to behold 45
+ Than dreary deserts, if they lead to gold?
+ 'Sad was the hour, and luckless was the day,
+ 'When first from Schiraz' walls I bent my way!'
+
+ 'O cease, my fears!--all frantic as I go,
+ When thought creates unnumber'd scenes of woe, 50
+ What if the lion in his rage I meet!--
+ Oft in the dust I view his printed feet:
+ And, fearful! oft, when day's declining light
+ Yields her pale empire to the mourner night,
+ By hunger roused, he scours the groaning plain, 55
+ Gaunt wolves and sullen tigers in his train:
+ Before them Death with shrieks directs their way,
+ Fills the wild yell, and leads them to their prey.
+ 'Sad was the hour, and luckless was the day,
+ 'When first from Schiraz' walls I bent my way!' 60
+
+ 'At that dead hour the silent asp shall creep,
+ If aught of rest I find, upon my sleep:
+ Or some swoln serpent twist his scales around,
+ And wake to anguish with a burning wound.
+ Thrice happy they, the wise contented poor, 65
+ From lust of wealth, and dread of death secure!
+ They tempt no deserts, and no griefs they find;
+ Peace rules the day, where reason rules the mind.
+ 'Sad was the hour, and luckless was the day,
+ 'When first from Schiraz' walls I bent my way!' 70
+
+ 'O hapless youth!--for she thy love hath won,
+ The tender Zara will be most undone!
+ Big swell'd my heart, and own'd the powerful maid,
+ When fast she dropt her tears, as thus she said:
+ "Farewell the youth whom sighs could not detain; 75
+ Whom Zara's breaking heart implored in vain!
+ Yet, as thou go'st, may every blast arise
+ Weak and unfelt, as these rejected sighs!
+ Safe o'er the wild, no perils mayst thou see,
+ No griefs endure, nor weep, false youth, like me." 80
+ O let me safely to the fair return,
+ Say, with a kiss, she must not, shall not mourn;
+ O! let me teach my heart to lose its fears,
+ Recall'd by Wisdom's voice, and Zara's tears.'
+
+ He said, and call'd on heaven to bless the day, 85
+ When back to Schiraz' walls he bent his way.
+
+
+VARIATIONS.
+
+ Ver.
+ 1. In silent horror o'er the desert waste
+
+ 83. Go teach my heart to lose its painful fears.
+
+
+
+
+ECLOGUE III.
+
+ABRA; OR, THE GEORGIAN SULTANA.
+
+ SCENE, A forest.
+ TIME, The evening.
+
+
+ In Georgia's land, where Tefflis' towers are seen,
+ In distant view, along the level green,
+ While evening dews enrich the glittering glade,
+ And the tall forests cast a longer shade,
+ What time 'tis sweet o'er fields of rice to stray, 5
+ Or scent the breathing maize at setting day;
+ Amidst the maids of Zagen's peaceful grove,
+ Emyra sung the pleasing cares of love.
+
+ Of Abra first began the tender strain,
+ Who led her youth with flocks upon the plain. 10
+ At morn she came those willing flocks to lead,
+ Where lilies rear them in the watery mead;
+ From early dawn the livelong hours she told,
+ Till late at silent eve she penn'd the fold.
+ Deep in the grove, beneath the secret shade, 15
+ A various wreath of odorous flowers she made:
+ Gay-motley'd[12] pinks and sweet jonquils she chose,
+ The violet blue that on the moss-bank grows;
+ All sweet to sense, the flaunting rose was there;
+ The finish'd chaplet well adorn'd her hair. 20
+
+ Great Abbas chanced that fated morn to stray,
+ By love conducted from the chase away;
+ Among the vocal vales he heard her song,
+ And sought, the vales and echoing groves among;
+ At length he found, and woo'd the rural maid; 25
+ She knew the monarch, and with fear obey'd.
+ 'Be every youth like royal Abbas moved,
+ 'And every Georgian maid like Abra loved!'
+
+ The royal lover bore her from the plain;
+ Yet still her crook and bleating flock remain: 30
+ Oft, as she went, she backward turn'd her view,
+ And bade that crook and bleating flock adieu.
+ Fair, happy maid! to other scenes remove,
+ To richer scenes of golden power and love!
+ Go leave the simple pipe and shepherd's strain; 35
+ With love delight thee, and with Abbas reign!
+ 'Be every youth like royal Abbas moved,
+ 'And every Georgian maid like Abra loved!'
+
+ Yet, 'midst the blaze of courts, she fix'd her love
+ On the cool fountain, or the shady grove; 40
+ Still, with the shepherd's innocence, her mind
+ To the sweet vale, and flowery mead, inclined;
+ And oft as spring renew'd the plains with flowers,
+ Breathed his soft gales, and led the fragrant hours,
+ With sure return she sought the sylvan scene, 45
+ The breezy mountains, and the forests green.
+ Her maids around her moved, a duteous band!
+ Each bore a crook, all rural, in her hand:
+ Some simple lay, of flocks and herds, they sung;
+ With joy the mountain and the forest rung. 50
+ 'Be every youth like royal Abbas moved,
+ 'And every Georgian maid like Abra loved!'
+
+ And oft the royal lover left the care
+ And thorns of state, attendant on the fair;
+ Oft to the shades and low-roof'd cots retired, 55
+ Or sought the vale where first his heart was fired:
+ A russet mantle, like a swain, he wore,
+ And thought of crowns, and busy courts, no more.
+ 'Be every youth like royal Abbas moved,
+ 'And every Georgian maid like Abra loved!' 60
+
+ Blest was the life that royal Abbas led:
+ Sweet was his love, and innocent his bed.
+ What if in wealth the noble maid excel?
+ The simple shepherd girl can love as well.
+ Let those who rule on Persia's jewel'd throne 65
+ Be famed for love, and gentlest love alone;
+ Or wreathe, like Abbas, full of fair renown,
+ The lover's myrtle with the warrior's crown.
+ O happy days! the maids around her say;
+ O haste, profuse of blessings, haste away! 70
+ 'Be every youth like royal Abbas moved,
+ 'And every Georgian maid like Abra loved!'
+
+
+VARIATION.
+
+ Verses 5 and 6 were inserted in the second edition.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [12] That these flowers are found in very great abundance in some of the
+ provinces of Persia, see the Modern History of the ingenious Mr.
+ Salmon. C.
+
+
+
+
+ECLOGUE IV.
+
+AGIB AND SECANDER; OR, THE FUGITIVES.
+
+ SCENE, A mountain in Circassia.
+ TIME, Midnight.
+
+
+ In fair Circassia, where, to love inclined,
+ Each swain was blest, for every maid was kind;
+ At that still hour, when awful midnight reigns,
+ And none, but wretches, haunt the twilight plains;
+ What time the moon had hung her lamp on high, 5
+ And past in radiance through the cloudless sky;
+ Sad, o'er the dews, two brother shepherds fled,
+ Where wildering fear and desperate sorrow led:
+ Fast as they press'd their flight, behind them lay
+ Wide ravaged plains, and valleys stole away: 10
+ Along the mountain's bending sides they ran,
+ Till, faint and weak, Secander thus began.
+
+
+ SECANDER.
+
+ O stay thee, Agib, for my feet deny,
+ No longer friendly to my life, to fly.
+ Friend of my heart, O turn thee and survey! 15
+ Trace our sad flight through all its length of way
+ And first review that long extended plain,
+ And yon wide groves, already past with pain!
+ Yon ragged cliff, whose dangerous path we tried!
+ And, last, this lofty mountain's weary side! 20
+
+
+ AGIB.
+
+ Weak as thou art, yet, hapless, must thou know
+ The toils of flight, or some severer woe!
+ Still, as I haste, the Tartar shouts behind,
+ And shrieks and sorrows load the saddening wind:
+ In rage of heart, with ruin in his hand, 25
+ He blasts our harvests, and deforms our land.
+ Yon citron grove, whence first in fear we came,
+ Droops its fair honors to the conquering flame:
+ Far fly the swains, like us, in deep despair,
+ And leave to ruffian bands their fleecy care. 30
+
+
+ SECANDER.
+
+ Unhappy land, whose blessings tempt the sword,
+ In vain, unheard, thou call'st thy Persian lord!
+ In vain thou court'st him, helpless, to thine aid,
+ To shield the shepherd, and protect the maid!
+ Far off, in thoughtless indolence resign'd, 35
+ Soft dreams of love and pleasure soothe his mind:
+ 'Midst fair sultanas lost in idle joy,
+ No wars alarm him, and no fears annoy.
+
+
+ AGIB.
+
+ Yet these green hills, in summer's sultry heat,
+ Have lent the monarch oft a cool retreat. 40
+ Sweet to the sight is Zabran's flowery plain,
+ And once by maids and shepherds loved in vain!
+ No more the virgins shall delight to rove
+ By Sargis' banks, or Irwan's shady grove;
+ On Tarkie's mountain catch the cooling gale, 45
+ Or breathe the sweets of Aly's flowery vale:
+ Fair scenes! but, ah! no more with peace possest,
+ With ease alluring, and with plenty blest!
+ No more the shepherds' whitening tents appear,
+ Nor the kind products of a bounteous year; 50
+ No more the date, with snowy blossoms crown'd!
+ But ruin spreads her baleful fires around.
+
+
+ SECANDER.
+
+ In vain Circassia boasts her spicy groves,
+ For ever famed for pure and happy loves:
+ In vain she boasts her fairest of the fair, 55
+ Their eyes' blue languish, and their golden hair!
+ Those eyes in tears their fruitless grief must send;
+ Those hairs the Tartar's cruel hand shall rend.
+
+
+ AGIB.
+
+ Ye Georgian swains, that piteous learn from far
+ Circassia's ruin, and the waste of war; 60
+ Some weightier arms than crooks and staves prepare,
+ To shield your harvests, and defend your fair:
+ The Turk and Tartar like designs pursue,
+ Fix'd to destroy, and steadfast to undo.
+ Wild as his land, in native deserts bred, 65
+ By lust incited, or by malice led,
+ The villain Arab, as he prowls for prey,
+ Oft marks with blood and wasting flames the way;
+ Yet none so cruel as the Tartar foe,
+ To death inured, and nurst in scenes of woe. 70
+
+ He said; when loud along the vale was heard
+ A shriller shriek, and nearer fires appear'd:
+ The affrighted shepherds, through the dews of night,
+ Wide o'er the moonlight hills renew'd their flight.
+
+
+VARIATIONS.
+
+ Ver.
+ 49. No more the shepherds' whitening seats appear,
+
+ 51. No more the dale, with snowy blossoms crown'd!
+
+
+END OF THE ECLOGUES.
+
+
+
+
+ODES
+
+ON SEVERAL DESCRIPTIVE AND ALLEGORICAL SUBJECTS.
+
+ ~Eien heurysiepes anageisthai
+ Prosphoros en Moisan diphro:
+ Tolma de kai amphilaphes dynamis
+ Espoito.~
+ ~Pindar. Olymp. Th.~
+
+
+ODES.
+
+
+ODE TO PITY.
+
+
+ O thou, the friend of man, assign'd
+ With balmy hands his wounds to bind,
+ And charm his frantic woe:
+ When first Distress, with dagger keen,
+ Broke forth to waste his destined scene, 5
+ His wild unsated foe!
+
+ By Pella's[13] bard, a magic name,
+ By all the griefs his thought could frame,
+ Receive my humble rite:
+ Long, Pity, let the nations view 10
+ The sky-worn robes of tenderest blue,
+ And eyes of dewy light!
+
+ But wherefore need I wander wide
+ To old Ilissus' distant side,
+ Deserted stream, and mute? 15
+ Wild Arun[14] too has heard thy strains,
+ And Echo, 'midst my native plains,
+ Been soothed by Pity's lute.
+
+ There first the wren thy myrtles shed
+ On gentlest Otway's infant head, 20
+ To him thy cell was shown;
+ And while he sung the female heart,
+ With youth's soft notes unspoil'd by art,
+ Thy turtles mix'd their own.
+
+ Come, Pity, come, by Fancy's aid, 25
+ E'en now my thoughts, relenting maid,
+ Thy temple's pride design:
+ Its southern site, its truth complete,
+ Shall raise a wild enthusiast heat
+ In all who view the shrine. 30
+
+ There Picture's toils shall well relate
+ How chance, or hard involving fate,
+ O'er mortal bliss prevail:
+ The buskin'd Muse shall near her stand,
+ And sighing prompt her tender hand, 35
+ With each disastrous tale.
+
+ There let me oft, retired by day,
+ In dreams of passion melt away,
+ Allow'd with thee to dwell:
+ There waste the mournful lamp of night, 40
+ Till, Virgin, thou again delight
+ To hear a British shell!
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [13] Euripides, of whom Aristotle pronounces, on a comparison of him
+ with Sophocles, that he was the greater master of the tender
+ passions, ~en tragikoteros~. C.
+
+ [14] The river Arun runs by the village of Trotton in Sussex, where
+ Otway had his birth.
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO FEAR.
+
+
+ Thou, to whom the world unknown,
+ With all its shadowy shapes, is shown;
+ Who seest, appall'd, the unreal scene,
+ While Fancy lifts the veil between:
+ Ah Fear! ah frantic Fear! 5
+ I see, I see thee near.
+ I know thy hurried step, thy haggard eye!
+ Like thee I start; like thee disorder'd fly.
+ For, lo, what monsters in thy train appear!
+ Danger, whose limbs of giant mould 10
+ What mortal eye can fix'd behold?
+ Who stalks his round, an hideous form,
+ Howling amidst the midnight storm;
+ Or throws him on the ridgy steep
+ Of some loose hanging rock to sleep: 15
+ And with him thousand phantoms join'd,
+ Who prompt to deeds accursed the mind:
+ And those, the fiends, who, near allied,
+ O'er Nature's wounds, and wrecks, preside;
+ Whilst Vengeance, in the lurid air, 20
+ Lifts her red arm, exposed and bare:
+ On whom that ravening[15] brood of Fate,
+ Who lap the blood of sorrow, wait:
+ Who, Fear, this ghastly train can see,
+ And look not madly wild, like thee! 25
+
+
+ EPODE.
+
+ In earliest Greece, to thee, with partial choice,
+ The grief-full Muse addrest her infant tongue;
+ The maids and matrons, on her awful voice,
+ Silent and pale, in wild amazement hung.
+
+ Yet he, the bard[16] who first invoked thy name, 30
+ Disdain'd in Marathon its power to feel:
+ For not alone he nursed the poet's flame,
+ But reach'd from Virtue's hand the patriot's steel.
+
+ But who is he whom later garlands grace,
+ Who left a while o'er Hybla's dews to rove, 35
+ With trembling eyes thy dreary steps to trace,
+ Where thou and furies shared the baleful grove?
+
+ Wrapt in thy cloudy veil, the incestuous[17] queen
+ Sigh'd the sad call[18] her son and husband heard,
+ When once alone it broke the silent scene, 40
+ And he the wretch of Thebes no more appear'd.
+
+ O Fear, I know thee by my throbbing heart:
+ Thy withering power inspired each mournful line:
+ Though gentle Pity claim her mingled part,
+ Yet all the thunders of the scene are thine! 45
+
+
+ ANTISTROPHE.
+
+ Thou who such weary lengths hast past,
+ Where wilt thou rest, mad Nymph, at last?
+ Say, wilt thou shroud in haunted cell,
+ Where gloomy Rape and Murder dwell?
+ Or, in some hollow'd seat, 50
+ 'Gainst which the big waves beat,
+ Hear drowning seamen's cries, in tempests brought?
+ Dark power, with shuddering meek submitted thought,
+ Be mine to read the visions old
+ Which thy awakening bards have told: 55
+ And, lest thou meet my blasted view,
+ Hold each strange tale devoutly true;
+ Ne'er be I found, by thee o'erawed,
+ In that thrice hallow'd eve, abroad,
+ When ghosts, as cottage maids believe, 60
+ Their pebbled beds permitted leave;
+ And goblins haunt, from fire, or fen,
+ Or mine, or flood, the walks of men!
+
+ O thou, whose spirit most possest
+ The sacred seat of Shakespeare's breast! 65
+ By all that from thy prophet broke,
+ In thy divine emotions spoke;
+ Hither again thy fury deal,
+ Teach me but once like him to feel:
+ His cypress wreath my meed decree, 70
+ And I, O Fear, will dwell with thee!
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [15] Alluding to the ~Kynas aphyktous~ of Sophocles. See the Electra.
+ C.
+
+ [16] AEschylus. C.
+
+ [17] Jocasta. C.
+
+ [18] ~----oud' et' ororei boe,
+ En men siope; phthegma d' exaiphnes tinos
+ Thouxen auton, hoste pantas orthias
+ Stesai phobo deisantas exaiphnes trichas.~
+
+ See the OEdip. Colon. of Sophocles. C.
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO SIMPLICITY.
+
+
+ O thou, by Nature taught
+ To breathe her genuine thought,
+ In numbers warmly pure, and sweetly strong;
+ Who first, on mountains wild,
+ In Fancy, loveliest child, 5
+ Thy babe, or Pleasure's, nursed the powers of song!
+
+ Thou, who, with hermit heart,
+ Disdain'st the wealth of art,
+ And gauds, and pageant weeds, and trailing pall;
+ But com'st a decent maid, 10
+ In attic robe array'd,
+ O chaste, unboastful Nymph, to thee I call!
+
+ By all the honey'd store
+ On Hybla's thymy shore;
+ By all her blooms, and mingled murmurs dear; 15
+ By her[19] whose lovelorn woe,
+ In evening musings slow,
+ Soothed sweetly sad Electra's poet's ear:
+
+ By old Cephisus deep,
+ Who spread his wavy sweep, 20
+ In warbled wanderings, round thy green retreat;
+ On whose enamel'd side,
+ When holy Freedom died,
+ No equal haunt allured thy future feet.
+
+ O sister meek of Truth, 25
+ To my admiring youth,
+ Thy sober aid and native charms infuse!
+ The flowers that sweetest breathe,
+ Though Beauty cull'd the wreath,
+ Still ask thy hand to range their order'd hues. 30
+
+ While Rome could none esteem
+ But virtue's patriot theme,
+ You lov'd her hills, and led her laureat band:
+ But staid to sing alone
+ To one distinguish'd throne; 35
+ And turn'd thy face, and fled her alter'd land.
+
+ No more, in hall or bower,
+ The Passions own thy power,
+ Love, only Love her forceless numbers mean:
+ For thou hast left her shrine; 40
+ Nor olive more, nor vine,
+ Shall gain thy feet to bless the servile scene.
+
+ Though taste, though genius, bless
+ To some divine excess,
+ Faints the cold work till thou inspire the whole; 45
+ What each, what all supply,
+ May court, may charm, our eye;
+ Thou, only thou, canst raise the meeting soul!
+
+ Of these let others ask,
+ To aid some mighty task, 50
+ I only seek to find thy temperate vale;
+ Where oft my reed might sound
+ To maids and shepherds round,
+ And all thy sons, O Nature, learn my tale.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [19] The ~aedon~, or nightingale, for which Sophocles seems to have
+ entertained a peculiar fondness. C.
+
+
+
+
+ODE ON THE POETICAL CHARACTER.
+
+
+ As once,--if, not with light regard,
+ I read aright that gifted bard,
+ --Him whose school above the rest
+ His loveliest elfin queen has blest;--
+ One, only one, unrival'd[20] fair, 5
+ Might hope the magic girdle wear,
+ At solemn turney hung on high,
+ The wish of each love-darting eye;
+
+ --Lo! to each other nymph, in turn, applied,
+ As if, in air unseen, some hovering hand, 10
+ Some chaste and angel friend to virgin fame,
+ With whisper'd spell had burst the starting band,
+ It left unblest her loathed dishonour'd side;
+ Happier, hopeless Fair, if never
+ Her baffled hand, with vain endeavour, 15
+ Had touch'd that fatal zone to her denied!
+ Young Fancy thus, to me divinest name,
+ To whom, prepared and bathed in heaven,
+ The cest of amplest power is given:
+ To few the godlike gift assigns, 20
+ To gird their blest prophetic loins,
+ And gaze her visions wild, and feel unmix'd her flame!
+
+ The band, as fairy legends say,
+ Was wove on that creating day,
+ When He, who call'd with thought to birth 25
+ Yon tented sky, this laughing earth,
+ And dress'd with springs and forests tall,
+ And pour'd the main engirting all,
+ Long by the loved enthusiast woo'd,
+ Himself in some diviner mood, 30
+ Retiring, sat with her alone,
+ And placed her on his sapphire throne;
+ The whiles, the vaulted shrine around,
+ Seraphic wires were heard to sound,
+ Now sublimest triumph swelling, 35
+ Now on love and mercy dwelling;
+ And she, from out the veiling cloud,
+ Breathed her magic notes aloud:
+ And thou, thou rich-hair'd youth of morn,
+ And all thy subject life was born! 40
+ The dangerous passions kept aloof,
+ Far from the sainted growing woof:
+ But near it sat ecstatic Wonder,
+ Listening the deep applauding thunder;
+ And Truth, in sunny vest array'd, 45
+ By whose the tarsel's eyes were made;
+ All the shadowy tribes of mind,
+ In braided dance, their murmurs join'd,
+ And all the bright uncounted powers
+ Who feed on heaven's ambrosial flowers. 50
+ --Where is the bard whose soul can now
+ Its high presuming hopes avow?
+ Where he who thinks, with rapture blind,
+ This hallow'd work for him design'd?
+
+ High on some cliff, to heaven up-piled, 55
+ Of rude access, of prospect wild,
+ Where, tangled round the jealous steep,
+ Strange shades o'erbrow the valleys deep,
+ And holy Genii guard the rock,
+ Its glooms embrown, its springs unlock, 60
+ While on its rich ambitious head,
+ An Eden, like his own, lies spread:
+ I view that oak, the fancied glades among,
+ By which, as Milton lay, his evening ear,
+ From many a cloud that dropp'd ethereal dew, 65
+ Nigh sphered in heaven, its native strains could hear;
+ On which that ancient trump he reach'd was hung:
+ Thither oft, his glory greeting,
+ From Waller's myrtle shades retreating,
+ With many a vow from Hope's aspiring tongue, 70
+ My trembling feet his guiding steps pursue;
+ In vain--Such bliss to one alone,
+ Of all the sons of soul, was known;
+ And Heaven, and Fancy, kindred powers,
+ Have now o'erturn'd the inspiring bowers; 75
+ Or curtain'd close such scene from every future view.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [20] Florimel. See Spenser, Leg. 4th. C.
+
+
+
+
+ODE,
+
+WRITTEN IN THE BEGINNING OF THE YEAR 1746.
+
+
+ How sleep the brave, who sink to rest,
+ By all their country's wishes bless'd!
+ When Spring, with dewy fingers cold,
+ Returns to deck their hallow'd mould,
+ She there shall dress a sweeter sod 5
+ Than Fancy's feet have ever trod.
+
+ By fairy hands their knell is rung;
+ By forms unseen their dirge is sung;
+ There Honour comes, a pilgrim-gray,
+ To bless the turf that wraps their clay; 10
+ And Freedom shall awhile repair,
+ To dwell a weeping hermit there!
+
+
+VARIATIONS.
+
+ Ver.
+ 5. She then shall dress a sweeter sod
+
+ 7. By hands unseen the knell is rung;
+
+ 8. By fairy forms their dirge is sung;
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO MERCY.
+
+
+ STROPHE.
+
+ O Thou, who sitt'st a smiling bride
+ By Valour's arm'd and awful side,
+ Gentlest of sky-born forms, and best adored;
+ Who oft with songs, divine to hear,
+ Winn'st from his fatal grasp the spear, 5
+ And hidest in wreaths of flowers his bloodless sword!
+ Thou who, amidst the deathful field,
+ By godlike chiefs alone beheld,
+ Oft with thy bosom bare art found,
+ Pleading for him the youth who sinks to ground: 10
+ See, Mercy, see, with pure and loaded hands,
+ Before thy shrine my country's genius stands,
+ And decks thy altar still, though pierced with many a wound.
+
+
+ ANTISTROPHE.
+
+ When he whom even our joys provoke,
+ The fiend of nature join'd his yoke, 15
+ And rush'd in wrath to make our isle his prey;
+ Thy form, from out thy sweet abode,
+ O'ertook him on his blasted road,
+ And stopp'd his wheels, and look'd his rage away.
+ I see recoil his sable steeds, 20
+ That bore him swift to salvage deeds,
+ Thy tender melting eyes they own;
+ O maid, for all thy love to Britain shown,
+ Where Justice bars her iron tower,
+ To thee we build a roseate bower; 25
+ Thou, thou shalt rule our queen, and share our monarch's throne!
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO LIBERTY.
+
+
+ STROPHE.
+
+ Who shall awake the Spartan fife,
+ And call in solemn sounds to life,
+ The youths, whose locks divinely spreading,
+ Like vernal hyacinths in sullen hue,
+ At once the breath of fear and virtue shedding, 5
+ Applauding Freedom loved of old to view?
+ What new Alcaeus,[21] fancy-blest,
+ Shall sing the sword, in myrtles drest,
+ At Wisdom's shrine awhile its flame concealing,
+ (What place so fit to seal a deed renown'd?) 10
+ Till she her brightest lightnings round revealing,
+ It leap'd in glory forth, and dealt her prompted wound!
+ O goddess, in that feeling hour,
+ When most its sounds would court thy ears,
+ Let not my shell's misguided power[22] 15
+ E'er draw thy sad, thy mindful tears.
+ No, Freedom, no, I will not tell
+ How Rome, before thy weeping face,
+ With heaviest sound, a giant-statue, fell,
+ Push'd by a wild and artless race 20
+ From off its wide ambitious base,
+ When Time his northern sons of spoil awoke,
+ And all the blended work of strength and grace,
+ With many a rude repeated stroke,
+ And many a barbarous yell, to thousand fragments broke. 25
+
+
+ EPODE.
+
+ Yet, even where'er the least appear'd,
+ The admiring world thy hand revered;
+ Still, 'midst the scatter'd states around,
+ Some remnants of her strength were found;
+ They saw, by what escaped the storm, 30
+ How wondrous rose her perfect form;
+ How in the great, the labour'd whole,
+ Each mighty master pour'd his soul!
+ For sunny Florence, seat of art,
+ Beneath her vines preserved a part, 35
+ Till they,[23] whom Science loved to name,
+ (O who could fear it?) quench'd her flame.
+ And lo, an humbler relic laid
+ In jealous Pisa's olive shade!
+ See small Marino[24] joins the theme, 40
+ Though least, not last in thy esteem:
+ Strike, louder strike the ennobling strings
+ To those,[25] whose merchant sons were kings;
+ To him,[26] who, deck'd with pearly pride,
+ In Adria weds his green-hair'd bride; 45
+ Hail, port of glory, wealth, and pleasure,
+ Ne'er let me change this Lydian measure:
+ Nor e'er her former pride relate,
+ To sad Liguria's[27] bleeding state.
+ Ah no! more pleased thy haunts I seek, 50
+ On wild Helvetia's[28] mountains bleak:
+ (Where, when the favour'd of thy choice,
+ The daring archer heard thy voice;
+ Forth from his eyrie roused in dread,
+ The ravening eagle northward fled:) 55
+ Or dwell in willow'd meads more near,
+ With those to whom thy stork[29] is dear:
+ Those whom the rod of Alva bruised,
+ Whose crown a British queen[30] refused!
+ The magic works, thou feel'st the strains, 60
+ One holier name alone remains;
+ The perfect spell shall then avail,
+ Hail, nymph, adored by Britain, hail!
+
+
+ ANTISTROPHE.
+
+ Beyond the measure vast of thought,
+ The works the wizard time has wrought! 65
+ The Gaul, 'tis held of antique story,
+ Saw Britain link'd to his now adverse strand,[31]
+ No sea between, nor cliff sublime and hoary,
+ He pass'd with unwet feet through all our land.
+ To the blown Baltic then, they say, 70
+ The wild waves found another way,
+ Where Orcas howls, his wolfish mountains rounding;
+ Till all the banded west at once 'gan rise,
+ A wide wild storm even nature's self confounding,
+ Withering her giant sons with strange uncouth surprise. 75
+ This pillar'd earth so firm and wide,
+ By winds and inward labours torn,
+ In thunders dread was push'd aside,
+ And down the shouldering billows borne.
+ And see, like gems, her laughing train, 80
+ The little isles on every side,
+ Mona,[32] once hid from those who search the main,
+ Where thousand elfin shapes abide,
+ And Wight who checks the westering tide,
+ For thee consenting heaven has each bestow'd, 85
+ A fair attendant on her sovereign pride:
+ To thee this blest divorce she owed,
+ For thou hast made her vales thy loved, thy last abode!
+
+
+ SECOND EPODE.
+
+ Then too, 'tis said, an hoary pile,
+ 'Midst the green navel of our isle, 90
+ Thy shrine in some religious wood,
+ O soul-enforcing goddess, stood!
+ There oft the painted native's feet
+ Were wont thy form celestial meet:
+ Though now with hopeless toil we trace 95
+ Time's backward rolls, to find its place;
+ Whether the fiery-tressed Dane,
+ Or Roman's self o'erturn'd the fane,
+ Or in what heaven-left age it fell,
+ 'Twere hard for modern song to tell. 100
+ Yet still, if Truth those beams infuse,
+ Which guide at once, and charm the Muse,
+ Beyond yon braided clouds that lie,
+ Paving the light embroider'd sky,
+ Amidst the bright pavilion'd plains, 105
+ The beauteous model still remains.
+ There, happier than in islands blest,
+ Or bowers by spring or Hebe drest,
+ The chiefs who fill our Albion's story,
+ In warlike weeds, retired in glory, 110
+ Hear their consorted Druids sing
+ Their triumphs to the immortal string.
+ How may the poet now unfold
+ What never tongue or numbers told?
+ How learn delighted, and amazed, 115
+ What hands unknown that fabric raised?
+ Even now before his favour'd eyes,
+ In gothic pride, it seems to rise!
+ Yet Graecia's graceful orders join,
+ Majestic through the mix'd design: 120
+ The secret builder knew to choose
+ Each sphere-found gem of richest hues;
+ Whate'er heaven's purer mould contains,
+ When nearer suns emblaze its veins;
+ There on the walls the patriot's sight 125
+ May ever hang with fresh delight,
+ And, graved with some prophetic rage,
+ Read Albion's fame through every age.
+ Ye forms divine, ye laureat band,
+ That near her inmost altar stand! 130
+ Now soothe her to her blissful train
+ Blithe Concord's social form to gain;
+ Concord, whose myrtle wand can steep
+ Even Anger's bloodshot eyes in sleep;
+ Before whose breathing bosom's balm 135
+ Rage drops his steel, and storms grow calm:
+ Her let our sires and matrons hoar
+ Welcome to Briton's ravaged shore;
+ Our youths, enamour'd of the fair,
+ Play with the tangles of her hair, 140
+ Till, in one loud applauding sound,
+ The nations shout to her around,
+ O how supremely art thou blest,
+ Thou, lady--thou shalt rule the west!
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [21] Alluding to that beautiful fragment of Alcaeus:
+
+ ~En myrtou kladi to xiphos phoreso,
+ Hosper Harmodios k' Aristogeiton,
+ Hote ton tyrannon ktaneten.
+ Isonomous t' Athenas epoiesaten.
+ Philtath' Harmodi' ou ti pou tethnekas,
+ Nesois d' en makaron se phasin einai,
+ Hina per podokes Achileus,
+ Tydeiden te phasin Diomedea.
+ En myrtou kladi to xiphos phoreso,
+ Osper Harmodios k' Aristogeiton,
+ Hot' Athenaies en Thysiais
+ Andra tyrannon Hipparchon ekaineten.
+ Aei sphon kleos essetai kat' aian,
+ Philtath' Harmodie, k' Aristogeiton,
+ Hoti ton tyrannon ktaneton,
+ Isonomous t' Athenas epoiesaton.~
+
+ [22] ~Me me tauta legomes, ha dakryon egage Deoi.~
+ Callimach. ~Hymnos eis Demetra~. C.
+
+ [23] The family of the Medici. C.
+
+ [24] The little republic of San Marino. C.
+
+ [25] The Venetians. C.
+
+ [26] The Doge of Venice. C.
+
+ [27] Genoa. C.
+
+ [28] Switzerland. C.
+
+ [29] The Dutch, amongst whom there are very severe penalties for those
+ who are convicted of killing this bird. They are kept tame in
+ almost all their towns, and particularly at the Hague, of the
+ arms of which they make a part. The common people of Holland are
+ said to entertain a superstitious sentiment, that if the whole
+ species of them should become extinct, they should lose their
+ liberties. C.
+
+ [30] Queen Elizabeth. C.
+
+ [31] This tradition is mentioned by several of our old historians. Some
+ naturalists too have endeavoured to support the probability of
+ the fact by arguments drawn from the correspondent disposition of
+ the two opposite coasts. I do not remember that any poetical use
+ has been hitherto made of it. C.
+
+ [32] There is a tradition in the Isle of Man, that a mermaid becoming
+ enamoured of a young man of extraordinary beauty took an
+ opportunity of meeting him one day as he walked on the shore, and
+ opened her passion to him, but was received with a coldness,
+ occasioned by his horror and surprise at her appearance. This,
+ however, was so misconstrued by the sea lady, that, in revenge
+ for his treatment of her, she punished the whole island by
+ covering it with a mist: so that all who attempted to carry on
+ any commerce with it, either never arrived at it, but wandered up
+ and down the sea, or were on a sudden wrecked upon its cliffs.
+ C.
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO A LADY,
+
+ON THE DEATH OF COLONEL ROSS, IN THE ACTION OF FONTENOY.
+
+Written in May, 1745.
+
+
+ While, lost to all his former mirth,
+ Britannia's genius bends to earth,
+ And mourns the fatal day:
+ While stain'd with blood he strives to tear
+ Unseemly from his sea-green hair 5
+ The wreaths of cheerful May:
+
+ The thoughts which musing Pity pays,
+ And fond Remembrance loves to raise,
+ Your faithful hours attend;
+ Still Fancy, to herself unkind, 10
+ Awakes to grief the soften'd mind,
+ And points the bleeding friend.
+
+ By rapid Scheld's descending wave
+ His country's vows shall bless the grave,
+ Where'er the youth is laid: 15
+ That sacred spot the village hind
+ With every sweetest turf shall bind,
+ And Peace protect the shade.
+
+ Blest youth, regardful of thy doom,
+ Aerial hands shall build thy tomb, 20
+ With shadowy trophies crown'd;
+ Whilst Honour bathed in tears shall rove
+ To sigh thy name through every grove,
+ And call his heroes round.
+
+ The warlike dead of every age, 25
+ Who fill the fair recording page,
+ Shall leave their sainted rest;
+ And, half reclining on his spear,
+ Each wondering chief by turns appear,
+ To hail the blooming guest: 30
+
+ Old Edward's sons, unknown to yield,
+ Shall crowd from Cressy's laurel'd field,
+ And gaze with fix'd delight;
+ Again for Britain's wrongs they feel,
+ Again they snatch the gleamy steel, 35
+ And wish the avenging fight.
+
+ But lo, where, sunk in deep despair,
+ Her garments torn, her bosom bare,
+ Impatient Freedom lies!
+ Her matted tresses madly spread, 40
+ To every sod, which wraps the dead,
+ She turns her joyless eyes.
+
+ Ne'er shall she leave that lowly ground
+ Till notes of triumph bursting round
+ Proclaim her reign restored: 45
+ Till William seek the sad retreat,
+ And, bleeding at her sacred feet,
+ Present the sated sword.
+
+ If, weak to soothe so soft a heart,
+ These pictured glories nought impart, 50
+ To dry thy constant tear:
+ If, yet, in Sorrow's distant eye,
+ Exposed and pale thou see'st him lie,
+ Wild War insulting near:
+
+ Where'er from time thou court'st relief, 55
+ The Muse shall still, with social grief,
+ Her gentlest promise keep;
+ Even humbled Harting's cottaged vale[33]
+ Shall learn the sad repeated tale,
+ And bid her shepherds weep. 60
+
+
+VARIATIONS.
+
+ Ver.
+ 4. While sunk in grief he strives to tear
+
+ 19. E'en now regardful of his doom
+ Applauding Honour haunts his tomb,
+ With shadowy trophies crown'd:
+ Whilst Freedom's form beside her roves,
+ Majestic through the twilight groves,
+ And calls her heroes round.
+
+ 19. O'er him, whose doom thy virtues grieve,
+ Aerial forms shall sit at eve,
+ And bend the pensive head;
+ And, fallen to save his injured land,
+ Imperial Honour's awful hand
+ Shall point his lonely bed.
+
+ 31. Old Edward's sons, untaught to yield,
+
+ 49. If, drawn by all a lover's art,
+
+ 58. Even humble Harting's cottaged vale
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [33] Harting, a village adjoining the parish of Trotton, and about two
+ miles distant from it.
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO EVENING.
+
+
+ If aught of oaten stop, or pastoral song,
+ May hope, chaste Eve, to soothe thy modest ear,
+ Like thy own brawling springs,
+ Thy springs, and dying gales;
+
+ O Nymph reserved, while now the bright-hair'd sun 5
+ Sits in yon western tent, whose cloudy skirts,
+ With brede ethereal wove,
+ O'erhang his wavy bed:
+
+ Now air is hush'd, save where the weak-eyed bat
+ With short shrill shriek flits by on leathern wing; 10
+ Or where the beetle winds
+ His small but sullen horn,
+
+ As oft he rises 'midst the twilight path,
+ Against the pilgrim borne in heedless hum:
+ Now teach me, maid composed, 15
+ To breathe some soften'd strain,
+
+ Whose numbers, stealing through thy darkening vale,
+ May not unseemly with its stillness suit;
+ As, musing slow, I hail
+ Thy genial loved return! 20
+
+ For when thy folding-star arising shows
+ His paly circlet, at his warning lamp
+ The fragrant Hours, and Elves
+ Who slept in buds the day,
+
+ And many a Nymph who wreathes her brows with sedge, 25
+ And sheds the freshening dew, and, lovelier still,
+ The pensive Pleasures sweet,
+ Prepare thy shadowy car.
+
+ Then let me rove some wild and heathy scene;
+ Or find some ruin, 'midst its dreary dells, 30
+ Whose walls more awful nod
+ By thy religious gleams.
+
+ Or, if chill blustering winds, or driving rain,
+ Prevent my willing feet, be mine the hut,
+ That, from the mountain's side, 35
+ Views wilds, and swelling floods,
+
+ And hamlets brown, and dim-discover'd spires;
+ And hears their simple bell, and marks o'er all
+ Thy dewy fingers draw
+ The gradual dusky veil. 40
+
+ While Spring shall pour his showers, as oft he wont,
+ And bathe thy breathing tresses, meekest Eve!
+ While Summer loves to sport
+ Beneath thy lingering light;
+
+ While sallow Autumn fills thy lap with leaves; 45
+ Or Winter, yelling through the troublous air,
+ Affrights thy shrinking train,
+ And rudely rends thy robes;
+
+ So long, regardful of thy quiet rule,
+ Shall Fancy, Friendship, Science, smiling Peace, 50
+ Thy gentlest influence own,
+ And love thy favourite name!
+
+
+VARIATIONS.
+
+ Ver
+ 2. May hope, O pensive Eve, to soothe thine ear,
+
+ 3. Like thy own solemn springs,
+
+ 9. While air is hush'd, save where the weak-eyed bat
+
+ 24. Who slept in flowers the day,
+
+ 29. Then lead, calm vot'ress, where some sheety lake
+ Cheers the lone heath, or some time-hallow'd pile,
+
+ 31. Or upland fallows grey,
+ Reflect its last cool gleam.
+
+ 33. But when chill blustering winds, or driving rain,
+ Forbid my willing feet, be mine the hut,
+
+ 49. So long, sure-found beneath the sylvan shed,
+ Shall Fancy, Friendship, Science, rose-lipp'd Health,
+ Thy gentlest influence own,
+ And hymn thy favourite name!
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO PEACE.
+
+
+ O thou, who bad'st thy turtles bear
+ Swift from his grasp thy golden hair,
+ And sought'st thy native skies;
+ When War, by vultures drawn from far,
+ To Britain bent his iron car, 5
+ And bade his storms arise!
+
+ Tired of his rude tyrannic sway,
+ Our youth shall fix some festive day,
+ His sullen shrines to burn:
+ But thou who hear'st the turning spheres, 10
+ What sounds may charm thy partial ears,
+ And gain thy blest return!
+
+ O Peace, thy injured robes up-bind!
+ O rise! and leave not one behind
+ Of all thy beamy train; 15
+ The British Lion, goddess sweet,
+ Lies stretch'd on earth to kiss thy feet,
+ And own thy holier reign.
+
+ Let others court thy transient smile,
+ But come to grace thy western isle, 20
+ By warlike Honour led;
+ And, while around her ports rejoice,
+ While all her sons adore thy choice,
+ With him for ever wed!
+
+
+
+
+THE MANNERS.
+
+AN ODE.
+
+
+ Farewell, for clearer ken design'd,
+ The dim-discover'd tracts of mind;
+ Truths which, from action's paths retired,
+ My silent search in vain required!
+ No more my sail that deep explores; 5
+ No more I search those magic shores;
+ What regions part the world of soul,
+ Or whence thy streams, Opinion, roll:
+ If e'er I round such fairy field,
+ Some power impart the spear and shield, 10
+ At which the wizard Passions fly;
+ By which the giant Follies die!
+
+ Farewell the porch whose roof is seen
+ Arch'd with the enlivening olive's green:
+ Where Science, prank'd in tissued vest, 15
+ By Reason, Pride, and Fancy drest,
+ Comes, like a bride, so trim array'd,
+ To wed with Doubt in Plato's shade!
+
+ Youth of the quick uncheated sight,
+ Thy walks, Observance, more invite! 20
+ O thou who lovest that ampler range,
+ Where life's wide prospects round thee change,
+ And, with her mingling sons allied,
+ Throw'st the prattling page aside,
+ To me, in converse sweet, impart 25
+ To read in man the native heart;
+ To learn, where Science sure is found,
+ From Nature as she lives around;
+ And, gazing oft her mirror true,
+ By turns each shifting image view! 30
+ Till meddling Art's officious lore
+ Reverse the lessons taught before;
+ Alluring from a safer rule,
+ To dream in her enchanted school:
+ Thou, Heaven, whate'er of great we boast, 35
+ Hast blest this social science most.
+
+ Retiring hence to thoughtful cell,
+ As Fancy breathes her potent spell,
+ Not vain she finds the charmful task,
+ In pageant quaint, in motley mask; 40
+ Behold, before her musing eyes,
+ The countless Manners round her rise;
+ While, ever varying as they pass,
+ To some Contempt applies her glass:
+ With these the white-robed maids combine; 45
+ And those the laughing satyrs join!
+ But who is he whom now she views,
+ In robe of wild contending hues?
+ Thou by the Passions nursed, I greet
+ The comic sock that binds thy feet! 50
+ O Humour, thou whose name is known
+ To Britain's favour'd isle alone:
+ Me too amidst thy band admit;
+ There where the young-eyed healthful Wit,
+ (Whose jewels in his crisped hair 55
+ Are placed each other's beams to share;
+ Whom no delights from thee divide)
+ In laughter loosed, attends thy side.
+
+ By old Miletus,[34] who so long
+ Has ceased his love-inwoven song; 60
+ By all you taught the Tuscan maids,
+ In changed Italia's modern shades;
+ By him[35] whose knight's distinguish'd name
+ Refined a nation's lust of fame;
+ Whose tales e'en now, with echoes sweet, 65
+ Castilia's Moorish hills repeat;
+ Or him[36] whom Seine's blue nymphs deplore,
+ In watchet weeds on Gallia's shore;
+ Who drew the sad Sicilian maid,
+ By virtues in her sire betray'd. 70
+
+ O Nature boon, from whom proceed
+ Each forceful thought, each prompted deed;
+ If but from thee I hope to feel,
+ On all my heart imprint thy seal!
+ Let some retreating cynic find 75
+ Those oft-turn'd scrolls I leave behind:
+ The Sports and I this hour agree,
+ To rove thy scene-full world with thee!
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [34] Alluding to the Milesian tales, some of the earliest romances. C.
+
+ [35] Cervantes. C.
+
+ [36] Monsieur Le Sage, author of the incomparable Adventures of Gil Blas
+ de Santillane, who died in Paris in the year 1745. C.
+
+
+
+
+THE PASSIONS.
+
+AN ODE FOR MUSIC.
+
+Performed at Oxford, with Hayes's music, in 1750.
+
+
+ When Music, heavenly maid, was young,
+ While yet in early Greece she sung,
+ The Passions oft, to hear her shell,
+ Throng'd around her magic cell,
+ Exulting, trembling, raging, fainting, 5
+ Possest beyond the Muse's painting:
+ By turns they felt the glowing mind
+ Disturb'd, delighted, raised, refined;
+ Till once, 'tis said, when all were fired,
+ Fill'd with fury, rapt, inspired, 10
+ From the supporting myrtles round
+ They snatch'd her instruments of sound;
+ And, as they oft had heard apart
+ Sweet lessons of her forceful art,
+ Each (for Madness ruled the hour) 15
+ Would prove his own expressive power.
+
+ First Fear his hand, its skill to try,
+ Amid the chords bewilder'd laid,
+ And back recoil'd, he knew not why,
+ E'en at the sound himself had made. 20
+
+ Next Anger rush'd; his eyes on fire,
+ In lightnings own'd his secret stings:
+ In one rude clash he struck the lyre,
+ And swept with hurried hand the strings.
+
+ With woful measures wan Despair 25
+ Low, sullen sounds his grief beguiled;
+ A solemn, strange, and mingled air;
+ 'Twas sad by fits, by starts 'twas wild.
+
+ But thou, O Hope, with eyes so fair,
+ What was thy delighted measure? 30
+ Still it whisper'd promised pleasure,
+ And bade the lovely scenes at distance hail!
+ Still would her touch the strain prolong;
+ And from the rocks, the woods, the vale,
+ She call'd on Echo still, through all the song; 35
+ And, where her sweetest theme she chose,
+ A soft responsive voice was heard at every close,
+ And Hope enchanted smiled, and waved her golden hair.
+ And longer had she sung;--but, with a frown,
+ Revenge impatient rose: 40
+ He threw his blood-stain'd sword, in thunder, down;
+ And, with a withering look,
+ The war-denouncing trumpet took,
+ And blew a blast so loud and dread,
+ Were ne'er prophetic sounds so full of woe! 45
+ And, ever and anon, he beat
+ The doubling drum, with furious heat;
+ And though sometimes, each dreary pause between,
+ Dejected Pity, at his side,
+ Her soul-subduing voice applied, 50
+ Yet still he kept his wild unalter'd mein,
+ While each strain'd ball of sight seem'd bursting from his head.
+ Thy numbers, Jealousy, to nought were fix'd;
+ Sad proof of thy distressful state;
+ Of differing themes the veering song was mix'd; 55
+ And now it courted Love, now raving call'd on Hate.
+
+ With eyes upraised, as one inspired,
+ Pale Melancholy sate retired;
+ And, from her wild sequester'd seat,
+ In notes by distance made more sweet, 60
+ Pour'd through the mellow horn her pensive soul:
+ And, dashing soft from rocks around,
+ Bubbling runnels join'd the sound;
+ Through glades and glooms the mingled measure stole,
+ Or, o'er some haunted stream, with fond delay, 65
+ Round an holy calm diffusing,
+ Love of Peace, and lonely musing,
+ In hollow murmurs died away.
+
+ But O! how alter'd was its sprightlier tone,
+ When Cheerfulness, a nymph of healthiest hue, 70
+ Her bow across her shoulder flung,
+ Her buskins gemm'd with morning dew,
+ Blew an inspiring air, that dale and thicket rung,
+ The hunter's call, to Faun and Dryad known!
+ The oak-crown'd Sisters, and their chaste-eyed Queen, 75
+ Satyrs and Sylvan Boys, were seen,
+ Peeping from forth their alleys green:
+ Brown Exercise rejoiced to hear;
+ And Sport leapt up, and seized his beechen spear.
+ Last came Joy's ecstatic trial: 80
+ He, with viny crown advancing,
+ First to the lively pipe his hand addrest;
+ But soon he saw the brisk awakening viol,
+ Whose sweet entrancing voice he loved the best;
+ They would have thought who heard the strain 85
+ They saw, in Tempe's vale, her native maids,
+ Amidst the festal sounding shades,
+ To some unwearied minstrel dancing,
+ While, as his flying fingers kiss'd the strings,
+ Love framed with Mirth a gay fantastic round: 90
+ Loose were her tresses seen, her zone unbound;
+ And he, amidst his frolic play,
+ As if he would the charming air repay,
+ Shook thousand odours from his dewy wings.
+
+ O Music! sphere-descended maid, 95
+ Friend of Pleasure, Wisdom's aid!
+ Why, goddess! why, to us denied,
+ Lay'st thou thy ancient lyre aside?
+ As, in that loved Athenian bower,
+ You learn'd an all commanding power, 100
+ Thy mimic soul, O Nymph endear'd,
+ Can well recall what then it heard;
+ Where is thy native simple heart,
+ Devote to Virtue, Fancy, Art?
+ Arise, as in that elder time, 105
+ Warm, energetic, chaste, sublime!
+ Thy wonders, in that godlike age,
+ Fill thy recording Sister's page--
+ 'Tis said, and I believe the tale,
+ Thy humblest reed could more prevail, 110
+ Had more of strength, diviner rage,
+ Than all which charms this laggard age;
+ E'en all at once together found,
+ Cecilia's mingled world of sound--
+ O bid our vain endeavours cease; 115
+ Revive the just designs of Greece:
+ Return in all thy simple state!
+ Confirm the tales her sons relate!
+
+
+VARIATION.
+
+ Ver.
+ 30. What was thy delightful measure?
+
+
+
+
+ODE ON THE DEATH OF THOMSON.
+
+THE SCENE IS SUPPOSED TO LIE ON THE THAMES NEAR RICHMOND.
+
+
+ In yonder grave a Druid lies,
+ Where slowly winds the stealing wave;
+ The year's best sweets shall duteous rise
+ To deck its poet's sylvan grave.
+
+ In yon deep bed of whispering reeds 5
+ His airy harp[37] shall now be laid,
+ That he, whose heart in sorrow bleeds,
+ May love through life the soothing shade.
+
+ Then maids and youths shall linger here,
+ And while its sounds at distance swell, 10
+ Shall sadly seem in pity's ear
+ To hear the woodland pilgrim's knell.
+
+ Remembrance oft shall haunt the shore
+ When Thames in summer wreaths is drest,
+ And oft suspend the dashing oar, 15
+ To bid his gentle spirit rest!
+
+ And oft, as ease and health retire
+ To breezy lawn, or forest deep,
+ The friend shall view yon whitening[38] spire
+ And 'mid the varied landscape weep. 20
+
+ But thou, who own'st that earthy bed,
+ Ah! what will every dirge avail;
+ Or tears, which love and pity shed,
+ That mourn beneath the gliding sail?
+
+ Yet lives there one, whose heedless eye 25
+ Shall scorn thy pale shrine glimmering near?
+ With him, sweet bard, may fancy die,
+ And joy desert the blooming year.
+
+ But thou, lorn stream, whose sullen tide
+ No sedge-crown'd sisters now attend, 30
+ Now waft me from the green hill's side,
+ Whose cold turf hides the buried friend!
+
+ And see, the fairy valleys fade;
+ Dun night has veil'd the solemn view!
+ Yet once again, dear parted shade, 35
+ Meek Nature's Child, again adieu!
+
+ The genial meads,[39] assign'd to bless
+ Thy life, shall mourn thy early doom;
+ Their hinds and shepherd-girls shall dress,
+ With simple hands, thy rural tomb. 40
+
+ Long, long, thy stone and pointed clay
+ Shall melt the musing Briton's eyes:
+ O! vales and wild woods, shall he say,
+ In yonder grave your Druid lies!
+
+
+VARIATION.
+
+ Ver.
+ 21. But thou who own'st that earthly bed,
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [37] The harp of AEolus, of which see a description in the Castle of
+ Indolence. C.
+
+ [38] Richmond Church, in which Thomson was buried. C.
+
+ [39] Mr. Thomson resided in the neighbourhood of Richmond some time
+ before his death.
+
+
+
+
+ODE ON THE POPULAR SUPERSTITIONS OF THE HIGHLANDS OF SCOTLAND;
+
+CONSIDERED AS THE SUBJECT OF POETRY; INSCRIBED TO MR. JOHN HOME.
+
+
+ I.
+
+ Home, thou return'st from Thames, whose Naiads long
+ Have seen thee lingering with a fond delay,
+ 'Mid those soft friends, whose hearts, some future day,
+ Shall melt, perhaps, to hear thy tragic song.[40]
+ Go, not unmindful of that cordial youth[41] 5
+ Whom, long endear'd, thou leavest by Levant's side;
+ Together let us wish him lasting truth,
+ And joy untainted with his destined bride.
+ Go! nor regardless, while these numbers boast
+ My short-lived bliss, forget my social name; 10
+ But think, far off, how, on the southern coast,
+ I met thy friendship with an equal flame!
+ Fresh to that soil thou turn'st, where every vale
+ Shall prompt the poet, and his song demand:
+ To thee thy copious subjects ne'er shall fail; 15
+ Thou need'st but take thy pencil to thy hand,
+ And paint what all believe, who own thy genial land.
+
+
+ II.
+
+ There must thou wake perforce thy Doric quill;
+ 'Tis Fancy's land to which thou sett'st thy feet;
+ Where still, 'tis said, the fairy people meet, 20
+ Beneath each birken shade, on mead or hill;
+ There, each trim lass, that skims the milky store,
+ To the swart tribes their creamy bowls allots;
+ By night they sip it round the cottage door,
+ While airy minstrels warble jocund notes. 25
+ There, every herd, by sad experience, knows
+ How, wing'd with fate, their elf-shot arrows fly,
+ When the sick ewe her summer food foregoes,
+ Or, stretch'd on earth, the heart-smit heifers lie.
+ Such airy beings awe the untutor'd swain: 30
+ Nor thou, though learn'd, his homelier thoughts neglect;
+ Let thy sweet muse the rural faith sustain;
+ These are the themes of simple, sure effect,
+ That add new conquests to her boundless reign,
+ And fill, with double force, her heart-commanding strain. 35
+
+
+ III.
+
+ E'en yet preserved, how often mayst thou hear,
+ Where to the pole the Boreal mountains run,
+ Taught by the father, to his listening son,
+ Strange lays, whose power had charm'd a Spenser's ear.
+ At every pause, before thy mind possest, 40
+ Old Runic bards shall seem to rise around,
+ With uncouth lyres, in many-colour'd vest,
+ Their matted hair with boughs fantastic crown'd:
+ Whether thou bidst the well taught hind repeat
+ The choral dirge, that mourns some chieftain brave, 45
+ When every shrieking maid her bosom beat,
+ And strew'd with choicest herbs his scented grave!
+ Or whether, sitting in the shepherd's shiel,[42]
+ Thou hear'st some sounding tale of war's alarms;
+ When at the bugle's call, with fire and steel, 50
+ The sturdy clans pour'd forth their brawny swarms,
+ And hostile brothers met, to prove each other's arms.
+
+
+ IV.
+
+ 'Tis thine to sing, how, framing hideous spells,
+ In Sky's lone isle, the gifted wizard seer,
+ Lodged in the wintry cave with Fate's fell spear, 55
+ Or in the depth of Uist's dark forest dwells:
+ How they, whose sight such dreary dreams engross,
+ With their own visions oft astonish'd droop,
+ When, o'er the watery strath, or quaggy moss,
+ They see the gliding ghosts unbodied troop. 60
+ Or, if in sports, or on the festive green,
+ Their destined glance some fated youth descry,
+ Who now, perhaps, in lusty vigour seen,
+ And rosy health, shall soon lamented die.
+ For them the viewless forms of air obey; 65
+ Their bidding heed, and at their beck repair:
+ They know what spirit brews the stormful day,
+ And heartless, oft like moody madness, stare
+ To see the phantom train their secret work prepare.
+
+
+ V.
+
+ To monarchs dear, some hundred miles astray, 70
+ Oft have they seen Fate give the fatal blow!
+ The seer, in Sky, shriek'd as the blood did flow,
+ When headless Charles warm on the scaffold lay!
+ As Boreas threw his young Aurora[43] forth,
+ In the first year of the first George's reign, 75
+ And battles raged in welkin of the North,
+ They mourn'd in air, fell, fell Rebellion slain!
+ And as, of late, they joy'd in Preston's fight,
+ Saw, at sad Falkirk, all their hopes near crown'd!
+ They raved! divining, through their second sight,[44] 80
+ Pale, red Culloden, where these hopes were drown'd!
+ Illustrious William![45] Britain's guardian name!
+ One William saved us from a tyrant's stroke;
+ He, for a sceptre, gain'd heroic fame,
+ But thou, more glorious, Slavery's chain hast broke, 85
+ To reign a private man, and bow to Freedom's yoke!
+
+
+ VI.
+
+ These, too, thou'lt sing! for well thy magic muse
+ Can to the topmost heaven of grandeur soar;
+ Or stoop to wail the swain that is no more!
+ Ah, homely swains! your homeward steps ne'er lose; 90
+ Let not dank Will[46] mislead you to the heath;
+ Dancing in mirky night, o'er fen and lake,
+ He glows, to draw you downward to your death,
+ In his bewitch'd, low, marshy, willow brake!
+ What though far off, from some dark dell espied, 95
+ His glimmering mazes cheer the excursive sight,
+ Yet turn, ye wanderers, turn your steps aside,
+ Nor trust the guidance of that faithless light;
+ For watchful, lurking, 'mid the unrustling reed,
+ At those mirk hours the wily monster lies, 100
+ And listens oft to hear the passing steed,
+ And frequent round him rolls his sullen eyes,
+ If chance his savage wrath may some weak wretch surprise.
+
+
+ VII.
+
+ Ah, luckless swain, o'er all unblest, indeed!
+ Whom late bewilder'd in the dank, dark fen, 105
+ Far from his flocks, and smoking hamlet, then!
+ To that sad spot where hums the sedgy weed:
+ On him, enraged, the fiend, in angry mood,
+ Shall never look with pity's kind concern,
+ But instant, furious, raise the whelming flood 110
+ O'er its drown'd banks, forbidding all return!
+ Or, if he meditate his wish'd escape,
+ To some dim hill, that seems uprising near,
+ To his faint eye the grim and grisly shape,
+ In all its terrors clad, shall wild appear. 115
+ Meantime the watery surge shall round him rise,
+ Pour'd sudden forth from every swelling source!
+ What now remains but tears and hopeless sighs?
+ His fear-shook limbs have lost their youthly force,
+ And down the waves he floats, a pale and breathless corse! 120
+
+
+ VIII.
+
+ For him in vain his anxious wife shall wait,
+ Or wander forth to meet him on his way;
+ For him in vain at to-fall of the day,
+ His babes shall linger at the unclosing gate!
+ Ah, ne'er shall he return! Alone, if night 125
+ Her travel'd limbs in broken slumbers steep,
+ With drooping willows drest, his mournful sprite
+ Shall visit sad, perchance, her silent sleep:
+ Then he, perhaps, with moist and watery hand,
+ Shall fondly seem to press her shuddering cheek, 130
+ And with his blue swoln face before her stand,
+ And, shivering cold, these piteous accents speak:
+ "Pursue, dear wife, thy daily toils pursue,
+ At dawn or dusk, industrious as before;
+ Nor e'er of me one helpless thought renew, 135
+ While I lie weltering on the osier'd shore,
+ Drown'd by the Kelpie's[47] wrath, nor e'er shall aid thee more!"
+
+
+ IX.
+
+ Unbounded is thy range; with varied skill
+ Thy muse may, like those feathery tribes which spring
+ From their rude rocks, extend her skirting wing 140
+ Round the moist marge of each cold Hebrid isle,
+ To that hoar pile[48] which still its ruins shows:
+ In whose small vaults a pigmy folk is found,
+ Whose bones the delver with his spade upthrows,
+ And culls them, wondering, from the hallow'd ground! 145
+ Or thither,[49] where, beneath the showery west,
+ The mighty kings of three fair realms are laid;
+ Once foes, perhaps, together now they rest,
+ No slaves revere them, and no wars invade:
+ Yet frequent now, at midnight's solemn hour, 150
+ The rifted mounds their yawning cells unfold,
+ And forth the monarchs stalk with sovereign power,
+ In pageant robes, and wreath'd with sheeny gold,
+ And on their twilight tombs aerial council hold.
+
+
+ X.
+
+ But, oh, o'er all, forget not Kilda's race, 155
+ On whose bleak rocks, which brave the wasting tides,
+ Fair Nature's daughter, Virtue, yet abides.
+ Go! just, as they, their blameless manners trace!
+ Then to my ear transmit some gentle song,
+ Of those whose lives are yet sincere and plain, 160
+ Their bounded walks the rugged cliffs along,
+ And all their prospect but the wintry main.
+ With sparing temperance, at the needful time,
+ They drain the scented spring; or, hunger-prest,
+ Along the Atlantic rock, undreading climb, 165
+ And of its eggs despoil the solan's[50] nest.
+ Thus, blest in primal innocence, they live
+ Sufficed, and happy with that frugal fare
+ Which tasteful toil and hourly danger give.
+ Hard is their shallow soil, and bleak and bare; 170
+ Nor ever vernal bee was heard to murmur there!
+
+
+ XI.
+
+ Nor need'st thou blush that such false themes engage
+ Thy gentle mind, of fairer stores possest;
+ For not alone they touch the village breast,
+ But fill'd, in elder time, the historic page. 175
+ There, Shakespeare's self, with every garland crown'd,
+ Flew to those fairy climes his fancy sheen,
+ In musing hour; his wayward sisters found,
+ And with their terrors drest the magic scene.
+ From them he sung, when, 'mid his bold design, 180
+ Before the Scot, afflicted, and aghast!
+ The shadowy kings of Banquo's fated line
+ Through the dark cave in gleamy pageant pass'd.
+ Proceed! nor quit the tales which, simply told,
+ Could once so well my answering bosom pierce; 185
+ Proceed, in forceful sounds, and colours bold,
+ The native legends of thy land rehearse;
+ To such adapt thy lyre, and suit thy powerful verse.
+
+
+ XII.
+
+ In scenes like these, which, daring to depart
+ From sober truth, are still to nature true, 190
+ And call forth fresh delight to Fancy's view,
+ The heroic muse employ'd her Tasso's art!
+ How have I trembled, when, at Tancred's stroke,
+ Its gushing blood the gaping cypress pour'd!
+ When each live plant with mortal accents spoke, 195
+ And the wild blast upheaved the vanish'd sword!
+ How have I sat, when piped the pensive wind,
+ To hear his harp by British Fairfax strung!
+ Prevailing poet! whose undoubting mind
+ Believed the magic wonders which he sung! 200
+ Hence, at each sound, imagination glows!
+ Hence, at each picture, vivid life starts here!
+ Hence his warm lay with softest sweetness flows!
+ Melting it flows, pure, murmuring, strong, and clear,
+ And fills the impassion'd heart, and wins the harmonious ear! 205
+
+
+ XIII.
+
+ All hail, ye scenes that o'er my soul prevail!
+ Ye splendid friths and lakes, which, far away,
+ Are by smooth Annan[51] fill'd or pastoral Tay,[51]
+ Or Don's[51] romantic springs at distance hail!
+ The time shall come, when I, perhaps, may tread 210
+ Your lowly glens, o'erhung with spreading broom;
+ Or, o'er your stretching heaths, by Fancy led;
+ Or, o'er your mountains creep, in awful gloom!
+ Then will I dress once more the faded bower,
+ Where Jonson[52] sat in Drummond's classic shade; 215
+ Or crop, from Tiviotdale, each lyric flower,
+ And mourn, on Yarrow's banks, where Willy's laid!
+ Meantime, ye powers that on the plains which bore
+ The cordial youth, on Lothian's plains,[53] attend!--
+ Where'er Home dwells, on hill, or lowly moor, 220
+ To him I lose, your kind protection lend,
+ And, touch'd with love like mine, preserve my absent friend!
+
+
+VARIATIONS.
+
+ Ver.
+ 44. Whether thou bidst the well taught hind relate
+
+ 51. The sturdy clans pour'd forth their bony swarms,
+
+ 56. Or in the gloom of Uist's dark forest dwells:
+
+ 58. With their own visions oft afflicted droop,
+
+ 66. Their bidding mark, and at their beck repair:
+
+ 100. At those sad hours the wily monster lies;
+
+ 111. O'er its drowned bank, forbidding all return!
+
+ 124. His babes shall linger at the cottage gate!
+
+ 127. With dropping willows drest, his mournful sprite
+
+ 130. Shall seem to press her cold and shuddering cheek,
+
+ 133. Proceed, dear wife, thy daily toils pursue,
+
+ 135. Nor e'er of me one hapless thought renew,
+
+ 138. Unbounded is thy range; with varied stile
+
+ 164. They drain the sainted spring; or, hunger-prest,
+
+ 193. How have I trembled, when, at Tancred's side,
+ Like him I stalk'd, and all his passions felt;
+ When charm'd by Ismen, through the forest wide,
+ Bark'd in each plant a talking spirit dwelt!
+
+ 201. Hence, sure to charm, his early numbers flow,
+ Though strong, yet sweet----
+ Though faithful, sweet; though strong, of simple kind.
+ Hence, with each theme, he bids the bosom glow,
+ While his warm lays an easy passage find,
+ Pour'd through each inmost nerve, and lull the harmonious ear.
+
+ 204. Melting it flows, pure, numerous, strong, and clear,
+
+ 216. Or crop from Tiviot's dale each--
+
+ 220. Where'er he dwell, on hill, or lowly muir,
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [40] How truly did Collins predict Home's tragic powers!
+
+ [41] A gentleman of the name of Barrow, who introduced Home to Collins.
+ Ed. 1788.
+
+ [42] A summer hut, built in the high part of the mountains, to tend
+ their flocks in the warm season, when the pasture is fine. Ed.
+ 1788.
+
+ [43] By young Aurora, Collins undoubtedly meant the first appearance of
+ the northern lights, which happened about the year 1715; at least
+ it is most highly probable, from this peculiar circumstance, that
+ no ancient writer whatever has taken any notice of them, nor even
+ any modern one, previous to the above period. Ed. 1788.
+
+ [44] Second sight is the term that is used for the divination of the
+ highlanders. Ed. 1788.
+
+ [45] The late Duke of Cumberland, who defeated the Pretender at the
+ battle of Culloden. Ed. 1788.
+
+ [46] A fiery meteor, called by various names, such as Will with the
+ Wisp, Jack with the Lantern, etc. It hovers in the air over
+ marshy and fenny places. Ed. 1788.
+
+ [47] The water fiend.
+
+ [48] One of the Hebrides is called the Isle of Pigmies; where it is
+ reported, that several miniature bones of the human species have
+ been dug up in the ruins of a chapel there.
+
+ [49] Icolmkill, one of the Hebrides, where near sixty of the ancient
+ Scottish, Irish, and Norwegian kings are interred.
+
+ [50] An aquatic bird like a goose, on the eggs of which the inhabitants
+ of St. Kilda, another of the Hebrides, chiefly subsist. Ed.
+ 1788.
+
+ [51] Three rivers in Scotland. Ed. 1788.
+
+ [52] Ben Jonson paid a visit on foot, in 1619, to the Scotch poet
+ Drummond, at his seat of Hawthornden, within four miles of
+ Edinburgh.
+
+ [53] Barrow, it seems, was at the Edinburgh University, which is in the
+ county of Lothian. Ed. 1788.
+
+
+
+
+AN EPISTLE,
+
+ADDRESSED TO SIR THOMAS HANMER, ON HIS EDITION OF SHAKESPEARE'S WORKS.
+
+
+ SIR,
+ A patriot's hand protects a poet's lays,
+ While nursed by you she sees her myrtles bloom,
+ Green and unwither'd o'er his honour'd tomb;
+ Excuse her doubts, if yet she fears to tell 5
+ What secret transports in her bosom swell:
+ With conscious awe she hears the critic's fame,
+ And blushing hides her wreath at Shakespeare's name.
+ Hard was the lot those injured strains endured,
+ Unown'd by Science, and by years obscured: 10
+ Fair Fancy wept; and echoing sighs confess'd
+ A fix'd despair in every tuneful breast.
+ Not with more grief the afflicted swains appear,
+ When wintry winds deform the plenteous year;
+ When lingering frosts the ruin'd seats invade 15
+ Where Peace resorted, and the Graces play'd.
+
+ Each rising art by just gradation moves,
+ Toil builds on toil, and age on age improves:
+ The Muse alone unequal dealt her rage,
+ And graced with noblest pomp her earliest stage. 20
+ Preserved through time, the speaking scenes impart
+ Each changeful wish of Phaedra's tortured heart;
+ Or paint the curse that mark'd the Theban's[54] reign,
+ A bed incestuous, and a father slain.
+ With kind concern our pitying eyes o'erflow, 25
+ Trace the sad tale, and own another's woe.
+
+ To Rome removed, with wit secure to please,
+ The comic Sisters kept their native ease:
+ With jealous fear, declining Greece beheld
+ Her own Menander's art almost excell'd; 30
+ But every Muse essay'd to raise in vain
+ Some labour'd rival of her tragic strain:
+ Ilissus' laurels, though transferr'd with toil,
+ Droop'd their fair leaves, nor knew the unfriendly soil.
+ As Arts expired, resistless Dulness rose; 35
+ Goths, Priests, or Vandals,--all were Learning's foes.
+ Till Julius[55] first recall'd each exiled maid,
+ And Cosmo own'd them in the Etrurian shade:
+ Then, deeply skill'd in love's engaging theme,
+ The soft Provencal pass'd to Arno's stream: 40
+ With graceful ease the wanton lyre he strung;
+ Sweet flow'd the lays--but love was all he sung.
+ The gay description could not fail to move,
+ For, led by nature, all are friends to love.
+
+ But Heaven, still various in its works, decreed 45
+ The perfect boast of time should last succeed.
+ The beauteous union must appear at length,
+ Of Tuscan fancy, and Athenian strength:
+ One greater Muse Eliza's reign adorn,
+ And e'en a Shakespeare to her fame be born! 50
+
+ Yet ah! so bright her morning's opening ray,
+ In vain our Britain hoped an equal day!
+ No second growth the western isle could bear,
+ At once exhausted with too rich a year.
+ Too nicely Jonson knew the critic's part; 55
+ Nature in him was almost lost in art.
+ Of softer mould the gentle Fletcher came,
+ The next in order, as the next in name;
+ With pleased attention, 'midst his scenes we find
+ Each glowing thought that warms the female mind; 60
+ Each melting sigh, and every tender tear;
+ The lover's wishes, and the virgin's fear.
+ His every strain[56] the Smiles and Graces own;
+ But stronger Shakespeare felt for man alone:
+ Drawn by his pen, our ruder passions stand 65
+ The unrival'd picture of his early hand.
+
+ With[57] gradual steps and slow, exacter France
+ Saw Art's fair empire o'er her shores advance:
+ By length of toil a bright perfection knew,
+ Correctly bold, and just in all she drew: 70
+ Till late Corneille, with Lucan's[58] spirit fired,
+ Breathed the free strain, as Rome and he inspired:
+ And classic judgment gain'd to sweet Racine
+ The temperate strength of Maro's chaster line.
+
+ But wilder far the British laurel spread, 75
+ And wreaths less artful crown our poet's head.
+ Yet he alone to every scene could give
+ The historian's truth, and bid the manners live.
+ Waked at his call I view, with glad surprise,
+ Majestic forms of mighty monarchs rise. 80
+ There Henry's trumpets spread their loud alarms,
+ And laurel'd Conquest waits her hero's arms.
+ Here gentler Edward claims a pitying sigh,
+ Scarce born to honours, and so soon to die!
+ Yet shall thy throne, unhappy infant, bring 85
+ No beam of comfort to the guilty king:
+ The time[59] shall come when Glo'ster's heart shall bleed,
+ In life's last hours, with horror of the deed;
+ When dreary visions shall at last present
+ Thy vengeful image in the midnight tent: 90
+ Thy hand unseen the secret death shall bear,
+ Blunt the weak sword, and break the oppressive spear!
+
+ Where'er we turn, by Fancy charm'd, we find
+ Some sweet illusion of the cheated mind.
+ Oft, wild of wing, she calls the soul to rove 95
+ With humbler nature, in the rural grove;
+ Where swains contented own the quiet scene,
+ And twilight fairies tread the circled green:
+ Dress'd by her hand, the woods and valleys smile,
+ And Spring diffusive decks the enchanted isle. 100
+
+ O, more than all in powerful genius blest,
+ Come, take thine empire o'er the willing breast!
+ Whate'er the wounds this youthful heart shall feel,
+ Thy songs support me, and thy morals heal!
+ There every thought the poet's warmth may raise, 105
+ There native music dwells in all the lays.
+ O might some verse with happiest skill persuade
+ Expressive Picture to adopt thine aid!
+ What wondrous draughts might rise from every page!
+ What other Raphaels charm a distant age! 110
+
+ Methinks e'en now I view some free design,
+ Where breathing Nature lives in every line:
+ Chaste and subdued the modest lights decay,
+ Steal into shades, and mildly melt away.
+ And see where Anthony,[60] in tears approved, 115
+ Guards the pale relics of the chief he loved:
+ O'er the cold corse the warrior seems to bend,
+ Deep sunk in grief, and mourns his murder'd friend!
+ Still as they press, he calls on all around,
+ Lifts the torn robe, and points the bleeding wound. 120
+
+ But who[61] is he, whose brows exalted bear
+ A wrath impatient, and a fiercer air?
+ Awake to all that injured worth can feel,
+ On his own Rome he turns the avenging steel;
+ Yet shall not war's insatiate fury fall 125
+ (So heaven ordains it) on the destined wall.
+ See the fond mother, 'midst the plaintive train,
+ Hung on his knees, and prostrate on the plain!
+ Touch'd to the soul, in vain he strives to hide
+ The son's affection, in the Roman's pride: 130
+ O'er all the man conflicting passions rise;
+ Rage grasps the sword, while Pity melts the eyes.
+
+ Thus generous Critic, as thy Bard inspires,
+ The sister Arts shall nurse their drooping fires;
+ Each from his scenes her stores alternate bring, 135
+ Blend the fair tints, or wake the vocal string:
+ Those sibyl leaves, the sport of every wind,
+ (For poets ever were a careless kind,)
+ By thee disposed, no farther toil demand,
+ But, just to Nature, own thy forming hand. 140
+
+ So spread o'er Greece, the harmonious whole unknown,
+ E'en Homer's numbers charm'd by parts alone.
+ Their own Ulysses scarce had wander'd more,
+ By winds and waters cast on every shore:
+ When, raised by fate, some former Hanmer join'd 145
+ Each beauteous image of the boundless mind;
+ And bade, like thee, his Athens ever claim
+ A fond alliance with the Poet's name.
+
+ Oxford, Dec. 3,
+ 1743.
+
+
+VARIATIONS.
+
+ Ver.
+ 1. While, own'd by you, with smiles the Muse surveys
+ The expected triumph of her sweetest lays:
+ While, stretch'd at ease, she boasts your guardian aid,
+ Secure, and happy in her sylvan shade:
+ Excuse her fears, who scarce a verse bestows,
+ In just remembrance of the debt she owes;
+ With conscious, &c.
+
+ 9. Long slighted Fancy with a mother's care
+ Wept o'er his works, and felt the last despair:
+ Torn from her head, she saw the roses fall,
+ By all deserted, though admired by all:
+
+ near And "Oh!" she cried, "shall Science still resign
+ 11 Whate'er is Nature's, and whate'er is mine?
+ to Shall Taste and Art but show a cold regard,
+ 22. And scornful Pride reject the unletter'd bard?
+ Ye myrtled nymphs, who own my gentle reign,
+ Tune the sweet lyre, and grace my airy train,
+ If, where ye rove, your searching eyes have known
+ One perfect mind, which judgment calls its own;
+ There every breast its fondest hopes must bend,
+ And every Muse with tears await her friend."
+ 'Twas then fair Isis from her stream arose,
+ In kind compassion of her sister's woes.
+ 'Twas then she promised to the mourning maid
+ The immortal honours which thy hands have paid:
+ "My best loved son," she said, "shall yet restore
+ Thy ruin'd sweets, and Fancy weep no more."
+ Each rising art by slow gradation moves;
+ Toil builds, &c.
+
+ 25. Line after line our pitying eyes o'erflow,
+
+ 27. To Rome removed, with equal power to please,
+
+ 35. When Rome herself, her envied glories dead,
+ No more imperial, stoop'd her conquer'd head;
+ Luxuriant Florence chose a softer theme,
+ While all was peace, by Arno's silver stream.
+ With sweeter notes the Etrurian vales complain'd,
+ And arts reviving told a Cosmo reign'd.
+ Their wanton lyres the bards of Provence strung,
+ Sweet flow'd the lays, but love was all they sung.
+ The gay, &c.
+
+ 45. But Heaven, still rising in its works, decreed
+
+ 63. His every strain the Loves and Graces own;
+
+ 71. Till late Corneille from epick Lucan brought
+ The full expression, and the Roman thought:
+
+ 101. O, blest in all that genius gives to charm,
+ Whose morals mend us, and whose passions warm!
+ Oft let my youth attend thy various page,
+ Where rich invention rules the unbounded stage:
+ There every scene the poet's warmth may raise,
+ And melting music find the softest lays:
+ O, might the Muse with equal ease persuade
+ Expressive Picture to adopt thine aid!
+ Some powerful Raphael should again appear,
+ And arts consenting fix their empire here.
+
+ 111. Methinks e'en now I view some fair design,
+ Where breathing Nature lives in every line;
+ Chaste and subdued, the modest colours lie,
+ In fair proportion to the approving eye:
+ And see where Anthony lamenting stands,
+ In fixt distress, and spreads his pleading hands:
+ O'er the pale corse the warrior seems to bend,
+
+ 122. A rage impatient, and a fiercer air?
+ E'en now his thoughts with eager vengeance doom
+ The last sad ruin of ungrateful Rome.
+ Till, slow advancing o'er the tented plain,
+ In sable weeds, appear the kindred train:
+ The frantic mother leads their wild despair,
+ Beats her swoln breast, and rends her silver hair;
+ And see, he yields! the tears unbidden start,
+ And conscious nature claims the unwilling heart!
+ O'er all the man conflicting passions rise;
+
+ 136. Spread the fair tints, or wake the vocal string:
+
+ 146. Each beauteous image of the tuneful mind;
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [54] The OEdipus of Sophocles.
+
+ [55] Julius the Second, the immediate predecessor of Leo the Tenth.
+
+ [56] Their characters are thus distinguished by Mr. Dryden.
+
+ [57] About the time of Shakespeare, the poet Hardy was in great repute
+ in France. He wrote, according to Fontenelle, six hundred plays.
+ The French poets after him applied themselves in general to the
+ correct improvement of the stage, which was almost totally
+ disregarded by those of our own country, Jonson excepted.
+
+ [58] The favourite author of the elder Corneille.
+
+ [59] Turno tempus erit, magno cum optaverit emptum
+ Intactum Pallanta, etc.
+ VIRG.
+
+ [60] See the tragedy of Julius Caesar.
+
+ [61] Coriolanus. See Mr. Spence's Dialogue on the Odyssey.
+
+
+
+
+DIRGE IN CYMBELINE,
+
+SUNG BY GUIDERUS AND ARVIRAGUS OVER FIDELE, SUPPOSED TO BE DEAD.
+
+
+ To fair Fidele's grassy tomb
+ Soft maids and village hinds shall bring
+ Each opening sweet of earliest bloom,
+ And rifle all the breathing spring.
+
+ No wailing ghost shall dare appear 5
+ To vex with shrieks this quiet grove;
+ But shepherd lads assemble here,
+ And melting virgins own their love.
+
+ No wither'd witch shall here be seen;
+ No goblins lead their nightly crew: 10
+ The female fays shall haunt the green,
+ And dress thy grave with pearly dew!
+
+ The redbreast oft, at evening hours,
+ Shall kindly lend his little aid,
+ With hoary moss, and gather'd flowers, 15
+ To deck the ground where thou art laid.
+
+ When howling winds, and beating rain,
+ In tempests shake the sylvan cell;
+ Or 'midst the chase, on every plain,
+ The tender thought on thee shall dwell; 20
+
+ Each lonely scene shall thee restore;
+ For thee the tear be duly shed;
+ Beloved till life can charm no more,
+ And mourn'd till Pity's self be dead.
+
+
+VARIATIONS.
+
+ Ver.
+ 1. To fair Pastora's grassy tomb
+
+ 7. But shepherd swains assemble here,
+
+ 11. But female fays shall haunt the green,
+
+ 12. And dress thy bed with pearly dew!
+
+ 17. When chiding winds, and beating rain,
+ In tempest shake the sylvan cell;
+ Or 'midst the flocks, on every plain,
+
+ 21. Each lovely scene shall thee restore;
+
+ 23. Beloved till life could charm no more,
+
+
+
+
+VERSES
+
+WRITTEN ON A PAPER WHICH CONTAINED A PIECE OF BRIDE-CAKE, GIVEN TO THE
+AUTHOR BY A LADY.
+
+
+ Ye curious hands, that, hid from vulgar eyes,
+ By search profane shall find this hallow'd cake,
+ With virtue's awe forbear the sacred prize,
+ Nor dare a theft, for love and pity's sake!
+
+ This precious relic, form'd by magic power, 5
+ Beneath her shepherd's haunted pillow laid,
+ Was meant by love to charm the silent hour,
+ The secret present of a matchless maid.
+
+ The Cyprian queen, at Hymen's fond request,
+ Each nice ingredient chose with happiest art; 10
+ Fears, sighs, and wishes of the enamour'd breast,
+ And pains that please, are mix'd in every part.
+
+ With rosy hand the spicy fruit she brought,
+ From Paphian hills, and fair Cythera's isle;
+ And temper'd sweet with these the melting thought, 15
+ The kiss ambrosial, and the yielding smile.
+
+ Ambiguous looks, that scorn and yet relent,
+ Denials mild, and firm unalter'd truth;
+ Reluctant pride, and amorous faint consent,
+ And meeting ardours, and exulting youth. 20
+
+ Sleep, wayward God! hath sworn, while these remain,
+ With flattering dreams to dry his nightly tear,
+ And cheerful Hope, so oft invoked in vain,
+ With fairy songs shall soothe his pensive ear.
+
+ If, bound by vows to Friendship's gentle side, 25
+ And fond of soul, thou hop'st an equal grace,
+ If youth or maid thy joys and griefs divide,
+ O, much entreated, leave this fatal place!
+
+ Sweet Peace, who long hath shunn'd my plaintive day,
+ Consents at length to bring me short delight, 30
+ Thy careless steps may scare her doves away,
+ And Grief with raven note usurp the night.
+
+
+
+
+TO MISS AURELIA C----R,
+
+ON HER WEEPING AT HER SISTER'S WEDDING.
+
+
+ Cease, fair Aurelia, cease to mourn,
+ Lament not Hannah's happy state;
+ You may be happy in your turn,
+ And seize the treasure you regret.
+
+ With Love united Hymen stands, 5
+ And softly whispers to your charms,
+ "Meet but your lover in my bands,
+ You'll find your sister in his arms."
+
+
+
+
+SONNET.
+
+
+ When Phoebe form'd a wanton smile,
+ My soul! it reach'd not here:
+ Strange, that thy peace, thou trembler, flies
+ Before a rising tear!
+ From 'midst the drops, my love is born, 5
+ That o'er those eyelids rove:
+ Thus issued from a teeming wave
+ The fabled queen of love.
+
+
+
+
+SONG.
+
+THE SENTIMENTS BORROWED FROM SHAKESPEARE.[62]
+
+
+ Young Damon of the vale is dead,
+ Ye lowly hamlets, moan;
+ A dewy turf lies o'er his head,
+ And at his feet a stone.
+
+ His shroud, which Death's cold damps destroy, 5
+ Of snow-white threads was made:
+ All mourn'd to see so sweet a boy
+ In earth for ever laid.
+
+ Pale pansies o'er his corpse were placed,
+ Which, pluck'd before their time, 10
+ Bestrew'd the boy, like him to waste
+ And wither in their prime.
+
+ But will he ne'er return, whose tongue
+ Could tune the rural lay?
+ Ah, no! his bell of peace is rung, 15
+ His lips are cold as clay.
+
+ They bore him out at twilight hour,
+ The youth who loved so well:
+ Ah, me! how many a true love shower
+ Of kind remembrance fell! 20
+
+ Each maid was woe--but Lucy chief,
+ Her grief o'er all was tried;
+ Within his grave she dropp'd in grief,
+ And o'er her loved one died.
+
+
+VARIATION.
+
+ Ver.
+ 2. Ye lowland hamlets, moan;
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [62] It is uncertain where this poem appeared. It was inserted in the
+ Edinburgh edition of the Poets, 1794. A manuscript copy in the
+ collection recently belonging to Mr. Upcott, and now in the
+ British Museum, is headed, "Written by Collins when at Winchester
+ School. From a Manuscript."
+
+
+
+
+ON OUR LATE TASTE IN MUSIC.[[63]]
+
+ ----Quid vocis modulamen inane juvabat
+ Verborum sensusque vacans numerique loquacis?
+ MILTON.
+
+
+ Britons! away with the degenerate pack!
+ Waft, western winds! the foreign spoilers back!
+ Enough has been in wild amusements spent,
+ Let British verse and harmony content!
+ No music once could charm you like your own, 5
+ Then tuneful Robinson,[64] and Tofts were known;
+ Then Purcell touched the strings, while numbers hung
+ Attentive to the sounds--and blest the song!
+ E'en gentle Weldon taught us manly notes,
+ Beyond the enervate thrills of Roman throats! 10
+ Notes, foreign luxury could ne'er inspire,
+ That animate the soul, and swell the lyre!
+ That mend, and not emasculate our hearts,
+ And teach the love of freedom and of arts.
+ Nor yet, while guardian Phoebus gilds our isle, 15
+ Does heaven averse await the muses' toil;
+ Cherish but once our worth of native race,
+ The sister-arts shall soon display their face!
+ Even half discouraged through the gloom they strive,
+ Smile at neglect, and o'er oblivion live. 20
+ See Handel, careless of a foreign fame,
+ Fix on our shore, and boast a Briton's name:
+ While, placed marmoric in the vocal grove,[65]
+ He guides the measures listening throngs approve.
+ Mark silence at the voice of Arne confess'd, 25
+ Soft as the sweet enchantress rules the breast;
+ As when transported Venice lent an ear,
+ Camilla's charms to view, and accents hear![66]
+ So while she varies the impassion'd song,
+ Alternate motions on the bosom throng! 30
+ As heavenly Milton[67] guides her magic voice,
+ And virtue thus convey'd allures the choice.
+ Discard soft nonsense in a slavish tongue,
+ The strain insipid, and the thought unknown;
+ From truth and nature form the unerring test; 35
+ Be what is manly, chaste, and good the best!
+ 'Tis not to ape the songsters of the groves,
+ Through all the quiverings of their wanton loves;
+ 'Tis not the enfeebled thrill, or warbled shake,
+ The heart can strengthen, or the soul awake! 40
+ But where the force of energy is found
+ When the sense rises on the wings of sound;
+ When reason, with the charms of music twined,
+ Through the enraptured ear informs the mind;
+ Bids generous love or soft compassion glow, 45
+ And forms a tuneful Paradise below!
+ Oh Britons! if the honour still you boast,
+ No longer purchase follies at such cost!
+ No longer let unmeaning sounds invite
+ To visionary scenes of false delight: 50
+ When, shame to sense! we see the hero's rage
+ Lisp'd on the tongue, and danced along the stage!
+ Or hear in eunuch sounds a hero squeak,
+ While kingdoms rise or fall upon a shake!
+ Let them at home to slavery's painted train, 55
+ With siren art, repeat the pleasing strain:
+ While we, like wise Ulysses, close our ear
+ To songs which liberty forbids to hear!
+ Keep, guardian gales, the infectious guests away,
+ To charm where priests direct, and slaves obey. 60
+ Madrid, or wanton Rome, be their delight;
+ There they may warble as their poets write.
+ The temper of our isle, though cold, is clear;
+ And such our genius, noble though severe.
+ Our Shakespeare scorn'd the trifling rules of art, 65
+ But knew to conquer and surprise the heart!
+ In magic chains the captive thought to bind,
+ And fathom all the depths of human kind!
+ Too long, our shame, the prostituted herd
+ Our sense have bubbled, and our wealth have shared. 70
+ Too long the favourites of our vulgar great
+ Have bask'd in luxury, and lived in state!
+ In Tuscan wilds now let them villas rear[68]
+ Ennobled by the charity we spare.
+ There let them warble in the tainted breeze, 75
+ Or sing like widow'd orphans to the trees:
+ There let them chant their incoherent dreams,
+ Where howls Charybdis, and where Scylla screams!
+ Or where Avernus, from his darksome round,
+ May echo to the winds the blasted sound! 80
+ As fair Alcyone,[69] with anguish press'd,
+ Broods o'er the British main with tuneful breast,
+ Beneath the white-brow'd cliff protected sings,
+ Or skims the azure plain with painted wings!
+ Grateful, like her, to nature, and as just, 85
+ In our domestic blessings let us trust;
+ Keep for our sons fair learning's honour'd prize,
+ Till the world own the worth they now despise!
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [63] See Memoir, p. xxxviii.
+
+ [64] Now Countess-dowager of Peterborough.
+
+ [65] Vauxhall.
+
+ [66] Vide the Spectator's Letters from Camilla, vol. vi.
+
+ [67] Milton's Comus lately revived.
+
+ [68] Senesino has built a palace near Sienna on an estate which carries
+ the title of a Marquisate, but purchased with English gold.
+
+ [69] The king-fisher.
+
+
+
+
+OBSERVATIONS ON THE ORIENTAL ECLOGUES AND ODES.
+
+BY DR. LANGHORNE.
+
+
+OBSERVATIONS ON THE ORIENTAL ECLOGUES.
+
+
+The genius of the pastoral, as well as of every other respectable
+species of poetry, had its origin in the east, and from thence was
+transplanted by the muses of Greece; but whether from the continent of
+the Lesser Asia, or from Egypt, which, about the era of the Grecian
+pastoral, was the hospitable nurse of letters, it is not easy to
+determine. From the subjects, and the manner of Theocritus, one would
+incline to the latter opinion, while the history of Bion is in favour of
+the former.
+
+However, though it should still remain a doubt through what channel the
+pastoral traveled westward, there is not the least shadow of uncertainty
+concerning its oriental origin.
+
+In those ages which, guided by sacred chronology, from a comparative
+view of time, we call the early ages, it appears, from the most
+authentic historians, that the chiefs of the people employed themselves
+in rural exercises, and that astronomers and legislators were at the
+same time shepherds. Thus Strabo informs us, that the history of the
+creation was communicated to the Egyptians by a Chaldean shepherd.
+
+From these circumstances it is evident, not only that such shepherds
+were capable of all the dignity and elegance peculiar to poetry, but
+that whatever poetry they attempted would be of the pastoral kind; would
+take its subjects from those scenes of rural simplicity in which they
+were conversant, and, as it was the offspring of harmony and nature,
+would employ the powers it derived from the former, to celebrate the
+beauty and benevolence of the latter.
+
+Accordingly we find that the most ancient poems treat of agriculture,
+astronomy, and other objects within the rural and natural systems.
+
+What constitutes the difference between the georgic and the pastoral,
+is love and the colloquial or dramatic form of composition peculiar to
+the latter; this form of composition is sometimes dispensed with, and
+love and rural imagery alone are thought sufficient to distinguish
+the pastoral. The tender passion, however, seems to be essential to
+this species of poetry, and is hardly ever excluded from those
+pieces that were intended to come under this denomination: even in
+those eclogues of the Amoebean kind, whose only purport is a trial of
+skill between contending shepherds, love has its usual share, and
+the praises of their respective mistresses are the general subjects of
+the competitors.
+
+It is to be lamented, that scarce any oriental compositions of this kind
+have survived the ravages of ignorance, tyranny, and time; we cannot
+doubt that many such have been extant, possibly as far down as that
+fatal period, never to be mentioned in the world of letters without
+horror, when the glorious monuments of human ingenuity perished in the
+ashes of the Alexandrian library.
+
+Those ingenious Greeks, whom we call the parents of pastoral poetry,
+were, probably, no more than imitators, of imitators that derived their
+harmony from higher and remoter sources, and kindled their poetical
+fires at those then unextinguished lamps which burned within the tombs
+of oriental genius.
+
+It is evident that Homer has availed himself of those magnificent images
+and descriptions so frequently to be met with in the books of the Old
+Testament; and why may not Theocritus, Moschus, and Bion have found
+their archetypes in other eastern writers, whose names have perished
+with their works? yet, though it may not be illiberal to admit such a
+supposition, it would certainly be invidious to conclude, what the
+malignity of cavillers alone could suggest with regard to Homer, that
+they destroyed the sources from which they borrowed, and, as it is
+fabled of the young of the pelican, drained their supporters to death.
+
+As the Septuagint translation of the Old Testament was performed at the
+request, and under the patronage, of Ptolemy Philadelphus, it were not
+to be wondered if Theocritus, who was entertained at that prince's
+court, had borrowed some part of his pastoral imagery from the poetical
+passages of those books. I think it can hardly be doubted that the
+Sicilian poet had in his eye certain expressions of the prophet Isaiah,
+when he wrote the following lines:
+
+ ~Nyn ia men phoreoite batoi, phoreoite d' akanthai.
+ Ha de kala Narkissos ep' arkeuthoisi komasai;
+ Panta d' enalla genoito, kai ha pitus ochnas eneikai
+ ----kai tos kynas holaphos helkoi.~
+
+ Let vexing brambles the blue violet bear,
+ On the rude thorn Narcissus dress his hair,
+ All, all reversed--The pine with pears be crown'd,
+ And the bold deer shall drag the trembling hound.
+
+The cause, indeed, of these phenomena is very different in the Greek
+from what it is in the Hebrew poet; the former employing them on the
+death, the latter on the birth, of an important person: but the marks of
+imitation are nevertheless obvious.
+
+It might, however, be expected, that if Theocritus had borrowed at all
+from the sacred writers, the celebrated pastoral epithalamium of
+Solomon, so much within his own walk of poetry, would not certainly
+have escaped his notice. His epithalamium on the marriage of Helena,
+moreover, gave him an open field for imitation; therefore, if he has any
+obligations to the royal bard, we may expect to find them there. The
+very opening of the poem is in the spirit of the Hebrew song:
+
+ ~Houto de proiza katedrathes, o phile gambre;~
+
+The colour of imitation is still stronger in the following passage:
+
+ ~Aos antelloisa kalon diephaine prosopon,
+ Potnia nyx hate, leukon ear cheimonos anentos?
+ Hode kai ha chrysea Helena diephainet' en amin,
+ Pieira megala hat' anedrame kosmos aroura.
+ He kapo kyparissos, e harmati Thessalos hippos.~
+
+This description of Helen is infinitely above the style and figure of
+the Sicilian pastoral: "She is like the rising of the golden morning,
+when the night departeth, and when the winter is over and gone. She
+resembleth the cypress in the garden, the horse in the chariots of
+Thessaly." These figures plainly declare their origin; and others,
+equally imitative, might be pointed out in the same idyllium.
+
+This beautiful and luxuriant marriage pastoral of Solomon is the only
+perfect form of the oriental eclogue that has survived the ruins of
+time; a happiness for which it is, probably, more indebted to its
+sacred character than to its intrinsic merit. Not that it is by any
+means destitute of poetical excellence: like all the eastern poetry, it
+is bold, wild, and unconnected in its figures, allusions, and parts, and
+has all that graceful and magnificent daring which characterizes its
+metaphorical and comparative imagery.
+
+In consequence of these peculiarities, so ill adapted to the frigid
+genius of the north, Mr. Collins could make but little use of it as a
+precedent for his Oriental Eclogues; and even in his third eclogue,
+where the subject is of a similar nature, he has chosen rather to follow
+the mode of the Doric and the Latian pastoral.
+
+The scenery and subjects then of the foregoing eclogues alone are
+oriental; the style and colouring are purely European; and, for this
+reason, the author's preface, in which he intimates that he had the
+originals from a merchant who traded to the east, is omitted, as being
+now altogether superfluous.[70]
+
+With regard to the merit of these eclogues, it may justly be asserted,
+that in simplicity of description and expression, in delicacy and
+softness of numbers, and in natural and unaffected tenderness, they are
+not to be equaled by any thing of the pastoral kind in the English
+language.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [70] In the present edition the preface is restored.
+
+
+
+
+ECLOGUE I.
+
+
+This eclogue, which is entitled Selim, or the Shepherd's Moral, as
+there is nothing dramatic in the subject, may be thought the least
+entertaining of the four: but it is by no means the least valuable.
+The moral precepts which the intelligent shepherd delivers to his
+fellow-swains, and the virgins their companions, are such as would
+infallibly promote the happiness of the pastoral life.
+
+In impersonating the private virtues, the poet has observed great
+propriety, and has formed their genealogy with the most perfect
+judgment, when he represents them as the daughters of truth and wisdom.
+
+The characteristics of modesty and chastity are extremely happy and
+_peinturesque_:
+
+ "Come thou, whose thoughts as limpid springs are clear,
+ To lead the train, sweet Modesty, appear;
+ With thee be Chastity, of all afraid,
+ Distrusting all, a wise, suspicious maid;
+ Cold is her breast, like flowers that drink the dew;
+ A silken veil conceals her from the view."
+
+The two similes borrowed from rural objects are not only much in
+character, but perfectly natural and expressive. There is,
+notwithstanding, this defect in the former, that it wants a peculiar
+propriety; for purity of thought may as well be applied to chastity as
+to modesty; and from this instance, as well as from a thousand more, we
+may see the necessity of distinguishing, in characteristic poetry, every
+object by marks and attributes peculiarly its own.
+
+It cannot be objected to this eclogue, that it wants both those
+essential criteria of the pastoral, love and the drama; for though it
+partakes not of the latter, the former still retains an interest in it,
+and that too very material, as it professedly consults the virtue and
+happiness of the lover, while it informs what are the qualities
+
+ ----that must lead to love.
+
+
+
+
+ECLOGUE II.
+
+
+All the advantages that any species of poetry can derive from the
+novelty of the subject and scenery, this eclogue possesses. The
+route of a camel-driver is a scene that scarce could exist in the
+imagination of a European, and of its attendant distresses he could
+have no idea.--These are very happily and minutely painted by our
+descriptive poet. What sublime simplicity of expression! what
+nervous plainness in the opening of the poem!
+
+ "In silent horror o'er the boundless waste
+ The driver Hassan with his camels past."
+
+The magic pencil of the poet brings the whole scene before us at once,
+as it were by enchantment; and in this single couplet we feel all the
+effect that arises from the terrible wildness of a region unenlivened by
+the habitations of men. The verses that describe so minutely the
+camel-driver's little provisions have a touching influence on the
+imagination, and prepare the reader to enter more feelingly into his
+future apprehensions of distress:
+
+ "Bethink thee, Hassan, where shall thirst assuage,
+ When fails this cruise, his unrelenting rage!"
+
+It is difficult to say whether his apostrophe to the "mute companions of
+his toils" is more to be admired for the elegance and beauty of the
+poetical imagery, or for the tenderness and humanity of the sentiment.
+He who can read it without being affected, will do his heart no
+injustice if he concludes it to be destitute of sensibility:
+
+ "Ye mute companions of my toils, that bear
+ In all my griefs a more than equal share!
+ Here, where no springs in murmurs break away,
+ Or moss-crown'd fountains mitigate the day,
+ In vain ye hope the green delights to know,
+ Which plains more blest, or verdant vales, bestow:
+ Here rocks alone and tasteless sands are found,
+ And faint and sickly winds for ever howl around."
+
+Yet in these beautiful lines there is a slight error, which writers of
+the greatest genius very frequently fall into.--It will be needless to
+observe to the accurate reader, that in the fifth and sixth verses there
+is a verbal pleonasm where the poet speaks of the _green_ delights of
+_verdant_ vales. There is an oversight of the same kind in the Manners,
+an Ode, where the poet says,
+
+ "----Seine's blue nymphs deplore
+ In watchet weeds----."
+
+This fault is indeed a common one, but to a reader of taste it is
+nevertheless disgustful; and it is mentioned here, as the error of a man
+of genius and judgment, that men of genius and judgment may guard
+against it.
+
+Mr. Collins speaks like a true poet, as well in sentiment as expression,
+when, with regard to the thirst of wealth, he says,
+
+ "Why heed we not, while mad we haste along,
+ The gentle voice of Peace, or Pleasure's song?
+ Or wherefore think the flowery mountain's side,
+ The fountain's murmurs, and the valley's pride,
+ Why think we these less pleasing to behold,
+ Than dreary deserts, if they lead to gold?"
+
+But however just these sentiments may appear to those who have not
+revolted from nature and simplicity, had the author proclaimed them in
+Lombard Street, or Cheapside, he would not have been complimented with
+the understanding of the bellman.--A striking proof, that our own
+particular ideas of happiness regulate our opinions concerning the sense
+and wisdom of others!
+
+It is impossible to take leave of this most beautiful eclogue, without
+paying the tribute of admiration so justly due to the following nervous
+lines:
+
+ "What if the lion in his rage I meet!----
+ Oft in the dust I view his printed feet:
+ And, fearful! oft, when day's declining light
+ Yields her pale empire to the mourner night,
+ By hunger roused, he scours the groaning plain,
+ Gaunt wolves and sullen tigers in his train:
+ Before them death with shrieks directs their way,
+ Fills the wild yell, and leads them to their prey."
+
+This, amongst many other passages to be met with in the writings of
+Collins, shows that his genius was perfectly capable of the grand and
+magnificent in description, notwithstanding what a learned writer has
+advanced to the contrary. Nothing, certainly, could be more greatly
+conceived, or more adequately expressed, than the image in the last
+couplet.
+
+The deception, sometimes used in rhetoric and poetry, which presents us
+with an object or sentiment contrary to what we expected, is here
+introduced to the greatest advantage:
+
+ "Farewell the youth, whom sighs could not detain,
+ Whom Zara's breaking heart implored in vain!
+ Yet, as thou go'st, may every blast arise----
+ Weak and unfelt as these rejected sighs!"
+
+But this, perhaps, is rather an artificial prettiness, than a real or
+natural beauty.
+
+
+
+
+ECLOGUE III.
+
+
+That innocence, and native simplicity of manners, which, in the first
+eclogue, was allowed to constitute the happiness of love, is here
+beautifully described in its effects. The sultan of Persia marries a
+Georgian shepherdess, and finds in her embraces that genuine felicity
+which unperverted nature alone can bestow. The most natural and
+beautiful parts of this eclogue are those where the fair sultana refers
+with so much pleasure to her pastoral amusements, and those scenes of
+happy innocence in which she had passed her early years; particularly
+when, upon her first departure,
+
+ "Oft as she went, she backward turned her view,
+ And bade that crook and bleating flock adieu."
+
+This picture of amiable simplicity reminds one of that passage where
+Proserpine, when carried off by Pluto, regrets the loss of the flowers
+she has been gathering:
+
+ "Collecti flores tunicis cecidere remissis:
+ Tantaque simplicitas puerilibus adfuit annis,
+ Haec quoque virgineum movit jactura dolorem."
+
+
+
+
+ECLOGUE IV.
+
+
+The beautiful but unfortunate country where the scene of this pathetic
+eclogue is laid, had been recently torn in pieces by the depredations of
+its savage neighbours, when Mr. Collins so affectingly described its
+misfortunes. This ingenious man had not only a pencil to portray, but a
+heart to feel for the miseries of mankind; and it is with the utmost
+tenderness and humanity he enters into the narrative of Circassia's
+ruin, while he realizes the scene, and brings the present drama before
+us. Of every circumstance that could possibly contribute to the tender
+effect this pastoral was designed to produce, the poet has availed
+himself with the utmost art and address. Thus he prepares the heart to
+pity the distresses of Circassia, by representing it as the scene of the
+happiest love:
+
+ "In fair Circassia, where, to love inclined,
+ Each swain was blest, for every maid was kind."
+
+To give the circumstance of the dialogue a more affecting solemnity, he
+makes the time midnight, and describes the two shepherds in the very
+act of flight from the destruction that swept over their country:
+
+ "Sad o'er the dews, two brother shepherds fled,
+ Where wildering fear and desperate sorrow led."
+
+There is a beauty and propriety in the epithet wildering, which strikes
+us more forcibly, the more we consider it.
+
+The opening of the dialogue is equally happy, natural, and unaffected;
+when one of the shepherds, weary and overcome with the fatigue of
+flight, calls upon his companion to review the length of way they had
+passed. This is certainly painting from nature, and the thoughts,
+however obvious, or destitute of refinement, are perfectly in character.
+But as the closest pursuit of nature is the surest way to excellence in
+general, and to sublimity in particular, in poetical description, so we
+find that this simple suggestion of the shepherd is not unattended with
+magnificence. There is a grandeur and variety in the landscape he
+describes:
+
+ "And first review that long extended plain,
+ And yon wide groves, already past with pain!
+ Yon ragged cliff, whose dangerous path we tried!
+ And, last, this lofty mountain's weary side!"
+
+There is, in imitative harmony, an act of expressing a slow and
+difficult movement by adding to the usual number of pauses in a verse.
+This is observable in the line that describes the ascent of the
+mountain:
+
+ And last || this lofty mountain's || weary side ||.
+
+Here we find the number of pauses, or musical bars, which, in an heroic
+verse, is commonly two, increased to three.
+
+The liquid melody, and the numerous sweetness of expression, in the
+following descriptive lines, is almost inimitably beautiful:
+
+ "Sweet to the sight is Zabran's flowery plain,
+ And once by nymphs and shepherds loved in vain!
+ No more the virgins shall delight to rove
+ By Sargis' banks, or Irwan's shady grove;
+ On Tarkie's mountain catch the cooling gale,
+ Or breathe the sweets of Aly's flowery vale."
+
+Nevertheless, in this delightful landscape there is an obvious fault;
+there is no distinction between the plain of Zabran and the vale of Aly;
+they are both flowery, and consequently undiversified. This could not
+proceed from the poet's want of judgment, but from inattention: it had
+not occurred to him that he had employed the epithet flowery twice
+within so short a compass; an oversight which those who are accustomed
+to poetical, or, indeed, to any other species of composition, know to be
+very possible.
+
+Nothing can be more beautifully conceived, or more pathetically
+expressed, than the shepherd's apprehensions for his fair countrywomen,
+exposed to the ravages of the invaders:
+
+ "In vain Circassia boasts her spicy groves,
+ For ever famed for pure and happy loves:
+ In vain she boasts her fairest of the fair,
+ Their eyes' blue languish, and their golden hair!
+ Those eyes in tears their fruitless grief shall send;
+ Those hairs the Tartar's cruel hand shall rend."
+
+There is certainly some very powerful charm in the liquid melody of
+sounds. The editor of these poems could never read or hear the following
+verse repeated, without a degree of pleasure otherwise entirely
+unaccountable:
+
+ "Their eyes' blue languish, and their golden hair."
+
+Such are the Oriental Eclogues, which we leave with the same kind of
+anxious pleasure we feel upon a temporary parting with a beloved
+friend.
+
+
+
+
+OBSERVATIONS
+
+ON THE ODES, DESCRIPTIVE AND ALLEGORICAL.
+
+
+The genius of Collins was capable of every degree of excellence in lyric
+poetry, and perfectly qualified for that high province of the muse.
+Possessed of a native ear for all the varieties of harmony and
+modulation, susceptible of the finest feelings of tenderness and
+humanity, but, above all, carried away by that high enthusiasm which
+gives to imagination its strongest colouring, he was at once capable of
+soothing the ear with the melody of his numbers, of influencing the
+passions by the force of his pathos, and of gratifying the fancy by the
+luxury of description.
+
+In consequence of these powers, but, more particularly, in consideration
+of the last, he chose such subjects for his lyric essays as were most
+favourable for the indulgence of description and allegory; where he
+could exercise his powers in moral and personal painting; where he could
+exert his invention in conferring new attributes on images or objects
+already known, and described by a determinate number of characteristics;
+where he might give an uncommon eclat to his figures, by placing them in
+happier attitudes, or in more advantageous lights, and introduce new
+forms from the moral and intellectual world into the society of
+impersonated beings.
+
+Such, no doubt, were the privileges which the poet expected, and such
+were the advantages he derived from the descriptive and allegorical
+nature of his themes.
+
+It seems to have been the whole industry of our author, (and it is, at
+the same time, almost all the claim to moral excellence his writings can
+boast,) to promote the influence of the social virtues, by painting them
+in the fairest and happiest lights.
+
+ "Melior fieri tuendo"
+
+would be no improper motto to his poems in general; but of his lyric
+poems it seems to be the whole moral tendency and effect. If, therefore,
+it should appear to some readers, that he has been more industrious to
+cultivate description than sentiment, it may be observed, that his
+descriptions themselves are sentimental, and answer the whole end of
+that species of writing, by embellishing every feature of virtue, and by
+conveying, through the effects of the pencil, the finest moral lessons
+to the mind.
+
+Horace speaks of the fidelity of the ear in preference to the
+uncertainty of the eye; but if the mind receives conviction, it is
+certainly of very little importance through what medium, or by which of
+the senses it is conveyed. The impressions left on the imagination may
+possibly be thought less durable than the deposits of the memory, but it
+may very well admit of a question, whether a conclusion of reason, or an
+impression of imagination, will soonest make it sway to the heart. A
+moral precept, conveyed in words, is only an account of truth in its
+effects; a moral picture is truth exemplified; and which is most likely
+to gain upon the affections, it may not be difficult to determine.
+
+This, however, must be allowed, that those works approach the nearest to
+perfection which unite these powers and advantages; which at once
+influence the imagination, and engage the memory; the former by the
+force of animated and striking description, the latter by a brief, but
+harmonious conveyance of precept: thus, while the heart is influenced
+through the operation of the passions or the fancy, the effect, which
+might otherwise have been transient, is secured by the cooperating power
+of the memory, which treasures up in a short aphorism the moral of the
+scene.
+
+This is a good reason, and this, perhaps, is the only reason that can be
+given, why our dramatic performances should generally end with a chain
+of couplets. In these the moral of the whole piece is usually conveyed;
+and that assistance which the memory borrows from rhyme, as it was
+probably the original cause of it, gives it usefulness and propriety
+even there.
+
+After these apologies for the descriptive turn of the following odes,
+something remains to be said on the origin and use of allegory in
+poetical composition.
+
+By this we are not to understand the trope in the schools, which is
+defined aliud verbis, aliud sensu ostendere; and of which Quintilian
+says, usus est, ut tristia dicamus melioribus verbis, aut bonae rei
+gratia quaedam contrariis significemus, &c. It is not the verbal, but the
+sentimental allegory, not allegorical expression (which, indeed, might
+come under the term of metaphor), but allegorical imagery, that is here
+in question.
+
+When we endeavour to trace this species of figurative sentiment to its
+origin, we find it coeval with literature itself. It is generally
+agreed, that the most ancient productions are poetical; and it is
+certain that the most ancient poems abound with allegorical imagery.
+
+If, then, it be allowed that the first literary productions were
+poetical; we shall have little or no difficulty in discovering the
+origin of allegory.
+
+At the birth of letters, in the transition from hieroglyphical to
+literal expression, it is not to be wondered if the custom of
+expressing ideas by personal images, which had so long prevailed, should
+still retain its influence on the mind, though the use of letters had
+rendered the practical application of it superfluous. Those who had been
+accustomed to express strength by the image of an elephant, swiftness by
+that of a panther, and courage by that of a lion, would make no scruple
+of substituting, in letters, the symbols for the ideas they had been
+used to represent.
+
+Here we plainly see the origin of allegorical expression, that it arose
+from the ashes of hieroglyphics; and if to the same cause we should
+refer that figurative boldness of style and imagery which distinguish
+the oriental writings, we shall, perhaps, conclude more justly, than if
+we should impute it to the superior grandeur of eastern genius.
+
+From the same source with the verbal, we are to derive the sentimental
+allegory, which is nothing more than a continuation of the metaphorical
+or symbolical expression of the several agents in an action, or the
+different objects in a scene.
+
+The latter most peculiarly comes under the denomination of allegorical
+imagery; and in this species of allegory, we include the impersonation
+of passions, affections, virtues, and vices, &c. on account of which,
+principally, the following odes were properly termed, by their author,
+allegorical.
+
+With respect to the utility of this figurative writing, the same
+arguments that have been advanced in favour of descriptive poetry will
+be of weight likewise here. It is, indeed, from impersonation, or, as it
+is commonly termed, personification, that poetical description borrows
+its chief powers and graces. Without the aid of this, moral and
+intellectual painting would be flat and unanimated, and even the scenery
+of material objects would be dull, without the introduction of
+fictitious life.
+
+These observations will be most effectually illustrated by the sublime
+and beautiful odes that occasioned them; in those it will appear how
+happily this allegorical painting may be executed by the genuine powers
+of poetical genius, and they will not fail to prove its force and
+utility by passing through the imagination to the heart.
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO PITY.
+
+
+ "By Pella's bard, a magic name,
+ By all the griefs his thoughts could frame,
+ Receive my humble rite:
+ Long, Pity, let the nations view
+ Thy sky-worn robes of tenderest blue,
+ And eyes of dewy light!"
+
+The propriety of invoking Pity, through the mediation of Euripides, is
+obvious.--That admirable poet had the keys of all the tender passions,
+and therefore could not but stand in the highest esteem with a writer of
+Mr. Collins's sensibility.--He did, indeed, admire him as much as Milton
+professedly did, and probably for the same reasons; but we do not find
+that he has copied him so closely as the last mentioned poet has
+sometimes done, and particularly in the opening of Samson Agonistes,
+which is an evident imitation of the following passage in the
+Phoenissae:
+
+ ~Hegou paroithe, thygater, hos typhlo podi
+ Ophthalmos ei su, nautiloisin astron hos?
+ Deur' eis to leuron pedon ichnos titheis' emon,
+ Probaine------~
+ Act. III. Sc. I.
+
+The "eyes of dewy light" is one of the happiest strokes of imagination,
+and may be ranked among those expressions which
+
+ "--give us back the image of the mind."
+
+ "Wild Arun too has heard thy strains,
+ And Echo, 'midst my native plains,
+ Been soothed by Pity's lute."
+
+ "There first the wren thy myrtles shed
+ On gentlest Otway's infant head."
+
+Sussex, in which county the Arun is a small river, had the honour of
+giving birth to Otway as well as to Collins: both these poets,
+unhappily, became the objects of that pity by which their writings are
+distinguished. There was a similitude in their genius and in their
+sufferings. There was a resemblance in the misfortunes and in the
+dissipation of their lives; and the circumstances of their death cannot
+be remembered without pain.
+
+The thought of painting in the temple of Pity the history of human
+misfortunes, and of drawing the scenes from the tragic muse, is very
+happy, and in every respect worthy the imagination of Collins.
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO FEAR.
+
+
+Mr. Collins, who had often determined to apply himself to dramatic
+poetry, seems here, with the same view, to have addressed one of the
+principal powers of the drama, and to implore that mighty influence she
+had given to the genius of Shakespeare:
+
+ "Hither again thy fury deal,
+ Teach me but once like him to feel:
+ His cypress wreath my meed decree,
+ And I, O Fear, will dwell with thee!"
+
+In the construction of this nervous ode, the author has shown equal
+power of judgment and imagination. Nothing can be more striking than the
+violent and abrupt abbreviation of the measure in the fifth and sixth
+verses, when he feels the strong influence of the power he invokes:
+
+ "Ah Fear! ah frantic Fear!
+ I see, I see thee near."
+
+The editor of these poems has met with nothing in the same species of
+poetry, either in his own, or in any other language, equal, in all
+respects, to the following description of Danger:
+
+
+ "Danger whose limbs of giant mould
+ What mortal eye can fix'd behold?
+ Who stalks his round, an hideous form,
+ Howling amidst the midnight storm,
+ Or throws him on the ridgy steep
+ Of some loose hanging rock to sleep."
+
+It is impossible to contemplate the image conveyed in the two last
+verses, without those emotions of terror it was intended to excite. It
+has, moreover, the entire advantage of novelty to recommend it; for
+there is too much originality in all the circumstances, to suppose that
+the author had in his eye that description of the penal situation of
+Catiline in the ninth AEneid:
+
+ "------Te, Catilina, minaci
+ Pendentem scopulo."
+
+The archetype of the English poet's idea was in Nature, and, probably,
+to her alone he was indebted for the thought. From her, likewise, he
+derived that magnificence of conception, that horrible grandeur of
+imagery, displayed in the following lines:
+
+ "And those, the fiends, who, near allied,
+ O'er Nature's wounds and wrecks preside;
+ While Vengeance in the lurid air
+ Lifts her red arm, exposed and bare:
+ On whom that ravening brood of fate,
+ Who lap the blood of sorrow, wait."
+
+That nutritive enthusiasm, which cherishes the seeds of poetry, and
+which is, indeed, the only soil wherein they will grow to perfection,
+lays open the mind to all the influences of fiction. A passion for
+whatever is greatly wild or magnificent in the works of nature seduces
+the imagination to attend to all that is extravagant, however unnatural.
+Milton was notoriously fond of high romance and gothic diableries; and
+Collins, who in genius and enthusiasm bore no very distant resemblance
+to Milton, was wholly carried away by the same attachments.
+
+ "Be mine to read the visions old,
+ Which thy awakening bards have told:
+ And, lest thou meet my blasted view,
+ Hold each strange tale devoutly true."
+
+ "On that thrice hallow'd eve," &c.
+
+There is an old traditionary superstition, that on St. Mark's eve, the
+forms of all such persons as shall die within the ensuing year make
+their solemn entry into the churches of their respective parishes, as
+St. Patrick swam over the Channel, without their heads.
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO SIMPLICITY.
+
+
+The measure of the ancient ballad seems to have been made choice of for
+this ode, on account of the subject; and it has, indeed, an air of
+simplicity, not altogether unaffecting:
+
+ "By all the honey'd store
+ On Hybla's thymy shore,
+ By all her blooms, and mingled murmurs dear,
+ By her whose lovelorn woe,
+ In evening musings slow,
+ Sooth'd sweetly sad Electra's poet's ear."
+
+This allegorical imagery of the honeyed store, the blooms, and mingled
+murmurs of Hybla, alluding to the sweetness and beauty of the Attic
+poetry, has the finest and the happiest effect: yet, possibly, it will
+bear a question, whether the ancient Greek tragedians had a general
+claim to simplicity in any thing more than the plans of their drama.
+Their language, at least, was infinitely metaphorical; yet it must be
+owned that they justly copied nature and the passions, and so far,
+certainly, they were entitled to the palm of true simplicity; the
+following most beautiful speech of Polynices will be a monument of
+this, so long as poetry shall last:
+
+ ~--------polydakrys d' aphikomen
+ Chronios idon melathra, kai bomous theon,
+ Gymnasia th' oisin enetraphen, Dirkes, th' hydor,
+ Hon ou dikaios apelatheis, xenen polin
+ Naio, di' osson nam echon dakryrrhooun.
+ All' ek gar algous algos au, se derkomai
+ Kara xyrekes, kai peplous melanchimous
+ Echousan.~
+ Eurip. Phoeniss. ver. 369.
+
+ 22 "But staid to sing alone
+ 33 To one distinguish'd throne."
+
+The poet cuts off the prevalence of simplicity among the Romans with the
+reign of Augustus; and, indeed, it did not continue much longer, most of
+the compositions, after that date, giving into false and artificial
+ornament.
+
+ "No more, in hall or bower,
+ The passions own thy power,
+ Love, only love, her forceless numbers mean."
+
+In these lines the writings of the Provencal poets are principally
+alluded to, in which simplicity is generally sacrificed to the
+rhapsodies of romantic love.
+
+
+
+
+ODE ON THE POETICAL CHARACTER.
+
+ Procul! O! procul este profani!
+
+
+This ode is so infinitely abstracted and replete with high enthusiasm,
+that it will find few readers capable of entering into the spirit of it,
+or of relishing its beauties. There is a style of sentiment as utterly
+unintelligible to common capacities, as if the subject were treated in
+an unknown language; and it is on the same account that abstracted
+poetry will never have many admirers.
+
+The authors of such poems must be content with the approbation of those
+heaven-favoured geniuses, who, by a similarity of taste and sentiment,
+are enabled to penetrate the high mysteries of inspired fancy, and to
+pursue the loftiest flights of enthusiastic imagination. Nevertheless,
+the praise of the distinguished few is certainly preferable to the
+applause of the undiscerning million; for all praise is valuable in
+proportion to the judgment of those who confer it.
+
+As the subject of this ode is uncommon, so are the style and expression
+highly metaphorical and abstracted: thus the sun is called "the
+rich-hair'd youth of morn," the ideas are termed "the shadowy tribes of
+mind," &c. We are struck with the propriety of this mode of expression
+here, and it affords us new proofs of the analogy that subsists between
+language and sentiment.
+
+Nothing can be more loftily imagined than the creation of the cestus of
+Fancy in this ode: the allegorical imagery is rich and sublime: and the
+observation, that the dangerous passions kept aloof during the
+operation, is founded on the strictest philosophical truth: for poetical
+fancy can exist only in minds that are perfectly serene, and in some
+measure abstracted from the influences of sense.
+
+The scene of Milton's "inspiring hour" is perfectly in character, and
+described with all those wild-wood appearances of which the great poet
+was so enthusiastically fond:
+
+ "I view that oak, the fancied glades among,
+ By which as Milton lay, his evening ear,
+ Nigh sphered in heaven, its native strains could hear."
+
+
+
+
+ODE,
+
+WRITTEN IN THE YEAR 1746.
+
+
+ODE TO MERCY.
+
+
+The Ode written in 1746, and the Ode to Mercy, seem to have been written
+on the same occasion, viz. the late rebellion; the former in memory of
+those heroes who fell in defence of their country, the latter to excite
+sentiments of compassion in favour of those unhappy and deluded wretches
+who became a sacrifice to public justice.
+
+The language and imagery of both are very beautiful; but the scene and
+figures described, in the strophe of the Ode to Mercy, are exquisitely
+striking, and would afford a painter one of the finest subjects in the
+world.
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO LIBERTY.
+
+
+The ancient states of Greece, perhaps the only ones in which a perfect
+model of liberty ever existed, are naturally brought to view in the
+opening of the poem:
+
+ "Who shall awake the Spartan fife,
+ And call in solemn sounds to life,
+ The youths, whose locks divinely spreading,
+ Like vernal hyacinths in sullen hue."
+
+There is something extremely bold in this imagery of the locks of the
+Spartan youths, and greatly superior to that description Jocasta gives
+us of the hair of Polynices:
+
+ ~Bostrychon te kyanochrota chaitas
+ Plokamon------~
+
+ "What new Alcaeus, fancy-blest,
+ Shall sing the sword, in myrtles drest," &c.
+
+This alludes to a fragment of Alcaeus still remaining, in which the poet
+celebrates Harmodius and Aristogiton, who slew the tyrant Hipparchus,
+and thereby restored the liberty of Athens.
+
+The fall of Rome is here most nervously described in one line
+
+ "With heaviest sound, a giant statue, fell."
+
+The thought seems altogether new, and the imitative harmony in the
+structure of the verse is admirable.
+
+After bewailing the ruin of ancient liberty, the poet considers the
+influence it has retained, or still retains, among the moderns; and here
+the free republics of Italy naturally engage his attention.--Florence,
+indeed, only to be lamented on account of losing its liberty under those
+patrons of letters, the Medicean family; the jealous Pisa, justly so
+called, in respect to its long impatience and regret under the same
+yoke; and the small Marino, which, however unrespectable with regard to
+power or extent of territory, has, at least, this distinction to boast,
+that it has preserved its liberty longer than any other state, ancient
+or modern, having, without any revolution, retained its present mode of
+government near fourteen hundred years. Moreover the patron saint who
+founded it, and from whom it takes its name, deserves this poetical
+record, as he is, perhaps, the only saint that ever contributed to the
+establishment of freedom.
+
+ "Nor e'er her former pride relate
+ To sad Liguria's bleeding state."
+
+In these lines the poet alludes to those ravages in the state of Genoa,
+occasioned by the unhappy divisions of the Guelphs and Gibelines.
+
+ "----When the favour'd of thy choice,
+ The daring archer heard thy voice."
+
+For an account of the celebrated event referred to in these verses, see
+Voltaire's Epistle to the King of Prussia.
+
+ "Those whom the rod of Alva bruised,
+ Whose crown a British queen refused!"
+
+The Flemings were so dreadfully oppressed by this sanguinary general of
+Philip the Second, that they offered their sovereignty to Elizabeth;
+but, happily for her subjects, she had policy and magnanimity enough to
+refuse it. Desormeaux, in his Abrege Chronologique de l'Histoire
+d'Espagne, thus describes the sufferings of the Flemings: "Le duc d'Albe
+achevoit de reduire les Flamands au desespoir. Apres avoir inonde les
+echafauds du sang le plus noble et le plus precieux, il faisoit
+construire des citadelles en divers endroits, et vouloit etablir
+l'Alcavala, ce tribute onereux qui avoit ete longtems en usage parmi les
+Espagnols."--_Abreg. Chron. tom. iv._
+
+ "------Mona,
+ Where thousand elfin shapes abide."
+
+Mona is properly the Roman name of the Isle of Anglesey, anciently so
+famous for its Druids; but sometimes, as in this place, it is given to
+the Isle of Man. Both these isles still retain much of the genius of
+superstition, and are now the only places where there is the least
+chance of finding a fairy.
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO A LADY,
+
+ON THE DEATH OF COLONEL ROSS, IN THE ACTION OF FONTENOY.
+
+
+The iambic kind of numbers in which this ode is conceived seems as well
+calculated for tender and plaintive subjects, as for those where
+strength or rapidity is required.--This, perhaps, is owing to the
+repetition of the strain in the same stanza; for sorrow rejects variety,
+and affects a uniformity of complaint. It is needless to observe, that
+this ode is replete with harmony, spirit, and pathos; and there surely
+appears no reason why the seventh and eighth stanzas should be omitted
+in that copy printed in Dodsley's Collection of Poems.
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO EVENING.
+
+
+The blank ode has for some time solicited admission into the English
+poetry; but its efforts, hitherto, seem to have been in vain, at least
+its reception has been no more than partial. It remains a question,
+then, whether there is not something in the nature of blank verse less
+adapted to the lyric than to the heroic measure, since, though it has
+been generally received in the latter, it is yet unadopted in the
+former. In order to discover this, we are to consider the different
+modes of these different species of poetry. That of the heroic is
+uniform; that of the lyric is various; and in these circumstances of
+uniformity and variety probably lies the cause why blank verse has been
+successful in the one, and unacceptable in the other. While it presented
+itself only in one form, it was familiarized to the ear by custom; but
+where it was obliged to assume the different shapes of the lyric muse,
+it seemed still a stranger of uncouth figure, was received rather with
+curiosity than pleasure, and entertained without that ease or
+satisfaction which acquaintance and familiarity produce.--Moreover, the
+heroic blank verse obtained a sanction of infinite importance to its
+general reception, when it was adopted by one of the greatest poets the
+world ever produced, and was made the vehicle of the noblest poem that
+ever was written. When this poem at length extorted that applause which
+ignorance and prejudice had united to withhold, the versification soon
+found its imitators, and became more generally successful than even in
+those countries from whence it was imported. But lyric blank verse had
+met with no such advantages; for Mr. Collins, whose genius and judgment
+in harmony might have given it so powerful an effect, has left us but
+one specimen of it in the Ode to Evening.
+
+In the choice of his measure he seems to have had in his eye Horace's
+Ode to Pyrrha; for this ode bears the nearest resemblance to that mixed
+kind of the asclepiad and pherecratic verse; and that resemblance in
+some degree reconciles us to the want of rhyme, while it reminds us of
+those great masters of antiquity, whose works had no need of this
+whimsical jingle of sounds.
+
+From the following passage one might be induced to think that the poet
+had it in view to render his subject and his versification suitable to
+each other on this occasion, and that, when he addressed himself to the
+sober power of Evening, he had thought proper to lay aside the foppery
+of rhyme:
+
+ "Now teach me, maid composed,
+ To breathe some soften'd strain,
+ Whose numbers, stealing through thy darkening vale,
+ May not unseemly with its stillness suit,
+ As, musing slow, I hail
+ Thy genial loved return!"
+
+But whatever were the numbers or the versification of this ode,
+the imagery and enthusiasm it contains could not fail of rendering
+it delightful. No other of Mr. Collins's odes is more generally
+characteristic of his genius. In one place we discover his passion
+for visionary beings:
+
+ "For when thy folding-star arising shows
+ His paly circlet, at his warning lamp
+ The fragrant Hours, and Elves
+ Who slept in buds the day,
+
+ And many a Nymph who wreathes her brows with sedge,
+ And sheds the freshening dew, and, lovelier still,
+ The pensive Pleasures sweet,
+ Prepare thy shadowy car."
+
+In another we behold his strong bias to melancholy:
+
+ "Then let me rove some wild and heathy scene,
+ Or find some ruin 'midst its dreary dells,
+ Whose walls more awful nod
+ By thy religious gleams."
+
+Then appears his taste for what is wildly grand and magnificent in
+nature; when, prevented by storms from enjoying his evening walk, he
+wishes for a situation,
+
+ "That from the mountain's side
+ Views wilds and swelling floods;"
+
+And through the whole, his invariable attachment to the expression of
+painting:
+
+ "----and marks o'er all
+ Thy dewy fingers draw
+ The gradual dusky veil."
+
+It might be a sufficient encomium on this beautiful ode to observe, that
+it has been particularly admired by a lady to whom nature has given the
+most perfect principles of taste. She has not even complained of the
+want of rhyme in it; a circumstance by no means unfavourable to the
+cause of lyric blank verse; for surely, if a fair reader can endure an
+ode without bells and chimes, the masculine genius may dispense with
+them.
+
+
+
+
+THE MANNERS.
+
+AN ODE.
+
+
+From the subject and sentiments of this ode, it seems not improbable
+that the author wrote it about the time when he left the university;
+when, weary with the pursuit of academical studies, he no longer
+confined himself to the search of theoretical knowledge, but commenced
+the scholar of humanity, to study nature in her works, and man in
+society.
+
+The following farewell to Science exhibits a very just as well as
+striking picture: for however exalted in theory the Platonic doctrines
+may appear, it is certain that Platonism and Pyrrhonism are nearly
+allied:
+
+ "Farewell the porch, whose roof is seen,
+ Arch'd with the enlivening olive's green:
+ Where Science, prank'd in tissued vest,
+ By Reason, Pride, and Fancy drest,
+ Comes like a bride, so trim array'd,
+ To wed with Doubt in Plato's shade!"
+
+When the mind goes in pursuit of visionary systems, it is not far
+from the regions of doubt; and the greater its capacity to think
+abstractedly, to reason and refine, the more it will be exposed to,
+and bewildered in, uncertainty.--From an enthusiastic warmth of
+temper, indeed, we may for a while be encouraged to persist in some
+favourite doctrine, or to adhere to some adopted system; but when that
+enthusiasm, which is founded on the vivacity of the passions,
+gradually cools and dies away with them, the opinions it supported
+drop from us, and we are thrown upon the inhospitable shore of
+doubt.--A striking proof of the necessity of some moral rule of wisdom
+and virtue, and some system of happiness established by unerring
+knowledge, and unlimited power.
+
+In the poet's address to Humour in this ode there is one image of
+singular beauty and propriety. The ornaments in the hair of Wit are of
+such a nature, and disposed in such a manner, as to be perfectly
+symbolical and characteristic:
+
+ "Me too amidst thy band admit,
+ There where the young-eyed healthful Wit,
+ (Whose jewels in his crisped hair
+ Are placed each other's beams to share,
+ Whom no delights from thee divide)
+ In laughter loosed, attends thy side."
+
+Nothing could be more expressive of wit, which consists in a happy
+collision of comparative and relative images, than this reciprocal
+reflection of light from the disposition of the jewels.
+
+ "O Humour, thou whose name is known
+ To Britain's favour'd isle alone."
+
+The author could only mean to apply this to the time when he wrote,
+since other nations had produced works of great humour, as he himself
+acknowledges afterwards.
+
+ "By old Miletus," &c.
+ "By all you taught the Tuscan maids," &c.
+
+The Milesian and Tuscan romances were by no means distinguished for
+humour; but as they were the models of that species of writing in which
+humour was afterwards employed, they are, probably for that reason only,
+mentioned here.
+
+
+
+
+THE PASSIONS.
+
+AN ODE FOR MUSIC.
+
+
+If the music which was composed for this ode had equal merit with the
+ode itself, it must have been the most excellent performance of the kind
+in which poetry and music have, in modern times, united. Other pieces of
+the same nature have derived their greatest reputation from the
+perfection of the music that accompanied them, having in themselves
+little more merit than that of an ordinary ballad: but in this we have
+the whole soul and power of poetry--expression that, even without the
+aid of music, strikes to the heart; and imagery of power enough to
+transport the attention, without the forceful alliance of corresponding
+sounds! what, then, must have been the effect of these united!
+
+It is very observable, that though the measure is the same, in which the
+musical efforts of Fear, Anger, and Despair are described, yet, by the
+variation of the cadence, the character and operation of each is
+strongly expressed: thus particularly of Despair:
+
+ "With woful measures wan Despair--
+ Low, sullen sounds his grief beguiled,
+ A solemn, strange, and mingled air,
+ 'Twas sad by fits, by starts 'twas wild."
+
+He must be a very unskilful composer who could not catch the power of
+imitative harmony from these lines!
+
+The picture of Hope that follows this is beautiful almost beyond
+imitation. By the united powers of imagery and harmony, that delightful
+being is exhibited with all the charms and graces that pleasure and
+fancy have appropriated to her:
+
+ Relegat, qui semel percurrit;
+ Qui nunquam legit, legat.
+
+ "But thou, O Hope, with eyes so fair,
+ What was thy delighted measure!
+ Still it whisper'd promised pleasure,
+ And bade the lovely scenes at distance hail!
+ Still would her touch the strain prolong,
+ And from the rocks, the woods, the vale,
+ She call'd on Echo still through all the song;
+ And where her sweetest theme she chose,
+ A soft responsive voice was heard at every close,
+ And Hope enchanted smiled, and waved her golden hair."
+
+In what an exalted light does the above stanza place this great master
+of poetical imagery and harmony! what varied sweetness of numbers! what
+delicacy of judgment and expression! how characteristically does Hope
+prolong her strain, repeat her soothing closes, call upon her associate
+Echo for the same purposes, and display every pleasing grace peculiar to
+her!
+
+ "And Hope enchanted smiled, and waved her golden hair."
+
+ Legat, qui nunquam legit;
+ Qui semel percurrit, relegat.
+
+The descriptions of Joy, Jealousy, and Revenge are excellent, though not
+equally so. Those of Melancholy and Cheerfulness are superior to every
+thing of the kind; and, upon the whole, there may be very little hazard
+in asserting, that this is the finest ode in the English language.
+
+
+
+
+AN EPISTLE
+
+TO SIR THOMAS HANMER, ON HIS EDITION OF SHAKESPEARE'S WORKS.
+
+
+This poem was written by our author at the university, about the time
+when Sir Thomas Hanmer's pompous edition of Shakespeare was printed at
+Oxford. If it has not so much merit as the rest of his poems, it has
+still more than the subject deserves. The versification is easy and
+genteel, and the allusions always poetical. The character of the poet
+Fletcher in particular is very justly drawn in this epistle.
+
+
+
+
+DIRGE IN CYMBELINE.
+
+ODE ON THE DEATH OF THOMSON.
+
+
+Mr. Collins had skill to complain. Of that mournful melody, and those
+tender images, which are the distinguishing excellencies of such pieces
+as bewail departed friendship, or beauty, he was an almost unequaled
+master. He knew perfectly to exhibit such circumstances, peculiar to the
+objects, as awaken the influences of pity; and while, from his own great
+sensibility, he felt what he wrote, he naturally addressed himself to
+the feelings of others.
+
+To read such lines as the following, all-beautiful and tender as they
+are, without corresponding emotions of pity, is surely impossible:
+
+ "The tender thought on thee shall dwell;
+ Each lonely scene shall thee restore,
+ For thee the tear be duly shed;
+ Beloved till life can charm no more,
+ And mourn'd till Pity's self be dead."
+
+The Ode on the Death of Thomson seems to have been written in an
+excursion to Richmond by water. The rural scenery has a proper effect in
+an ode to the memory of a poet, much of whose merit lay in descriptions
+of the same kind; and the appellations of "Druid," and "meek Nature's
+child," are happily characteristic. For the better understanding of this
+ode, it is necessary to remember, that Mr. Thomson lies buried in the
+church of Richmond.
+
+
+THE END.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber Notes
+
+Archaic and variable spelling is preserved.
+
+Author's punctuation style is preserved. Quotes in the poetry are
+sometimes repeated on every line, as in the original.
+
+Poetry line numbers regularized.
+
+Footnote 4's location is approximated.
+
+Passages in italics indicated by _underscores_.
+
+Greek transliterations are surrounded by ~tildes~.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Poetical Works of William Collins, by
+William Collins
+
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