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+<title>The Task, by William Cowper</title>
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Task, by William Cowper, Edited by Henry
+Morley
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
+other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
+to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Task
+ and Other Poems
+
+
+Author: William Cowper
+
+Editor: Henry Morley
+
+Release Date: March 29, 2015 [eBook #3698]
+[This file was first posted on July 24, 2001]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE TASK***
+</pre>
+<p>This eBook was produced by Les Bowler, St. Ives, Dorset.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/coverb.jpg">
+<img alt=
+"Book cover"
+title=
+"Book cover"
+ src="images/covers.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span
+class="GutSmall">CASSELL&rsquo;S NATIONAL LIBRARY.</span></p>
+
+<div class="gapshortline">&nbsp;</div>
+<h1><span class="smcap">The Task</span><br />
+<span class="GutSmall">AND OTHER POEMS</span></h1>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">BY</span><br
+/>
+WILLIAM COWPER.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/tpb.jpg">
+<img alt=
+"Decorative graphic"
+title=
+"Decorative graphic"
+ src="images/tps.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p style="text-align: center">CASSELL &amp; COMPANY, Limited:<br
+/>
+<span class="GutSmall"><i>LONDON</i></span><span
+class="GutSmall">, </span><span
+class="GutSmall"><i>PARIS</i></span><span class="GutSmall">,
+</span><span class="GutSmall"><i>NEW YORK &amp;
+MELBOURNE</i></span><span class="GutSmall">.</span><br />
+<span class="GutSmall">1899.</span></p>
+<h2>INTRODUCTION.</h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">After</span> the publication of his
+&ldquo;Table Talk&rdquo; and other poems in March, 1782, William
+Cowper, in his quiet retirement at Olney, under Mrs.
+Unwin&rsquo;s care, found a new friend in Lady Austen.&nbsp; She
+was a baronet&rsquo;s widow who had a sister married to a
+clergyman near Olney, with whom Cowper was slightly
+acquainted.&nbsp; In the summer of 1781, when his first volume
+was being printed, Cowper met Lady Austen and her sister in the
+street at Olney, and persuaded Mrs. Unwin to invite them to
+tea.&nbsp; Their coming was the beginning of a cordial
+friendship.&nbsp; Lady Austen, without being less earnest, had a
+liveliness that satisfied Cowper&rsquo;s sense of fun to an
+extent that stirred at last some jealousy in Mrs. Unwin.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;She had lived much in France,&rdquo; Cowper said,
+&ldquo;was very sensible, and had infinite vivacity.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Vicar of Olney was in difficulties, with his affairs in
+the hands of trustees. The duties of his office were entirely
+discharged by a curate, and the vicarage was to let.&nbsp; Lady
+Austen, in 1782, rented it, to be near her new friends.&nbsp;
+There was only a wall between the garden of the house occupied by
+Cowper and Mrs. Unwin and the vicarage garden.&nbsp; A door was
+made in the wall, and there was a close companionship of
+three.&nbsp; When Lady Austen did not spend her evenings with
+Mrs. Unwin and Cowper, Mrs. Unwin and Cowper spent their evenings
+with Lady Austen.&nbsp; They read, talked, Lady Austen played and
+sang, and they all called one another by their Christian names,
+William, Mary (Mrs. Unwin), and Anna (Lady Austen).&nbsp; In a
+poetical epistle to Lady Austen, written in December, 1781,
+Cowper closes a reference to the strength of their friendship
+with the evidence it gave,&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;That Solomon has wisely spoken,&mdash;<br
+/>
+&lsquo;A threefold cord is not soon broken.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>One evening in the summer of 1782, when Cowper was
+low-spirited, Lady Austen told him in lively fashion the story
+upon which he founded the ballad of &ldquo;John
+Gilpin.&rdquo;&nbsp; Its original hero is said to have been a Mr.
+Bayer, who had a draper&rsquo;s shop in London, at the corner of
+Cheapside.&nbsp; Cowper was so much tickled by it, that he lay
+awake part of the night rhyming and laughing, and by the next
+evening the ballad was complete.&nbsp; It was sent to Mrs.
+Unwin&rsquo;s son, who sent it to the Public Advertiser, where
+for the next two or three years it lay buried in the
+&ldquo;Poets&rsquo; Corner,&rdquo; and attracted no particular
+attention.</p>
+<p>In the summer of 1783, when one of the three friends had been
+reading blank verse aloud to the other two, Lady Austen, from her
+seat upon the sofa, urged upon Cowper, as she had urged before,
+that blank verse was to be preferred to the rhymed couplets in
+which his first book had been written, and that he should write a
+poem in blank verse.&nbsp; &ldquo;I will,&rdquo; he said,
+&ldquo;if you will give me a subject.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; she answered, &ldquo;you can write upon
+anything.&nbsp; Write on this sofa.&rdquo;&nbsp; He playfully
+accepted that as &ldquo;the task&rdquo; set him, and began his
+poem called &ldquo;The Task,&rdquo; which was finished in the
+summer of the next year, 1784.&nbsp; But before &ldquo;The
+Task&rdquo; was finished, Mrs. Unwin&rsquo;s jealousy obliged
+Cowper to give up his new friend&mdash;whom he had made a point
+of calling upon every morning at eleven&mdash;and prevent her
+return to summer quarters in the vicarage.</p>
+<p>Two miles from Olney was Weston Underwood with a park, to
+which its owner gave Cowper the use of a key.&nbsp; In 1782 a
+younger brother, John Throckmorton, came with his wife to live at
+Weston, and continued Cowper&rsquo;s privilege.&nbsp; The
+Throckmortons were Roman Catholics, but in May, 1784, Mr. Unwin
+was tempted by an invitation to see a balloon ascent from their
+park.&nbsp; Their kindness as hosts won upon Cowper; they sought
+and had his more intimate friendship, till in his correspondence
+he playfully abused the first syllable of their name and called
+them Mr. and Mrs. Frog.</p>
+<p>Cowper&rsquo;s &ldquo;Task&rdquo; went to its publisher and
+printing was begun, when suddenly &ldquo;John Gilpin,&rdquo;
+after a long sleep in the Public Advertiser, rode triumphant
+through the town.&nbsp; A favourite actor of the day was giving
+recitations at Freemason&rsquo;s Hall.&nbsp; A man of letters,
+Richard Sharp, who had read and liked &ldquo;John Gilpin,&rdquo;
+pointed out to the actor how well it would suit his
+purpose.&nbsp; The actor was John Henderson, whose Hamlet,
+Shylock, Richard III., and Falstaff were the most popular of his
+day.&nbsp; He died suddenly in 1785, at the age of thirty-eight,
+and it was thus in the last year of his life that his power of
+recitation drew &ldquo;John Gilpin&rdquo; from obscurity and made
+it the nine days&rsquo; wonder of the town.&nbsp; Pictures of
+John Gilpin abounded in all forms.&nbsp; He figured on
+pocket-handkerchiefs.&nbsp; When the publisher asked for a few
+more pages to his volume of &ldquo;The Task,&rdquo; Cowper gave
+him as makeweights an &ldquo;Epistle to Joseph Hill,&rdquo; his
+&ldquo;Tirocinium,&rdquo; and, a little doubtfully, &ldquo;John
+Gilpin.&rdquo;&nbsp; So the book was published in June, 1785; was
+sought by many because it was by the author of &ldquo;John
+Gilpin,&rdquo; and at once won recognition. The preceding volume
+had not made Cowper famous.&nbsp; &ldquo;The Task&rdquo; at once
+gave him his place among the poets.</p>
+<p>Cowper&rsquo;s &ldquo;Task&rdquo; is to this day, except
+Wordsworth&rsquo;s &ldquo;Excursion,&rdquo; the best purely
+didactic poem in the English language.&nbsp; The
+&ldquo;Sofa&rdquo; stands only as a point of departure:&mdash;it
+suits a gouty limb; but as the poet is not gouty, he is up and
+off.&nbsp; He is off for a walk with Mrs. Unwin in the country
+about Olney.&nbsp; He dwells on the rural sights and rural
+sounds, taking first the inanimate sounds, then the
+animate.&nbsp; In muddy winter weather he walks alone, finds a
+solitary cottage, and draws from it comment upon the false
+sentiment of solitude.&nbsp; He describes the walk to the park at
+Weston Underwood, the prospect from the hilltop, touches upon his
+privilege in having a key of the gate, describes the avenues of
+trees, the wilderness, the grove, and the sound of the
+thresher&rsquo;s flail then suggests to him that all live by
+energy, best ease is after toil.&nbsp; He compares the luxury of
+art with wholesomeness of Nature free to all, that brings health
+to the sick, joy to the returned seafarer.&nbsp; Spleen vexes
+votaries of artificial life.&nbsp; True gaiety is for the
+innocent.&nbsp; So thought flows on, and touches in its course
+the vital questions of a troubled time.&nbsp; &ldquo;The
+Task&rdquo; appeared four years before the outbreak of the French
+Revolution, and is in many passages not less significant of
+rising storms than the &ldquo;Excursion&rdquo; is significant of
+what came with the breaking of the clouds.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">H. M.</p>
+<h2><span class="smcap">The Task</span>.</h2>
+<h3>BOOK I.<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">THE SOFA.</span></h3>
+<p>[&ldquo;The history of the following production is briefly
+this:&mdash;A lady, fond of blank verse, demanded a poem of that
+kind from the author, and gave him the <span
+class="smcap">Sofa</span> for a subject.&nbsp; He obeyed, and
+having much leisure, connected another subject with it; and,
+pursuing the train of thought to which his situation and turn of
+mind led him, brought forth, at length, instead of the trifle
+which he at first intended, a serious affair&mdash;a
+volume.&rdquo;]</p>
+<p class="poetry">I <span class="smcap">sing</span> the
+Sofa.&nbsp; I, who lately sang<br />
+Truth, Hope, and Charity, and touched with awe<br />
+The solemn chords, and with a trembling hand,<br />
+Escaped with pain from that advent&rsquo;rous flight,<br />
+Now seek repose upon a humbler theme:<br />
+The theme though humble, yet august and proud<br />
+The occasion&mdash;for the Fair commands the song.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Time was, when clothing
+sumptuous or for use,<br />
+Save their own painted skins, our sires had none.<br />
+As yet black breeches were not; satin smooth,<br />
+Or velvet soft, or plush with shaggy pile:<br />
+The hardy chief upon the rugged rock<br />
+Washed by the sea, or on the gravelly bank<br />
+Thrown up by wintry torrents roaring loud,<br />
+Fearless of wrong, reposed his weary strength.<br />
+Those barbarous ages past, succeeded next<br />
+The birthday of invention; weak at first,<br />
+Dull in design, and clumsy to perform.<br />
+Joint-stools were then created; on three legs<br />
+Upborne they stood. Three legs upholding firm<br />
+A massy slab, in fashion square or round.<br />
+On such a stool immortal Alfred sat,<br />
+And swayed the sceptre of his infant realms;<br />
+And such in ancient halls and mansions drear<br />
+May still be seen, but perforated sore<br />
+And drilled in holes the solid oak is found,<br />
+By worms voracious eating through and through.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;At length a generation more
+refined<br />
+Improved the simple plan, made three legs four,<br />
+Gave them a twisted form vermicular,<br />
+And o&rsquo;er the seat, with plenteous wadding stuffed,<br />
+Induced a splendid cover green and blue,<br />
+Yellow and red, of tapestry richly wrought<br />
+And woven close, or needlework sublime.<br />
+There might ye see the peony spread wide,<br />
+The full-blown rose, the shepherd and his lass,<br />
+Lapdog and lambkin with black staring eyes,<br />
+And parrots with twin cherries in their beak.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Now came the cane from India,
+smooth and bright<br />
+With Nature&rsquo;s varnish; severed into stripes<br />
+That interlaced each other, these supplied,<br />
+Of texture firm, a lattice-work that braced<br />
+The new machine, and it became a chair.<br />
+But restless was the chair; the back erect<br />
+Distressed the weary loins that felt no ease;<br />
+The slippery seat betrayed the sliding part<br />
+That pressed it, and the feet hung dangling down,<br />
+Anxious in vain to find the distant floor.<br />
+These for the rich: the rest, whom fate had placed<br />
+In modest mediocrity, content<br />
+With base materials, sat on well-tanned hides<br />
+Obdurate and unyielding, glassy smooth,<br />
+With here and there a tuft of crimson yarn,<br />
+Or scarlet crewel in the cushion fixed:<br />
+If cushion might be called, what harder seemed<br />
+Than the firm oak of which the frame was formed.<br />
+No want of timber then was felt or feared<br />
+In Albion&rsquo;s happy isle.&nbsp; The lumber stood<br />
+Ponderous, and fixed by its own massy weight.<br />
+But elbows still were wanting; these, some say,<br />
+An alderman of Cripplegate contrived,<br />
+And some ascribe the invention to a priest<br />
+Burly and big, and studious of his ease.<br />
+But rude at first, and not with easy slope<br />
+Receding wide, they pressed against the ribs,<br />
+And bruised the side, and elevated high<br />
+Taught the raised shoulders to invade the ears.<br />
+Long time elapsed or e&rsquo;er our rugged sires<br />
+Complained, though incommodiously pent in,<br />
+And ill at ease behind.&nbsp; The ladies first<br />
+Gan murmur, as became the softer sex.<br />
+Ingenious fancy, never better pleased<br />
+Than when employed to accommodate the fair,<br />
+Heard the sweet moan with pity, and devised<br />
+The soft settee; one elbow at each end,<br />
+And in the midst an elbow, it received,<br />
+United yet divided, twain at once.<br />
+So sit two kings of Brentford on one throne;<br />
+And so two citizens who take the air,<br />
+Close packed and smiling in a chaise and one.<br />
+But relaxation of the languid frame<br />
+By soft recumbency of outstretched limbs,<br />
+Was bliss reserved for happier days; so slow<br />
+The growth of what is excellent, so hard<br />
+To attain perfection in this nether world.<br />
+Thus first necessity invented stools,<br />
+Convenience next suggested elbow-chairs,<br />
+And luxury the accomplished Sofa last.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The nurse sleeps sweetly,
+hired to watch the sick,<br />
+Whom snoring she disturbs.&nbsp; As sweetly he<br />
+Who quits the coach-box at the midnight hour<br />
+To sleep within the carriage more secure,<br />
+His legs depending at the open door.<br />
+Sweet sleep enjoys the curate in his desk,<br />
+The tedious rector drawling o&rsquo;er his head,<br />
+And sweet the clerk below; but neither sleep<br />
+Of lazy nurse, who snores the sick man dead,<br />
+Nor his who quits the box at midnight hour<br />
+To slumber in the carriage more secure,<br />
+Nor sleep enjoyed by curate in his desk,<br />
+Nor yet the dozings of the clerk are sweet,<br />
+Compared with the repose the Sofa yields.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Oh, may I live exempted
+(while I live<br />
+Guiltless of pampered appetite obscene)<br />
+From pangs arthritic that infest the toe<br />
+Of libertine excess.&nbsp; The Sofa suits<br />
+The gouty limb, &rsquo;tis true; but gouty limb,<br />
+Though on a Sofa, may I never feel:<br />
+For I have loved the rural walk through lanes<br />
+Of grassy swarth, close cropped by nibbling sheep,<br />
+And skirted thick with intertexture firm<br />
+Of thorny boughs: have loved the rural walk<br />
+O&rsquo;er hills, through valleys, and by river&rsquo;s brink,<br
+/>
+E&rsquo;er since a truant boy I passed my bounds<br />
+To enjoy a ramble on the banks of Thames.<br />
+And still remember, nor without regret<br />
+Of hours that sorrow since has much endeared,<br />
+How oft, my slice of pocket store consumed,<br />
+Still hungering penniless and far from home,<br />
+I fed on scarlet hips and stony haws,<br />
+Or blushing crabs, or berries that emboss<br />
+The bramble, black as jet, or sloes austere.<br />
+Hard fare! but such as boyish appetite<br />
+Disdains not, nor the palate undepraved<br />
+By culinary arts unsavoury deems.<br />
+No Sofa then awaited my return,<br />
+No Sofa then I needed.&nbsp; Youth repairs<br />
+His wasted spirits quickly, by long toil<br />
+Incurring short fatigue; and though our years,<br />
+As life declines, speed rapidly away,<br />
+And not a year but pilfers as he goes<br />
+Some youthful grace that age would gladly keep,<br />
+A tooth or auburn lock, and by degrees<br />
+Their length and colour from the locks they spare;<br />
+The elastic spring of an unwearied foot<br />
+That mounts the stile with ease, or leaps the fence,<br />
+That play of lungs inhaling and again<br />
+Respiring freely the fresh air, that makes<br />
+Swift pace or steep ascent no toil to me,<br />
+Mine have not pilfered yet; nor yet impaired<br />
+My relish of fair prospect; scenes that soothed<br />
+Or charmed me young, no longer young, I find<br />
+Still soothing and of power to charm me still.<br />
+And witness, dear companion of my walks,<br />
+Whose arm this twentieth winter I perceive<br />
+Fast locked in mine, with pleasure such as love,<br />
+Confirmed by long experience of thy worth<br />
+And well-tried virtues, could alone inspire&mdash;<br />
+Witness a joy that thou hast doubled long.<br />
+Thou know&rsquo;st my praise of Nature most sincere,<br />
+And that my raptures are not conjured up<br />
+To serve occasions of poetic pomp,<br />
+But genuine, and art partner of them all.<br />
+How oft upon yon eminence, our pace<br />
+Has slackened to a pause, and we have borne<br />
+The ruffling wind scarce conscious that it blew,<br />
+While admiration feeding at the eye,<br />
+And still unsated, dwelt upon the scene!<br />
+Thence with what pleasure have we just discerned<br />
+The distant plough slow-moving, and beside<br />
+His labouring team, that swerved not from the track,<br />
+The sturdy swain diminished to a boy!<br />
+Here Ouse, slow winding through a level plain<br />
+Of spacious meads with cattle sprinkled o&rsquo;er,<br />
+Conducts the eye along his sinuous course<br />
+Delighted.&nbsp; There, fast rooted in his bank<br />
+Stand, never overlooked, our favourite elms<br />
+That screen the herdsman&rsquo;s solitary hut;<br />
+While far beyond and overthwart the stream<br />
+That, as with molten glass, inlays the vale,<br />
+The sloping land recedes into the clouds;<br />
+Displaying on its varied side the grace<br />
+Of hedgerow beauties numberless, square tower,<br />
+Tall spire, from which the sound of cheerful bells<br />
+Just undulates upon the listening ear;<br />
+Groves, heaths, and smoking villages remote.<br />
+Scenes must be beautiful which daily viewed<br />
+Please daily, and whose novelty survives<br />
+Long knowledge and the scrutiny of years:<br />
+Praise justly due to those that I describe.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Nor rural sights alone, but
+rural sounds<br />
+Exhilarate the spirit, and restore<br />
+The tone of languid Nature.&nbsp; Mighty winds,<br />
+That sweep the skirt of some far-spreading wood<br />
+Of ancient growth, make music not unlike<br />
+The dash of ocean on his winding shore,<br />
+And lull the spirit while they fill the mind,<br />
+Unnumbered branches waving in the blast,<br />
+And all their leaves fast fluttering, all at once.<br />
+Nor less composure waits upon the roar<br />
+Of distant floods, or on the softer voice<br />
+Of neighbouring fountain, or of rills that slip<br />
+Through the cleft rock, and, chiming as they fall<br />
+Upon loose pebbles, lose themselves at length<br />
+In matted grass, that with a livelier green<br />
+Betrays the secret of their silent course.<br />
+Nature inanimate employs sweet sounds,<br />
+But animated Nature sweeter still<br />
+To soothe and satisfy the human ear.<br />
+Ten thousand warblers cheer the day, and one<br />
+The livelong night: nor these alone whose notes<br />
+Nice-fingered art must emulate in vain,<br />
+But cawing rooks, and kites that swim sublime<br />
+In still repeated circles, screaming loud,<br />
+The jay, the pie, and even the boding owl<br />
+That hails the rising moon, have charms for me.<br />
+Sounds inharmonious in themselves and harsh,<br />
+Yet heard in scenes where peace for ever reigns,<br />
+And only there, please highly for their sake.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Peace to the artist, whose
+ingenious thought<br />
+Devised the weather-house, that useful toy!<br />
+Fearless of humid air and gathering rains<br />
+Forth steps the man&mdash;an emblem of myself!<br />
+More delicate his timorous mate retires.<br />
+When Winter soaks the fields, and female feet,<br />
+Too weak to struggle with tenacious clay,<br />
+Or ford the rivulets, are best at home,<br />
+The task of new discoveries falls on me.<br />
+At such a season and with such a charge<br />
+Once went I forth, and found, till then unknown,<br />
+A cottage, whither oft we since repair:<br />
+&rsquo;Tis perched upon the green hill-top, but close<br />
+Environed with a ring of branching elms<br />
+That overhang the thatch, itself unseen<br />
+Peeps at the vale below; so thick beset<br />
+With foliage of such dark redundant growth,<br />
+I called the low-roofed lodge the <i>peasant&rsquo;s nest</i>.<br
+/>
+And hidden as it is, and far remote<br />
+From such unpleasing sounds as haunt the ear<br />
+In village or in town, the bay of curs<br />
+Incessant, clinking hammers, grinding wheels,<br />
+And infants clamorous whether pleased or pained,<br />
+Oft have I wished the peaceful covert mine.<br />
+Here, I have said, at least I should possess<br />
+The poet&rsquo;s treasure, silence, and indulge<br />
+The dreams of fancy, tranquil and secure.<br />
+Vain thought! the dweller in that still retreat<br />
+Dearly obtains the refuge it affords.<br />
+Its elevated site forbids the wretch<br />
+To drink sweet waters of the crystal well;<br />
+He dips his bowl into the weedy ditch,<br />
+And heavy-laden brings his beverage home,<br />
+Far-fetched and little worth: nor seldom waits<br />
+Dependent on the baker&rsquo;s punctual call,<br />
+To hear his creaking panniers at the door,<br />
+Angry and sad and his last crust consumed.<br />
+So farewell envy of the <i>peasant&rsquo;s nest</i>.<br />
+If solitude make scant the means of life,<br />
+Society for me!&nbsp; Thou seeming sweet,<br />
+Be still a pleasing object in my view,<br />
+My visit still, but never mine abode.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Not distant far, a length of
+colonnade<br />
+Invites us; monument of ancient taste,<br />
+Now scorned, but worthy of a better fate.<br />
+Our fathers knew the value of a screen<br />
+From sultry suns, and, in their shaded walks<br />
+And long-protracted bowers, enjoyed at noon<br />
+The gloom and coolness of declining day.<br />
+We bear our shades about us; self-deprived<br />
+Of other screen, the thin umbrella spread,<br />
+And range an Indian waste without a tree.<br />
+Thanks to Benevolus&mdash;he spares me yet<br />
+These chestnuts ranged in corresponding lines,<br />
+And, though himself so polished, still reprieves<br />
+The obsolete prolixity of shade.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Descending now (but cautious,
+lest too fast)<br />
+A sudden steep, upon a rustic bridge<br />
+We pass a gulf, in which the willows dip<br />
+Their pendent boughs, stooping as if to drink.<br />
+Hence ankle-deep in moss and flowery thyme<br />
+We mount again, and feel at every step<br />
+Our foot half sunk in hillocks green and soft,<br />
+Raised by the mole, the miner of the soil.<br />
+He, not unlike the great ones of mankind,<br />
+Disfigures earth, and plotting in the dark<br />
+Toils much to earn a monumental pile,<br />
+That may record the mischiefs he has done.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The summit gained, behold the
+proud alcove<br />
+That crowns it! yet not all its pride secures<br />
+The grand retreat from injuries impressed<br />
+By rural carvers, who with knives deface<br />
+The panels, leaving an obscure rude name<br />
+In characters uncouth, and spelt amiss.<br />
+So strong the zeal to immortalise himself<br />
+Beats in the breast of man, that even a few<br />
+Few transient years, won from the abyss abhorred<br />
+Of blank oblivion, seem a glorious prize,<br />
+And even to a clown.&nbsp; Now roves the eye,<br />
+And posted on this speculative height<br />
+Exults in its command.&nbsp; The sheepfold here<br />
+Pours out its fleecy tenants o&rsquo;er the glebe.<br />
+At first, progressive as a stream, they seek<br />
+The middle field; but scattered by degrees,<br />
+Each to his choice, soon whiten all the land.<br />
+There, from the sunburnt hay-field homeward creeps<br />
+The loaded wain; while, lightened of its charge,<br />
+The wain that meets it passes swiftly by,<br />
+The boorish driver leaning o&rsquo;er his team,<br />
+Vociferous, and impatient of delay.<br />
+Nor less attractive is the woodland scene<br />
+Diversified with trees of every growth,<br />
+Alike yet various.&nbsp; Here the gray smooth trunks<br />
+Of ash, or lime, or beech, distinctly shine,<br />
+Within the twilight of their distant shades;<br />
+There, lost behind a rising ground, the wood<br />
+Seems sunk, and shortened to its topmost boughs.<br />
+No tree in all the grove but has its charms,<br />
+Though each its hue peculiar; paler some,<br />
+And of a wannish gray; the willow such,<br />
+And poplar that with silver lines his leaf,<br />
+And ash far-stretching his umbrageous arm;<br />
+Of deeper green the elm; and deeper still,<br />
+Lord of the woods, the long-surviving oak.<br />
+Some glossy-leaved and shining in the sun,<br />
+The maple, and the beech of oily nuts<br />
+Prolific, and the lime at dewy eve<br />
+Diffusing odours; nor unnoted pass<br />
+The sycamore, capricious in attire,<br />
+Now green, now tawny, and ere autumn yet<br />
+Have changed the woods, in scarlet honours bright.<br />
+O&rsquo;er these, but far beyond (a spacious map<br />
+Of hill and valley interposed between),<br />
+The Ouse, dividing the well-watered land,<br />
+Now glitters in the sun, and now retires,<br />
+As bashful, yet impatient to be seen.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Hence the declivity is sharp
+and short,<br />
+And such the re-ascent; between them weeps<br />
+A little Naiad her impoverished urn,<br />
+All summer long, which winter fills again.<br />
+The folded gates would bar my progress now,<br />
+But that the lord of this enclosed demesne,<br />
+Communicative of the good he owns,<br />
+Admits me to a share: the guiltless eye<br />
+Commits no wrong, nor wastes what it enjoys.<br />
+Refreshing change! where now the blazing sun?<br />
+By short transition we have lost his glare,<br />
+And stepped at once into a cooler clime.<br />
+Ye fallen avenues! once more I mourn<br />
+Your fate unmerited, once more rejoice<br />
+That yet a remnant of your race survives.<br />
+How airy and how light the graceful arch,<br />
+Yet awful as the consecrated roof<br />
+Re-echoing pious anthems! while beneath,<br />
+The chequered earth seems restless as a flood<br />
+Brushed by the wind.&nbsp; So sportive is the light<br />
+Shot through the boughs, it dances as they dance,<br />
+Shadow and sunshine intermingling quick,<br />
+And darkening and enlightening, as the leaves<br />
+Play wanton, every moment, every spot.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And now, with nerves
+new-braced and spirits cheered,<br />
+We tread the wilderness, whose well-rolled walks,<br />
+With curvature of slow and easy sweep&mdash;<br />
+Deception innocent&mdash;give ample space<br />
+To narrow bounds.&nbsp; The grove receives us next;<br />
+Between the upright shafts of whose tall elms<br />
+We may discern the thresher at his task.<br />
+Thump after thump resounds the constant flail,<br />
+That seems to swing uncertain and yet falls<br />
+Full on the destined ear.&nbsp; Wide flies the chaff,<br />
+The rustling straw sends up a frequent mist<br />
+Of atoms, sparkling in the noonday beam.<br />
+Come hither, ye that press your beds of down<br />
+And sleep not: see him sweating o&rsquo;er his bread<br />
+Before he eats it.&mdash;&rsquo;Tis the primal curse,<br />
+But softened into mercy; made the pledge<br />
+Of cheerful days, and nights without a groan.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;By ceaseless action, all that
+is subsists.<br />
+Constant rotation of the unwearied wheel<br />
+That Nature rides upon, maintains her health,<br />
+Her beauty, her fertility.&nbsp; She dreads<br />
+An instant&rsquo;s pause, and lives but while she moves.<br />
+Its own revolvency upholds the world.<br />
+Winds from all quarters agitate the air,<br />
+And fit the limpid element for use,<br />
+Else noxious: oceans, rivers, lakes, and streams<br />
+All feel the freshening impulse, and are cleansed<br />
+By restless undulation: even the oak<br />
+Thrives by the rude concussion of the storm:<br />
+He seems indeed indignant, and to feel<br />
+The impression of the blast with proud disdain,<br />
+Frowning as if in his unconscious arm<br />
+He held the thunder.&nbsp; But the monarch owes<br />
+His firm stability to what he scorns,<br />
+More fixed below, the more disturbed above.<br />
+The law, by which all creatures else are bound,<br />
+Binds man the lord of all.&nbsp; Himself derives<br />
+No mean advantage from a kindred cause,<br />
+From strenuous toil his hours of sweetest ease.<br />
+The sedentary stretch their lazy length<br />
+When custom bids, but no refreshment find,<br />
+For none they need: the languid eye, the cheek<br />
+Deserted of its bloom, the flaccid, shrunk,<br />
+And withered muscle, and the vapid soul,<br />
+Reproach their owner with that love of rest<br />
+To which he forfeits even the rest he loves.<br />
+Not such the alert and active.&nbsp; Measure life<br />
+By its true worth, the comforts it affords,<br />
+And theirs alone seems worthy of the name<br />
+Good health, and, its associate in the most,<br />
+Good temper; spirits prompt to undertake,<br />
+And not soon spent, though in an arduous task;<br />
+The powers of fancy and strong thought are theirs;<br />
+Even age itself seems privileged in them<br />
+With clear exemption from its own defects.<br />
+A sparkling eye beneath a wrinkled front<br />
+The veteran shows, and gracing a gray beard<br />
+With youthful smiles, descends towards the grave<br />
+Sprightly, and old almost without decay.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Like a coy maiden, Ease, when
+courted most,<br />
+Farthest retires&mdash;an idol, at whose shrine<br />
+Who oftenest sacrifice are favoured least.<br />
+The love of Nature and the scene she draws<br />
+Is Nature&rsquo;s dictate.&nbsp; Strange, there should be
+found<br />
+Who, self-imprisoned in their proud saloons,<br />
+Renounce the odours of the open field<br />
+For the unscented fictions of the loom;<br />
+Who, satisfied with only pencilled scenes,<br />
+Prefer to the performance of a God<br />
+The inferior wonders of an artist&rsquo;s hand.<br />
+Lovely indeed the mimic works of Art,<br />
+But Nature&rsquo;s works far lovelier.&nbsp; I admire,<br />
+None more admires, the painter&rsquo;s magic skill,<br />
+Who shows me that which I shall never see,<br />
+Conveys a distant country into mine,<br />
+And throws Italian light on English walls.<br />
+But imitative strokes can do no more<br />
+Than please the eye, sweet Nature every sense.<br />
+The air salubrious of her lofty hills,<br />
+The cheering fragrance of her dewy vales,<br />
+And music of her woods&mdash;no works of man<br />
+May rival these; these all bespeak a power<br />
+Peculiar, and exclusively her own.<br />
+Beneath the open sky she spreads the feast;<br />
+&rsquo;Tis free to all&mdash;&rsquo;tis ev&rsquo;ry day
+renewed,<br />
+Who scorns it, starves deservedly at home.<br />
+He does not scorn it, who, imprisoned long<br />
+In some unwholesome dungeon, and a prey<br />
+To sallow sickness, which the vapours dank<br />
+And clammy of his dark abode have bred<br />
+Escapes at last to liberty and light;<br />
+His cheek recovers soon its healthful hue,<br />
+His eye relumines its extinguished fires,<br />
+He walks, he leaps, he runs&mdash;is winged with joy,<br />
+And riots in the sweets of every breeze.<br />
+He does not scorn it, who has long endured<br />
+A fever&rsquo;s agonies, and fed on drugs.<br />
+Nor yet the mariner, his blood inflamed<br />
+With acrid salts; his very heart athirst<br />
+To gaze at Nature in her green array.<br />
+Upon the ship&rsquo;s tall side he stands, possessed<br />
+With visions prompted by intense desire;<br />
+Fair fields appear below, such as he left<br />
+Far distant, such as he would die to find&mdash;<br />
+He seeks them headlong, and is seen no more.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The spleen is seldom felt
+where Flora reigns;<br />
+The lowering eye, the petulance, the frown,<br />
+And sullen sadness that o&rsquo;ershade, distort,<br />
+And mar the face of beauty, when no cause<br />
+For such immeasurable woe appears,<br />
+These Flora banishes, and gives the fair<br />
+Sweet smiles, and bloom less transient than her own.<br />
+It is the constant revolution, stale<br />
+And tasteless, of the same repeated joys<br />
+That palls and satiates, and makes languid life<br />
+A pedlar&rsquo;s pack that bows the bearer down.<br />
+Health suffers, and the spirits ebb; the heart<br />
+Recoils from its own choice&mdash;at the full feast<br />
+Is famished&mdash;finds no music in the song,<br />
+No smartness in the jest, and wonders why.<br />
+Yet thousands still desire to journey on,<br />
+Though halt and weary of the path they tread.<br />
+The paralytic, who can hold her cards<br />
+But cannot play them, borrows a friend&rsquo;s hand<br />
+To deal and shuffle, to divide and sort<br />
+Her mingled suits and sequences, and sits<br />
+Spectatress both and spectacle, a sad<br />
+And silent cipher, while her proxy plays.<br />
+Others are dragged into the crowded room<br />
+Between supporters; and once seated, sit<br />
+Through downright inability to rise,<br />
+Till the stout bearers lift the corpse again.<br />
+These speak a loud memento.&nbsp; Yet even these<br />
+Themselves love life, and cling to it as he,<br />
+That overhangs a torrent, to a twig.<br />
+They love it, and yet loathe it; fear to die,<br />
+Yet scorn the purposes for which they live.<br />
+Then wherefore not renounce them?&nbsp; No&mdash;the dread,<br />
+The slavish dread of solitude, that breeds<br />
+Reflection and remorse, the fear of shame,<br />
+And their inveterate habits, all forbid.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Whom call we gay?&nbsp; That
+honour has been long<br />
+The boast of mere pretenders to the name.<br />
+The innocent are gay&mdash;the lark is gay,<br />
+That dries his feathers saturate with dew<br />
+Beneath the rosy cloud, while yet the beams<br />
+Of day-spring overshoot his humble nest.<br />
+The peasant too, a witness of his song,<br />
+Himself a songster, is as gay as he.<br />
+But save me from the gaiety of those<br />
+Whose headaches nail them to a noonday bed;<br />
+And save me, too, from theirs whose haggard eyes<br />
+Flash desperation, and betray their pangs<br />
+For property stripped off by cruel chance;<br />
+From gaiety that fills the bones with pain,<br />
+The mouth with blasphemy, the heart with woe.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The earth was made so
+various, that the mind<br />
+Of desultory man, studious of change,<br />
+And pleased with novelty, might be indulged.<br />
+Prospects however lovely may be seen<br />
+Till half their beauties fade; the weary sight,<br />
+Too well acquainted with their smiles, slides off<br />
+Fastidious, seeking less familiar scenes.<br />
+Then snug enclosures in the sheltered vale,<br />
+Where frequent hedges intercept the eye,<br />
+Delight us, happy to renounce a while,<br />
+Not senseless of its charms, what still we love,<br />
+That such short absence may endear it more.<br />
+Then forests, or the savage rock may please,<br />
+That hides the sea-mew in his hollow clefts<br />
+Above the reach of man: his hoary head<br />
+Conspicuous many a league, the mariner,<br />
+Bound homeward, and in hope already there,<br />
+Greets with three cheers exulting.&nbsp; At his waist<br />
+A girdle of half-withered shrubs he shows,<br />
+And at his feet the baffled billows die.<br />
+The common overgrown with fern, and rough<br />
+With prickly gorse, that, shapeless and deformed<br />
+And dangerous to the touch, has yet its bloom,<br />
+And decks itself with ornaments of gold,<br />
+Yields no unpleasing ramble; there the turf<br />
+Smells fresh, and, rich in odoriferous herbs<br />
+And fungous fruits of earth, regales the sense<br />
+With luxury of unexpected sweets.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;There often wanders one, whom
+better days<br />
+Saw better clad, in cloak of satin trimmed<br />
+With lace, and hat with splendid ribbon bound.<br />
+A serving-maid was she, and fell in love<br />
+With one who left her, went to sea and died.<br />
+Her fancy followed him through foaming waves<br />
+To distant shores, and she would sit and weep<br />
+At what a sailor suffers; fancy too,<br />
+Delusive most where warmest wishes are,<br />
+Would oft anticipate his glad return,<br />
+And dream of transports she was not to know.<br />
+She heard the doleful tidings of his death,<br />
+And never smiled again.&nbsp; And now she roams<br />
+The dreary waste; there spends the livelong day,<br />
+And there, unless when charity forbids,<br />
+The livelong night.&nbsp; A tattered apron hides,<br />
+Worn as a cloak, and hardly hides, a gown<br />
+More tattered still; and both but ill conceal<br />
+A bosom heaved with never-ceasing sighs.<br />
+She begs an idle pin of all she meets,<br />
+And hoards them in her sleeve; but needful food,<br />
+Though pressed with hunger oft, or comelier clothes,<br />
+Though pinched with cold, asks never.&mdash;Kate is crazed!</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I see a column of slow-rising
+smoke<br />
+O&rsquo;ertop the lofty wood that skirts the wild.<br />
+A vagabond and useless tribe there eat<br />
+Their miserable meal.&nbsp; A kettle slung<br />
+Between two poles upon a stick transverse,<br />
+Receives the morsel; flesh obscene of dog,<br />
+Or vermin, or, at best, of cock purloined<br />
+From his accustomed perch.&nbsp; Hard-faring race!<br />
+They pick their fuel out of every hedge,<br />
+Which, kindled with dry leaves, just saves unquenched<br />
+The spark of life.&nbsp; The sportive wind blows wide<br />
+Their fluttering rags, and shows a tawny skin,<br />
+The vellum of the pedigree they claim.<br />
+Great skill have they in palmistry, and more<br />
+To conjure clean away the gold they touch,<br />
+Conveying worthless dross into its place;<br />
+Loud when they beg, dumb only when they steal.<br />
+Strange! that a creature rational, and cast<br />
+In human mould, should brutalise by choice<br />
+His nature, and, though capable of arts<br />
+By which the world might profit and himself,<br />
+Self-banished from society, prefer<br />
+Such squalid sloth to honourable toil.<br />
+Yet even these, though feigning sickness oft<br />
+They swathe the forehead, drag the limping limb,<br />
+And vex their flesh with artificial sores,<br />
+Can change their whine into a mirthful note<br />
+When safe occasion offers, and with dance,<br />
+And music of the bladder and the bag,<br />
+Beguile their woes, and make the woods resound.<br />
+Such health and gaiety of heart enjoy<br />
+The houseless rovers of the sylvan world;<br />
+And breathing wholesome air, and wandering much,<br />
+Need other physic none to heal the effects<br />
+Of loathsome diet, penury, and cold.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Blest he, though
+undistinguished from the crowd<br />
+By wealth or dignity, who dwells secure<br />
+Where man, by nature fierce, has laid aside<br />
+His fierceness, having learnt, though slow to learn<br />
+The manners and the arts of civil life.<br />
+His wants, indeed, are many; but supply<br />
+Is obvious; placed within the easy reach<br />
+Of temperate wishes and industrious hands.<br />
+Here virtue thrives as in her proper soil;<br />
+Not rude and surly, and beset with thorns,<br />
+And terrible to sight, as when she springs<br />
+(If e&rsquo;er she spring spontaneous) in remote<br />
+And barbarous climes, where violence prevails,<br />
+And strength is lord of all; but gentle, kind,<br />
+By culture tamed, by liberty refreshed,<br />
+And all her fruits by radiant truth matured.<br />
+War and the chase engross the savage whole;<br />
+War followed for revenge, or to supplant<br />
+The envied tenants of some happier spot;<br />
+The chase for sustenance, precarious trust!<br />
+His hard condition with severe constraint<br />
+Binds all his faculties, forbids all growth<br />
+Of wisdom, proves a school in which he learns<br />
+Sly circumvention, unrelenting hate,<br />
+Mean self-attachment, and scarce aught beside.<br />
+Thus fare the shivering natives of the north,<br />
+And thus the rangers of the western world,<br />
+Where it advances far into the deep,<br />
+Towards the Antarctic.&nbsp; Even the favoured isles<br />
+So lately found, although the constant sun<br />
+Cheer all their seasons with a grateful smile,<br />
+Can boast but little virtue; and inert<br />
+Through plenty, lose in morals what they gain<br />
+In manners, victims of luxurious ease.<br />
+These therefore I can pity, placed remote<br />
+From all that science traces, art invents,<br />
+Or inspiration teaches; and enclosed<br />
+In boundless oceans, never to be passed<br />
+By navigators uninformed as they,<br />
+Or ploughed perhaps by British bark again.<br />
+But far beyond the rest, and with most cause,<br />
+Thee, gentle savage! whom no love of thee<br />
+Or thine, but curiosity perhaps,<br />
+Or else vain-glory, prompted us to draw<br />
+Forth from thy native bowers, to show thee here<br />
+With what superior skill we can abuse<br />
+The gifts of Providence, and squander life.<br />
+The dream is past.&nbsp; And thou hast found again<br />
+Thy cocoas and bananas, palms, and yams,<br />
+And homestall thatched with leaves.&nbsp; But hast thou found<br
+/>
+Their former charms?&nbsp; And, having seen our state,<br />
+Our palaces, our ladies, and our pomp<br />
+Of equipage, our gardens, and our sports,<br />
+And heard our music; are thy simple friends,<br />
+Thy simple fare, and all thy plain delights<br />
+As dear to thee as once?&nbsp; And have thy joys<br />
+Lost nothing by comparison with ours?<br />
+Rude as thou art (for we returned thee rude<br />
+And ignorant, except of outward show),<br />
+I cannot think thee yet so dull of heart<br />
+And spiritless, as never to regret<br />
+Sweets tasted here, and left as soon as known.<br />
+Methinks I see thee straying on the beach,<br />
+And asking of the surge that bathes the foot<br />
+If ever it has washed our distant shore.<br />
+I see thee weep, and thine are honest tears,<br />
+A patriot&rsquo;s for his country.&nbsp; Thou art sad<br />
+At thought of her forlorn and abject state,<br />
+From which no power of thine can raise her up.<br />
+Thus fancy paints thee, and, though apt to err,<br />
+Perhaps errs little when she paints thee thus.<br />
+She tells me too that duly every morn<br />
+Thou climb&rsquo;st the mountain-top, with eager eye<br />
+Exploring far and wide the watery waste,<br />
+For sight of ship from England.&nbsp; Every speck<br />
+Seen in the dim horizon turns thee pale<br />
+With conflict of contending hopes and fears.<br />
+But comes at last the dull and dusky eve,<br />
+And sends thee to thy cabin, well prepared<br />
+To dream all night of what the day denied.<br />
+Alas, expect it not.&nbsp; We found no bait<br />
+To tempt us in thy country.&nbsp; Doing good,<br />
+Disinterested good, is not our trade.<br />
+We travel far, &rsquo;tis true, but not for naught;<br />
+And must be bribed to compass earth again<br />
+By other hopes, and richer fruits than yours.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But though true worth and
+virtue, in the mild<br />
+And genial soil of cultivated life<br />
+Thrive most, and may perhaps thrive only there,<br />
+Yet not in cities oft.&nbsp; In proud and gay<br />
+And gain-devoted cities, thither flow,<br />
+As to a common and most noisome sewer,<br />
+The dregs and feculence of every land.<br />
+In cities, foul example on most minds<br />
+Begets its likeness.&nbsp; Rank abundance breeds<br />
+In gross and pampered cities sloth and lust,<br />
+And wantonness and gluttonous excess.<br />
+In cities, vice is hidden with most ease,<br />
+Or seen with least reproach; and virtue, taught<br />
+By frequent lapse, can hope no triumph there,<br />
+Beyond the achievement of successful flight.<br />
+I do confess them nurseries of the arts,<br />
+In which they flourish most; where, in the beams<br />
+Of warm encouragement, and in the eye<br />
+Of public note, they reach their perfect size.<br />
+Such London is, by taste and wealth proclaimed<br />
+The fairest capital in all the world,<br />
+By riot and incontinence the worst.<br />
+There, touched by Reynolds, a dull blank becomes<br />
+A lucid mirror, in which nature sees<br />
+All her reflected features.&nbsp; Bacon there<br />
+Gives more than female beauty to a stone,<br />
+And Chatham&rsquo;s eloquence to marble lips.<br />
+Nor does the chisel occupy alone<br />
+The powers of sculpture, but the style as much;<br />
+Each province of her art her equal care.<br />
+With nice incision of her guided steel<br />
+She ploughs a brazen field, and clothes a soil<br />
+So sterile with what charms soe&rsquo;er she will,<br />
+The richest scenery and the loveliest forms.<br />
+Where finds philosophy her eagle eye,<br />
+With which she gazes at yon burning disk<br />
+Undazzled, and detects and counts his spots?<br />
+In London.&nbsp; Where her implements exact,<br />
+With which she calculates, computes, and scans<br />
+All distance, motion, magnitude, and now<br />
+Measures an atom, and now girds a world?<br />
+In London.&nbsp; Where has commerce such a mart,<br />
+So rich, so thronged, so drained, and so supplied,<br />
+As London, opulent, enlarged, and still<br />
+Increasing London?&nbsp; Babylon of old<br />
+Not more the glory of the earth, than she<br />
+A more accomplished world&rsquo;s chief glory now.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;She has her praise.&nbsp; Now
+mark a spot or two<br />
+That so much beauty would do well to purge;<br />
+And show this queen of cities, that so fair<br />
+May yet be foul; so witty, yet not wise.<br />
+It is not seemly, nor of good report,<br />
+That she is slack in discipline; more prompt<br />
+To avenge than to prevent the breach of law:<br />
+That she is rigid in denouncing death<br />
+On petty robbers, and indulges life<br />
+And liberty, and ofttimes honour too,<br />
+To peculators of the public gold:<br />
+That thieves at home must hang; but he, that puts<br />
+Into his overgorged and bloated purse<br />
+The wealth of Indian provinces, escapes.<br />
+Nor is it well, nor can it come to good,<br />
+That through profane and infidel contempt<br />
+Of holy writ, she has presumed to annul<br />
+And abrogate, as roundly as she may,<br />
+The total ordinance and will of God;<br />
+Advancing fashion to the post of truth,<br />
+And centring all authority in modes<br />
+And customs of her own, till Sabbath rites<br />
+Have dwindled into unrespected forms,<br />
+And knees and hassocks are wellnigh divorced.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;God made the country, and man
+made the town.<br />
+What wonder, then, that health and virtue, gifts<br />
+That can alone make sweet the bitter draught<br />
+That life holds out to all, should most abound<br />
+And least be threatened in the fields and groves?<br />
+Possess ye therefore, ye who, borne about<br />
+In chariots and sedans, know no fatigue<br />
+But that of idleness, and taste no scenes<br />
+But such as art contrives, possess ye still<br />
+Your element; there only ye can shine,<br />
+There only minds like yours can do no harm.<br />
+Our groves were planted to console at noon<br />
+The pensive wanderer in their shades.&nbsp; At eve<br />
+The moonbeam, sliding softly in between<br />
+The sleeping leaves, is all the light they wish,<br />
+Birds warbling all the music.&nbsp; We can spare<br />
+The splendour of your lamps, they but eclipse<br />
+Our softer satellite.&nbsp; Your songs confound<br />
+Our more harmonious notes.&nbsp; The thrush departs<br />
+Scared, and the offended nightingale is mute.<br />
+There is a public mischief in your mirth;<br />
+It plagues your country.&nbsp; Folly such as yours,<br />
+Graced with a sword, and worthier of a fan,<br />
+Has made, which enemies could ne&rsquo;er have done,<br />
+Our arch of empire, steadfast but for you,<br />
+A mutilated structure, soon to fall.</p>
+<h3>BOOK II.<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">THE TIMEPIECE.</span></h3>
+<p class="poetry"><span class="smcap">Oh</span> for a lodge in
+some vast wilderness,<br />
+Some boundless contiguity of shade,<br />
+Where rumour of oppression and deceit,<br />
+Of unsuccessful or successful war,<br />
+Might never reach me more!&nbsp; My ear is pained,<br />
+My soul is sick with every day&rsquo;s report<br />
+Of wrong and outrage with which earth is filled.<br />
+There is no flesh in man&rsquo;s obdurate heart,<br />
+It does not feel for man.&nbsp; The natural bond<br />
+Of brotherhood is severed as the flax<br />
+That falls asunder at the touch of fire.<br />
+He finds his fellow guilty of a skin<br />
+Not coloured like his own, and having power<br />
+To enforce the wrong, for such a worthy cause<br />
+Dooms and devotes him as his lawful prey.<br />
+Lands intersected by a narrow frith<br />
+Abhor each other.&nbsp; Mountains interposed<br />
+Make enemies of nations, who had else<br />
+Like kindred drops been mingled into one.<br />
+Thus man devotes his brother, and destroys;<br />
+And worse than all, and most to be deplored,<br />
+As human nature&rsquo;s broadest, foulest blot,<br />
+Chains him, and tasks him, and exacts his sweat<br />
+With stripes, that mercy, with a bleeding heart,<br />
+Weeps when she sees inflicted on a beast.<br />
+Then what is man?&nbsp; And what man, seeing this,<br />
+And having human feelings, does not blush<br />
+And hang his head, to think himself a man?<br />
+I would not have a slave to till my ground,<br />
+To carry me, to fan me while I sleep,<br />
+And tremble when I wake, for all the wealth<br />
+That sinews bought and sold have ever earned.<br />
+No: dear as freedom is, and in my heart&rsquo;s<br />
+Just estimation prized above all price,<br />
+I had much rather be myself the slave<br />
+And wear the bonds, than fasten them on him.<br />
+We have no slaves at home&mdash;then why abroad?<br />
+And they themselves, once ferried o&rsquo;er the wave<br />
+That parts us, are emancipate and loosed.<br />
+Slaves cannot breathe in England; if their lungs<br />
+Receive our air, that moment they are free,<br />
+They touch our country and their shackles fall.<br />
+That&rsquo;s noble, and bespeaks a nation proud<br />
+And jealous of the blessing.&nbsp; Spread it then,<br />
+And let it circulate through every vein<br />
+Of all your empire; that where Britain&rsquo;s power<br />
+Is felt, mankind may feel her mercy too.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sure there is need of social
+intercourse,<br />
+Benevolence and peace and mutual aid,<br />
+Between the nations, in a world that seems<br />
+To toll the death-bell to its own decease;<br />
+And by the voice of all its elements<br />
+To preach the general doom.&nbsp; When were the winds<br />
+Let slip with such a warrant to destroy?<br />
+When did the waves so haughtily o&rsquo;erleap<br />
+Their ancient barriers, deluging the dry?<br />
+Fires from beneath and meteors from above,<br />
+Portentous, unexampled, unexplained,<br />
+Have kindled beacons in the skies, and the old<br />
+And crazy earth has had her shaking fits<br />
+More frequent, and foregone her usual rest.<br />
+Is it a time to wrangle, when the props<br />
+And pillars of our planet seem to fail,<br />
+And nature with a dim and sickly eye<br />
+To wait the close of all?&nbsp; But grant her end<br />
+More distant, and that prophecy demands<br />
+A longer respite, unaccomplished yet;<br />
+Still they are frowning signals, and bespeak<br />
+Displeasure in His breast who smites the earth<br />
+Or heals it, makes it languish or rejoice.<br />
+And &rsquo;tis but seemly, that, where all deserve<br />
+And stand exposed by common peccancy<br />
+To what no few have felt, there should be peace,<br />
+And brethren in calamity should love.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Alas for Sicily, rude
+fragments now<br />
+Lie scattered where the shapely column stood.<br />
+Her palaces are dust.&nbsp; In all her streets<br />
+The voice of singing and the sprightly chord<br />
+Are silent.&nbsp; Revelry and dance and show<br />
+Suffer a syncope and solemn pause,<br />
+While God performs, upon the trembling stage<br />
+Of His own works, His dreadful part alone.<br />
+How does the earth receive Him?&mdash;With what signs<br />
+Of gratulation and delight, her King?<br />
+Pours she not all her choicest fruits abroad,<br />
+Her sweetest flowers, her aromatic gums,<br />
+Disclosing paradise where&rsquo;er He treads?<br />
+She quakes at His approach.&nbsp; Her hollow womb,<br />
+Conceiving thunders, through a thousand deeps<br />
+And fiery caverns roars beneath His foot.<br />
+The hills move lightly and the mountains smoke,<br />
+For He has touched them.&nbsp; From the extremest point<br />
+Of elevation down into the abyss,<br />
+His wrath is busy and His frown is felt.<br />
+The rocks fall headlong and the valleys rise,<br />
+The rivers die into offensive pools,<br />
+And, charged with putrid verdure, breathe a gross<br />
+And mortal nuisance into all the air.<br />
+What solid was, by transformation strange<br />
+Grows fluid, and the fixed and rooted earth<br />
+Tormented into billows, heaves and swells,<br />
+Or with vortiginous and hideous whirl<br />
+Sucks down its prey insatiable.&nbsp; Immense<br />
+The tumult and the overthrow, the pangs<br />
+And agonies of human and of brute<br />
+Multitudes, fugitive on every side,<br />
+And fugitive in vain.&nbsp; The sylvan scene<br />
+Migrates uplifted, and, with all its soil<br />
+Alighting in far-distant fields, finds out<br />
+A new possessor, and survives the change.<br />
+Ocean has caught the frenzy, and upwrought<br />
+To an enormous and o&rsquo;erbearing height,<br />
+Not by a mighty wind, but by that voice<br />
+Which winds and waves obey, invades the shore<br />
+Resistless.&nbsp; Never such a sudden flood,<br />
+Upridged so high, and sent on such a charge,<br />
+Possessed an inland scene.&nbsp; Where now the throng<br />
+That pressed the beach and hasty to depart<br />
+Looked to the sea for safety?&nbsp; They are gone,<br />
+Gone with the refluent wave into the deep,<br />
+A prince with half his people.&nbsp; Ancient towers,<br />
+And roofs embattled high, the gloomy scenes<br />
+Where beauty oft and lettered worth consume<br />
+Life in the unproductive shades of death,<br />
+Fall prone: the pale inhabitants come forth,<br />
+And, happy in their unforeseen release<br />
+From all the rigours of restraint, enjoy<br />
+The terrors of the day that sets them free.<br />
+Who then, that has thee, would not hold thee fast,<br />
+Freedom! whom they that lose thee so regret,<br />
+That even a judgment, making way for thee,<br />
+Seems in their eyes a mercy, for thy sake.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Such evil sin hath wrought;
+and such a flame<br />
+Kindled in heaven, that it burns down to earth,<br />
+And, in the furious inquest that it makes<br />
+On God&rsquo;s behalf, lays waste His fairest works.<br />
+The very elements, though each be meant<br />
+The minister of man to serve his wants,<br />
+Conspire against him.&nbsp; With his breath he draws<br />
+A plague into his blood; and cannot use<br />
+Life&rsquo;s necessary means, but he must die.<br />
+Storms rise to o&rsquo;erwhelm him: or, if stormy winds<br />
+Rise not, the waters of the deep shall rise,<br />
+And, needing none assistance of the storm,<br />
+Shall roll themselves ashore, and reach him there.<br />
+The earth shall shake him out of all his holds,<br />
+Or make his house his grave; nor so content,<br />
+Shall counterfeit the motions of the flood,<br />
+And drown him in her dry and dusty gulfs.<br />
+What then&mdash;were they the wicked above all,<br />
+And we the righteous, whose fast-anchored isle<br />
+Moved not, while theirs was rocked like a light skiff,<br />
+The sport of every wave?&nbsp; No: none are clear,<br />
+And none than we more guilty.&nbsp; But where all<br />
+Stand chargeable with guilt, and to the shafts<br />
+Of wrath obnoxious, God may choose His mark,<br />
+May punish, if He please, the less, to warn<br />
+The more malignant.&nbsp; If He spared not them,<br />
+Tremble and be amazed at thine escape,<br />
+Far guiltier England, lest He spare not thee!</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Happy the man who sees a God
+employed<br />
+In all the good and ill that chequer life!<br />
+Resolving all events, with their effects<br />
+And manifold results, into the will<br />
+And arbitration wise of the Supreme.<br />
+Did not His eye rule all things, and intend<br />
+The least of our concerns (since from the least<br />
+The greatest oft originate), could chance<br />
+Find place in His dominion, or dispose<br />
+One lawless particle to thwart His plan,<br />
+Then God might be surprised, and unforeseen<br />
+Contingence might alarm Him, and disturb<br />
+The smooth and equal course of His affairs.<br />
+This truth, philosophy, though eagle-eyed<br />
+In nature&rsquo;s tendencies, oft overlooks;<br />
+And, having found His instrument, forgets<br />
+Or disregards, or, more presumptuous still,<br />
+Denies the power that wields it.&nbsp; God proclaims<br />
+His hot displeasure against foolish men<br />
+That live an Atheist life: involves the heaven<br />
+In tempests, quits His grasp upon the winds<br />
+And gives them all their fury; bids a plague<br />
+Kindle a fiery boil upon the skin,<br />
+And putrefy the breath of blooming health.<br />
+He calls for Famine, and the meagre fiend<br />
+Blows mildew from between his shrivelled lips,<br />
+And taints the golden ear.&nbsp; He springs His mines,<br />
+And desolates a nation at a blast.<br />
+Forth steps the spruce philosopher, and tells<br />
+Of homogeneal and discordant springs<br />
+And principles; of causes how they work<br />
+By necessary laws their sure effects;<br />
+Of action and reaction.&nbsp; He has found<br />
+The source of the disease that nature feels,<br />
+And bids the world take heart and banish fear.<br />
+Thou fool! will thy discovery of the cause<br />
+Suspend the effect, or heal it?&nbsp; Has not God<br />
+Still wrought by means since first He made the world,<br />
+And did He not of old employ His means<br />
+To drown it?&nbsp; What is His creation less<br />
+Than a capacious reservoir of means<br />
+Formed for His use, and ready at His will?<br />
+Go, dress thine eyes with eye-salve, ask of Him,<br />
+Or ask of whomsoever He has taught,<br />
+And learn, though late, the genuine cause of all.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;England, with all thy faults,
+I love thee still&mdash;<br />
+My country! and while yet a nook is left,<br />
+Where English minds and manners may be found,<br />
+Shall be constrained to love thee.&nbsp; Though thy clime<br />
+Be fickle, and thy year most part deformed<br />
+With dripping rains, or withered by a frost,<br />
+I would not yet exchange thy sullen skies<br />
+And fields without a flower, for warmer France<br />
+With all her vines; nor for Ausonia&rsquo;s groves<br />
+Of golden fruitage, and her myrtle bowers.<br />
+To shake thy senate, and from heights sublime<br />
+Of patriot eloquence to flash down fire<br />
+Upon thy foes, was never meant my task;<br />
+But I can feel thy fortune, and partake<br />
+Thy joys and sorrows with as true a heart<br />
+As any thunderer there.&nbsp; And I can feel<br />
+Thy follies too, and with a just disdain<br />
+Frown at effeminates, whose very looks<br />
+Reflect dishonour on the land I love.<br />
+How, in the name of soldiership and sense,<br />
+Should England prosper, when such things, as smooth<br />
+And tender as a girl, all essenced o&rsquo;er<br />
+With odours, and as profligate as sweet,<br />
+Who sell their laurel for a myrtle wreath,<br />
+And love when they should fight; when such as these<br />
+Presume to lay their hand upon the ark<br />
+Of her magnificent and awful cause?<br />
+Time was when it was praise and boast enough<br />
+In every clime, and travel where we might,<br />
+That we were born her children.&nbsp; Praise enough<br />
+To fill the ambition of a private man,<br />
+That Chatham&rsquo;s language was his mother tongue,<br />
+And Wolfe&rsquo;s great name compatriot with his own.<br />
+Farewell those honours, and farewell with them<br />
+The hope of such hereafter.&nbsp; They have fallen<br />
+Each in his field of glory; one in arms,<br />
+And one in council;&mdash;Wolfe upon the lap<br />
+Of smiling victory that moment won,<br />
+And Chatham, heart-sick of his country&rsquo;s shame.<br />
+They made us many soldiers.&nbsp; Chatham, still<br />
+Consulting England&rsquo;s happiness at home,<br />
+Secured it by an unforgiving frown<br />
+If any wronged her.&nbsp; Wolfe, where&rsquo;er he fought,<br />
+Put so much of his heart into his act,<br />
+That his example had a magnet&rsquo;s force,<br />
+And all were swift to follow whom all loved.<br />
+Those suns are set.&nbsp; Oh, rise some other such!<br />
+Or all that we have left is empty talk<br />
+Of old achievements, and despair of new.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Now hoist the sail, and let
+the streamers float<br />
+Upon the wanton breezes.&nbsp; Strew the deck<br />
+With lavender, and sprinkle liquid sweets,<br />
+That no rude savour maritime invade<br />
+The nose of nice nobility.&nbsp; Breathe soft,<br />
+Ye clarionets, and softer still, ye flutes,<br />
+That winds and waters lulled by magic sounds<br />
+May bear us smoothly to the Gallic shore.<br />
+True, we have lost an empire&mdash;let it pass.<br />
+True, we may thank the perfidy of France<br />
+That picked the jewel out of England&rsquo;s crown,<br />
+With all the cunning of an envious shrew.<br />
+And let that pass&mdash;&rsquo;twas but a trick of state.<br />
+A brave man knows no malice, but at once<br />
+Forgets in peace the injuries of war,<br />
+And gives his direst foe a friend&rsquo;s embrace.<br />
+And shamed as we have been, to the very beard<br />
+Braved and defied, and in our own sea proved<br />
+Too weak for those decisive blows that once<br />
+Insured us mastery there, we yet retain<br />
+Some small pre-eminence, we justly boast<br />
+At least superior jockeyship, and claim<br />
+The honours of the turf as all our own.<br />
+Go then, well worthy of the praise ye seek,<br />
+And show the shame ye might conceal at home,<br />
+In foreign eyes!&mdash;be grooms, and win the plate,<br />
+Where once your nobler fathers won a crown!&mdash;<br />
+&rsquo;Tis generous to communicate your skill<br />
+To those that need it.&nbsp; Folly is soon learned,<br />
+And, under such preceptors, who can fail?</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;There is a pleasure in poetic
+pains<br />
+Which only poets know.&nbsp; The shifts and turns,<br />
+The expedients and inventions multiform<br />
+To which the mind resorts, in chase of terms<br />
+Though apt, yet coy, and difficult to win&mdash;<br />
+To arrest the fleeting images that fill<br />
+The mirror of the mind, and hold them fast,<br />
+And force them sit, till he has pencilled off<br />
+A faithful likeness of the forms he views;<br />
+Then to dispose his copies with such art<br />
+That each may find its most propitious light,<br />
+And shine by situation, hardly less<br />
+Than by the labour and the skill it cost,<br />
+Are occupations of the poet&rsquo;s mind<br />
+So pleasing, and that steal away the thought<br />
+With such address from themes of sad import,<br />
+That, lost in his own musings, happy man!<br />
+He feels the anxieties of life, denied<br />
+Their wonted entertainment, all retire.<br />
+Such joys has he that sings.&nbsp; But ah! not such,<br />
+Or seldom such, the hearers of his song.<br />
+Fastidious, or else listless, or perhaps<br />
+Aware of nothing arduous in a task<br />
+They never undertook, they little note<br />
+His dangers or escapes, and haply find<br />
+There least amusement where he found the most.<br />
+But is amusement all? studious of song<br />
+And yet ambitious not to sing in vain,<br />
+I would not trifle merely, though the world<br />
+Be loudest in their praise who do no more.<br />
+Yet what can satire, whether grave or gay?<br />
+It may correct a foible, may chastise<br />
+The freaks of fashion, regulate the dress,<br />
+Retrench a sword-blade, or displace a patch;<br />
+But where are its sublimer trophies found?<br />
+What vice has it subdued? whose heart reclaimed<br />
+By rigour, or whom laughed into reform?<br />
+Alas, Leviathan is not so tamed.<br />
+Laughed at, he laughs again; and, stricken hard,<br />
+Turns to the stroke his adamantine scales,<br />
+That fear no discipline of human hands.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The pulpit
+therefore&mdash;and I name it, filled<br />
+With solemn awe, that bids me well beware<br />
+With what intent I touch that holy thing&mdash;<br />
+The pulpit, when the satirist has at last,<br />
+Strutting and vapouring in an empty school,<br />
+Spent all his force, and made no proselyte&mdash;<br />
+I say the pulpit, in the sober use<br />
+Of its legitimate peculiar powers,<br />
+Must stand acknowledged, while the world shall stand,<br />
+The most important and effectual guard,<br />
+Support, and ornament of virtue&rsquo;s cause.<br />
+There stands the messenger of truth; there stands<br />
+The legate of the skies; his theme divine,<br />
+His office sacred, his credentials clear.<br />
+By him, the violated Law speaks out<br />
+Its thunders, and by him, in strains as sweet<br />
+As angels use, the Gospel whispers peace.<br />
+He stablishes the strong, restores the weak,<br />
+Reclaims the wanderer, binds the broken heart,<br />
+And, armed himself in panoply complete<br />
+Of heavenly temper, furnishes with arms<br />
+Bright as his own, and trains, by every rule<br />
+Of holy discipline, to glorious war,<br />
+The sacramental host of God&rsquo;s elect.<br />
+Are all such teachers? would to heaven all were!<br />
+But hark&mdash;the Doctor&rsquo;s voice&mdash;fast wedged
+between<br />
+Two empirics he stands, and with swollen cheeks<br />
+Inspires the news, his trumpet.&nbsp; Keener far<br />
+Than all invective is his bold harangue,<br />
+While through that public organ of report<br />
+He hails the clergy, and, defying shame,<br />
+Announces to the world his own and theirs,<br />
+He teaches those to read whom schools dismissed,<br />
+And colleges, untaught; sells accents, tone,<br />
+And emphasis in score, and gives to prayer<br />
+The adagio and andante it demands.<br />
+He grinds divinity of other days<br />
+Down into modern use; transforms old print<br />
+To zigzag manuscript, and cheats the eyes<br />
+Of gallery critics by a thousand arts.&mdash;<br />
+Are there who purchase of the Doctor&rsquo;s ware?<br />
+Oh name it not in Gath!&mdash;it cannot be,<br />
+That grave and learned Clerks should need such aid.<br />
+He doubtless is in sport, and does but droll,<br />
+Assuming thus a rank unknown before,<br />
+Grand caterer and dry-nurse of the Church.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I venerate the man whose
+heart is warm,<br />
+Whose hands are pure, whose doctrine and whose life,<br />
+Coincident, exhibit lucid proof<br />
+That he is honest in the sacred cause.<br />
+To such I render more than mere respect,<br />
+Whose actions say that they respect themselves.<br />
+But, loose in morals, and in manners vain,<br />
+In conversation frivolous, in dress<br />
+Extreme, at once rapacious and profuse,<br />
+Frequent in park with lady at his side,<br />
+Ambling and prattling scandal as he goes,<br />
+But rare at home, and never at his books<br />
+Or with his pen, save when he scrawls a card;<br />
+Constant at routs, familiar with a round<br />
+Of ladyships, a stranger to the poor;<br />
+Ambitions of preferment for its gold,<br />
+And well prepared by ignorance and sloth,<br />
+By infidelity and love o&rsquo; the world,<br />
+To make God&rsquo;s work a sinecure; a slave<br />
+To his own pleasures and his patron&rsquo;s pride.&mdash;<br />
+From such apostles, O ye mitred heads,<br />
+Preserve the Church! and lay not careless hands<br />
+On skulls that cannot teach, and will not learn.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Would I describe a preacher,
+such as Paul,<br />
+Were he on earth, would hear, approve, and own,<br />
+Paul should himself direct me.&nbsp; I would trace<br />
+His master-strokes, and draw from his design.<br />
+I would express him simple, grave, sincere;<br />
+In doctrine uncorrupt; in language plain,<br />
+And plain in manner; decent, solemn, chaste,<br />
+And natural in gesture; much impressed<br />
+Himself, as conscious of his awful charge,<br />
+And anxious mainly that the flock he feeds<br />
+May feel it too; affectionate in look<br />
+And tender in address, as well becomes<br />
+A messenger of grace to guilty men.<br />
+Behold the picture!&mdash;Is it like?&mdash;Like whom?<br />
+The things that mount the rostrum with a skip,<br />
+And then skip down again; pronounce a text,<br />
+Cry&mdash;Hem; and reading what they never wrote,<br />
+Just fifteen minutes, huddle up their work,<br />
+And with a well-bred whisper close the scene.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In man or woman, but far most
+in man,<br />
+And most of all in man that ministers<br />
+And serves the altar, in my soul I loathe<br />
+All affectation.&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis my perfect scorn;<br />
+Object of my implacable disgust.<br />
+What!&mdash;will a man play tricks, will he indulge<br />
+A silly fond conceit of his fair form<br />
+And just proportion, fashionable mien,<br />
+And pretty face, in presence of his God?<br />
+Or will he seek to dazzle me with tropes,<br />
+As with the diamond on his lily hand,<br />
+And play his brilliant parts before my eyes,<br />
+When I am hungry for the Bread of Life?<br />
+He mocks his Maker, prostitutes and shames<br />
+His noble office, and, instead of truth,<br />
+Displaying his own beauty, starves his flock!<br />
+Therefore, avaunt, all attitude and stare<br />
+And start theatric, practised at the glass.<br />
+I seek divine simplicity in him<br />
+Who handles things divine; and all beside,<br />
+Though learned with labour, and though much admired<br />
+By curious eyes and judgments ill-informed,<br />
+To me is odious as the nasal twang<br />
+Heard at conventicle, where worthy men,<br />
+Misled by custom, strain celestial themes<br />
+Through the prest nostril, spectacle-bestrid.<br />
+Some, decent in demeanour while they preach,<br />
+That task performed, relapse into themselves,<br />
+And having spoken wisely, at the close<br />
+Grow wanton, and give proof to every eye&mdash;<br />
+Whoe&rsquo;er was edified themselves were not.<br />
+Forth comes the pocket mirror.&nbsp; First we stroke<br />
+An eyebrow; next compose a straggling lock;<br />
+Then with an air, most gracefully performed,<br />
+Fall back into our seat; extend an arm,<br />
+And lay it at its ease with gentle care,<br />
+With handkerchief in hand, depending low:<br />
+The better hand, more busy, gives the nose<br />
+Its bergamot, or aids the indebted eye<br />
+With opera glass to watch the moving scene,<br />
+And recognise the slow-retiring fair.<br />
+Now this is fulsome, and offends me more<br />
+Than in a Churchman slovenly neglect<br />
+And rustic coarseness would.&nbsp; A heavenly mind<br />
+May be indifferent to her house of clay,<br />
+And slight the hovel as beneath her care.<br />
+But how a body so fantastic, trim,<br />
+And quaint in its deportment and attire,<br />
+Can lodge a heavenly mind&mdash;demands a doubt.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;He that negotiates between
+God and man,<br />
+As God&rsquo;s ambassador, the grand concerns<br />
+Of judgment and of mercy, should beware<br />
+Of lightness in his speech.&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis pitiful<br />
+To court a grin, when you should woo a soul;<br />
+To break a jest, when pity would inspire<br />
+Pathetic exhortation; and to address<br />
+The skittish fancy with facetious tales,<br />
+When sent with God&rsquo;s commission to the heart.<br />
+So did not Paul.&nbsp; Direct me to a quip<br />
+Or merry turn in all he ever wrote,<br />
+And I consent you take it for your text,<br />
+Your only one, till sides and benches fail.<br />
+No: he was serious in a serious cause,<br />
+And understood too well the weighty terms<br />
+That he had ta&rsquo;en in charge.&nbsp; He would not stoop<br />
+To conquer those by jocular exploits,<br />
+Whom truth and soberness assailed in vain.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Oh, popular applause! what
+heart of man<br />
+Is proof against thy sweet seducing charms?<br />
+The wisest and the best feel urgent need<br />
+Of all their caution in thy gentlest gales;<br />
+But swelled into a gust&mdash;who then, alas!<br />
+With all his canvas set, and inexpert,<br />
+And therefore heedless, can withstand thy power?<br />
+Praise from the riveled lips of toothless, bald<br />
+Decrepitude, and in the looks of lean<br />
+And craving poverty, and in the bow<br />
+Respectful of the smutched artificer,<br />
+Is oft too welcome, and may much disturb<br />
+The bias of the purpose.&nbsp; How much more,<br />
+Poured forth by beauty splendid and polite,<br />
+In language soft as adoration breathes?<br />
+Ah, spare your idol! think him human still;<br />
+Charms he may have, but he has frailties too;<br />
+Dote not too much, nor spoil what ye admire.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;All truth is from the
+sempiternal source<br />
+Of light divine.&nbsp; But Egypt, Greece, and Rome<br />
+Drew from the stream below.&nbsp; More favoured, we<br />
+Drink, when we choose it, at the fountain head.<br />
+To them it flowed much mingled and defiled<br />
+With hurtful error, prejudice, and dreams<br />
+Illusive of philosophy, so called,<br />
+But falsely.&nbsp; Sages after sages strove,<br />
+In vain, to filter off a crystal draught<br />
+Pure from the lees, which often more enhanced<br />
+The thirst than slaked it, and not seldom bred<br />
+Intoxication and delirium wild.<br />
+In vain they pushed inquiry to the birth<br />
+And spring-time of the world; asked, Whence is man?<br />
+Why formed at all? and wherefore as he is?<br />
+Where must he find his Maker?&nbsp; With what rites<br />
+Adore Him?&nbsp; Will He hear, accept, and bless?<br />
+Or does He sit regardless of His works?<br />
+Has man within him an immortal seed?<br />
+Or does the tomb take all?&nbsp; If he survive<br />
+His ashes, where? and in what weal or woe?<br />
+Knots worthy of solution, which alone<br />
+A Deity could solve.&nbsp; Their answers vague,<br />
+And all at random, fabulous and dark,<br />
+Left them as dark themselves.&nbsp; Their rules of life,<br />
+Defective and unsanctioned, proved too weak<br />
+To bind the roving appetite, and lead<br />
+Blind nature to a God not yet revealed.<br />
+&rsquo;Tis Revelation satisfies all doubts,<br />
+Explains all mysteries, except her own,<br />
+And so illuminates the path of life,<br />
+That fools discover it, and stray no more.<br />
+Now tell me, dignified and sapient sir,<br />
+My man of morals, nurtured in the shades<br />
+Of Academus, is this false or true?<br />
+Is Christ the abler teacher, or the schools?<br />
+If Christ, then why resort at every turn<br />
+To Athens or to Rome for wisdom short<br />
+Of man&rsquo;s occasions, when in Him reside<br />
+Grace, knowledge, comfort, an unfathomed store?<br />
+How oft when Paul has served us with a text,<br />
+Has Epictetus, Plato, Tully, preached!<br />
+Men that, if now alive, would sit content<br />
+And humble learners of a Saviour&rsquo;s worth,<br />
+Preach it who might.&nbsp; Such was their love of truth,<br />
+Their thirst of knowledge, and their candour too.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And thus it is.&nbsp; The
+pastor, either vain<br />
+By nature, or by flattery made so, taught<br />
+To gaze at his own splendour, and to exalt<br />
+Absurdly, not his office, but himself;<br />
+Or unenlightened, and too proud to learn,<br />
+Or vicious, and not therefore apt to teach,<br />
+Perverting often, by the stress of lewd<br />
+And loose example, whom he should instruct,<br />
+Exposes and holds up to broad disgrace<br />
+The noblest function, and discredits much<br />
+The brightest truths that man has ever seen.<br />
+For ghostly counsel, if it either fall<br />
+Below the exigence, or be not backed<br />
+With show of love, at least with hopeful proof<br />
+Of some sincerity on the giver&rsquo;s part;<br />
+Or be dishonoured in the exterior form<br />
+And mode of its conveyance, by such tricks<br />
+As move derision, or by foppish airs<br />
+And histrionic mummery, that let down<br />
+The pulpit to the level of the stage;<br />
+Drops from the lips a disregarded thing.<br />
+The weak perhaps are moved, but are not taught,<br />
+While prejudice in men of stronger minds<br />
+Takes deeper root, confirmed by what they see.<br />
+A relaxation of religion&rsquo;s hold<br />
+Upon the roving and untutored heart<br />
+Soon follows, and the curb of conscience snapt,<br />
+The laity run wild.&mdash;But do they now?<br />
+Note their extravagance, and be convinced.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As nations, ignorant of God,
+contrive<br />
+A wooden one, so we, no longer taught<br />
+By monitors that Mother Church supplies,<br />
+Now make our own.&nbsp; Posterity will ask<br />
+(If e&rsquo;er posterity sees verse of mine),<br />
+Some fifty or a hundred lustrums hence,<br />
+What was a monitor in George&rsquo;s days?<br />
+My very gentle reader, yet unborn,<br />
+Of whom I needs must augur better things,<br />
+Since Heaven would sure grow weary of a world<br />
+Productive only of a race like us,<br />
+A monitor is wood&mdash;plank shaven thin.<br />
+We wear it at our backs.&nbsp; There, closely braced<br />
+And neatly fitted, it compresses hard<br />
+The prominent and most unsightly bones,<br />
+And binds the shoulders flat.&nbsp; We prove its use<br />
+Sovereign and most effectual to secure<br />
+A form, not now gymnastic as of yore,<br />
+From rickets and distortion, else, our lot.<br />
+But thus admonished we can walk erect,<br />
+One proof at least of manhood; while the friend<br />
+Sticks close, a Mentor worthy of his charge.<br />
+Our habits costlier than Lucullus wore,<br />
+And, by caprice as multiplied as his,<br />
+Just please us while the fashion is at full,<br />
+But change with every moon.&nbsp; The sycophant,<br />
+That waits to dress us, arbitrates their date,<br />
+Surveys his fair reversion with keen eye;<br />
+Finds one ill made, another obsolete,<br />
+This fits not nicely, that is ill conceived;<br />
+And, making prize of all that he condemns,<br />
+With our expenditure defrays his own.<br />
+Variety&rsquo;s the very spice of life,<br />
+That gives it all its flavour.&nbsp; We have run<br />
+Through every change that fancy, at the loom<br />
+Exhausted, has had genius to supply,<br />
+And, studious of mutation still, discard<br />
+A real elegance, a little used,<br />
+For monstrous novelty and strange disguise.<br />
+We sacrifice to dress, till household joys<br />
+And comforts cease.&nbsp; Dress drains our cellar dry,<br />
+And keeps our larder lean; puts out our fires,<br />
+And introduces hunger, frost, and woe,<br />
+Where peace and hospitality might reign.<br />
+What man that lives, and that knows how to live,<br />
+Would fail to exhibit at the public shows<br />
+A form as splendid as the proudest there,<br />
+Though appetite raise outcries at the cost?<br />
+A man o&rsquo; the town dines late, but soon enough,<br />
+With reasonable forecast and despatch,<br />
+To ensure a side-box station at half-price.<br />
+You think, perhaps, so delicate his dress,<br />
+His daily fare as delicate.&nbsp; Alas!<br />
+He picks clean teeth, and, busy as he seems<br />
+With an old tavern quill, is hungry yet.<br />
+The rout is folly&rsquo;s circle which she draws<br />
+With magic wand.&nbsp; So potent is the spell,<br />
+That none decoyed into that fatal ring,<br />
+Unless by Heaven&rsquo;s peculiar grace, escape.<br />
+There we grow early gray, but never wise;<br />
+There form connections, and acquire no friend;<br />
+Solicit pleasure hopeless of success;<br />
+Waste youth in occupations only fit<br />
+For second childhood, and devote old age<br />
+To sports which only childhood could excuse.<br />
+There they are happiest who dissemble best<br />
+Their weariness; and they the most polite,<br />
+Who squander time and treasure with a smile,<br />
+Though at their own destruction.&nbsp; She that asks<br />
+Her dear five hundred friends, contemns them all,<br />
+And hates their coming.&nbsp; They (what can they less?)<br />
+Make just reprisals, and, with cringe and shrug<br />
+And bow obsequious, hide their hate of her.<br />
+All catch the frenzy, downward from her Grace,<br />
+Whose flambeaux flash against the morning skies,<br />
+And gild our chamber ceilings as they pass,<br />
+To her who, frugal only that her thrift<br />
+May feed excesses she can ill afford,<br />
+Is hackneyed home unlackeyed; who, in haste<br />
+Alighting, turns the key in her own door,<br />
+And, at the watchman&rsquo;s lantern borrowing light,<br />
+Finds a cold bed her only comfort left.<br />
+Wives beggar husbands, husbands starve their wives,<br />
+On Fortune&rsquo;s velvet altar offering up<br />
+Their last poor pittance&mdash;Fortune, most severe<br />
+Of goddesses yet known, and costlier far<br />
+Than all that held their routs in Juno&rsquo;s heaven.&mdash;<br
+/>
+So fare we in this prison-house the world.<br />
+And &rsquo;tis a fearful spectacle to see<br />
+So many maniacs dancing in their chains.<br />
+They gaze upon the links that hold them fast<br />
+With eyes of anguish, execrate their lot,<br />
+Then shake them in despair, and dance again.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Now basket up the family of
+plagues<br />
+That waste our vitals.&nbsp; Peculation, sale<br />
+Of honour, perjury, corruption, frauds<br />
+By forgery, by subterfuge of law,<br />
+By tricks and lies, as numerous and as keen<br />
+As the necessities their authors feel;<br />
+Then cast them, closely bundled, every brat<br />
+At the right door.&nbsp; Profusion is its sire.<br />
+Profusion unrestrained, with all that&rsquo;s base<br />
+In character, has littered all the land,<br />
+And bred within the memory of no few<br />
+A priesthood such as Baal&rsquo;s was of old,<br />
+A people such as never was till now.<br />
+It is a hungry vice:&mdash;it eats up all<br />
+That gives society its beauty, strength,<br />
+Convenience, and security, and use;<br />
+Makes men mere vermin, worthy to be trapped<br />
+And gibbeted, as fast as catchpole claws<br />
+Can seize the slippery prey; unties the knot<br />
+Of union, and converts the sacred band<br />
+That holds mankind together to a scourge.<br />
+Profusion, deluging a state with lusts<br />
+Of grossest nature and of worst effects,<br />
+Prepares it for its ruin; hardens, blinds,<br />
+And warps the consciences of public men<br />
+Till they can laugh at virtue; mock the fools<br />
+That trust them; and, in the end, disclose a face<br />
+That would have shocked credulity herself,<br />
+Unmasked, vouchsafing this their sole excuse;&mdash;<br />
+Since all alike are selfish, why not they?<br />
+This does Profusion, and the accursed cause<br />
+Of such deep mischief has itself a cause.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In colleges and halls, in
+ancient days,<br />
+When learning, virtue, piety, and truth<br />
+Were precious, and inculcated with care,<br />
+There dwelt a sage called Discipline.&nbsp; His head,<br />
+Not yet by time completely silvered o&rsquo;er,<br />
+Bespoke him past the bounds of freakish youth,<br />
+But strong for service still, and unimpaired.<br />
+His eye was meek and gentle, and a smile<br />
+Played on his lips, and in his speech was heard<br />
+Paternal sweetness, dignity, and love.<br />
+The occupation dearest to his heart<br />
+Was to encourage goodness.&nbsp; He would stroke<br />
+The head of modest and ingenuous worth,<br />
+That blushed at its own praise, and press the youth<br />
+Close to his side that pleased him.&nbsp; Learning grew<br />
+Beneath his care, a thriving, vigorous plant;<br />
+The mind was well informed, the passions held<br />
+Subordinate, and diligence was choice.<br />
+If e&rsquo;er it chanced, as sometimes chance it must,<br />
+That one among so many overleaped<br />
+The limits of control, his gentle eye<br />
+Grew stern, and darted a severe rebuke;<br />
+His frown was full of terror, and his voice<br />
+Shook the delinquent with such fits of awe<br />
+As left him not, till penitence had won<br />
+Lost favour back again, and closed the breach.<br />
+But Discipline, a faithful servant long,<br />
+Declined at length into the vale of years;<br />
+A palsy struck his arm, his sparkling eye<br />
+Was quenched in rheums of age, his voice unstrung<br />
+Grew tremulous, and moved derision more<br />
+Than reverence in perverse, rebellious youth.<br />
+So colleges and halls neglected much<br />
+Their good old friend, and Discipline at length,<br />
+O&rsquo;erlooked and unemployed, fell sick and died.<br />
+Then study languished, emulation slept,<br />
+And virtue fled.&nbsp; The schools became a scene<br />
+Of solemn farce, where ignorance in stilts,<br />
+His cap well lined with logic not his own,<br />
+With parrot tongue performed the scholar&rsquo;s part,<br />
+Proceeding soon a graduated dunce.<br />
+Then compromise had place, and scrutiny<br />
+Became stone-blind, precedence went in truck,<br />
+And he was competent whose purse was so.<br />
+A dissolution of all bonds ensued,<br />
+The curbs invented for the mulish mouth<br />
+Of headstrong youth were broken; bars and bolts<br />
+Grew rusty by disuse, and massy gates<br />
+Forgot their office, opening with a touch;<br />
+Till gowns at length are found mere masquerade;<br />
+The tasselled cap and the spruce band a jest,<br />
+A mockery of the world.&nbsp; What need of these<br />
+For gamesters, jockeys, brothellers impure,<br />
+Spendthrifts and booted sportsmen, oftener seen<br />
+With belted waist, and pointers at their heels,<br />
+Than in the bounds of duty?&nbsp; What was learned,<br />
+If aught was learned in childhood, is forgot,<br />
+And such expense as pinches parents blue<br />
+And mortifies the liberal hand of love,<br />
+Is squandered in pursuit of idle sports<br />
+And vicious pleasures; buys the boy a name,<br />
+That sits a stigma on his father&rsquo;s house,<br />
+And cleaves through life inseparably close<br />
+To him that wears it.&nbsp; What can after-games<br />
+Of riper joys, and commerce with the world,<br />
+The lewd vain world that must receive him soon,<br />
+Add to such erudition thus acquired,<br />
+Where science and where virtue are professed?<br />
+They may confirm his habits, rivet fast<br />
+His folly, but to spoil him is a task<br />
+That bids defiance to the united powers<br />
+Of fashion, dissipation, taverns, stews.<br />
+Now, blame we most the nurselings, or the nurse?<br />
+The children crooked and twisted and deformed<br />
+Through want of care, or her whose winking eye<br />
+And slumbering oscitancy mars the brood?<br />
+The nurse no doubt.&nbsp; Regardless of her charge,<br />
+She needs herself correction; needs to learn<br />
+That it is dangerous sporting with the world,<br />
+With things so sacred as a nation&rsquo;s trust;<br />
+The nurture of her youth, her dearest pledge.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;All are not such.&nbsp; I had
+a brother once&mdash;<br />
+Peace to the memory of a man of worth,<br />
+A man of letters and of manners too&mdash;<br />
+Of manners sweet as virtue always wears,<br />
+When gay good-nature dresses her in smiles.<br />
+He graced a college in which order yet<br />
+Was sacred, and was honoured, loved, and wept,<br />
+By more than one, themselves conspicuous there.<br />
+Some minds are tempered happily, and mixt<br />
+With such ingredients of good sense and taste<br />
+Of what is excellent in man, they thirst<br />
+With such a zeal to be what they approve,<br />
+That no restraints can circumscribe them more<br />
+Than they themselves by choice, for wisdom&rsquo;s sake.<br />
+Nor can example hurt them.&nbsp; What they see<br />
+Of vice in others but enhancing more<br />
+The charms of virtue in their just esteem.<br />
+If such escape contagion, and emerge<br />
+Pure, from so foul a pool, to shine abroad,<br />
+And give the world their talents and themselves,<br />
+Small thanks to those whose negligence or sloth<br />
+Exposed their inexperience to the snare,<br />
+And left them to an undirected choice.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;See, then, the quiver broken
+and decayed,<br />
+In which are kept our arrows.&nbsp; Rusting there<br />
+In wild disorder and unfit for use,<br />
+What wonder if discharged into the world<br />
+They shame their shooters with a random flight,<br />
+Their points obtuse and feathers drunk with wine.<br />
+Well may the Church wage unsuccessful war<br />
+With such artillery armed.&nbsp; Vice parries wide<br />
+The undreaded volley with a sword of straw,<br />
+And stands an impudent and fearless mark.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Have we not tracked the felon
+home, and found<br />
+His birthplace and his dam?&nbsp; The country mourns&mdash;<br />
+Mourns, because every plague that can infest<br />
+Society, that saps and worms the base<br />
+Of the edifice that Policy has raised,<br />
+Swarms in all quarters; meets the eye, the ear,<br />
+And suffocates the breath at every turn.<br />
+Profusion breeds them.&nbsp; And the cause itself<br />
+Of that calamitous mischief has been found,<br />
+Found, too, where most offensive, in the skirts<br />
+Of the robed pedagogue.&nbsp; Else, let the arraigned<br />
+Stand up unconscious and refute the charge.<br />
+So, when the Jewish leader stretched his arm<br />
+And waved his rod divine, a race obscene,<br />
+Spawned in the muddy beds of Nile, came forth<br />
+Polluting Egypt.&nbsp; Gardens, fields, and plains<br />
+Were covered with the pest.&nbsp; The streets were filled;<br />
+The croaking nuisance lurked in every nook,<br />
+Nor palaces nor even chambers &rsquo;scaped,<br />
+And the land stank, so numerous was the fry.</p>
+<h3>BOOK III.<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">THE GARDEN.</span></h3>
+<p class="poetry"><span class="smcap">As</span> one who, long in
+thickets and in brakes<br />
+Entangled, winds now this way and now that<br />
+His devious course uncertain, seeking home;<br />
+Or, having long in miry ways been foiled<br />
+And sore discomfited, from slough to slough<br />
+Plunging, and half despairing of escape,<br />
+If chance at length he find a greensward smooth<br />
+And faithful to the foot, his spirits rise,<br />
+He chirrups brisk his ear-erecting steed,<br />
+And winds his way with pleasure and with ease;<br />
+So I, designing other themes, and called<br />
+To adorn the Sofa with eulogium due,<br />
+To tell its slumbers and to paint its dreams,<br />
+Have rambled wide.&nbsp; In country, city, seat<br />
+Of academic fame, howe&rsquo;er deserved,<br />
+Long held, and scarcely disengaged at last.<br />
+But now with pleasant pace, a cleanlier road<br />
+I mean to tread.&nbsp; I feel myself at large,<br />
+Courageous, and refreshed for future toil,<br />
+If toil await me, or if dangers new.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Since pulpits fail, and
+sounding-boards reflect<br />
+Most part an empty ineffectual sound,<br />
+What chance that I, to fame so little known,<br />
+Nor conversant with men or manners much,<br />
+Should speak to purpose, or with better hope<br />
+Crack the satiric thong?&nbsp; &rsquo;Twere wiser far<br />
+For me, enamoured of sequestered scenes,<br />
+And charmed with rural beauty, to repose,<br />
+Where chance may throw me, beneath elm or vine<br />
+My languid limbs, when summer sears the plains;<br />
+Or when rough winter rages, on the soft<br />
+And sheltered Sofa, while the nitrous air<br />
+Feeds a blue flame and makes a cheerful hearth;<br />
+There, undisturbed by folly, and apprised<br />
+How great the danger of disturbing her,<br />
+To muse in silence, or at least confine<br />
+Remarks that gall so many to the few,<br />
+My partners in retreat.&nbsp; Disgust concealed<br />
+Is ofttimes proof of wisdom, when the fault<br />
+Is obstinate, and cure beyond our reach.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Domestic happiness, thou only
+bliss<br />
+Of Paradise that has survived the fall!<br />
+Though few now taste thee unimpaired and pure,<br />
+Or, tasting, long enjoy thee, too infirm<br />
+Or too incautious to preserve thy sweets<br />
+Unmixed with drops of bitter, which neglect<br />
+Or temper sheds into thy crystal cup.<br />
+Thou art the nurse of virtue.&nbsp; In thine arms<br />
+She smiles, appearing, as in truth she is,<br />
+Heaven-born, and destined to the skies again.<br />
+Thou art not known where Pleasure is adored,<br />
+That reeling goddess with the zoneless waist<br />
+And wandering eyes, still leaning on the arm<br />
+Of Novelty, her fickle frail support;<br />
+For thou art meek and constant, hating change,<br />
+And finding in the calm of truth-tried love<br />
+Joys that her stormy raptures never yield.<br />
+Forsaking thee, what shipwreck have we made<br />
+Of honour, dignity, and fair renown,<br />
+Till prostitution elbows us aside<br />
+In all our crowded streets, and senates seem<br />
+Convened for purposes of empire less,<br />
+Than to release the adult&rsquo;ress from her bond.<br />
+The adult&rsquo;ress! what a theme for angry verse,<br />
+What provocation to the indignant heart<br />
+That feels for injured love! but I disdain<br />
+The nauseous task to paint her as she is,<br />
+Cruel, abandoned, glorying in her shame.<br />
+No; let her pass, and charioted along<br />
+In guilty splendour shake the public ways;<br />
+The frequency of crimes has washed them white,<br />
+And verse of mine shall never brand the wretch<br />
+Whom matrons now of character unsmirched<br />
+And chaste themselves, are not ashamed to own.<br />
+Virtue and vice had boundaries in old time<br />
+Not to be passed; and she that had renounced<br />
+Her sex&rsquo;s honour, was renounced herself<br />
+By all that prized it; not for prudery&rsquo;s sake,<br />
+But dignity&rsquo;s, resentful of the wrong.<br />
+&rsquo;Twas hard, perhaps, on here and there a waif<br />
+Desirous to return, and not received;<br />
+But was a wholesome rigour in the main,<br />
+And taught the unblemished to preserve with care<br />
+That purity, whose loss was loss of all.<br />
+Men, too, were nice in honour in those days,<br />
+And judged offenders well.&nbsp; Then he that sharped,<br />
+And pocketed a prize by fraud obtained,<br />
+Was marked and shunned as odious.&nbsp; He that sold<br />
+His country, or was slack when she required<br />
+His every nerve in action and at stretch,<br />
+Paid with the blood that he had basely spared<br />
+The price of his default.&nbsp; But now,&mdash;yes, now,<br />
+We are become so candid and so fair,<br />
+So liberal in construction, and so rich<br />
+In Christian charity (good-natured age!)<br />
+That they are safe, sinners of either sex,<br />
+Transgress what laws they may.&nbsp; Well dressed, well bred,<br
+/>
+Well equipaged, is ticket good enough<br />
+To pass us readily through every door.<br />
+Hypocrisy, detest her as we may<br />
+(And no man&rsquo;s hatred ever wronged her yet),<br />
+May claim this merit still&mdash;that she admits<br />
+The worth of what she mimics with such care,<br />
+And thus gives virtue indirect applause;<br />
+But she has burnt her mask, not needed here,<br />
+Where vice has such allowance, that her shifts<br />
+And specious semblances have lost their use.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I was a stricken deer that
+left the herd<br />
+Long since; with many an arrow deep infixt<br />
+My panting side was charged, when I withdrew<br />
+To seek a tranquil death in distant shades.<br />
+There was I found by one who had himself<br />
+Been hurt by the archers.&nbsp; In his side he bore,<br />
+And in his hands and feet, the cruel scars.<br />
+With gentle force soliciting the darts<br />
+He drew them forth, and healed and bade me live.<br />
+Since then, with few associates, in remote<br />
+And silent woods I wander, far from those<br />
+My former partners of the peopled scene,<br />
+With few associates, and not wishing more.<br />
+Here much I ruminate, as much I may,<br />
+With other views of men and manners now<br />
+Than once, and others of a life to come.<br />
+I see that all are wanderers, gone astray<br />
+Each in his own delusions; they are lost<br />
+In chase of fancied happiness, still woo&rsquo;d<br />
+And never won.&nbsp; Dream after dream ensues,<br />
+And still they dream that they shall still succeed,<br />
+And still are disappointed: rings the world<br />
+With the vain stir.&nbsp; I sum up half mankind,<br />
+And add two-thirds of the remaining half,<br />
+And find the total of their hopes and fears<br />
+Dreams, empty dreams.&nbsp; The million flit as gay<br />
+As if created only, like the fly<br />
+That spreads his motley wings in the eye of noon,<br />
+To sport their season and be seen no more.<br />
+The rest are sober dreamers, grave and wise,<br />
+And pregnant with discoveries new and rare.<br />
+Some write a narrative of wars, and feats<br />
+Of heroes little known, and call the rant<br />
+A history; describe the man, of whom<br />
+His own coevals took but little note,<br />
+And paint his person, character, and views,<br />
+As they had known him from his mother&rsquo;s womb;<br />
+They disentangle from the puzzled skein,<br />
+In which obscurity has wrapped them up,<br />
+The threads of politic and shrewd design<br />
+That ran through all his purposes, and charge<br />
+His mind with meanings that he never had,<br />
+Or, having, kept concealed.&nbsp; Some drill and bore<br />
+The solid earth, and from the strata there<br />
+Extract a register, by which we learn<br />
+That He who made it and revealed its date<br />
+To Moses, was mistaken in its age.<br />
+Some, more acute and more industrious still,<br />
+Contrive creation; travel nature up<br />
+To the sharp peak of her sublimest height,<br />
+And tell us whence the stars; why some are fixt,<br />
+And planetary some; what gave them first<br />
+Rotation, from what fountain flowed their light.<br />
+Great contest follows, and much learned dust<br />
+Involves the combatants, each claiming truth,<br />
+And truth disclaiming both.&nbsp; And thus they spend<br />
+The little wick of life&rsquo;s poor shallow lamp<br />
+In playing tricks with nature, giving laws<br />
+To distant worlds, and trifling in their own.<br />
+Is&rsquo;t not a pity now, that tickling rheums<br />
+Should ever tease the lungs and blear the sight<br />
+Of oracles like these?&nbsp; Great pity, too,<br />
+That having wielded the elements, and built<br />
+A thousand systems, each in his own way,<br />
+They should go out in fume and be forgot?<br />
+Ah, what is life thus spent? and what are they<br />
+But frantic who thus spend it? all for smoke&mdash;<br />
+Eternity for bubbles proves at last<br />
+A senseless bargain.&nbsp; When I see such games<br />
+Played by the creatures of a Power who swears<br />
+That He will judge the earth, and call the fool<br />
+To a sharp reckoning that has lived in vain,<br />
+And when I weigh this seeming wisdom well,<br />
+And prove it in the infallible result<br />
+So hollow and so false&mdash;I feel my heart<br />
+Dissolve in pity, and account the learned,<br />
+If this be learning, most of all deceived.<br />
+Great crimes alarm the conscience, but it sleeps<br />
+While thoughtful man is plausibly amused.<br />
+Defend me, therefore, common sense, say I,<br />
+From reveries so airy, from the toil<br />
+Of dropping buckets into empty wells,<br />
+And growing old in drawing nothing up!</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&rsquo;Twere well, says one
+sage erudite, profound,<br />
+Terribly arched and aquiline his nose,<br />
+And overbuilt with most impending brows,<br />
+&rsquo;Twere well could you permit the world to live<br />
+As the world pleases.&nbsp; What&rsquo;s the world to
+you?&mdash;<br />
+Much.&nbsp; I was born of woman, and drew milk<br />
+As sweet as charity from human breasts.<br />
+I think, articulate, I laugh and weep,<br />
+And exercise all functions of a man.<br />
+How then should I and any man that lives<br />
+Be strangers to each other?&nbsp; Pierce my vein,<br />
+Take of the crimson stream meandering there,<br />
+And catechise it well.&nbsp; Apply your glass,<br />
+Search it, and prove now if it be not blood<br />
+Congenial with thine own; and if it be,<br />
+What edge of subtlety canst thou suppose<br />
+Keen enough, wise and skilful as thou art,<br />
+To cut the link of brotherhood, by which<br />
+One common Maker bound me to the kind?<br />
+True; I am no proficient, I confess,<br />
+In arts like yours.&nbsp; I cannot call the swift<br />
+And perilous lightnings from the angry clouds,<br />
+And bid them hide themselves in the earth beneath;<br />
+I cannot analyse the air, nor catch<br />
+The parallax of yonder luminous point<br />
+That seems half quenched in the immense abyss:<br />
+Such powers I boast not&mdash;neither can I rest<br />
+A silent witness of the headlong rage,<br />
+Or heedless folly, by which thousands die,<br />
+Bone of my bone, and kindred souls to mine.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;God never meant that man
+should scale the heavens<br />
+By strides of human wisdom.&nbsp; In His works,<br />
+Though wondrous, He commands us in His Word<br />
+To seek Him rather where His mercy shines.<br />
+The mind indeed, enlightened from above,<br />
+Views Him in all; ascribes to the grand cause<br />
+The grand effect; acknowledges with joy<br />
+His manner, and with rapture tastes His style.<br />
+But never yet did philosophic tube,<br />
+That brings the planets home into the eye<br />
+Of observation, and discovers, else<br />
+Not visible, His family of worlds,<br />
+Discover Him that rules them; such a veil<br />
+Hangs over mortal eyes, blind from the birth,<br />
+And dark in things divine.&nbsp; Full often too<br />
+Our wayward intellect, the more we learn<br />
+Of nature, overlooks her Author more;<br />
+From instrumental causes proud to draw<br />
+Conclusions retrograde, and mad mistake:<br />
+But if His Word once teach us, shoot a ray<br />
+Through all the heart&rsquo;s dark chambers, and reveal<br />
+Truths undiscerned but by that holy light,<br />
+Then all is plain.&nbsp; Philosophy, baptised<br />
+In the pure fountain of eternal love,<br />
+Has eyes indeed; and, viewing all she sees<br />
+As meant to indicate a God to man,<br />
+Gives <i>Him</i> His praise, and forfeits not her own.<br />
+Learning has borne such fruit in other days<br />
+On all her branches.&nbsp; Piety has found<br />
+Friends in the friends of science, and true prayer<br />
+Has flowed from lips wet with Castalian dews.<br />
+Such was thy wisdom, Newton, childlike sage!<br />
+Sagacious reader of the works of God,<br />
+And in His Word sagacious.&nbsp; Such too thine,<br />
+Milton, whose genius had angelic wings,<br />
+And fed on manna.&nbsp; And such thine, in whom<br />
+Our British Themis gloried with just cause,<br />
+Immortal Hale! for deep discernment praised,<br />
+And sound integrity not more, than famed<br />
+For sanctity of manners undefiled.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;All flesh is grass, and all
+its glory fades<br />
+Like the fair flower dishevelled in the wind;<br />
+Riches have wings, and grandeur is a dream;<br />
+The man we celebrate must find a tomb,<br />
+And we that worship him, ignoble graves.<br />
+Nothing is proof against the general curse<br />
+Of vanity, that seizes all below.<br />
+The only amaranthine flower on earth<br />
+Is virtue; the only lasting treasure, truth.<br />
+But what is truth? &rsquo;twas Pilate&rsquo;s question put<br />
+To truth itself, that deigned him no reply.<br />
+And wherefore? will not God impart His light<br />
+To them that ask it?&mdash;Freely&mdash;&rsquo;tis His joy,<br />
+His glory, and His nature to impart.<br />
+But to the proud, uncandid, insincere,<br />
+Or negligent inquirer, not a spark.<br />
+What&rsquo;s that which brings contempt upon a book<br />
+And him that writes it, though the style be neat,<br />
+The method clear, and argument exact?<br />
+That makes a minister in holy things<br />
+The joy of many, and the dread of more,<br />
+His name a theme for praise and for reproach?&mdash;<br />
+That, while it gives us worth in God&rsquo;s account,<br />
+Depreciates and undoes us in our own?<br />
+What pearl is it that rich men cannot buy,<br />
+That learning is too proud to gather up,<br />
+But which the poor and the despised of all<br />
+Seek and obtain, and often find unsought?<br />
+Tell me, and I will tell thee what is truth.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Oh, friendly to the best
+pursuits of man,<br />
+Friendly to thought, to virtue, and to peace,<br />
+Domestic life in rural leisure passed!<br />
+Few know thy value, and few taste thy sweets,<br />
+Though many boast thy favours, and affect<br />
+To understand and choose thee for their own.<br />
+But foolish man foregoes his proper bliss,<br />
+Even as his first progenitor, and quits,<br />
+Though placed in paradise, for earth has still<br />
+Some traces of her youthful beauty left,<br />
+Substantial happiness for transient joy.<br />
+Scenes formed for contemplation, and to nurse<br />
+The growing seeds of wisdom; that suggest,<br />
+By every pleasing image they present,<br />
+Reflections such as meliorate the heart,<br />
+Compose the passions, and exalt the mind;<br />
+Scenes such as these, &rsquo;tis his supreme delight<br />
+To fill with riot and defile with blood.<br />
+Should some contagion, kind to the poor brutes<br />
+We persecute, annihilate the tribes<br />
+That draw the sportsman over hill and dale<br />
+Fearless, and rapt away from all his cares;<br />
+Should never game-fowl hatch her eggs again,<br />
+Nor baited hook deceive the fish&rsquo;s eye;<br />
+Could pageantry, and dance, and feast, and song<br />
+Be quelled in all our summer months&rsquo; retreats;<br />
+How many self-deluded nymphs and swains,<br />
+Who dream they have a taste for fields and groves,<br />
+Would find them hideous nurseries of the spleen,<br />
+And crowd the roads, impatient for the town!<br />
+They love the country, and none else, who seek<br />
+For their own sake its silence and its shade;<br />
+Delights which who would leave, that has a heart<br />
+Susceptible of pity, or a mind<br />
+Cultured and capable of sober thought,<br />
+For all the savage din of the swift pack,<br />
+And clamours of the field?&nbsp; Detested sport,<br />
+That owes its pleasures to another&rsquo;s pain,<br />
+That feeds upon the sobs and dying shrieks<br />
+Of harmless nature, dumb, but yet endued<br />
+With eloquence, that agonies inspire,<br />
+Of silent tears and heart-distending sighs!<br />
+Vain tears, alas! and sighs that never find<br />
+A corresponding tone in jovial souls.<br />
+Well&mdash;one at least is safe.&nbsp; One sheltered hare<br />
+Has never heard the sanguinary yell<br />
+Of cruel man, exulting in her woes.<br />
+Innocent partner of my peaceful home,<br />
+Whom ten long years&rsquo; experience of my care<br />
+Has made at last familiar, she has lost<br />
+Much of her vigilant instinctive dread,<br />
+Not needful here, beneath a roof like mine.<br />
+Yes&mdash;thou mayst eat thy bread, and lick the hand<br />
+That feeds thee; thou mayst frolic on the floor<br />
+At evening, and at night retire secure<br />
+To thy straw-couch, and slumber unalarmed;<br />
+For I have gained thy confidence, have pledged<br />
+All that is human in me to protect<br />
+Thine unsuspecting gratitude and love.<br />
+If I survive thee I will dig thy grave,<br />
+And when I place thee in it, sighing say,<br />
+I knew at least one hare that had a friend.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;How various his employments,
+whom the world<br />
+Calls idle, and who justly in return<br />
+Esteems that busy world an idler, too!<br />
+Friends, books, a garden, and perhaps his pen,<br />
+Delightful industry enjoyed at home,<br />
+And nature in her cultivated trim<br />
+Dressed to his taste, inviting him abroad&mdash;<br />
+Can he want occupation who has these?<br />
+Will he be idle who has much to enjoy?<br />
+Me, therefore, studious of laborious ease,<br />
+Not slothful; happy to deceive the time,<br />
+Not waste it; and aware that human life<br />
+Is but a loan to be repaid with use,<br />
+When He shall call His debtors to account,<br />
+From whom are all our blessings; business finds<br />
+Even here: while sedulous I seek to improve,<br />
+At least neglect not, or leave unemployed,<br />
+The mind He gave me; driving it, though slack<br />
+Too oft, and much impeded in its work<br />
+By causes not to be divulged in vain,<br />
+To its just point&mdash;the service of mankind.<br />
+He that attends to his interior self,<br />
+That has a heart and keeps it; has a mind<br />
+That hungers and supplies it; and who seeks<br />
+A social, not a dissipated life,<br />
+Has business; feels himself engaged to achieve<br />
+No unimportant, though a silent task.<br />
+A life all turbulence and noise may seem,<br />
+To him that leads it, wise and to be praised;<br />
+But wisdom is a pearl with most success<br />
+Sought in still water, and beneath clear skies.<br />
+He that is ever occupied in storms,<br />
+Or dives not for it or brings up instead,<br />
+Vainly industrious, a disgraceful prize.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The morning finds the
+self-sequestered man<br />
+Fresh for his task, intend what task he may.<br />
+Whether inclement seasons recommend<br />
+His warm but simple home, where he enjoys,<br />
+With her who shares his pleasures and his heart,<br />
+Sweet converse, sipping calm the fragrant lymph<br />
+Which neatly she prepares; then to his book<br />
+Well chosen, and not sullenly perused<br />
+In selfish silence, but imparted oft<br />
+As aught occurs that she may smile to hear,<br />
+Or turn to nourishment digested well.<br />
+Or if the garden with its many cares,<br />
+All well repaid, demand him, he attends<br />
+The welcome call, conscious how much the hand<br />
+Of lubbard labour needs his watchful eye,<br />
+Oft loitering lazily if not o&rsquo;erseen,<br />
+Or misapplying his unskilful strength.<br />
+Nor does he govern only or direct,<br />
+But much performs himself; no works indeed<br />
+That ask robust tough sinews, bred to toil,<br />
+Servile employ&mdash;but such as may amuse,<br />
+Not tire, demanding rather skill than force.<br />
+Proud of his well-spread walls, he views his trees<br />
+That meet, no barren interval between,<br />
+With pleasure more than even their fruits afford,<br />
+Which, save himself who trains them, none can feel.<br />
+These, therefore, are his own peculiar charge,<br />
+No meaner hand may discipline the shoots,<br />
+None but his steel approach them.&nbsp; What is weak,<br />
+Distempered, or has lost prolific powers,<br />
+Impaired by age, his unrelenting hand<br />
+Dooms to the knife.&nbsp; Nor does he spare the soft<br />
+And succulent that feeds its giant growth,<br />
+But barren, at the expense of neighbouring twigs<br />
+Less ostentatious, and yet studded thick<br />
+With hopeful gems.&nbsp; The rest, no portion left<br />
+That may disgrace his art, or disappoint<br />
+Large expectation, he disposes neat<br />
+At measured distances, that air and sun<br />
+Admitted freely may afford their aid,<br />
+And ventilate and warm the swelling buds.<br />
+Hence Summer has her riches, Autumn hence,<br />
+And hence even Winter fills his withered hand<br />
+With blushing fruits, and plenty not his own,<br />
+Fair recompense of labour well bestowed<br />
+And wise precaution, which a clime so rude<br />
+Makes needful still, whose Spring is but the child<br />
+Of churlish Winter, in her froward moods<br />
+Discovering much the temper of her sire.<br />
+For oft, as if in her the stream of mild<br />
+Maternal nature had reversed its course,<br />
+She brings her infants forth with many smiles,<br />
+But, once delivered, kills them with a frown.<br />
+He therefore, timely warned, himself supplies<br />
+Her want of care, screening and keeping warm<br />
+The plenteous bloom, that no rough blast may sweep<br />
+His garlands from the boughs.&nbsp; Again, as oft<br />
+As the sun peeps and vernal airs breathe mild,<br />
+The fence withdrawn, he gives them ev&rsquo;ry beam,<br />
+And spreads his hopes before the blaze of day.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;To raise the prickly and
+green-coated gourd,<br />
+So grateful to the palate, and when rare<br />
+So coveted, else base and disesteemed&mdash;<br />
+Food for the vulgar merely&mdash;is an art<br />
+That toiling ages have but just matured,<br />
+And at this moment unessayed in song.<br />
+Yet gnats have had, and frogs and mice long since,<br />
+Their eulogy; those sang the Mantuan bard,<br />
+And these the Grecian in ennobling strains;<br />
+And in thy numbers, Philips, shines for aye<br />
+The solitary Shilling.&nbsp; Pardon then,<br />
+Ye sage dispensers of poetic fame!<br />
+The ambition of one meaner far, whose powers<br />
+Presuming an attempt not less sublime,<br />
+Pant for the praise of dressing to the taste<br />
+Of critic appetite, no sordid fare,<br />
+A cucumber, while costly yet and scarce.</p>
+<p class="poetry">The stable yields a stercoraceous heap<br />
+Impregnated with quick fermenting salts,<br />
+And potent to resist the freezing blast.<br />
+For ere the beech and elm have cast their leaf<br />
+Deciduous, and when now November dark<br />
+Checks vegetation in the torpid plant<br />
+Exposed to his cold breath, the task begins.<br />
+Warily therefore, and with prudent heed<br />
+He seeks a favoured spot, that where he builds<br />
+The agglomerated pile, his frame may front<br />
+The sun&rsquo;s meridian disk, and at the back<br />
+Enjoy close shelter, wall, or reeds, or hedge<br />
+Impervious to the wind.&nbsp; First he bids spread<br />
+Dry fern or littered hay, that may imbibe<br />
+The ascending damps; then leisurely impose,<br />
+And lightly, shaking it with agile hand<br />
+From the full fork, the saturated straw.<br />
+What longest binds the closest, forms secure<br />
+The shapely side, that as it rises takes<br />
+By just degrees an overhanging breadth,<br />
+Sheltering the base with its projected eaves.<br />
+The uplifted frame compact at every joint,<br />
+And overlaid with clear translucent glass,<br />
+He settles next upon the sloping mount,<br />
+Whose sharp declivity shoots off secure<br />
+From the dashed pane the deluge as it falls.<br />
+He shuts it close, and the first labour ends.<br />
+Thrice must the voluble and restless earth<br />
+Spin round upon her axle, ere the warmth<br />
+Slow gathering in the midst, through the square mass<br />
+Diffused, attain the surface.&nbsp; When, behold!<br />
+A pestilent and most corrosive steam,<br />
+Like a gross fog Boeotian, rising fast,<br />
+And fast condensed upon the dewy sash,<br />
+Asks egress; which obtained, the overcharged<br />
+And drenched conservatory breathes abroad,<br />
+In volumes wheeling slow, the vapour dank,<br />
+And purified, rejoices to have lost<br />
+Its foul inhabitant.&nbsp; But to assuage<br />
+The impatient fervour which it first conceives<br />
+Within its reeking bosom, threatening death<br />
+To his young hopes, requires discreet delay.<br />
+Experience, slow preceptress, teaching oft<br />
+The way to glory by miscarriage foul,<br />
+Must prompt him, and admonish how to catch<br />
+The auspicious moment, when the tempered heat,<br />
+Friendly to vital motion, may afford<br />
+Soft fermentation, and invite the seed.<br />
+The seed selected wisely, plump and smooth<br />
+And glossy, he commits to pots of size<br />
+Diminutive, well filled with well-prepared<br />
+And fruitful soil, that has been treasured long,<br />
+And drunk no moisture from the dripping clouds:<br />
+These on the warm and genial earth that hides<br />
+The smoking manure, and o&rsquo;erspreads it all,<br />
+He places lightly, and, as time subdues<br />
+The rage of fermentation, plunges deep<br />
+In the soft medium, till they stand immersed.<br />
+Then rise the tender germs upstarting quick<br />
+And spreading wide their spongy lobes; at first<br />
+Pale, wan, and livid; but assuming soon,<br />
+If fanned by balmy and nutritious air<br />
+Strained through the friendly mats, a vivid green.<br />
+Two leaves produced, two rough indented leaves,<br />
+Cautious he pinches from the second stalk<br />
+A pimple, that portends a future sprout,<br />
+And interdicts its growth.&nbsp; Thence straight succeed<br />
+The branches, sturdy to his utmost wish,<br />
+Prolific all, and harbingers of more.<br />
+The crowded roots demand enlargement now<br />
+And transplantation in an ampler space.<br />
+Indulged in what they wish, they soon supply<br />
+Large foliage, overshadowing golden flowers,<br />
+Blown on the summit of the apparent fruit.<br />
+These have their sexes, and when summer shines<br />
+The bee transports the fertilising meal<br />
+From flower to flower, and even the breathing air<br />
+Wafts the rich prize to its appointed use.<br />
+Not so when winter scowls.&nbsp; Assistant art<br />
+Then acts in nature&rsquo;s office, brings to pass<br />
+The glad espousals and insures the crop.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Grudge not, ye rich (since
+luxury must have<br />
+His dainties, and the world&rsquo;s more numerous half<br />
+Lives by contriving delicates for you),<br />
+Grudge not the cost.&nbsp; Ye little know the cares,<br />
+The vigilance, the labour, and the skill<br />
+That day and night are exercised, and hang<br />
+Upon the ticklish balance of suspense,<br />
+That ye may garnish your profuse regales<br />
+With summer fruits, brought forth by wintry suns.<br />
+Ten thousand dangers lie in wait to thwart<br />
+The process.&nbsp; Heat and cold, and wind and steam,<br />
+Moisture and drought, mice, worms, and swarming flies<br />
+Minute as dust and numberless, oft work<br />
+Dire disappointment that admits no cure,<br />
+And which no care can obviate.&nbsp; It were long,<br />
+Too long to tell the expedients and the shifts<br />
+Which he, that fights a season so severe,<br />
+Devises, while he guards his tender trust,<br />
+And oft, at last, in vain.&nbsp; The learned and wise<br />
+Sarcastic would exclaim, and judge the song<br />
+Cold as its theme, and, like its theme, the fruit<br />
+Of too much labour, worthless when produced.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Who loves a garden, loves a
+greenhouse too.<br />
+Unconscious of a less propitious clime<br />
+There blooms exotic beauty, warm and snug,<br />
+While the winds whistle and the snows descend.<br />
+The spiry myrtle with unwithering leaf<br />
+Shines there and flourishes.&nbsp; The golden boast<br />
+Of Portugal and Western India there,<br />
+The ruddier orange and the paler lime,<br />
+Peep through their polished foliage at the storm,<br />
+And seem to smile at what they need not fear.<br />
+The amomum there with intermingling flowers<br />
+And cherries hangs her twigs.&nbsp; Geranium boasts<br />
+Her crimson honours, and the spangled beau,<br />
+Ficoides, glitters bright the winter long,<br />
+All plants, of every leaf, that can endure<br />
+The winter&rsquo;s frown if screened from his shrewd bite,<br />
+Live there and prosper.&nbsp; Those Ausonia claims,<br />
+Levantine regions these; the Azores send<br />
+Their jessamine; her jessamine remote<br />
+Caffraria: foreigners from many lands,<br />
+They form one social shade, as if convened<br />
+By magic summons of the Orphean lyre.<br />
+Yet such arrangement, rarely brought to pass<br />
+But by a master&rsquo;s hand, disposing well<br />
+The gay diversities of leaf and flower,<br />
+Must lend its aid to illustrate all their charms,<br />
+And dress the regular yet various scene.<br />
+Plant behind plant aspiring, in the van<br />
+The dwarfish, in the rear retired, but still<br />
+Sublime above the rest, the statelier stand.<br />
+So once were ranged the sons of ancient Rome,<br />
+A noble show, while Roscius trod the stage;<br />
+And so, while Garrick, as renowned as he,<br />
+The sons of Albion, fearing each to lose<br />
+Some note of Nature&rsquo;s music from his lips,<br />
+And covetous of Shakespeare&rsquo;s beauty, seen<br />
+In every flash of his far-beaming eye.<br />
+Nor taste alone and well-contrived display<br />
+Suffice to give the marshalled ranks the grace<br />
+Of their complete effect.&nbsp; Much yet remains<br />
+Unsung, and many cares are yet behind<br />
+And more laborious; cares on which depends<br />
+Their vigour, injured soon, not soon restored.<br />
+The soil must be renewed, which often washed<br />
+Loses its treasure of salubrious salts,<br />
+And disappoints the roots; the slender roots,<br />
+Close interwoven where they meet the vase,<br />
+Must smooth be shorn away; the sapless branch<br />
+Must fly before the knife; the withered leaf<br />
+Must be detached, and where it strews the floor<br />
+Swept with a woman&rsquo;s neatness, breeding else<br />
+Contagion, and disseminating death.<br />
+Discharge but these kind offices (and who<br />
+Would spare, that loves them, offices like these?)<br />
+Well they reward the toil.&nbsp; The sight is pleased,<br />
+The scent regaled, each odoriferous leaf,<br />
+Each opening blossom, freely breathes abroad<br />
+Its gratitude, and thanks him with its sweets.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;So manifold, all pleasing in
+their kind,<br />
+All healthful, are the employs of rural life,<br />
+Reiterated as the wheel of time<br />
+Runs round, still ending, and beginning still.<br />
+Nor are these all.&nbsp; To deck the shapely knoll<br />
+That, softly swelled and gaily dressed, appears<br />
+A flowery island from the dark green lawn<br />
+Emerging, must be deemed a labour due<br />
+To no mean hand, and asks the touch of taste.<br />
+Here also grateful mixture of well-matched<br />
+And sorted hues (each giving each relief,<br />
+And by contrasted beauty shining more)<br />
+Is needful.&nbsp; Strength may wield the ponderous spade,<br />
+May turn the clod, and wheel the compost home,<br />
+But elegance, chief grace the garden shows<br />
+And most attractive, is the fair result<br />
+Of thought, the creature of a polished mind.<br />
+Without it, all is Gothic as the scene<br />
+To which the insipid citizen resorts,<br />
+Near yonder heath; where industry misspent,<br />
+But proud of his uncouth, ill-chosen task,<br />
+Has made a heaven on earth; with suns and moons<br />
+Of close-rammed stones has charged the encumbered soil,<br />
+And fairly laid the zodiac in the dust.<br />
+He, therefore, who would see his flowers disposed<br />
+Sightly and in just order, ere he gives<br />
+The beds the trusted treasure of their seeds,<br />
+Forecasts the future whole; that when the scene<br />
+Shall break into its preconceived display,<br />
+Each for itself, and all as with one voice<br />
+Conspiring, may attest his bright design.<br />
+Nor even then, dismissing as performed<br />
+His pleasant work, may he suppose it done.<br />
+Few self-supported flowers endure the wind<br />
+Uninjured, but expect the upholding aid<br />
+Of the smooth-shaven prop, and neatly tied<br />
+Are wedded thus, like beauty to old age,<br />
+For interest sake, the living to the dead.<br />
+Some clothe the soil that feeds them, far diffused<br />
+And lowly creeping, modest and yet fair;<br />
+Like virtue, thriving most where little seen.<br />
+Some, more aspiring, catch the neighbour shrub<br />
+With clasping tendrils, and invest his branch,<br />
+Else unadorned, with many a gay festoon<br />
+And fragrant chaplet, recompensing well<br />
+The strength they borrow with the grace they lend.<br />
+All hate the rank society of weeds,<br />
+Noisome, and very greedy to exhaust<br />
+The impoverished earth; an overbearing race,<br />
+That, like the multitude made faction-mad,<br />
+Disturb good order, and degrade true worth.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Oh blest seclusion from a
+jarring world,<br />
+Which he, thus occupied, enjoys!&nbsp; Retreat<br />
+Cannot, indeed, to guilty man restore<br />
+Lost innocence, or cancel follies past;<br />
+But it has peace, and much secures the mind<br />
+From all assaults of evil; proving still<br />
+A faithful barrier, not o&rsquo;erleaped with ease<br />
+By vicious custom raging uncontrolled<br />
+Abroad and desolating public life.<br />
+When fierce temptation, seconded within<br />
+By traitor appetite, and armed with darts<br />
+Tempered in hell, invades the throbbing breast,<br />
+To combat may be glorious, and success<br />
+Perhaps may crown us, but to fly is safe.<br />
+Had I the choice of sublunary good,<br />
+What could I wish that I possess not here?<br />
+Health, leisure; means to improve it, friendship, peace,<br />
+No loose or wanton though a wandering muse,<br />
+And constant occupation without care.<br />
+Thus blest, I draw a picture of that bliss;<br />
+Hopeless, indeed, that dissipated minds<br />
+And profligate abusers of a world<br />
+Created fair so much in vain for them,<br />
+Should seek the guiltless joys that I describe,<br />
+Allured by my report; but sure no less<br />
+That self-condemned they must neglect the prize,<br />
+And what they will not taste, must yet approve.<br />
+What we admire we praise; and when we praise<br />
+Advance it into notice, that, its worth<br />
+Acknowledged, others may admire it too.<br />
+I therefore recommend, though at the risk<br />
+Of popular disgust, yet boldly still,<br />
+The cause of piety and sacred truth<br />
+And virtue, and those scenes which God ordained<br />
+Should best secure them and promote them most;<br />
+Scenes that I love, and with regret perceive<br />
+Forsaken, or through folly not enjoyed.<br />
+Pure is the nymph, though liberal of her smiles,<br />
+And chaste, though unconfined, whom I extol.<br />
+Not as the prince in Shushan, when he called,<br />
+Vain-glorious of her charms, his Vashti forth,<br />
+To grace the full pavilion.&nbsp; His design<br />
+Was but to boast his own peculiar good,<br />
+Which all might view with envy, none partake.<br />
+My charmer is not mine alone; my sweets,<br />
+And she that sweetens all my bitters, too,<br />
+Nature, enchanting Nature, in whose form<br />
+And lineaments divine I trace a hand<br />
+That errs not, and find raptures still renewed,<br />
+Is free to all men&mdash;universal prize.<br />
+Strange that so fair a creature should yet want<br />
+Admirers, and be destined to divide<br />
+With meaner objects even the few she finds.<br />
+Stript of her ornaments, her leaves and flowers,<br />
+She loses all her influence.&nbsp; Cities then<br />
+Attract us, and neglected Nature pines,<br />
+Abandoned, as unworthy of our love.<br />
+But are not wholesome airs, though unperfumed<br />
+By roses, and clear suns, though scarcely felt,<br />
+And groves, if unharmonious yet secure<br />
+From clamour and whose very silence charms,<br />
+To be preferred to smoke&mdash;to the eclipse<br />
+That Metropolitan volcanoes make,<br />
+Whose Stygian throats breathe darkness all day long,<br />
+And to the stir of commerce, driving slow,<br />
+And thundering loud with his ten thousand wheels?<br />
+They would be, were not madness in the head<br />
+And folly in the heart; were England now<br />
+What England was, plain, hospitable, kind,<br />
+And undebauched.&nbsp; But we have bid farewell<br />
+To all the virtues of those better days,<br />
+And all their honest pleasures.&nbsp; Mansions once<br />
+Knew their own masters, and laborious hands<br />
+That had survived the father, served the son.<br />
+Now the legitimate and rightful lord<br />
+Is but a transient guest, newly arrived<br />
+And soon to be supplanted.&nbsp; He that saw<br />
+His patrimonial timber cast its leaf,<br />
+Sells the last scantling, and transfers the price<br />
+To some shrewd sharper, ere it buds again.<br />
+Estates are landscapes, gazed upon awhile,<br />
+Then advertised, and auctioneered away.<br />
+The country starves, and they that feed the o&rsquo;er-charged<br
+/>
+And surfeited lewd town with her fair dues,<br />
+By a just judgment strip and starve themselves.<br />
+The wings that waft our riches out of sight<br />
+Grow on the gamester&rsquo;s elbows, and the alert<br />
+And nimble motion of those restless joints,<br />
+That never tire, soon fans them all away.<br />
+Improvement too, the idol of the age,<br />
+Is fed with many a victim.&nbsp; Lo! he comes&mdash;<br />
+The omnipotent magician, Brown, appears.<br />
+Down falls the venerable pile, the abode<br />
+Of our forefathers, a grave whiskered race,<br />
+But tasteless.&nbsp; Springs a palace in its stead,<br />
+But in a distant spot; where more exposed<br />
+It may enjoy the advantage of the North<br />
+And aguish East, till time shall have transformed<br />
+Those naked acres to a sheltering grove.<br />
+He speaks.&nbsp; The lake in front becomes a lawn,<br />
+Woods vanish, hills subside, and valleys rise,<br />
+And streams, as if created for his use,<br />
+Pursue the track of his directed wand<br />
+Sinuous or straight, now rapid and now slow,<br />
+Now murmuring soft, now roaring in cascades,<br />
+Even as he bids.&nbsp; The enraptured owner smiles.<br />
+&rsquo;Tis finished.&nbsp; And yet, finished as it seems,<br />
+Still wants a grace, the loveliest it could show,<br />
+A mine to satisfy the enormous cost.<br />
+Drained to the last poor item of his wealth,<br />
+He sighs, departs, and leaves the accomplished plan<br />
+That he has touched and retouched, many a day<br />
+Laboured, and many a night pursued in dreams,<br />
+Just when it meets his hopes, and proves the heaven<br />
+He wanted, for a wealthier to enjoy.<br />
+And now perhaps the glorious hour is come,<br />
+When having no stake left, no pledge to endear<br />
+Her interests, or that gives her sacred cause<br />
+A moment&rsquo;s operation on his love,<br />
+He burns with most intense and flagrant zeal<br />
+To serve his country.&nbsp; Ministerial grace<br />
+Deals him out money from the public chest,<br />
+Or, if that mine be shut, some private purse<br />
+Supplies his need with an usurious loan,<br />
+To be refunded duly, when his vote,<br />
+Well-managed, shall have earned its worthy price.<br />
+Oh, innocent compared with arts like these,<br />
+Crape and cocked pistol and the whistling ball<br />
+Sent through the traveller&rsquo;s temples!&nbsp; He that
+finds<br />
+One drop of heaven&rsquo;s sweet mercy in his cup,<br />
+Can dig, beg, rot, and perish well-content,<br />
+So he may wrap himself in honest rags<br />
+At his last gasp; but could not for a world<br />
+Fish up his dirty and dependent bread<br />
+From pools and ditches of the commonwealth,<br />
+Sordid and sickening at his own success.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Ambition, avarice, penury
+incurred<br />
+By endless riot, vanity, the lust<br />
+Of pleasure and variety, despatch,<br />
+As duly as the swallows disappear,<br />
+The world of wandering knights and squires to town;<br />
+London engulfs them all.&nbsp; The shark is there,<br />
+And the shark&rsquo;s prey; the spendthrift, and the leech<br />
+That sucks him.&nbsp; There the sycophant, and he<br />
+That with bare-headed and obsequious bows<br />
+Begs a warm office, doomed to a cold jail<br />
+And groat per diem if his patron frown.<br />
+The levee swarms, as if in golden pomp<br />
+Were charactered on every statesman&rsquo;s door,<br />
+&lsquo;<span class="smcap">Battered and bankrupt fortunes mended
+here</span>.&rsquo;<br />
+These are the charms that sully and eclipse<br />
+The charms of nature.&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis the cruel gripe<br />
+That lean hard-handed poverty inflicts,<br />
+The hope of better things, the chance to win,<br />
+The wish to shine, the thirst to be amused,<br />
+That, at the sound of Winter&rsquo;s hoary wing,<br />
+Unpeople all our counties of such herds<br />
+Of fluttering, loitering, cringing, begging, loose<br />
+And wanton vagrants, as make London, vast<br />
+And boundless as it is, a crowded coop.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Oh thou resort and mart of
+all the earth,<br />
+Chequered with all complexions of mankind,<br />
+And spotted with all crimes; in whom I see<br />
+Much that I love, and more that I admire,<br />
+And all that I abhor; thou freckled fair<br />
+That pleases and yet shocks me, I can laugh<br />
+And I can weep, can hope, and can despond,<br />
+Feel wrath and pity when I think on thee!<br />
+Ten righteous would have saved a city once,<br />
+And thou hast many righteous.&mdash;Well for thee&mdash;<br />
+That salt preserves thee; more corrupted else,<br />
+And therefore more obnoxious at this hour<br />
+Than Sodom in her day had power to be,<br />
+For whom God heard his Abram plead in vain.</p>
+<h3>BOOK IV.<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">THE WINTER EVENING.</span></h3>
+<p class="poetry"><span class="smcap">Hark</span>! &rsquo;tis the
+twanging horn o&rsquo;er yonder bridge,<br />
+That with its wearisome but needful length<br />
+Bestrides the wintry flood, in which the moon<br />
+Sees her unwrinkled face reflected bright;&mdash;<br />
+He comes, the herald of a noisy world,<br />
+With spattered boots, strapped waist, and frozen locks,<br />
+News from all nations lumbering at his back.<br />
+True to his charge the close-packed load behind,<br />
+Yet careless what he brings, his one concern<br />
+Is to conduct it to the destined inn,<br />
+And, having dropped the expected bag&mdash;pass on.<br />
+He whistles as he goes, light-hearted wretch,<br />
+Cold and yet cheerful: messenger of grief<br />
+Perhaps to thousands, and of joy to some;<br />
+To him indifferent whether grief or joy.<br />
+Houses in ashes, and the fall of stocks,<br />
+Births, deaths, and marriages, epistles wet<br />
+With tears that trickled down the writer&rsquo;s cheeks,<br />
+Fast as the periods from his fluent quill,<br />
+Or charged with amorous sighs of absent swains,<br />
+Or nymphs responsive, equally affect<br />
+His horse and him, unconscious of them all.<br />
+But oh, the important budget! ushered in<br />
+With such heart-shaking music, who can say<br />
+What are its tidings? have our troops awaked?<br />
+Or do they still, as if with opium drugged,<br />
+Snore to the murmurs of the Atlantic wave?<br />
+Is India free? and does she wear her plumed<br />
+And jewelled turban with a smile of peace,<br />
+Or do we grind her still?&nbsp; The grand debate,<br />
+The popular harangue, the tart reply,<br />
+The logic and the wisdom and the wit<br />
+And the loud laugh&mdash;I long to know them all;<br />
+I burn to set the imprisoned wranglers free,<br />
+And give them voice and utterance once again.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Now stir the fire, and close
+the shutters fast,<br />
+Let fall the curtains, wheel the sofa round,<br />
+And while the bubbling and loud-hissing urn<br />
+Throws up a steamy column, and the cups,<br />
+That cheer but not inebriate, wait on each,<br />
+So let us welcome peaceful evening in.<br />
+Not such his evening, who with shining face<br />
+Sweats in the crowded theatre, and squeezed<br />
+And bored with elbow-points through both his sides,<br />
+Outscolds the ranting actor on the stage;<br />
+Nor his, who patient stands till his feet throb<br />
+And his head thumps, to feed upon the breath<br />
+Of patriots bursting with heroic rage,<br />
+Or placemen all tranquillity and smiles.<br />
+This folio of four pages, happy work!<br />
+Which not even critics criticise, that holds<br />
+Inquisitive attention while I read<br />
+Fast bound in chains of silence, which the fair,<br />
+Though eloquent themselves, yet fear to break,<br />
+What is it but a map of busy life,<br />
+Its fluctuations and its vast concerns?<br />
+Here runs the mountainous and craggy ridge<br />
+That tempts ambition.&nbsp; On the summit, see,<br />
+The seals of office glitter in his eyes;<br />
+He climbs, he pants, he grasps them.&nbsp; At his heels,<br />
+Close at his heels, a demagogue ascends,<br />
+And with a dextrous jerk soon twists him down<br />
+And wins them, but to lose them in his turn.<br />
+Here rills of oily eloquence, in soft<br />
+Meanders, lubricate the course they take;<br />
+The modest speaker is ashamed and grieved<br />
+To engross a moment&rsquo;s notice, and yet begs,<br />
+Begs a propitious ear for his poor thoughts,<br />
+However trivial all that he conceives.<br />
+Sweet bashfulness! it claims, at least, this praise,<br />
+The dearth of information and good sense<br />
+That it foretells us, always comes to pass.<br />
+Cataracts of declamation thunder here,<br />
+There forests of no meaning spread the page<br />
+In which all comprehension wanders lost;<br />
+While fields of pleasantry amuse us there,<br />
+With merry descants on a nation&rsquo;s woes.<br />
+The rest appears a wilderness of strange<br />
+But gay confusion; roses for the cheeks<br />
+And lilies for the brows of faded age,<br />
+Teeth for the toothless, ringlets for the bald,<br />
+Heaven, earth, and ocean plundered of their sweets.<br />
+Nectareous essences, Olympian dews,<br />
+Sermons and city feasts and favourite airs,<br />
+Ethereal journeys, submarine exploits,<br />
+And Katterfelto with his hair on end<br />
+At his own wonders, wondering for his bread.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&rsquo;Tis pleasant through
+the loopholes of retreat<br />
+To peep at such a world; to see the stir<br />
+Of the great Babel and not feel the crowd;<br />
+To hear the roar she sends through all her gates<br />
+At a safe distance, where the dying sound<br />
+Falls a soft murmur on the uninjured ear.<br />
+Thus sitting and surveying thus at ease<br />
+The globe and its concerns, I seem advanced<br />
+To some secure and more than mortal height,<br />
+That liberates and exempts me from them all.<br />
+It turns submitted to my view, turns round<br />
+With all its generations; I behold<br />
+The tumult and am still.&nbsp; The sound of war<br />
+Has lost its terrors ere it reaches me;<br />
+Grieves, but alarms me not.&nbsp; I mourn the pride<br />
+And avarice that makes man a wolf to man;<br />
+Hear the faint echo of those brazen throats<br />
+By which he speaks the language of his heart,<br />
+And sigh, but never tremble at the sound.<br />
+He travels and expatiates, as the bee<br />
+From flower to flower so he from land to land;<br />
+The manners, customs, policy of all<br />
+Pay contribution to the store he gleans,<br />
+He sucks intelligence in every clime,<br />
+And spreads the honey of his deep research<br />
+At his return&mdash;a rich repast for me.<br />
+He travels and I too.&nbsp; I tread his deck,<br />
+Ascend his topmast, through his peering eyes<br />
+Discover countries, with a kindred heart<br />
+Suffer his woes and share in his escapes;<br />
+While fancy, like the finger of a clock,<br />
+Runs the great circuit, and is still at home.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Oh Winter, ruler of the
+inverted year,<br />
+Thy scattered hair with sleet-like ashes filled,<br />
+Thy breath congealed upon thy lips, thy cheeks<br />
+Fringed with a beard made white with other snows<br />
+Than those of age, thy forehead wrapped in clouds,<br />
+A leafless branch thy sceptre, and thy throne<br />
+A sliding car indebted to no wheels,<br />
+But urged by storms along its slippery way,<br />
+I love thee, all unlovely as thou seem&rsquo;st,<br />
+And dreaded as thou art.&nbsp; Thou hold&rsquo;st the sun<br />
+A prisoner in the yet undawning East,<br />
+Shortening his journey between morn and noon,<br />
+And hurrying him, impatient of his stay,<br />
+Down to the rosy west; but kindly still<br />
+Compensating his loss with added hours<br />
+Of social converse and instructive ease,<br />
+And gathering at short notice in one group<br />
+The family dispersed, and fixing thought<br />
+Not less dispersed by daylight and its cares.<br />
+I crown thee king of intimate delights,<br />
+Fire-side enjoyments, home-born happiness,<br />
+And all the comforts that the lowly roof<br />
+Of undisturbed retirement, and the hours<br />
+Of long uninterrupted evening know.<br />
+No rattling wheels stop short before these gates;<br />
+No powdered pert proficients in the art<br />
+Of sounding an alarm, assault these doors<br />
+Till the street rings; no stationary steeds<br />
+Cough their own knell, while heedless of the sound<br />
+The silent circle fan themselves, and quake:<br />
+But here the needle plies its busy task,<br />
+The pattern grows, the well-depicted flower,<br />
+Wrought patiently into the snowy lawn,<br />
+Unfolds its bosom; buds and leaves and sprigs<br />
+And curly tendrils, gracefully disposed,<br />
+Follow the nimble finger of the fair;<br />
+A wreath that cannot fade, of flowers that blow<br />
+With most success when all besides decay.<br />
+The poet&rsquo;s or historian&rsquo;s page, by one<br />
+Made vocal for the amusement of the rest;<br />
+The sprightly lyre, whose treasure of sweet sounds<br />
+The touch from many a trembling chord shakes out;<br />
+And the clear voice symphonious, yet distinct,<br />
+And in the charming strife triumphant still,<br />
+Beguile the night, and set a keener edge<br />
+On female industry; the threaded steel<br />
+Flies swiftly, and unfelt the task proceeds.<br />
+The volume closed, the customary rites<br />
+Of the last meal commence: a Roman meal,<br />
+Such as the mistress of the world once found<br />
+Delicious, when her patriots of high note,<br />
+Perhaps by moonlight, at their humble doors,<br />
+And under an old oak&rsquo;s domestic shade,<br />
+Enjoyed&mdash;spare feast!&mdash;a radish and an egg.<br />
+Discourse ensues, not trivial, yet not dull,<br />
+Nor such as with a frown forbids the play<br />
+Of fancy, or proscribes the sound of mirth;<br />
+Nor do we madly, like an impious world,<br />
+Who deem religion frenzy, and the God<br />
+That made them an intruder on their joys,<br />
+Start at His awful name, or deem His praise<br />
+A jarring note; themes of a graver tone<br />
+Exciting oft our gratitude and love,<br />
+While we retrace with memory&rsquo;s pointing wand<br />
+That calls the past to our exact review,<br />
+The dangers we have scaped, the broken snare,<br />
+The disappointed foe, deliverance found<br />
+Unlooked for, life preserved and peace restored,<br />
+Fruits of omnipotent eternal love:&mdash;<br />
+Oh evenings worthy of the gods! exclaimed<br />
+The Sabine bard.&nbsp; Oh evenings, I reply,<br />
+More to be prized and coveted than yours,<br />
+As more illumined and with nobler truths,<br />
+That I, and mine, and those we love, enjoy.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Is Winter hideous in a garb
+like this?<br />
+Needs he the tragic fur, the smoke of lamps,<br />
+The pent-up breath of an unsavoury throng<br />
+To thaw him into feeling, or the smart<br />
+And snappish dialogue that flippant wits<br />
+Call comedy, to prompt him with a smile?<br />
+The self-complacent actor, when he views<br />
+(Stealing a sidelong glance at a full house)<br />
+The slope of faces from the floor to the roof,<br />
+As if one master-spring controlled them all,<br />
+Relaxed into an universal grin,<br />
+Sees not a countenance there that speaks a joy<br />
+Half so refined or so sincere as ours.<br />
+Cards were superfluous here, with all the tricks<br />
+That idleness has ever yet contrived<br />
+To fill the void of an unfurnished brain,<br />
+To palliate dulness and give time a shove.<br />
+Time, as he passes us, has a dove&rsquo;s wing,<br />
+Unsoiled and swift and of a silken sound.<br />
+But the world&rsquo;s time is time in masquerade.<br />
+Theirs, should I paint him, has his pinions fledged<br />
+With motley plumes, and, where the peacock shows<br />
+His azure eyes, is tinctured black and red<br />
+With spots quadrangular of diamond form,<br />
+Ensanguined hearts, clubs typical of strife,<br />
+And spades, the emblem of untimely graves.<br />
+What should be, and what was an hour-glass once,<br />
+Becomes a dice-box, and a billiard mast<br />
+Well does the work of his destructive scythe.<br />
+Thus decked he charms a world whom fashion blinds<br />
+To his true worth, most pleased when idle most,<br />
+Whose only happy are their wasted hours.<br />
+Even misses, at whose age their mothers wore<br />
+The back-string and the bib, assume the dress<br />
+Of womanhood, sit pupils in the school<br />
+Of card-devoted time, and night by night,<br />
+Placed at some vacant corner of the board,<br />
+Learn every trick, and soon play all the game.<br />
+But truce with censure.&nbsp; Roving as I rove,<br />
+Where shall I find an end, or how proceed?<br />
+As he that travels far, oft turns aside<br />
+To view some rugged rock, or mouldering tower,<br />
+Which seen delights him not; then coming home,<br />
+Describes and prints it, that the world may know<br />
+How far he went for what was nothing worth;<br />
+So I, with brush in hand and pallet spread<br />
+With colours mixed for a far different use,<br />
+Paint cards and dolls, and every idle thing<br />
+That fancy finds in her excursive flights.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Come, Evening, once again,
+season of peace,<br />
+Return, sweet Evening, and continue long!<br />
+Methinks I see thee in the streaky west,<br />
+With matron-step slow moving, while the night<br />
+Treads on thy sweeping train; one hand employed<br />
+In letting fall the curtain of repose<br />
+On bird and beast, the other charged for man<br />
+With sweet oblivion of the cares of day;<br />
+Not sumptuously adorned, nor needing aid,<br />
+Like homely-featured night, of clustering gems,<br />
+A star or two just twinkling on thy brow<br />
+Suffices thee; save that the moon is thine<br />
+No less than hers, not worn indeed on high<br />
+With ostentatious pageantry, but set<br />
+With modest grandeur in thy purple zone,<br />
+Resplendent less, but of an ampler round.<br />
+Come, then, and thou shalt find thy votary calm,<br />
+Or make me so.&nbsp; Composure is thy gift;<br />
+And whether I devote thy gentle hours<br />
+To books, to music, or to poet&rsquo;s toil,<br />
+To weaving nets for bird-alluring fruit,<br />
+Or twining silken threads round ivory reels<br />
+When they command whom man was born to please,<br />
+I slight thee not, but make thee welcome still.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Just when our drawing-rooms
+begin to blaze<br />
+With lights, by clear reflection multiplied<br />
+From many a mirror, in which he of Gath,<br />
+Goliath, might have seen his giant bulk<br />
+Whole without stooping, towering crest and all,<br />
+My pleasures too begin.&nbsp; But me perhaps<br />
+The glowing hearth may satisfy a while<br />
+With faint illumination, that uplifts<br />
+The shadow to the ceiling, there by fits<br />
+Dancing uncouthly to the quivering flame.<br />
+Not undelightful is an hour to me<br />
+So spent in parlour twilight; such a gloom<br />
+Suits well the thoughtful or unthinking mind,<br />
+The mind contemplative, with some new theme<br />
+Pregnant, or indisposed alike to all.<br />
+Laugh ye, who boast your more mercurial powers<br />
+That never feel a stupor, know no pause,<br />
+Nor need one; I am conscious, and confess.<br />
+Fearless, a soul that does not always think.<br />
+Me oft has fancy ludicrous and wild<br />
+Soothed with a waking dream of houses, towers,<br />
+Trees, churches, and strange visages expressed<br />
+In the red cinders, while with poring eye<br />
+I gazed, myself creating what I saw.<br />
+Nor less amused have I quiescent watched<br />
+The sooty films that play upon the bars<br />
+Pendulous, and foreboding in the view<br />
+Of superstition, prophesying still,<br />
+Though still deceived, some stranger&rsquo;s near approach.<br />
+&rsquo;Tis thus the understanding takes repose<br />
+In indolent vacuity of thought,<br />
+And sleeps and is refreshed.&nbsp; Meanwhile the face<br />
+Conceals the mood lethargic with a mask<br />
+Of deep deliberation, as the man<br />
+Were tasked to his full strength, absorbed and lost.<br />
+Thus oft reclined at ease, I lose an hour<br />
+At evening, till at length the freezing blast<br />
+That sweeps the bolted shutter, summons home<br />
+The recollected powers, and, snapping short<br />
+The glassy threads with which the fancy weaves<br />
+Her brittle toys, restores me to myself.<br />
+How calm is my recess! and how the frost<br />
+Raging abroad, and the rough wind, endear<br />
+The silence and the warmth enjoyed within!<br />
+I saw the woods and fields at close of day<br />
+A variegated show; the meadows green<br />
+Though faded, and the lands, where lately waved<br />
+The golden harvest, of a mellow brown,<br />
+Upturned so lately by the forceful share;<br />
+I saw far off the weedy fallows smile<br />
+With verdure not unprofitable, grazed<br />
+By flocks fast feeding, and selecting each<br />
+His favourite herb; while all the leafless groves<br />
+That skirt the horizon wore a sable hue,<br />
+Scarce noticed in the kindred dusk of eve.<br />
+To-morrow brings a change, a total change,<br />
+Which even now, though silently performed<br />
+And slowly, and by most unfelt, the face<br />
+Of universal nature undergoes.<br />
+Fast falls a fleecy shower; the downy flakes,<br />
+Descending and with never-ceasing lapse<br />
+Softly alighting upon all below,<br />
+Assimilate all objects.&nbsp; Earth receives<br />
+Gladly the thickening mantle, and the green<br />
+And tender blade, that feared the chilling blast,<br />
+Escapes unhurt beneath so warm a veil.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In such a world, so thorny,
+and where none<br />
+Finds happiness unblighted, or if found,<br />
+Without some thistly sorrow at its side,<br />
+It seems the part of wisdom, and no sin<br />
+Against the law of love, to measure lots<br />
+With less distinguished than ourselves, that thus<br />
+We may with patience bear our moderate ills,<br />
+And sympathise with others, suffering more.<br />
+Ill fares the traveller now, and he that stalks<br />
+In ponderous boots beside his reeking team;<br />
+The wain goes heavily, impeded sore<br />
+By congregating loads adhering close<br />
+To the clogged wheels, and, in its sluggish pace,<br />
+Noiseless appears a moving hill of snow.<br />
+The toiling steeds expand the nostril wide,<br />
+While every breath, by respiration strong<br />
+Forced downward, is consolidated soon<br />
+Upon their jutting chests.&nbsp; He, formed to bear<br />
+The pelting brunt of the tempestuous night,<br />
+With half-shut eyes, and puckered cheeks, and teeth<br />
+Presented bare against the storm, plods on;<br />
+One hand secures his hat, save when with both<br />
+He brandishes his pliant length of whip,<br />
+Resounding oft, and never heard in vain.<br />
+Oh happy, and, in my account, denied<br />
+That sensibility of pain with which<br />
+Refinement is endued, thrice happy thou!<br />
+Thy frame, robust and hardy, feels indeed<br />
+The piercing cold, but feels it unimpaired;<br />
+The learned finger never need explore<br />
+Thy vigorous pulse, and the unhealthful East,<br />
+That breathes the spleen, and searches every bone<br />
+Of the infirm, is wholesome air to thee.<br />
+Thy days roll on exempt from household care,<br />
+Thy waggon is thy wife; and the poor beasts,<br />
+That drag the dull companion to and fro,<br />
+Thine helpless charge, dependent on thy care.<br />
+Ah, treat them kindly! rude as thou appearest,<br />
+Yet show that thou hast mercy, which the great,<br />
+With needless hurry whirled from place to place,<br />
+Humane as they would seem, not always show.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Poor, yet industrious,
+modest, quiet, neat,<br />
+Such claim compassion in a night like this,<br />
+And have a friend in every feeling heart.<br />
+Warmed while it lasts, by labour, all day long<br />
+They brave the season, and yet find at eve,<br />
+Ill clad and fed but sparely, time to cool.<br />
+The frugal housewife trembles when she lights<br />
+Her scanty stock of brushwood, blazing clear,<br />
+But dying soon, like all terrestrial joys;<br />
+The few small embers left she nurses well.<br />
+And while her infant race with outspread hands<br />
+And crowded knees sit cowering o&rsquo;er the sparks,<br />
+Retires, content to quake, so they be warmed.<br />
+The man feels least, as more inured than she<br />
+To winter, and the current in his veins<br />
+More briskly moved by his severer toil;<br />
+Yet he, too, finds his own distress in theirs.<br />
+The taper soon extinguished, which I saw<br />
+Dangled along at the cold finger&rsquo;s end<br />
+Just when the day declined, and the brown loaf<br />
+Lodged on the shelf, half-eaten, without sauce<br />
+Of sav&rsquo;ry cheese, or butter costlier still,<br />
+Sleep seems their only refuge.&nbsp; For alas,<br />
+Where penury is felt the thought is chained,<br />
+And sweet colloquial pleasures are but few.<br />
+With all this thrift they thrive not.&nbsp; All the care<br />
+Ingenious parsimony takes, but just<br />
+Saves the small inventory, bed and stool,<br />
+Skillet and old carved chest, from public sale.<br />
+They live, and live without extorted alms<br />
+From grudging hands, but other boast have none<br />
+To soothe their honest pride that scorns to beg,<br />
+Nor comfort else, but in their mutual love.<br />
+I praise you much, ye meek and patient pair,<br />
+For ye are worthy; choosing rather far<br />
+A dry but independent crust, hard-earned<br />
+And eaten with a sigh, than to endure<br />
+The rugged frowns and insolent rebuffs<br />
+Of knaves in office, partial in their work<br />
+Of distribution; liberal of their aid<br />
+To clamorous importunity in rags,<br />
+But ofttimes deaf to suppliants who would blush<br />
+To wear a tattered garb however coarse,<br />
+Whom famine cannot reconcile to filth;<br />
+These ask with painful shyness, and, refused<br />
+Because deserving, silently retire.<br />
+But be ye of good courage!&nbsp; Time itself<br />
+Shall much befriend you.&nbsp; Time shall give increase,<br />
+And all your numerous progeny, well trained,<br />
+But helpless, in few years shall find their hands,<br />
+And labour too.&nbsp; Meanwhile ye shall not want<br />
+What, conscious of your virtues, we can spare,<br />
+Nor what a wealthier than ourselves may send.<br />
+I mean the man, who when the distant poor<br />
+Need help, denies them nothing but his name.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But poverty with most, who
+whimper forth<br />
+Their long complaints, is self-inflicted woe,<br />
+The effect of laziness or sottish waste.<br />
+Now goes the nightly thief prowling abroad<br />
+For plunder; much solicitous how best<br />
+He may compensate for a day of sloth,<br />
+By works of darkness and nocturnal wrong,<br />
+Woe to the gardener&rsquo;s pale, the farmer&rsquo;s hedge<br />
+Plashed neatly and secured with driven stakes<br />
+Deep in the loamy bank.&nbsp; Uptorn by strength<br />
+Resistless in so bad a cause, but lame<br />
+To better deeds, he bundles up the spoil&mdash;<br />
+An ass&rsquo;s burden,&mdash;and when laden most<br />
+And heaviest, light of foot steals fast away.<br />
+Nor does the boarded hovel better guard<br />
+The well-stacked pile of riven logs and roots<br />
+From his pernicious force.&nbsp; Nor will he leave<br />
+Unwrenched the door, however well secured,<br />
+Where chanticleer amidst his harem sleeps<br />
+In unsuspecting pomp; twitched from the perch<br />
+He gives the princely bird with all his wives<br />
+To his voracious bag, struggling in vain,<br />
+And loudly wondering at the sudden change.<br />
+Nor this to feed his own.&nbsp; &rsquo;Twere some excuse<br />
+Did pity of their sufferings warp aside<br />
+His principle, and tempt him into sin<br />
+For their support, so destitute; but they<br />
+Neglected pine at home, themselves, as more<br />
+Exposed than others, with less scruple made<br />
+His victims, robbed of their defenceless all.<br />
+Cruel is all he does.&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis quenchless thirst<br />
+Of ruinous ebriety that prompts<br />
+His every action, and imbrutes the man.<br />
+Oh for a law to noose the villain&rsquo;s neck<br />
+Who starves his own; who persecutes the blood<br />
+He gave them in his children&rsquo;s veins, and hates<br />
+And wrongs the woman he has sworn to love.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Pass where we may, through
+city, or through town,<br />
+Village or hamlet of this merry land,<br />
+Though lean and beggared, every twentieth pace<br />
+Conducts the unguarded nose to such a whiff<br />
+Of stale debauch, forth-issuing from the styes<br />
+That law has licensed, as makes temperance reel.<br />
+There sit involved and lost in curling clouds<br />
+Of Indian fume, and guzzling deep, the boor,<br />
+The lackey, and the groom.&nbsp; The craftsman there<br />
+Takes a Lethean leave of all his toil;<br />
+Smith, cobbler, joiner, he that plies the shears,<br />
+And he that kneads the dough: all loud alike,<br />
+All learned, and all drunk.&nbsp; The fiddle screams<br />
+Plaintive and piteous, as it wept and wailed<br />
+Its wasted tones and harmony unheard;<br />
+Fierce the dispute, whate&rsquo;er the theme; while she,<br />
+Fell Discord, arbitress of such debate,<br />
+Perched on the sign-post, holds with even hand<br />
+Her undecisive scales.&nbsp; In this she lays<br />
+A weight of ignorance, in that, of pride,<br />
+And smiles delighted with the eternal poise.<br />
+Dire is the frequent curse and its twin sound<br />
+The cheek-distending oath, not to be praised<br />
+As ornamental, musical, polite,<br />
+Like those which modern senators employ,<br />
+Whose oath is rhetoric, and who swear for fame.<br />
+Behold the schools in which plebeian minds,<br />
+Once simple, are initiated in arts<br />
+Which some may practise with politer grace,<br />
+But none with readier skill!&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis here they learn<br
+/>
+The road that leads from competence and peace<br />
+To indigence and rapine; till at last<br />
+Society, grown weary of the load,<br />
+Shakes her encumbered lap, and casts them out.<br />
+But censure profits little.&nbsp; Vain the attempt<br />
+To advertise in verse a public pest,<br />
+That, like the filth with which the peasant feeds<br />
+His hungry acres, stinks and is of use.<br />
+The excise is fattened with the rich result<br />
+Of all this riot; and ten thousand casks,<br />
+For ever dribbling out their base contents,<br />
+Touched by the Midas finger of the state,<br />
+Bleed gold for Ministers to sport away.<br />
+Drink and be mad then; &rsquo;tis your country bids!<br />
+Gloriously drunk, obey the important call,<br />
+Her cause demands the assistance of your throats;&mdash;<br />
+Ye all can swallow, and she asks no more.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Would I had fallen upon those
+happier days<br />
+That poets celebrate; those golden times<br />
+And those Arcadian scenes that Maro sings,<br />
+And Sidney, warbler of poetic prose.<br />
+Nymphs were Dianas then, and swains had hearts<br />
+That felt their virtues.&nbsp; Innocence, it seems,<br />
+From courts dismissed, found shelter in the groves;<br />
+The footsteps of simplicity, impressed<br />
+Upon the yielding herbage (so they sing),<br />
+Then were not all effaced.&nbsp; Then speech profane<br />
+And manners profligate were rarely found,<br />
+Observed as prodigies, and soon reclaimed.<br />
+Vain wish! those days were never: airy dreams<br />
+Sat for the picture; and the poet&rsquo;s hand,<br />
+Imparting substance to an empty shade,<br />
+Imposed a gay delirium for a truth.<br />
+Grant it: I still must envy them an age<br />
+That favoured such a dream, in days like these<br />
+Impossible, when virtue is so scarce<br />
+That to suppose a scene where she presides<br />
+Is tramontane, and stumbles all belief.<br />
+No.&nbsp; We are polished now.&nbsp; The rural lass,<br />
+Whom once her virgin modesty and grace,<br />
+Her artless manners and her neat attire,<br />
+So dignified, that she was hardly less<br />
+Than the fair shepherdess of old romance,<br />
+Is seen no more.&nbsp; The character is lost.<br />
+Her head adorned with lappets pinned aloft<br />
+And ribbons streaming gay, superbly raised<br />
+And magnified beyond all human size,<br />
+Indebted to some smart wig-weaver&rsquo;s hand<br />
+For more than half the tresses it sustains;<br />
+Her elbows ruffled, and her tottering form<br />
+Ill propped upon French heels; she might be deemed<br />
+(But that the basket dangling on her arm<br />
+Interprets her more truly) of a rank<br />
+Too proud for dairy-work, or sale of eggs;<br />
+Expect her soon with foot-boy at her heels,<br />
+No longer blushing for her awkward load,<br />
+Her train and her umbrella all her care.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The town has tinged the
+country; and the stain<br />
+Appears a spot upon a vestal&rsquo;s robe,<br />
+The worse for what it soils.&nbsp; The fashion runs<br />
+Down into scenes still rural, but alas,<br />
+Scenes rarely graced with rural manners now.<br />
+Time was when in the pastoral retreat<br />
+The unguarded door was safe; men did not watch<br />
+To invade another&rsquo;s right, or guard their own.<br />
+Then sleep was undisturbed by fear, unscared<br />
+By drunken howlings; and the chilling tale<br />
+Of midnight murder was a wonder heard<br />
+With doubtful credit, told to frighten babes<br />
+But farewell now to unsuspicious nights,<br />
+And slumbers unalarmed.&nbsp; Now, ere you sleep,<br />
+See that your polished arms be primed with care,<br />
+And drop the night-bolt.&nbsp; Ruffians are abroad,<br />
+And the first larum of the cock&rsquo;s shrill throat<br />
+May prove a trumpet, summoning your ear<br />
+To horrid sounds of hostile feet within.<br />
+Even daylight has its dangers; and the walk<br />
+Through pathless wastes and woods, unconscious once<br />
+Of other tenants than melodious birds,<br />
+Or harmless flocks, is hazardous and bold.<br />
+Lamented change! to which full many a cause<br />
+Inveterate, hopeless of a cure, conspires.<br />
+The course of human things from good to ill,<br />
+From ill to worse, is fatal, never fails.<br />
+Increase of power begets increase of wealth;<br />
+Wealth luxury, and luxury excess;<br />
+Excess, the scrofulous and itchy plague<br />
+That seizes first the opulent, descends<br />
+To the next rank contagious, and in time<br />
+Taints downward all the graduated scale<br />
+Of order, from the chariot to the plough.<br />
+The rich, and they that have an arm to check<br />
+The licence of the lowest in degree,<br />
+Desert their office; and themselves, intent<br />
+On pleasure, haunt the capital, and thus<br />
+To all the violence of lawless hands<br />
+Resign the scenes their presence might protect.<br />
+Authority itself not seldom sleeps,<br />
+Though resident, and witness of the wrong.<br />
+The plump convivial parson often bears<br />
+The magisterial sword in vain, and lays<br />
+His reverence and his worship both to rest<br />
+On the same cushion of habitual sloth.<br />
+Perhaps timidity restrains his arm,<br />
+When he should strike he trembles, and sets free,<br />
+Himself enslaved by terror of the band,<br />
+The audacious convict whom he dares not bind.<br />
+Perhaps, though by profession ghostly pure,<br />
+He, too, may have his vice, and sometimes prove<br />
+Less dainty than becomes his grave outside<br />
+In lucrative concerns.&nbsp; Examine well<br />
+His milk-white hand.&nbsp; The palm is hardly clean&mdash;<br />
+But here and there an ugly smutch appears.<br />
+Foh! &rsquo;twas a bribe that left it.&nbsp; He has touched<br />
+Corruption.&nbsp; Whoso seeks an audit here<br />
+Propitious, pays his tribute, game or fish,<br />
+Wildfowl or venison, and his errand speeds.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But faster far and more than
+all the rest<br />
+A noble cause, which none who bears a spark<br />
+Of public virtue ever wished removed,<br />
+Works the deplored and mischievous effect.<br />
+&rsquo;Tis universal soldiership has stabbed<br />
+The heart of merit in the meaner class.<br />
+Arms, through the vanity and brainless rage<br />
+Of those that bear them, in whatever cause,<br />
+Seem most at variance with all moral good,<br />
+And incompatible with serious thought.<br />
+The clown, the child of nature, without guile,<br />
+Blest with an infant&rsquo;s ignorance of all<br />
+But his own simple pleasures, now and then<br />
+A wrestling match, a foot-race, or a fair,<br />
+Is balloted, and trembles at the news.<br />
+Sheepish he doffs his hat, and mumbling swears<br />
+A Bible-oath to be whate&rsquo;er they please,<br />
+To do he knows not what.&nbsp; The task performed,<br />
+That instant he becomes the serjeant&rsquo;s care,<br />
+His pupil, and his torment, and his jest;<br />
+His awkward gait, his introverted toes,<br />
+Bent knees, round shoulders, and dejected looks,<br />
+Procure him many a curse.&nbsp; By slow degrees,<br />
+Unapt to learn and formed of stubborn stuff,<br />
+He yet by slow degrees puts off himself,<br />
+Grows conscious of a change, and likes it well.<br />
+He stands erect, his slouch becomes a walk,<br />
+He steps right onward, martial in his air,<br />
+His form and movement; is as smart above<br />
+As meal and larded locks can make him: wears<br />
+His hat or his plumed helmet with a grace,<br />
+And, his three years of heroship expired,<br />
+Returns indignant to the slighted plough.<br />
+He hates the field in which no fife or drum<br />
+Attends him, drives his cattle to a march,<br />
+And sighs for the smart comrades he has left.<br />
+&rsquo;Twere well if his exterior change were all&mdash;<br />
+But with his clumsy port the wretch has lost<br />
+His ignorance and harmless manners too.<br />
+To swear, to game, to drink, to show at home<br />
+By lewdness, idleness, and Sabbath-breach,<br />
+The great proficiency he made abroad,<br />
+To astonish and to grieve his gazing friends,<br />
+To break some maiden&rsquo;s and his mother&rsquo;s heart,<br />
+To be a pest where he was useful once,<br />
+Are his sole aim, and all his glory now!<br />
+Man in society is like a flower<br />
+Blown in its native bed.&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis there alone<br />
+His faculties expanded in full bloom<br />
+Shine out, there only reach their proper use.<br />
+But man associated and leagued with man<br />
+By regal warrant, or self-joined by bond<br />
+For interest sake, or swarming into clans<br />
+Beneath one head for purposes of war,<br />
+Like flowers selected from the rest, and bound<br />
+And bundled close to fill some crowded vase,<br />
+Fades rapidly, and by compression marred<br />
+Contracts defilement not to be endured.<br />
+Hence chartered boroughs are such public plagues,<br />
+And burghers, men immaculate perhaps<br />
+In all their private functions, once combined,<br />
+Become a loathsome body, only fit<br />
+For dissolution, hurtful to the main.<br />
+Hence merchants, unimpeachable of sin<br />
+Against the charities of domestic life,<br />
+Incorporated, seem at once to lose<br />
+Their nature, and, disclaiming all regard<br />
+For mercy and the common rights of man,<br />
+Build factories with blood, conducting trade<br />
+At the sword&rsquo;s point, and dyeing the white robe<br />
+Of innocent commercial justice red.<br />
+Hence too the field of glory, as the world<br />
+Misdeems it, dazzled by its bright array,<br />
+With all the majesty of thundering pomp,<br />
+Enchanting music and immortal wreaths,<br />
+Is but a school where thoughtlessness is taught<br />
+On principle, where foppery atones<br />
+For folly, gallantry for every vice.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But slighted as it is, and by
+the great<br />
+Abandoned, and, which still I more regret,<br />
+Infected with the manners and the modes<br />
+It knew not once, the country wins me still.<br />
+I never framed a wish or formed a plan<br />
+That flattered me with hopes of earthly bliss,<br />
+But there I laid the scene.&nbsp; There early strayed<br />
+My fancy, ere yet liberty of choice<br />
+Had found me, or the hope of being free.<br />
+My very dreams were rural, rural too<br />
+The first-born efforts of my youthful muse,<br />
+Sportive, and jingling her poetic bells<br />
+Ere yet her ear was mistress of their powers.<br />
+No bard could please me but whose lyre was tuned<br />
+To Nature&rsquo;s praises.&nbsp; Heroes and their feats<br />
+Fatigued me, never weary of the pipe<br />
+Of Tityrus, assembling as he sang<br />
+The rustic throng beneath his favourite beech.<br />
+Then Milton had indeed a poet&rsquo;s charms:<br />
+New to my taste, his Paradise surpassed<br />
+The struggling efforts of my boyish tongue<br />
+To speak its excellence; I danced for joy.<br />
+I marvelled much that, at so ripe an age<br />
+As twice seven years, his beauties had then first<br />
+Engaged my wonder, and admiring still,<br />
+And still admiring, with regret supposed<br />
+The joy half lost because not sooner found.<br />
+Thee, too, enamoured of the life I loved,<br />
+Pathetic in its praise, in its pursuit<br />
+Determined, and possessing it at last<br />
+With transports such as favoured lovers feel,<br />
+I studied, prized, and wished that I had known,<br />
+Ingenious Cowley: and though now, reclaimed<br />
+By modern lights from an erroneous taste,<br />
+I cannot but lament thy splendid wit<br />
+Entangled in the cobwebs of the schools.<br />
+I still revere thee, courtly though retired,<br />
+Though stretched at ease in Chertsey&rsquo;s silent bowers,<br />
+Not unemployed, and finding rich amends<br />
+For a lost world in solitude and verse.<br />
+&rsquo;Tis born with all.&nbsp; The love of Nature&rsquo;s
+works<br />
+Is an ingredient in the compound, man,<br />
+Infused at the creation of the kind.<br />
+And though the Almighty Maker has throughout<br />
+Discriminated each from each, by strokes<br />
+And touches of His hand, with so much art<br />
+Diversified, that two were never found<br />
+Twins at all points&mdash;yet this obtains in all,<br />
+That all discern a beauty in His works,<br />
+And all can taste them: minds that have been formed<br />
+And tutored, with a relish more exact,<br />
+But none without some relish, none unmoved.<br />
+It is a flame that dies not even there,<br />
+Where nothing feeds it.&nbsp; Neither business, crowds,<br />
+Nor habits of luxurious city life,<br />
+Whatever else they smother of true worth<br />
+In human bosoms, quench it or abate.<br />
+The villas, with which London stands begirt<br />
+Like a swarth Indian with his belt of beads,<br />
+Prove it.&nbsp; A breath of unadulterate air,<br />
+The glimpse of a green pasture, how they cheer<br />
+The citizen, and brace his languid frame!<br />
+Even in the stifling bosom of the town,<br />
+A garden in which nothing thrives, has charms<br />
+That soothe the rich possessor; much consoled<br />
+That here and there some sprigs of mournful mint,<br />
+Of nightshade, or valerian, grace the well<br />
+He cultivates.&nbsp; These serve him with a hint<br />
+That Nature lives; that sight-refreshing green<br />
+Is still the livery she delights to wear,<br />
+Though sickly samples of the exuberant whole.<br />
+What are the casements lined with creeping herbs,<br />
+The prouder sashes fronted with a range<br />
+Of orange, myrtle, or the fragrant weed,<br />
+The Frenchman&rsquo;s darling? are they not all proofs<br />
+That man, immured in cities, still retains<br />
+His inborn inextinguishable thirst<br />
+Of rural scenes, compensating his loss<br />
+By supplemental shifts, the best he may?<br />
+The most unfurnished with the means of life,<br />
+And they that never pass their brick-wall bounds<br />
+To range the fields, and treat their lungs with air,<br />
+Yet feel the burning instinct: over-head<br />
+Suspend their crazy boxes planted thick<br />
+And watered duly.&nbsp; There the pitcher stands<br />
+A fragment, and the spoutless tea-pot there;<br />
+Sad witnesses how close-pent man regrets<br />
+The country, with what ardour he contrives<br />
+A peep at nature, when he can no more.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Hail, therefore, patroness of
+health and ease<br />
+And contemplation, heart-consoling joys<br />
+And harmless pleasures, in the thronged abode<br />
+Of multitudes unknown, hail rural life!<br />
+Address himself who will to the pursuit<br />
+Of honours, or emolument, or fame,<br />
+I shall not add myself to such a chase,<br />
+Thwart his attempts, or envy his success.<br />
+Some must be great.&nbsp; Great offices will have<br />
+Great talents.&nbsp; And God gives to every man<br />
+The virtue, temper, understanding, taste,<br />
+That lifts him into life, and lets him fall<br />
+Just in the niche he was ordained to fill.<br />
+To the deliverer of an injured land<br />
+He gives a tongue to enlarge upon, a heart<br />
+To feel, and courage to redress her wrongs;<br />
+To monarchs dignity, to judges sense;<br />
+To artists ingenuity and skill;<br />
+To me an unambitious mind, content<br />
+In the low vale of life, that early felt<br />
+A wish for ease and leisure, and ere long<br />
+Found here that leisure and that ease I wished.</p>
+<h3>BOOK V.<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">THE WINTER MORNING WALK.</span></h3>
+<p class="poetry">&rsquo;<span class="smcap">Tis</span> morning;
+and the sun, with ruddy orb<br />
+Ascending, fires the horizon; while the clouds,<br />
+That crowd away before the driving wind,<br />
+More ardent as the disk emerges more,<br />
+Resemble most some city in a blaze,<br />
+Seen through the leafless wood.&nbsp; His slanting ray<br />
+Slides ineffectual down the snowy vale,<br />
+And, tingeing all with his own rosy hue,<br />
+From every herb and every spiry blade<br />
+Stretches a length of shadow o&rsquo;er the field,<br />
+Mine, spindling into longitude immense,<br />
+In spite of gravity, and sage remark<br />
+That I myself am but a fleeting shade,<br />
+Provokes me to a smile.&nbsp; With eye askance<br />
+I view the muscular proportioned limb<br />
+Transformed to a lean shank; the shapeless pair,<br />
+As they designed to mock me, at my side<br />
+Take step for step, and, as I near approach<br />
+The cottage, walk along the plastered wall,<br />
+Preposterous sight, the legs without the man.<br />
+The verdure of the plain lies buried deep<br />
+Beneath the dazzling deluge, and the bents<br />
+And coarser grass upspearing o&rsquo;er the rest,<br />
+Of late unsightly and unseen, now shine<br />
+Conspicuous, and, in bright apparel clad,<br />
+And fledged with icy feathers, nod superb.<br />
+The cattle mourn in corners, where the fence<br />
+Screens them, and seem, half petrified, to sleep<br />
+In unrecumbent sadness.&nbsp; There they wait<br />
+Their wonted fodder, not, like hungering man,<br />
+Fretful if unsupplied, but silent, meek,<br />
+And patient of the slow-paced swain&rsquo;s delay.<br />
+He from the stack carves out the accustomed load,<br />
+Deep-plunging, and again deep-plunging oft<br />
+His broad keen knife into the solid mass:<br />
+Smooth as a wall the upright remnant stands,<br />
+With such undeviating and even force<br />
+He severs it away: no needless care,<br />
+Lest storms should overset the leaning pile<br />
+Deciduous, or its own unbalanced weight.<br />
+Forth goes the woodman, leaving unconcerned<br />
+The cheerful haunts of man, to wield the axe<br />
+And drive the wedge in yonder forest drear,<br />
+From morn to eve his solitary task.<br />
+Shaggy and lean and shrewd, with pointed ears<br />
+And tail cropped short, half lurcher and half cur,<br />
+His dog attends him.&nbsp; Close behind his heel<br />
+Now creeps he slow, and now with many a frisk,<br />
+Wide-scampering, snatches up the drifted snow<br />
+With ivory teeth, or ploughs it with his snout;<br />
+Then shakes his powdered coat and barks for joy.<br />
+Heedless of all his pranks the sturdy churl<br />
+Moves right toward the mark; nor stops for aught,<br />
+But now and then, with pressure of his thumb,<br />
+To adjust the fragrant charge of a short tube,<br />
+That fumes beneath his nose; the trailing cloud<br />
+Streams far behind him, scenting all the air.<br />
+Now from the roost, or from the neighbouring pale,<br />
+Where, diligent to catch the first faint gleam<br />
+Of smiling day, they gossiped side by side,<br />
+Come trooping at the housewife&rsquo;s well-known call<br />
+The feathered tribes domestic; half on wing,<br />
+And half on foot, they brush the fleecy flood,<br />
+Conscious, and fearful of too deep a plunge.<br />
+The sparrows peep, and quit the sheltering eaves<br />
+To seize the fair occasion; well they eye<br />
+The scattered grain, and, thievishly resolved<br />
+To escape the impending famine, often scared<br />
+As oft return, a pert, voracious kind.<br />
+Clean riddance quickly made, one only care<br />
+Remains to each, the search of sunny nook,<br />
+Or shed impervious to the blast.&nbsp; Resigned<br />
+To sad necessity the cock foregoes<br />
+His wonted strut, and, wading at their head<br />
+With well-considered steps, seems to resent<br />
+His altered gait, and stateliness retrenched.<br />
+How find the myriads, that in summer cheer<br />
+The hills and valleys with their ceaseless songs,<br />
+Due sustenance, or where subsist they now?<br />
+Earth yields them naught: the imprisoned worm is safe<br />
+Beneath the frozen clod; all seeds of herbs<br />
+Lie covered close, and berry-bearing thorns<br />
+That feed the thrush (whatever some suppose),<br />
+Afford the smaller minstrel no supply.<br />
+The long-protracted rigour of the year<br />
+Thins all their numerous flocks.&nbsp; In chinks and holes<br />
+Ten thousand seek an unmolested end,<br />
+As instinct prompts, self-buried ere they die.<br />
+The very rooks and daws forsake the fields,<br />
+Where neither grub nor root nor earth-nut now<br />
+Repays their labour more; and perched aloft<br />
+By the way-side, or stalking in the path,<br />
+Lean pensioners upon the traveller&rsquo;s track,<br />
+Pick up their nauseous dole, though sweet to them,<br />
+Of voided pulse, or half-digested grain.<br />
+The streams are lost amid the splendid blank,<br />
+O&rsquo;erwhelming all distinction.&nbsp; On the flood<br />
+Indurated and fixed the snowy weight<br />
+Lies undissolved, while silently beneath<br />
+And unperceived the current steals away;<br />
+Not so where, scornful of a check, it leaps<br />
+The mill-dam, dashes on the restless wheel,<br />
+And wantons in the pebbly gulf below.<br />
+No frost can bind it there.&nbsp; Its utmost force<br />
+Can but arrest the light and smoky mist<br />
+That in its fall the liquid sheet throws wide.<br />
+And see where it has hung the embroidered banks<br />
+With forms so various, that no powers of art,<br />
+The pencil, or the pen, may trace the scene!<br />
+Here glittering turrets rise, upbearing high<br />
+(Fantastic misarrangement) on the roof<br />
+Large growth of what may seem the sparkling trees<br />
+And shrubs of fairy land.&nbsp; The crystal drops<br />
+That trickle down the branches, fast congealed,<br />
+Shoot into pillars of pellucid length<br />
+And prop the pile they but adorned before.<br />
+Here grotto within grotto safe defies<br />
+The sunbeam.&nbsp; There imbossed and fretted wild,<br />
+The growing wonder takes a thousand shapes<br />
+Capricious, in which fancy seeks in vain<br />
+The likeness of some object seen before.<br />
+Thus nature works as if to mock at art,<br />
+And in defiance of her rival powers;<br />
+By these fortuitous and random strokes<br />
+Performing such inimitable feats,<br />
+As she with all her rules can never reach.<br />
+Less worthy of applause though more admired,<br />
+Because a novelty, the work of man,<br />
+Imperial mistress of the fur-clad Russ,<br />
+Thy most magnificent and mighty freak,<br />
+The wonder of the North.&nbsp; No forest fell<br />
+When thou wouldst build; no quarry sent its stores<br />
+To enrich thy walls; but thou didst hew the floods,<br />
+And make thy marble of the glassy wave.<br />
+In such a palace Aristaeus found<br />
+Cyrene, when he bore the plaintive tale<br />
+Of his lost bees to her maternal ear.<br />
+In such a palace poetry might place<br />
+The armoury of winter, where his troops,<br />
+The gloomy clouds, find weapons, arrowy sleet,<br />
+Skin-piercing volley, blossom-bruising hail,<br />
+And snow that often blinds the traveller&rsquo;s course,<br />
+And wraps him in an unexpected tomb.<br />
+Silently as a dream the fabric rose.<br />
+No sound of hammer or of saw was there.<br />
+Ice upon ice, the well-adjusted parts<br />
+Were soon conjoined, nor other cement asked<br />
+Than water interfused to make them one.<br />
+Lamps gracefully disposed, and of all hues,<br />
+Illumined every side.&nbsp; A watery light<br />
+Gleamed through the clear transparency, that seemed<br />
+Another moon new-risen, or meteor fallen<br />
+From heaven to earth, of lambent flame serene.<br />
+So stood the brittle prodigy, though smooth<br />
+And slippery the materials, yet frost-bound<br />
+Firm as a rock.&nbsp; Nor wanted aught within<br />
+That royal residence might well befit,<br />
+For grandeur or for use.&nbsp; Long wavy wreaths<br />
+Of flowers, that feared no enemy but warmth,<br />
+Blushed on the panels.&nbsp; Mirror needed none<br />
+Where all was vitreous, but in order due<br />
+Convivial table and commodious seat<br />
+(What seemed at least commodious seat) were there,<br />
+Sofa and couch and high-built throne august.<br />
+The same lubricity was found in all,<br />
+And all was moist to the warm touch; a scene<br />
+Of evanescent glory, once a stream,<br />
+And soon to slide into a stream again.<br />
+Alas, &rsquo;twas but a mortifying stroke<br />
+Of undesigned severity, that glanced<br />
+(Made by a monarch) on her own estate,<br />
+On human grandeur and the courts of kings<br />
+&rsquo;Twas transient in its nature, as in show<br />
+&rsquo;Twas durable; as worthless, as it seemed<br />
+Intrinsically precious; to the foot<br />
+Treacherous and false; it smiled, and it was cold.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Great princes have great
+playthings.&nbsp; Some have played<br />
+At hewing mountains into men, and some<br />
+At building human wonders mountain high.<br />
+Some have amused the dull sad years of life<br />
+(Life spent in indolence, and therefore sad)<br />
+With schemes of monumental fame, and sought<br />
+By pyramids and mausoleum pomp,<br />
+Short-lived themselves, to immortalise their bones.<br />
+Some seek diversion in the tented field,<br />
+And make the sorrows of mankind their sport.<br />
+But war&rsquo;s a game which, were their subjects wise,<br />
+Kings should not play at.&nbsp; Nations would do well<br />
+To extort their truncheons from the puny hands<br />
+Of heroes whose infirm and baby minds<br />
+Are gratified with mischief, and who spoil,<br />
+Because men suffer it, their toy the world.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;When Babel was confounded,
+and the great<br />
+Confederacy of projectors wild and vain<br />
+Was split into diversity of tongues,<br />
+Then, as a shepherd separates his flock,<br />
+These to the upland, to the valley those,<br />
+God drave asunder and assigned their lot<br />
+To all the nations.&nbsp; Ample was the boon<br />
+He gave them, in its distribution fair<br />
+And equal, and he bade them dwell in peace.<br />
+Peace was a while their care.&nbsp; They ploughed and sowed,<br
+/>
+And reaped their plenty without grudge or strife,<br />
+But violence can never longer sleep<br />
+Than human passions please.&nbsp; In every heart<br />
+Are sown the sparks that kindle fiery war,<br />
+Occasion needs but fan them, and they blaze.<br />
+Cain had already shed a brother&rsquo;s blood:<br />
+The Deluge washed it out; but left unquenched<br />
+The seeds of murder in the breast of man.<br />
+Soon, by a righteous judgment, in the line<br />
+Of his descending progeny was found<br />
+The first artificer of death; the shrewd<br />
+Contriver who first sweated at the forge,<br />
+And forced the blunt and yet unblooded steel<br />
+To a keen edge, and made it bright for war.<br />
+Him Tubal named, the Vulcan of old times,<br />
+The sword and falchion their inventor claim,<br />
+And the first smith was the first murderer&rsquo;s son.<br />
+His art survived the waters; and ere long,<br />
+When man was multiplied and spread abroad<br />
+In tribes and clans, and had begun to call<br />
+These meadows and that range of hills his own,<br />
+The tasted sweets of property begat<br />
+Desire of more; and industry in some<br />
+To improve and cultivate their just demesne,<br />
+Made others covet what they saw so fair.<br />
+Thus wars began on earth.&nbsp; These fought for spoil,<br />
+And those in self-defence.&nbsp; Savage at first<br />
+The onset, and irregular.&nbsp; At length<br />
+One eminent above the rest, for strength,<br />
+For stratagem, or courage, or for all,<br />
+Was chosen leader.&nbsp; Him they served in war,<br />
+And him in peace for sake of warlike deeds<br />
+Reverenced no less.&nbsp; Who could with him compare?<br />
+Or who so worthy to control themselves<br />
+As he, whose prowess had subdued their foes?<br />
+Thus war, affording field for the display<br />
+Of virtue, made one chief, whom times of peace,<br />
+Which have their exigencies too, and call<br />
+For skill in government, at length made king.<br />
+King was a name too proud for man to wear<br />
+With modesty and meekness, and the crown,<br />
+So dazzling in their eyes who set it on,<br />
+Was sure to intoxicate the brows it bound.<br />
+It is the abject property of most,<br />
+That being parcel of the common mass,<br />
+And destitute of means to raise themselves,<br />
+They sink and settle lower than they need.<br />
+They know not what it is to feel within<br />
+A comprehensive faculty, that grasps<br />
+Great purposes with ease, that turns and wields,<br />
+Almost without an effort, plans too vast<br />
+For their conception, which they cannot move.<br />
+Conscious of impotence they soon grow drunk<br />
+With gazing, when they see an able man<br />
+Step forth to notice; and besotted thus<br />
+Build him a pedestal and say&mdash;Stand there,<br />
+And be our admiration and our praise.<br />
+They roll themselves before him in the dust,<br />
+Then most deserving in their own account<br />
+When most extravagant in his applause,<br />
+As if exalting him they raised themselves.<br />
+Thus by degrees, self-cheated of their sound<br />
+And sober judgment that he is but man,<br />
+They demi-deify and fume him so<br />
+That in due season he forgets it too.<br />
+Inflated and astrut with self-conceit<br />
+He gulps the windy diet, and ere long,<br />
+Adopting their mistake, profoundly thinks<br />
+The world was made in vain if not for him.<br />
+Thenceforth they are his cattle: drudges, born<br />
+To bear his burdens, drawing in his gears,<br />
+And sweating in his service.&nbsp; His caprice<br />
+Becomes the soul that animates them all.<br />
+He deems a thousand, or ten thousand lives,<br />
+Spent in the purchase of renown for him<br />
+An easy reckoning, and they think the same.<br />
+Thus kings were first invented, and thus kings<br />
+Were burnished into heroes, and became<br />
+The arbiters of this terraqueous swamp;<br />
+Storks among frogs, that have but croaked and died.<br />
+Strange that such folly, as lifts bloated man<br />
+To eminence fit only for a god,<br />
+Should ever drivel out of human lips,<br />
+Even in the cradled weakness of the world!<br />
+Still stranger much, that when at length mankind<br />
+Had reached the sinewy firmness of their youth,<br />
+And could discriminate and argue well<br />
+On subjects more mysterious, they were yet<br />
+Babes in the cause of freedom, and should fear<br />
+And quake before the gods themselves had made.<br />
+But above measure strange, that neither proof<br />
+Of sad experience, nor examples set<br />
+By some whose patriot virtue has prevailed,<br />
+Can even now, when they are grown mature<br />
+In wisdom, and with philosophic deeps<br />
+Familiar, serve to emancipate the rest!<br />
+Such dupes are men to custom, and so prone<br />
+To reverence what is ancient, and can plead<br />
+A course of long observance for its use,<br />
+That even servitude, the worst of ills,<br />
+Because delivered down from sire to son,<br />
+Is kept and guarded as a sacred thing.<br />
+But is it fit, or can it bear the shock<br />
+Of rational discussion, that a man,<br />
+Compounded and made up like other men<br />
+Of elements tumultuous, in whom lust<br />
+And folly in as ample measure meet,<br />
+As in the bosoms of the slaves he rules,<br />
+Should be a despot absolute, and boast<br />
+Himself the only freeman of his land?<br />
+Should when he pleases, and on whom he will,<br />
+Wage war, with any or with no pretence<br />
+Of provocation given, or wrong sustained,<br />
+And force the beggarly last doit, by means<br />
+That his own humour dictates, from the clutch<br />
+Of poverty, that thus he may procure<br />
+His thousands, weary of penurious life,<br />
+A splendid opportunity to die?<br />
+Say ye, who (with less prudence than of old<br />
+Jotham ascribed to his assembled trees<br />
+In politic convention) put your trust<br />
+I&rsquo; th&rsquo; shadow of a bramble, and recline<br />
+In fancied peace beneath his dangerous branch,<br />
+Rejoice in him and celebrate his sway,<br />
+Where find ye passive fortitude?&nbsp; Whence springs<br />
+Your self-denying zeal that holds it good<br />
+To stroke the prickly grievance, and to hang<br />
+His thorns with streamers of continual praise?<br />
+We too are friends to loyalty; we love<br />
+The king who loves the law, respects his bounds.<br />
+And reigns content within them; him we serve<br />
+Freely and with delight, who leaves us free;<br />
+But recollecting still that he is man,<br />
+We trust him not too far.&nbsp; King though he be,<br />
+And king in England, too, he may be weak<br />
+And vain enough to be ambitious still,<br />
+May exercise amiss his proper powers,<br />
+Or covet more than freemen choose to grant:<br />
+Beyond that mark is treason.&nbsp; He is ours,<br />
+To administer, to guard, to adorn the state,<br />
+But not to warp or change it.&nbsp; We are his,<br />
+To serve him nobly in the common cause<br />
+True to the death, but not to be his slaves.<br />
+Mark now the difference, ye that boast your love<br />
+Of kings, between your loyalty and ours.<br />
+We love the man; the paltry pageant you:<br />
+We the chief patron of the commonwealth;<br />
+You the regardless author of its woes:<br />
+We, for the sake of liberty, a king;<br />
+You chains and bondage for a tyrant&rsquo;s sake.</p>
+<p class="poetry">Our love is principle, and has its root<br />
+In reason, is judicious, manly, free;<br />
+Yours, a blind instinct, crouches to the rod,<br />
+And licks the foot that treads it in the dust.<br />
+Were kingship as true treasure as it seems,<br />
+Sterling, and worthy of a wise man&rsquo;s wish,<br />
+I would not be a king to be beloved<br />
+Causeless, and daubed with undiscerning praise,<br />
+Where love is more attachment to the throne,<br />
+Not to the man who fills it as he ought.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Whose freedom is by
+sufferance, and at will<br />
+Of a superior, he is never free.<br />
+Who lives, and is not weary of a life<br />
+Exposed to manacles, deserves them well.<br />
+The state that strives for liberty, though foiled<br />
+And forced to abandon what she bravely sought,<br />
+Deserves at least applause for her attempt,<br />
+And pity for her loss.&nbsp; But that&rsquo;s a cause<br />
+Not often unsuccessful; power usurped<br />
+Is weakness when opposed; conscious of wrong,<br />
+&rsquo;Tis pusillanimous and prone to flight.<br />
+But slaves that once conceive the glowing thought<br />
+Of freedom, in that hope itself possess<br />
+All that the contest calls for; spirit, strength,<br />
+The scorn of danger, and united hearts,<br />
+The surest presage of the good they seek. <a
+name="citation127"></a><a href="#footnote127"
+class="citation">[127]</a><br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Then shame to manhood, and opprobrious more<br />
+To France than all her losses and defeats,<br />
+Old or of later date, by sea or land,<br />
+Her house of bondage worse than that of old<br />
+Which God avenged on Pharaoh&mdash;the Bastille!<br />
+Ye horrid towers, the abode of broken hearts,<br />
+Ye dungeons and ye cages of despair,<br />
+That monarchs have supplied from age to age<br />
+With music such as suits their sovereign ears,<br />
+The sighs and groans of miserable men!<br />
+There&rsquo;s not an English heart that would not leap<br />
+To hear that ye were fallen at last, to know<br />
+That even our enemies, so oft employed<br />
+In forging chains for us, themselves were free.<br />
+For he that values liberty, confines<br />
+His zeal for her predominance within<br />
+No narrow bounds; her cause engages him<br />
+Wherever pleaded.&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis the cause of man.<br />
+There dwell the most forlorn of humankind,<br />
+Immured though unaccused, condemned untried,<br />
+Cruelly spared, and hopeless of escape.<br />
+There, like the visionary emblem seen<br />
+By him of Babylon, life stands a stump,<br />
+And filleted about with hoops of brass,<br />
+Still lives, though all its pleasant boughs are gone.<br />
+To count the hour bell and expect no change;<br />
+And ever as the sullen sound is heard,<br />
+Still to reflect that though a joyless note<br />
+To him whose moments all have one dull pace,<br />
+Ten thousand rovers in the world at large<br />
+Account it music; that it summons some<br />
+To theatre, or jocund feast, or ball;<br />
+The wearied hireling finds it a release<br />
+From labour, and the lover, that has chid<br />
+Its long delay, feels every welcome stroke<br />
+Upon his heart-strings trembling with delight;&mdash;<br />
+To fly for refuge from distracting thought<br />
+To such amusements as ingenious woe<br />
+Contrives, hard-shifting and without her tools;&mdash;<br />
+To read engraven on the mouldy walls,<br />
+In staggering types, his predecessor&rsquo;s tale,<br />
+A sad memorial, and subjoin his own;&mdash;<br />
+To turn purveyor to an overgorged<br />
+And bloated spider, till the pampered pest<br />
+Is made familiar, watches his approach,<br />
+Comes at his call, and serves him for a friend;&mdash;<br />
+To wear out time in numbering to and fro<br />
+The studs that thick emboss his iron door,<br />
+Then downward and then upward, then aslant<br />
+And then alternate, with a sickly hope<br />
+By dint of change to give his tasteless task<br />
+Some relish, till the sum, exactly found<br />
+In all directions, he begins again:&mdash;<br />
+Oh comfortless existence! hemmed around<br />
+With woes, which who that suffers would not kneel<br />
+And beg for exile, or the pangs of death?<br />
+That man should thus encroach on fellow-man,<br />
+Abridge him of his just and native rights,<br />
+Eradicate him, tear him from his hold<br />
+Upon the endearments of domestic life<br />
+And social, nip his fruitfulness and use,<br />
+And doom him for perhaps a heedless word<br />
+To barrenness and solitude and tears,<br />
+Moves indignation; makes the name of king<br />
+(Of king whom such prerogative can please)<br />
+As dreadful as the Manichean god,<br />
+Adored through fear, strong only to destroy.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&rsquo;Tis liberty alone that
+gives the flower<br />
+Of fleeting life its lustre and perfume,<br />
+And we are weeds without it.&nbsp; All constraint,<br />
+Except what wisdom lays on evil men,<br />
+Is evil; hurts the faculties, impedes<br />
+Their progress in the road of science; blinds<br />
+The eyesight of discovery, and begets,<br />
+In those that suffer it, a sordid mind<br />
+Bestial, a meagre intellect, unfit<br />
+To be the tenant of man&rsquo;s noble form.<br />
+Thee therefore still, blameworthy as thou art,<br />
+With all thy loss of empire, and though squeezed<br />
+By public exigence, till annual food<br />
+Fails for the craving hunger of the state,<br />
+Thee I account still happy, and the chief<br />
+Among the nations, seeing thou art free,<br />
+My native nook of earth!&nbsp; Thy clime is rude,<br />
+Replete with vapours, and disposes much<br />
+All hearts to sadness, and none more than mine;<br />
+Thine unadulterate manners are less soft<br />
+And plausible than social life requires.<br />
+And thou hast need of discipline and art<br />
+To give thee what politer France receives<br />
+From Nature&rsquo;s bounty&mdash;that humane address<br />
+And sweetness, without which no pleasure is<br />
+In converse, either starved by cold reserve,<br />
+Or flushed with fierce dispute, a senseless brawl;<br />
+Yet, being free, I love thee; for the sake<br />
+Of that one feature, can be well content,<br />
+Disgraced as thou hast been, poor as thou art,<br />
+To seek no sublunary rest beside.<br />
+But once enslaved, farewell! I could endure<br />
+Chains nowhere patiently; and chains at home,<br />
+Where I am free by birthright, not at all.<br />
+Then what were left of roughness in the grain<br />
+Of British natures, wanting its excuse<br />
+That it belongs to freemen, would disgust<br />
+And shock me.&nbsp; I should then with double pain<br />
+Feel all the rigour of thy fickle clime;<br />
+And, if I must bewail the blessing lost<br />
+For which our Hampdens and our Sidneys bled,<br />
+I would at least bewail it under skies<br />
+Milder, among a people less austere,<br />
+In scenes which, having never known me free,<br />
+Would not reproach me with the loss I felt.<br />
+Do I forebode impossible events,<br />
+And tremble at vain dreams?&nbsp; Heaven grant I may,<br />
+But the age of virtuous politics is past,<br />
+And we are deep in that of cold pretence.<br />
+Patriots are grown too shrewd to be sincere,<br />
+And we too wise to trust them.&nbsp; He that takes<br />
+Deep in his soft credulity the stamp<br />
+Designed by loud declaimers on the part<br />
+Of liberty, themselves the slaves of lust,<br />
+Incurs derision for his easy faith<br />
+And lack of knowledge, and with cause enough.<br />
+For when was public virtue to be found,<br />
+Where private was not?&nbsp; Can he love the whole<br />
+Who loves no part? he be a nation&rsquo;s friend<br />
+Who is, in truth, the friend of no man there?<br />
+Can he be strenuous in his country&rsquo;s cause,<br />
+Who slights the charities for whose dear sake<br />
+That country, if at all, must be beloved?<br />
+&mdash;&rsquo;Tis therefore sober and good men are sad<br />
+For England&rsquo;s glory, seeing it wax pale<br />
+And sickly, while her champions wear their hearts<br />
+So loose to private duty, that no brain,<br />
+Healthful and undisturbed by factious fumes,<br />
+Can dream them trusty to the general weal.<br />
+Such were not they of old whose tempered blades<br />
+Dispersed the shackles of usurped control,<br />
+And hewed them link from link.&nbsp; Then Albion&rsquo;s sons<br
+/>
+Were sons indeed.&nbsp; They felt a filial heart<br />
+Beat high within them at a mother&rsquo;s wrongs,<br />
+And shining each in his domestic sphere,<br />
+Shone brighter still once called to public view.<br />
+&rsquo;Tis therefore many, whose sequestered lot<br />
+Forbids their interference, looking on,<br />
+Anticipate perforce some dire event;<br />
+And seeing the old castle of the state,<br />
+That promised once more firmness, so assailed<br />
+That all its tempest-beaten turrets shake,<br />
+Stand motionless expectants of its fall.<br />
+All has its date below.&nbsp; The fatal hour<br />
+Was registered in heaven ere time began.<br />
+We turn to dust, and all our mightiest works<br />
+Die too.&nbsp; The deep foundations that we lay,<br />
+Time ploughs them up, and not a trace remains.<br />
+We build with what we deem eternal rock;<br />
+A distant age asks where the fabric stood;<br />
+And in the dust, sifted and searched in vain,<br />
+The undiscoverable secret sleeps.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But there is yet a liberty
+unsung<br />
+By poets, and by senators unpraised,<br />
+Which monarchs cannot grant, nor all the power<br />
+Of earth and hell confederate take away;<br />
+A liberty, which persecution, fraud,<br />
+Oppression, prisons, have no power to bind,<br />
+Which whoso tastes can be enslaved no more:<br />
+&rsquo;Tis liberty of heart, derived from heaven,<br />
+Bought with His blood who gave it to mankind,<br />
+And sealed with the same token.&nbsp; It is held<br />
+By charter, and that charter sanctioned sure<br />
+By the unimpeachable and awful oath<br />
+And promise of a God.&nbsp; His other gifts<br />
+All bear the royal stamp that speaks them His,<br />
+And are august, but this transcends them all.<br />
+His other works, this visible display<br />
+Of all-creating energy and might,<br />
+Are grand, no doubt, and worthy of the Word<br />
+That, finding an interminable space<br />
+Unoccupied, has filled the void so well,<br />
+And made so sparkling what was dark before.<br />
+But these are not His glory.&nbsp; Man, &rsquo;tis true,<br />
+Smit with the beauty of so fair a scene,<br />
+Might well suppose the Artificer Divine<br />
+Meant it eternal, had He not Himself<br />
+Pronounced it transient, glorious as it is,<br />
+And still designing a more glorious far,<br />
+Doomed it, as insufficient for His praise.<br />
+These, therefore, are occasional, and pass;<br />
+Formed for the confutation of the fool<br />
+Whose lying heart disputes against a God;<br />
+That office served, they must be swept away.<br />
+Not so the labours of His love; they shine<br />
+In other heavens than these that we behold,<br />
+And fade not.&nbsp; There is Paradise that fears<br />
+No forfeiture, and of its fruits He sends<br />
+Large prelibation oft to saints below.<br />
+Of these the first in order, and the pledge<br />
+And confident assurance of the rest,<br />
+Is liberty; a flight into His arms<br />
+Ere yet mortality&rsquo;s fine threads give way,<br />
+A clear escape from tyrannising lust,<br />
+And fill immunity from penal woe.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Chains are the portion of
+revolted man,<br />
+Stripes and a dungeon; and his body serves<br />
+The triple purpose.&nbsp; In that sickly, foul,<br />
+Opprobrious residence, he finds them all.<br />
+Propense his heart to idols, he is held<br />
+In silly dotage on created things<br />
+Careless of their Creator.&nbsp; And that low<br />
+And sordid gravitation of his powers<br />
+To a vile clod, so draws him with such force<br />
+Resistless from the centre he should seek,<br />
+That he at last forgets it.&nbsp; All his hopes<br />
+Tend downward, his ambition is to sink,<br />
+To reach a depth profounder still, and still<br />
+Profounder, in the fathomless abyss<br />
+Of folly, plunging in pursuit of death.<br />
+But ere he gain the comfortless repose<br />
+He seeks, and acquiescence of his soul,<br />
+In heaven renouncing exile, he endures<br />
+What does he not? from lusts opposed in vain,<br />
+And self-reproaching conscience.&nbsp; He foresees<br />
+The fatal issue to his health, fame, peace,<br />
+Fortune, and dignity; the loss of all<br />
+That can ennoble man, and make frail life,<br />
+Short as it is, supportable.&nbsp; Still worse,<br />
+Far worse than all the plagues with which his sins<br />
+Infect his happiest moments, he forebodes<br />
+Ages of hopeless misery; future death,<br />
+And death still future; not a hasty stroke,<br />
+Like that which sends him to the dusty grave,<br />
+But unrepealable enduring death.<br />
+Scripture is still a trumpet to his fears:<br />
+What none can prove a forgery, may be true;<br />
+What none but bad men wish exploded, must.<br />
+That scruple checks him.&nbsp; Riot is not loud<br />
+Nor drunk enough to drown it.&nbsp; In the midst<br />
+Of laughter his compunctions are sincere,<br />
+And he abhors the jest by which he shines.<br />
+Remorse begets reform.&nbsp; His master-lust<br />
+Falls first before his resolute rebuke,<br />
+And seems dethroned and vanquished.&nbsp; Peace ensues,<br />
+But spurious and short-lived, the puny child<br />
+Of self-congratulating Pride, begot<br />
+On fancied Innocence.&nbsp; Again he falls,<br />
+And fights again; but finds his best essay,<br />
+A presage ominous, portending still<br />
+Its own dishonour by a worse relapse,<br />
+Till Nature, unavailing Nature, foiled<br />
+So oft, and wearied in the vain attempt,<br />
+Scoffs at her own performance.&nbsp; Reason now<br />
+Takes part with appetite, and pleads the cause,<br />
+Perversely, which of late she so condemned;<br />
+With shallow shifts and old devices, worn<br />
+And tattered in the service of debauch,<br />
+Covering his shame from his offended sight.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&ldquo;Hath God indeed given
+appetites to man,<br />
+And stored the earth so plenteously with means<br />
+To gratify the hunger of His wish,<br />
+And doth He reprobate and will He damn<br />
+The use of His own bounty? making first<br />
+So frail a kind, and then enacting laws<br />
+So strict, that less than perfect must despair?<br />
+Falsehood! which whoso but suspects of truth,<br />
+Dishonours God, and makes a slave of man.<br />
+Do they themselves, who undertake for hire<br />
+The teacher&rsquo;s office, and dispense at large<br />
+Their weekly dole of edifying strains,<br />
+Attend to their own music? have they faith<br />
+In what, with such solemnity of tone<br />
+And gesture, they propound to our belief?<br />
+Nay&mdash;conduct hath the loudest tongue.&nbsp; The voice<br />
+Is but an instrument on which the priest<br />
+May play what tune he pleases.&nbsp; In the deed,<br />
+The unequivocal authentic deed,<br />
+We find sound argument, we read the heart.&rdquo;</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Such reasonings (if that name
+must needs belong<br />
+To excuses in which reason has no part)<br />
+Serve to compose a spirit well inclined<br />
+To live on terms of amity with vice,<br />
+And sin without disturbance.&nbsp; Often urged<br />
+(As often as, libidinous discourse<br />
+Exhausted, he resorts to solemn themes<br />
+Of theological and grave import),<br />
+They gain at last his unreserved assent,<br />
+Till, hardened his heart&rsquo;s temper in the forge<br />
+Of lust and on the anvil of despair,<br />
+He slights the strokes of conscience.&nbsp; Nothing moves,<br />
+Or nothing much, his constancy in ill;<br />
+Vain tampering has but fostered his disease,<br />
+&rsquo;Tis desperate, and he sleeps the sleep of death.<br />
+Haste now, philosopher, and set him free.<br />
+Charm the deaf serpent wisely.&nbsp; Make him hear<br />
+Of rectitude and fitness: moral truth<br />
+How lovely, and the moral sense how sure,<br />
+Consulted and obeyed, to guide his steps<br />
+Directly to the <span class="GutSmall">FIRST AND ONLY
+FAIR</span>.<br />
+Spare not in such a cause.&nbsp; Spend all the powers<br />
+Of rant and rhapsody in virtue&rsquo;s praise,<br />
+Be most sublimely good, verbosely grand,<br />
+And with poetic trappings grace thy prose<br />
+Till it outmantle all the pride of verse.&mdash;<br />
+Ah, tinkling cymbal and high-sounding brass<br />
+Smitten in vain! such music cannot charm<br />
+The eclipse that intercepts truth&rsquo;s heavenly beam,<br />
+And chills and darkens a wide-wandering soul.<br />
+The still small voice is wanted.&nbsp; He must speak,<br />
+Whose word leaps forth at once to its effect,<br />
+Who calls for things that are not, and they come.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Grace makes the slave a
+freeman.&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis a change<br />
+That turns to ridicule the turgid speech<br />
+And stately tone of moralists, who boast,<br />
+As if, like him of fabulous renown,<br />
+They had indeed ability to smooth<br />
+The shag of savage nature, and were each<br />
+An Orpheus and omnipotent in song.<br />
+But transformation of apostate man<br />
+From fool to wise, from earthly to divine,<br />
+Is work for Him that made him.&nbsp; He alone,<br />
+And He, by means in philosophic eyes<br />
+Trivial and worthy of disdain, achieves<br />
+The wonder; humanising what is brute<br />
+In the lost kind, extracting from the lips<br />
+Of asps their venom, overpowering strength<br />
+By weakness, and hostility by love.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Patriots have toiled, and in
+their country&rsquo;s cause<br />
+Bled nobly, and their deeds, as they deserve,<br />
+Receive proud recompense.&nbsp; We give in charge<br />
+Their names to the sweet lyre.&nbsp; The historic muse,<br />
+Proud of the treasure, marches with it down<br />
+To latest times; and sculpture, in her turn,<br />
+Gives bond in stone and ever-during brass,<br />
+To guard them, and to immortalise her trust.<br />
+But fairer wreaths are due, though never paid,<br />
+To those who, posted at the shrine of truth,<br />
+Have fallen in her defence.&nbsp; A patriot&rsquo;s blood<br />
+Well spent in such a strife may earn indeed,<br />
+And for a time ensure to his loved land,<br />
+The sweets of liberty and equal laws;<br />
+But martyrs struggle for a brighter prize,<br />
+And win it with more pain.&nbsp; Their blood is shed<br />
+In confirmation of the noblest claim,<br />
+Our claim to feed upon immortal truth,<br />
+To walk with God, to be divinely free,<br />
+To soar, and to anticipate the skies!<br />
+Yet few remember them.&nbsp; They lived unknown,<br />
+Till persecution dragged them into fame<br />
+And chased them up to heaven.&nbsp; Their ashes flew<br />
+&mdash;No marble tells us whither.&nbsp; With their names<br />
+No bard embalms and sanctifies his song,<br />
+And history, so warm on meaner themes,<br />
+Is cold on this.&nbsp; She execrates indeed<br />
+The tyranny that doomed them to the fire,<br />
+But gives the glorious sufferers little praise.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;He is the freeman whom the
+truth makes free,<br />
+And all are slaves beside.&nbsp; There&rsquo;s not a chain<br />
+That hellish foes confederate for his harm<br />
+Can wind around him, but he casts it off<br />
+With as much ease as Samson his green withes.<br />
+He looks abroad into the varied field<br />
+Of Nature, and, though poor perhaps compared<br />
+With those whose mansions glitter in his sight,<br />
+Calls the delightful scenery all his own.<br />
+His are the mountains, and the valleys his,<br />
+And the resplendent river&rsquo;s.&nbsp; His to enjoy<br />
+With a propriety that none can feel,<br />
+But who, with filial confidence inspired,<br />
+Can lift to heaven an unpresumptuous eye,<br />
+And smiling say&mdash;My Father made them all!<br />
+Are they not his by a peculiar right,<br />
+And by an emphasis of interest his,<br />
+Whose eye they fill with tears of holy joy,<br />
+Whose heart with praise, and whose exalted mind<br />
+With worthy thoughts of that unwearied love<br />
+That planned, and built, and still upholds a world<br />
+So clothed with beauty, for rebellious man?<br />
+Yes&mdash;ye may fill your garners, ye that reap<br />
+The loaded soil, and ye may waste much good<br />
+In senseless riot; but ye will not find<br />
+In feast or in the chase, in song or dance,<br />
+A liberty like his, who, unimpeached<br />
+Of usurpation, and to no man&rsquo;s wrong,<br />
+Appropriates nature as his Father&rsquo;s work,<br />
+And has a richer use of yours, than you.<br />
+He is indeed a freeman.&nbsp; Free by birth<br />
+Of no mean city, planned or e&rsquo;er the hills<br />
+Were built, the fountains opened, or the sea<br />
+With all his roaring multitude of waves.<br />
+His freedom is the same in every state;<br />
+And no condition of this changeful life<br />
+So manifold in cares, whose every day<br />
+Brings its own evil with it, makes it less.<br />
+For he has wings that neither sickness, pain,<br />
+Nor penury, can cripple or confine.<br />
+No nook so narrow but he spreads them there<br />
+With ease, and is at large.&nbsp; The oppressor holds<br />
+His body bound, but knows not what a range<br />
+His spirit takes, unconscious of a chain;<br />
+And that to bind him is a vain attempt,<br />
+Whom God delights in, and in whom He dwells.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Acquaint thyself with God if
+thou wouldst taste<br />
+His works.&nbsp; Admitted once to His embrace,<br />
+Thou shalt perceive that thou wast blind before;<br />
+Thine eye shall be instructed, and thine heart,<br />
+Made pure, shall relish, with divine delight<br />
+Till then unfelt, what hands divine have wrought.<br />
+Brutes graze the mountain-top with faces prone,<br />
+And eyes intent upon the scanty herb<br />
+It yields them; or, recumbent on its brow,<br />
+Ruminate, heedless of the scene outspread<br />
+Beneath, beyond, and stretching far away<br />
+From inland regions to the distant main.<br />
+Man views it and admires, but rests content<br />
+With what he views.&nbsp; The landscape has his praise,<br />
+But not its Author.&nbsp; Unconcerned who formed<br />
+The paradise he sees, he finds it such,<br />
+And such well pleased to find it, asks no more.<br />
+Not so the mind that has been touched from heaven,<br />
+And in the school of sacred wisdom taught<br />
+To read His wonders, in whose thought the world,<br />
+Fair as it is, existed ere it was.<br />
+Nor for its own sake merely, but for His<br />
+Much more who fashioned it, he gives it praise;<br />
+Praise that from earth resulting as it ought<br />
+To earth&rsquo;s acknowledged Sovereign, finds at once<br />
+Its only just proprietor in Him.<br />
+The soul that sees Him, or receives sublimed<br />
+New faculties or learns at least to employ<br />
+More worthily the powers she owned before;<br />
+Discerns in all things what, with stupid gaze<br />
+Of ignorance, till then she overlooked,<br />
+A ray of heavenly light gilding all forms<br />
+Terrestrial, in the vast and the minute<br />
+The unambiguous footsteps of the God<br />
+Who gives its lustre to an insect&rsquo;s wing<br />
+And wheels His throne upon the rolling worlds.<br />
+Much conversant with heaven, she often holds<br />
+With those fair ministers of light to man<br />
+That fill the skies nightly with silent pomp<br />
+Sweet conference; inquires what strains were they<br />
+With which heaven rang, when every star, in haste<br />
+To gratulate the new-created earth,<br />
+Sent forth a voice, and all the sons of God<br />
+Shouted for joy.&mdash;&ldquo;Tell me, ye shining hosts<br />
+That navigate a sea that knows no storms,<br />
+Beneath a vault unsullied with a cloud,<br />
+If from your elevation, whence ye view<br />
+Distinctly scenes invisible to man<br />
+And systems of whose birth no tidings yet<br />
+Have reached this nether world, ye spy a race<br />
+Favoured as ours, transgressors from the womb<br />
+And hasting to a grave, yet doomed to rise<br />
+And to possess a brighter heaven than yours?<br />
+As one who, long detained on foreign shores,<br />
+Pants to return, and when he sees afar<br />
+His country&rsquo;s weather-bleached and battered rocks,<br />
+From the green wave emerging, darts an eye<br />
+Radiant with joy towards the happy land;<br />
+So I with animated hopes behold,<br />
+And many an aching wish, your beamy fires,<br />
+That show like beacons in the blue abyss,<br />
+Ordained to guide the embodied spirit home<br />
+From toilsome life to never-ending rest.<br />
+Love kindles as I gaze.&nbsp; I feel desires<br />
+That give assurance of their own success,<br />
+And that, infused from heaven, must thither tend.&rdquo;</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;So reads he Nature whom the
+lamp of truth<br />
+Illuminates.&nbsp; Thy lamp, mysterious Word!<br />
+Which whoso sees, no longer wanders lost<br />
+With intellect bemazed in endless doubt,<br />
+But runs the road of wisdom.&nbsp; Thou hast built,<br />
+With means that were not till by Thee employed,<br />
+Worlds that had never been, hadst Thou in strength<br />
+Been less, or less benevolent than strong.<br />
+They are Thy witnesses, who speak Thy power<br />
+And goodness infinite, but speak in ears<br />
+That hear not, or receive not their report.<br />
+In vain Thy creatures testify of Thee<br />
+Till Thou proclaim Thyself.&nbsp; Theirs is indeed<br />
+A teaching voice; but &rsquo;tis the praise of Thine<br />
+That whom it teaches it makes prompt to learn,<br />
+And with the boon gives talents for its use.<br />
+Till Thou art heard, imaginations vain<br />
+Possess the heart, and fables, false as hell,<br />
+Yet deemed oracular, lure down to death<br />
+The uninformed and heedless souls of men.<br />
+We give to chance, blind chance, ourselves as blind,<br />
+The glory of Thy work, which yet appears<br />
+Perfect and unimpeachable of blame,<br />
+Challenging human scrutiny, and proved<br />
+Then skilful most when most severely judged.<br />
+But chance is not; or is not where Thou reign&rsquo;st:<br />
+Thy providence forbids that fickle power<br />
+(If power she be that works but to confound)<br />
+To mix her wild vagaries with Thy laws.<br />
+Yet thus we dote, refusing, while we can,<br />
+Instruction, and inventing to ourselves<br />
+Gods such as guilt makes welcome&mdash;gods that sleep,<br />
+Or disregard our follies, or that sit<br />
+Amused spectators of this bustling stage.<br />
+Thee we reject, unable to abide<br />
+Thy purity, till pure as Thou art pure,<br />
+Made such by Thee, we love Thee for that cause<br />
+For which we shunned and hated Thee before.<br />
+Then we are free: then liberty, like day,<br />
+Breaks on the soul, and by a flash from heaven<br />
+Fires all the faculties with glorious joy.<br />
+A voice is heard that mortal ears hear not<br />
+Till Thou hast touched them; &rsquo;tis the voice of song,<br />
+A loud Hosanna sent from all Thy works,<br />
+Which he that hears it with a shout repeats,<br />
+And adds his rapture to the general praise.<br />
+In that blest moment, Nature, throwing wide<br />
+Her veil opaque, discloses with a smile<br />
+The Author of her beauties, who, retired<br />
+Behind His own creation, works unseen<br />
+By the impure, and hears His power denied.<br />
+Thou art the source and centre of all minds,<br />
+Their only point of rest, eternal Word!<br />
+From Thee departing, they are lost and rove<br />
+At random, without honour, hope, or peace.<br />
+From Thee is all that soothes the life of man,<br />
+His high endeavour, and his glad success,<br />
+His strength to suffer, and his will to serve.<br />
+But, oh, Thou Bounteous Giver of all good,<br />
+Thou art of all Thy gifts Thyself the crown!<br />
+Give what Thou canst, without Thee we are poor,<br />
+And with Thee rich, take what Thou wilt away.</p>
+<h3>BOOK VI.<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">THE WINTER WALK AT NOON.</span></h3>
+<p class="poetry"><span class="smcap">There</span> is in souls a
+sympathy with sounds,<br />
+And as the mind is pitched the ear is pleased<br />
+With melting airs or martial, brisk or grave;<br />
+Some chord in unison with what we hear<br />
+Is touched within us, and the heart replies.<br />
+How soft the music of those village bells<br />
+Falling at intervals upon the ear<br />
+In cadence sweet, now dying all away,<br />
+Now pealing loud again, and louder still,<br />
+Clear and sonorous as the gale comes on.<br />
+With easy force it opens all the cells<br />
+Where memory slept.&nbsp; Wherever I have heard<br />
+A kindred melody, the scene recurs,<br />
+And with it all its pleasures and its pains.<br />
+Such comprehensive views the spirit takes,<br />
+That in a few short moments I retrace<br />
+(As in a map the voyager his course)<br />
+The windings of my way through many years.<br />
+Short as in retrospect the journey seems,<br />
+It seemed not always short; the rugged path,<br />
+And prospect oft so dreary and forlorn,<br />
+Moved many a sigh at its disheartening length.<br />
+Yet feeling present evils, while the past<br />
+Faintly impress the mind, or not at all,<br />
+How readily we wish time spent revoked,<br />
+That we might try the ground again, where once<br />
+(Through inexperience as we now perceive)<br />
+We missed that happiness we might have found.<br />
+Some friend is gone, perhaps his son&rsquo;s best friend<br />
+A father, whose authority, in show<br />
+When most severe, and mustering all its force,<br />
+Was but the graver countenance of love;<br />
+Whose favour, like the clouds of spring, might lower,<br />
+And utter now and then an awful voice,<br />
+But had a blessing in its darkest frown,<br />
+Threatening at once and nourishing the plant.<br />
+We loved, but not enough, the gentle hand<br />
+That reared us.&nbsp; At a thoughtless age allured<br />
+By every gilded folly, we renounced<br />
+His sheltering side, and wilfully forewent<br />
+That converse which we now in vain regret.<br />
+How gladly would the man recall to life<br />
+The boy&rsquo;s neglected sire! a mother too,<br />
+That softer friend, perhaps more gladly still,<br />
+Might he demand them at the gates of death.<br />
+Sorrow has since they went subdued and tamed<br />
+The playful humour; he could now endure<br />
+(Himself grown sober in the vale of tears)<br />
+And feel a parent&rsquo;s presence no restraint.<br />
+But not to understand a treasure&rsquo;s worth<br />
+Till time has stolen away the slighted good,<br />
+Is cause of half the poverty we feel,<br />
+And makes the world the wilderness it is.<br />
+The few that pray at all, pray oft amiss,<br />
+And, seeking grace to improve the prize they hold,<br />
+Would urge a wiser suit than asking more.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The night was winter in his
+roughest mood,<br />
+The morning sharp and clear; but now at noon<br />
+Upon the southern side of the slant hills,<br />
+And where the woods fence off the northern blast,<br />
+The season smiles, resigning all its rage,<br />
+And has the warmth of May.&nbsp; The vault is blue<br />
+Without a cloud, and white without a speck<br />
+The dazzling splendour of the scene below.<br />
+Again the harmony comes o&rsquo;er the vale,<br />
+And through the trees I view the embattled tower<br />
+Whence all the music.&nbsp; I again perceive<br />
+The soothing influence of the wafted strains,<br />
+And settle in soft musings, as I tread<br />
+The walk still verdant under oaks and elms,<br />
+Whose outspread branches overarch the glade.<br />
+The roof, though movable through all its length,<br />
+As the wind sways it, has yet well sufficed,<br />
+And, intercepting in their silent fall<br />
+The frequent flakes, has kept a path for me.<br />
+No noise is here, or none that hinders thought:<br />
+The redbreast warbles still, but is content<br />
+With slender notes and more than half suppressed.<br />
+Pleased with his solitude, and flitting light<br />
+From spray to spray, where&rsquo;er he rests he shakes<br />
+From many a twig the pendant drops of ice,<br />
+That tinkle in the withered leaves below.<br />
+Stillness, accompanied with sounds so soft,<br />
+Charms more than silence.&nbsp; Meditation here<br />
+May think down hours to moments.&nbsp; Here the heart<br />
+May give an useful lesson to the head,<br />
+And learning wiser grow without his books.<br />
+Knowledge and wisdom, far from being one,<br />
+Have ofttimes no connection.&nbsp; Knowledge dwells<br />
+In heads replete with thoughts of other men;<br />
+Wisdom in minds attentive to their own.<br />
+Knowledge, a rude unprofitable mass,<br />
+The mere materials with which wisdom builds,<br />
+Till smoothed and squared and fitted to its place,<br />
+Does but encumber whom it seems to enrich.<br />
+Knowledge is proud that he has learned so much,<br />
+Wisdom is humble that he knows no more.<br />
+Books are not seldom talismans and spells<br />
+By which the magic art of shrewder wits<br />
+Holds an unthinking multitude enthralled.<br />
+Some to the fascination of a name<br />
+Surrender judgment hoodwinked.&nbsp; Some the style<br />
+Infatuates, and, through labyrinths and wilds<br />
+Of error, leads them by a tune entranced.<br />
+While sloth seduces more, too weak to bear<br />
+The insupportable fatigue of thought,<br />
+And swallowing therefore without pause or choice<br />
+The total grist unsifted, husks and all.<br />
+But trees, and rivulets whose rapid course<br />
+Defies the check of winter, haunts of deer,<br />
+And sheep-walks populous with bleating lambs,<br />
+And lanes, in which the primrose ere her time<br />
+Peeps through the moss that clothes the hawthorn root,<br />
+Deceive no student.&nbsp; Wisdom there, and truth,<br />
+Not shy as in the world, and to be won<br />
+By slow solicitation, seize at once<br />
+The roving thought, and fix it on themselves.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What prodigies can power
+divine perform<br />
+More grand than it produces year by year,<br />
+And all in sight of inattentive man?<br />
+Familiar with the effect we slight the cause,<br />
+And in the constancy of Nature&rsquo;s course,<br />
+The regular return of genial months,<br />
+And renovation of a faded world,<br />
+See nought to wonder at.&nbsp; Should God again,<br />
+As once in Gibeon, interrupt the race<br />
+Of the undeviating and punctual sun,<br />
+How would the world admire! but speaks it less<br />
+An agency divine, to make him know<br />
+His moment when to sink and when to rise<br />
+Age after age, than to arrest his course?<br />
+All we behold is miracle: but, seen<br />
+So duly, all is miracle in vain.<br />
+Where now the vital energy that moved,<br />
+While summer was, the pure and subtle lymph<br />
+Through the imperceptible meandering veins<br />
+Of leaf and flower?&nbsp; It sleeps: and the icy touch<br />
+Of unprolific winter has impressed<br />
+A cold stagnation on the intestine tide.<br />
+But let the months go round, a few short months,<br />
+And all shall be restored.&nbsp; These naked shoots,<br />
+Barren as lances, among which the wind<br />
+Makes wintry music, sighing as it goes,<br />
+Shall put their graceful foliage on again,<br />
+And more aspiring and with ampler spread<br />
+Shall boast new charms, and more than they have lost.<br />
+Then, each in its peculiar honours clad,<br />
+Shall publish even to the distant eye<br />
+Its family and tribe.&nbsp; Laburnum rich<br />
+In streaming gold; syringa ivory pure;<br />
+The scented and the scentless rose; this red<br />
+And of a humbler growth, the other tall,<br />
+And throwing up into the darkest gloom<br />
+Of neighbouring cypress, or more sable yew,<br />
+Her silver globes, light as the foamy surf<br />
+That the wind severs from the broken wave;<br />
+The lilac various in array, now white,<br />
+Now sanguine, and her beauteous head now set<br />
+With purple spikes pyramidal, as if<br />
+Studious of ornament, yet unresolved<br />
+Which hue she most approved, she chose them all;<br />
+Copious of flowers the woodbine, pale and wan,<br />
+But well compensating their sickly looks<br />
+With never-cloying odours, early and late;<br />
+Hypericum all bloom, so thick a swarm<br />
+Of flowers like flies, clothing her slender rods,<br />
+That scarce a leaf appears; mezereon too,<br />
+Though leafless, well attired, and thick beset<br />
+With blushing wreaths investing every spray;<br />
+Alth&aelig;a with the purple eye; the broom,<br />
+Yellow and bright as bullion unalloyed<br />
+Her blossoms; and luxuriant above all<br />
+The jasmine, throwing wide her elegant sweets,<br />
+The deep dark green of whose unvarnished leaf<br />
+Makes more conspicuous, and illumines more<br />
+The bright profusion of her scattered stars.&mdash;<br />
+These have been, and these shall be in their day,<br />
+And all this uniform uncoloured scene<br />
+Shall be dismantled of its fleecy load,<br />
+And flush into variety again.<br />
+From dearth to plenty, and from death to life,<br />
+Is Nature&rsquo;s progress when she lectures man<br />
+In heavenly truth; evincing, as she makes<br />
+The grand transition, that there lives and works<br />
+A soul in all things, and that soul is God.<br />
+The beauties of the wilderness are His,<br />
+That make so gay the solitary place<br />
+Where no eye sees them.&nbsp; And the fairer forms<br />
+That cultivation glories in, are His.<br />
+He sets the bright procession on its way,<br />
+And marshals all the order of the year.<br />
+He marks the bounds which Winter may not pass,<br />
+And blunts his pointed fury.&nbsp; In its case,<br />
+Russet and rude, folds up the tender germ<br />
+Uninjured, with inimitable art,<br />
+And, ere one flowery season fades and dies,<br />
+Designs the blooming wonders of the next.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Some say that in the origin
+of things,<br />
+When all creation started into birth,<br />
+The infant elements received a law<br />
+From which they swerve not since; that under force<br />
+Of that controlling ordinance they move,<br />
+And need not His immediate hand, who first<br />
+Prescribed their course, to regulate it now.<br />
+Thus dream they, and contrive to save a God<br />
+The encumbrance of His own concerns, and spare<br />
+The great Artificer of all that moves<br />
+The stress of a continual act, the pain<br />
+Of unremitted vigilance and care,<br />
+As too laborious and severe a task.<br />
+So man the moth is not afraid, it seems,<br />
+To span Omnipotence, and measure might<br />
+That knows no measure, by the scanty rule<br />
+And standard of his own, that is to-day,<br />
+And is not ere to-morrow&rsquo;s sun go down.<br />
+But how should matter occupy a charge<br />
+Dull as it is, and satisfy a law<br />
+So vast in its demands, unless impelled<br />
+To ceaseless service by a ceaseless force,<br />
+And under pressure of some conscious cause?<br />
+The Lord of all, Himself through all diffused<br />
+Sustains and is the life of all that lives.<br />
+Nature is but a name for an effect<br />
+Whose cause is God.&nbsp; He feeds the secret fire<br />
+By which the mighty process is maintained,<br />
+Who sleeps not, is not weary; in whose sight<br />
+Slow-circling ages are as transient days;<br />
+Whose work is without labour, whose designs<br />
+No flaw deforms, no difficulty thwarts,<br />
+And whose beneficence no charge exhausts.<br />
+Him blind antiquity profaned, not served,<br />
+With self-taught rites and under various names<br />
+Female and male, Pomona, Pales, Pan,<br />
+And Flora and Vertumnus; peopling earth<br />
+With tutelary goddesses and gods<br />
+That were not, and commending as they would<br />
+To each some province, garden, field, or grove.<br />
+But all are under One.&nbsp; One spirit&mdash;His<br />
+Who bore the platted thorns with bleeding brows&mdash;<br />
+Rules universal nature.&nbsp; Not a flower<br />
+But shows some touch in freckle, streak, or stain,<br />
+Of His unrivalled pencil.&nbsp; He inspires<br />
+Their balmy odours and imparts their hues,<br />
+And bathes their eyes with nectar, and includes,<br />
+In grains as countless as the sea-side sands,<br />
+The forms with which He sprinkles all the earth.<br />
+Happy who walks with Him! whom, what he finds<br />
+Of flavour or of scent in fruit or flower,<br />
+Or what he views of beautiful or grand<br />
+In nature, from the broad majestic oak<br />
+To the green blade that twinkles in the sun,<br />
+Prompts with remembrance of a present God.<br />
+His presence, who made all so fair, perceived,<br />
+Makes all still fairer.&nbsp; As with Him no scene<br />
+Is dreary, so with Him all seasons please.<br />
+Though winter had been none had man been true,<br />
+And earth be punished for its tenant&rsquo;s sake,<br />
+Yet not in vengeance; as this smiling sky,<br />
+So soon succeeding such an angry night,<br />
+And these dissolving snows, and this clear stream,<br />
+Recovering fast its liquid music, prove.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Who then, that has a mind
+well strung and tuned<br />
+To contemplation, and within his reach<br />
+A scene so friendly to his favourite task,<br />
+Would waste attention at the chequered board,<br />
+His host of wooden warriors to and fro<br />
+Marching and counter-marching, with an eye<br />
+As fixt as marble, with a forehead ridged<br />
+And furrowed into storms, and with a hand<br />
+Trembling, as if eternity were hung<br />
+In balance on his conduct of a pin?<br />
+Nor envies he aught more their idle sport,<br />
+Who pant with application misapplied<br />
+To trivial toys, and, pushing ivory balls<br />
+Across the velvet level, feel a joy<br />
+Akin to rapture, when the bauble finds<br />
+Its destined goal of difficult access.<br />
+Nor deems he wiser him, who gives his noon<br />
+To Miss, the Mercer&rsquo;s plague, from shop to shop<br />
+Wandering, and littering with unfolded silks<br />
+The polished counter, and approving none,<br />
+Or promising with smiles to call again.<br />
+Nor him, who, by his vanity seduced,<br />
+And soothed into a dream that he discerns<br />
+The difference of a Guido from a daub,<br />
+Frequents the crowded auction.&nbsp; Stationed there<br />
+As duly as the Langford of the show,<br />
+With glass at eye, and catalogue in hand,<br />
+And tongue accomplished in the fulsome cant<br />
+And pedantry that coxcombs learn with ease,<br />
+Oft as the price-deciding hammer falls<br />
+He notes it in his book, then raps his box,<br />
+Swears &rsquo;tis a bargain, rails at his hard fate<br />
+That he has let it pass&mdash;but never bids.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Here unmolested, through
+whatever sign<br />
+The sun proceeds, I wander; neither mist,<br />
+Nor freezing sky, nor sultry, checking me,<br />
+Nor stranger intermeddling with my joy.<br />
+Even in the spring and play-time of the year<br />
+That calls the unwonted villager abroad<br />
+With all her little ones, a sportive train,<br />
+To gather king-cups in the yellow mead,<br />
+And prank their hair with daisies, or to pick<br />
+A cheap but wholesome salad from the brook,<br />
+These shades are all my own.&nbsp; The timorous hare,<br />
+Grown so familiar with her frequent guest,<br />
+Scarce shuns me; and the stock-dove unalarmed<br />
+Sits cooing in the pine-tree, nor suspends<br />
+His long love-ditty for my near approach.<br />
+Drawn from his refuge in some lonely elm<br />
+That age or injury has hollowed deep,<br />
+Where on his bed of wool and matted leaves<br />
+He has outslept the winter, ventures forth<br />
+To frisk awhile, and bask in the warm sun,<br />
+The squirrel, flippant, pert, and full of play.<br />
+He sees me, and at once, swift as a bird,<br />
+Ascends the neighbouring beech; there whisks his brush,<br />
+And perks his ears, and stamps and scolds aloud,<br />
+With all the prettiness of feigned alarm,<br />
+And anger insignificantly fierce.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The heart is hard in nature,
+and unfit<br />
+For human fellowship, as being void<br />
+Of sympathy, and therefore dead alike<br />
+To love and friendship both, that is not pleased<br />
+With sight of animals enjoying life,<br />
+Nor feels their happiness augment his own.<br />
+The bounding fawn that darts across the glade<br />
+When none pursues, through mere delight of heart,<br />
+And spirits buoyant with excess of glee;<br />
+The horse, as wanton and almost as fleet,<br />
+That skims the spacious meadow at full speed,<br />
+Then stops and snorts, and throwing high his heels<br />
+Starts to the voluntary race again;<br />
+The very kine that gambol at high noon,<br />
+The total herd receiving first from one,<br />
+That leads the dance, a summons to be gay,<br />
+Though wild their strange vagaries, and uncouth<br />
+Their efforts, yet resolved with one consent<br />
+To give such act and utterance as they may<br />
+To ecstasy too big to be suppressed&mdash;<br />
+These, and a thousand images of bliss,<br />
+With which kind nature graces every scene<br />
+Where cruel man defeats not her design,<br />
+Impart to the benevolent, who wish<br />
+All that are capable of pleasure pleased,<br />
+A far superior happiness to theirs,<br />
+The comfort of a reasonable joy.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Man scarce had risen,
+obedient to His call<br />
+Who formed him from the dust, his future grave,<br />
+When he was crowned as never king was since.<br />
+God set His diadem upon his head,<br />
+And angel choirs attended.&nbsp; Wondering stood<br />
+The new-made monarch, while before him passed,<br />
+All happy and all perfect in their kind,<br />
+The creatures, summoned from their various haunts<br />
+To see their sovereign, and confess his sway.<br />
+Vast was his empire, absolute his power,<br />
+Or bounded only by a law whose force<br />
+&rsquo;Twas his sublimest privilege to feel<br />
+And own, the law of universal love.<br />
+He ruled with meekness, they obeyed with joy.<br />
+No cruel purpose lurked within his heart,<br />
+And no distrust of his intent in theirs.<br />
+So Eden was a scene of harmless sport,<br />
+Where kindness on his part who ruled the whole<br />
+Begat a tranquil confidence in all,<br />
+And fear as yet was not, nor cause for fear.<br />
+But sin marred all; and the revolt of man,<br />
+That source of evils not exhausted yet,<br />
+Was punished with revolt of his from him.<br />
+Garden of God, how terrible the change<br />
+Thy groves and lawns then witnessed! every heart,<br />
+Each animal of every name, conceived<br />
+A jealousy and an instinctive fear,<br />
+And, conscious of some danger, either fled<br />
+Precipitate the loathed abode of man,<br />
+Or growled defiance in such angry sort,<br />
+As taught him too to tremble in his turn.<br />
+Thus harmony and family accord<br />
+Were driven from Paradise; and in that hour<br />
+The seeds of cruelty, that since have swelled<br />
+To such gigantic and enormous growth,<br />
+Were sown in human nature&rsquo;s fruitful soil.<br />
+Hence date the persecution and the pain<br />
+That man inflicts on all inferior kinds,<br />
+Regardless of their plaints.&nbsp; To make him sport,<br />
+To gratify the frenzy of his wrath,<br />
+Or his base gluttony, are causes good<br />
+And just in his account, why bird and beast<br />
+Should suffer torture, and the streams be dyed<br />
+With blood of their inhabitants impaled.<br />
+Earth groans beneath the burden of a war<br />
+Waged with defenceless innocence, while he,<br />
+Not satisfied to prey on all around,<br />
+Adds tenfold bitterness to death by pangs<br />
+Needless, and first torments ere he devours.<br />
+Now happiest they that occupy the scenes<br />
+The most remote from his abhorred resort,<br />
+Whom once as delegate of God on earth<br />
+They feared, and as His perfect image loved.<br />
+The wilderness is theirs with all its caves,<br />
+Its hollow glens, its thickets, and its plains<br />
+Unvisited by man.&nbsp; There they are free,<br />
+And howl and roar as likes them, uncontrolled,<br />
+Nor ask his leave to slumber or to play.<br />
+Woe to the tyrant, if he dare intrude<br />
+Within the confines of their wild domain;<br />
+The lion tells him, &ldquo;I am monarch here;&rdquo;<br />
+And if he spares him, spares him on the terms<br />
+Of royal mercy, and through generous scorn<br />
+To rend a victim trembling at his foot.<br />
+In measure, as by force of instinct drawn,<br />
+Or by necessity constrained, they live<br />
+Dependent upon man, those in his fields,<br />
+These at his crib, and some beneath his roof;<br />
+They prove too often at how dear a rate<br />
+He sells protection.&nbsp; Witness, at his foot<br />
+The spaniel dying for some venial fault,<br />
+Under dissection of the knotted scourge;<br />
+Witness the patient ox, with stripes and yells<br />
+Driven to the slaughter, goaded as he runs<br />
+To madness, while the savage at his heels<br />
+Laughs at the frantic sufferer&rsquo;s fury spent<br />
+Upon the guiltless passenger o&rsquo;erthrown.<br />
+He too is witness, noblest of the train<br />
+That wait on man, the flight-performing horse:<br />
+With unsuspecting readiness he takes<br />
+His murderer on his back, and, pushed all day,<br />
+With bleeding sides, and flanks that heave for life,<br />
+To the far-distant goal, arrives and dies.<br />
+So little mercy shows who needs so much!<br />
+Does law, so jealous in the cause of man,<br />
+Denounce no doom on the delinquent?&nbsp; None.<br />
+He lives, and o&rsquo;er his brimming beaker boasts<br />
+(As if barbarity were high desert)<br />
+The inglorious feat, and, clamorous in praise<br />
+Of the poor brute, seems wisely to suppose<br />
+The honours of his matchless horse his own.<br />
+But many a crime, deemed innocent on earth,<br />
+Is registered in heaven, and these, no doubt,<br />
+Have each their record, with a curse annexed.<br />
+Man may dismiss compassion from his heart,<br />
+But God will never.&nbsp; When He charged the Jew<br />
+To assist his foe&rsquo;s down-fallen beast to rise,<br />
+And when the bush-exploring boy that seized<br />
+The young, to let the parent bird go free,<br />
+Proved He not plainly that His meaner works<br />
+Are yet His care, and have an interest all,<br />
+All, in the universal Father&rsquo;s love?<br />
+On Noah, and in him on all mankind,<br />
+The charter was conferred by which we hold<br />
+The flesh of animals in fee, and claim,<br />
+O&rsquo;er all we feed on, power of life and death.<br />
+But read the instrument, and mark it well;<br />
+The oppression of a tyrannous control<br />
+Can find no warrant there.&nbsp; Feed then, and yield<br />
+Thanks for thy food.&nbsp; Carnivorous, through sin,<br />
+Feed on the slain, but spare the living brute.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Governor of all, Himself
+to all<br />
+So bountiful, in whose attentive ear<br />
+The unfledged raven and the lion&rsquo;s whelp<br />
+Plead not in vain for pity on the pangs<br />
+Of hunger unassuaged, has interposed,<br />
+Not seldom, His avenging arm, to smite<br />
+The injurious trampler upon nature&rsquo;s law,<br />
+That claims forbearance even for a brute.<br />
+He hates the hardness of a Balaam&rsquo;s heart,<br />
+And, prophet as he was, he might not strike<br />
+The blameless animal, without rebuke,<br />
+On which he rode.&nbsp; Her opportune offence<br />
+Saved him, or the unrelenting seer had died.<br />
+He sees that human equity is slack<br />
+To interfere, though in so just a cause,<br />
+And makes the task His own; inspiring dumb<br />
+And helpless victims with a sense so keen<br />
+Of injury, with such knowledge of their strength,<br />
+And such sagacity to take revenge,<br />
+That oft the beast has seemed to judge the man.<br />
+An ancient, not a legendary tale,<br />
+By one of sound intelligence rehearsed,<br />
+(If such, who plead for Providence may seem<br />
+In modern eyes) shall make the doctrine clear.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Where England, stretched
+towards the setting sun,<br />
+Narrow and long, o&rsquo;erlooks the western wave,<br />
+Dwelt young Misagathus; a scorner he<br />
+Of God and goodness, atheist in ostent,<br />
+Vicious in act, in temper savage-fierce.<br />
+He journeyed, and his chance was, as he went,<br />
+To join a traveller of far different note&mdash;<br />
+Evander, famed for piety, for years<br />
+Deserving honour, but for wisdom more.<br />
+Fame had not left the venerable man<br />
+A stranger to the manners of the youth,<br />
+Whose face, too, was familiar to his view.<br />
+Their way was on the margin of the land,<br />
+O&rsquo;er the green summit of the rocks whose base<br />
+Beats back the roaring surge, scarce heard so high.<br />
+The charity that warmed his heart was moved<br />
+At sight of the man-monster.&nbsp; With a smile<br />
+Gentle and affable, and full of grace,<br />
+As fearful of offending whom he wished<br />
+Much to persuade, he plied his ear with truths<br />
+Not harshly thundered forth or rudely pressed,<br />
+But, like his purpose, gracious, kind, and sweet.<br />
+&ldquo;And dost thou dream,&rdquo; the impenetrable man<br />
+Exclaimed, &ldquo;that me the lullabies of age,<br />
+And fantasies of dotards such as thou,<br />
+Can cheat, or move a moment&rsquo;s fear in me?<br />
+Mark now the proof I give thee, that the brave<br />
+Need no such aids as superstition lends<br />
+To steel their hearts against the dread of death.&rdquo;<br />
+He spoke, and to the precipice at hand<br />
+Pushed with a madman&rsquo;s fury.&nbsp; Fancy shrinks,<br />
+And the blood thrills and curdles at the thought<br />
+Of such a gulf as he designed his grave.<br />
+But though the felon on his back could dare<br />
+The dreadful leap, more rational, his steed<br />
+Declined the death, and wheeling swiftly round,<br />
+Or ere his hoof had pressed the crumbling verge,<br />
+Baffled his rider, saved against his will.<br />
+The frenzy of the brain may be redressed<br />
+By medicine well applied, but without grace<br />
+The heart&rsquo;s insanity admits no cure.<br />
+Enraged the more by what might have reformed<br />
+His horrible intent, again he sought<br />
+Destruction, with a zeal to be destroyed,<br />
+With sounding whip and rowels dyed in blood.<br />
+But still in vain.&nbsp; The Providence that meant<br />
+A longer date to the far nobler beast,<br />
+Spared yet again the ignobler for his sake.<br />
+And now, his prowess proved, and his sincere,<br />
+Incurable obduracy evinced,<br />
+His rage grew cool; and, pleased perhaps to have earned<br />
+So cheaply the renown of that attempt,<br />
+With looks of some complacence he resumed<br />
+His road, deriding much the blank amaze<br />
+Of good Evander, still where he was left<br />
+Fixed motionless, and petrified with dread.<br />
+So on they fared; discourse on other themes<br />
+Ensuing, seemed to obliterate the past,<br />
+And tamer far for so much fury shown<br />
+(As is the course of rash and fiery men)<br />
+The rude companion smiled as if transformed.<br />
+But &rsquo;twas a transient calm.&nbsp; A storm was near,<br />
+An unsuspected storm.&nbsp; His hour was come.<br />
+The impious challenger of power divine<br />
+Was now to learn that Heaven, though slow to wrath,<br />
+Is never with impunity defied.<br />
+His horse, as he had caught his master&rsquo;s mood,<br />
+Snorting, and starting into sudden rage,<br />
+Unbidden, and not now to be controlled,<br />
+Rushed to the cliff, and having reached it, stood.<br />
+At once the shock unseated him; he flew<br />
+Sheer o&rsquo;er the craggy barrier, and, immersed<br />
+Deep in the flood, found, when he sought it not,<br />
+The death he had deserved, and died alone.<br />
+So God wrought double justice; made the fool<br />
+The victim of his own tremendous choice,<br />
+And taught a brute the way to safe revenge.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I would not enter on my list
+of friends<br />
+(Though graced with polished manners and fine sense,<br />
+Yet wanting sensibility) the man<br />
+Who needlessly sets foot upon a worm.<br />
+An inadvertent step may crush the snail<br />
+That crawls at evening in the public path;<br />
+But he that has humanity, forewarned,<br />
+Will tread aside, and let the reptile live.<br />
+The creeping vermin, loathsome to the sight,<br />
+And charged perhaps with venom, that intrudes<br />
+A visitor unwelcome into scenes<br />
+Sacred to neatness and repose, the alcove,<br />
+The chamber, or refectory, may die.<br />
+A necessary act incurs no blame.<br />
+Not so when, held within their proper bounds<br />
+And guiltless of offence, they range the air,<br />
+Or take their pastime in the spacious field.<br />
+There they are privileged; and he that hunts<br />
+Or harms them there is guilty of a wrong,<br />
+Disturbs the economy of Nature&rsquo;s realm,<br />
+Who, when she formed, designed them an abode.<br />
+The sum is this: if man&rsquo;s convenience, health,<br />
+Or safety interfere, his rights and claims<br />
+Are paramount, and must extinguish theirs.<br />
+Else they are all&mdash;the meanest things that are&mdash;<br />
+As free to live and to enjoy that life,<br />
+As God was free to form them at the first,<br />
+Who in His sovereign wisdom made them all.<br />
+Ye, therefore, who love mercy, teach your sons<br />
+To love it too.&nbsp; The spring-time of our years<br />
+Is soon dishonoured and defiled in most<br />
+By budding ills, that ask a prudent hand<br />
+To check them.&nbsp; But, alas! none sooner shoots,<br />
+If unrestrained, into luxuriant growth,<br />
+Than cruelty, most devilish of them all.<br />
+Mercy to him that shows it, is the rule<br />
+And righteous limitation of its act,<br />
+By which Heaven moves in pardoning guilty man;<br />
+And he that shows none, being ripe in years,<br />
+And conscious of the outrage he commits,<br />
+Shall seek it and not find it in his turn.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Distinguished much by reason,
+and still more<br />
+By our capacity of grace divine,<br />
+From creatures that exist but for our sake,<br />
+Which having served us, perish, we are held<br />
+Accountable, and God, some future day,<br />
+Will reckon with us roundly for the abuse<br />
+Of what He deems no mean or trivial trust.<br />
+Superior as we are, they yet depend<br />
+Not more on human help, than we on theirs.<br />
+Their strength, or speed, or vigilance, were given<br />
+In aid of our defects.&nbsp; In some are found<br />
+Such teachable and apprehensive parts,<br />
+That man&rsquo;s attainments in his own concerns,<br />
+Matched with the expertness of the brutes in theirs,<br />
+Are ofttimes vanquished and thrown far behind.<br />
+Some show that nice sagacity of smell,<br />
+And read with such discernment, in the port<br />
+And figure of the man, his secret aim,<br />
+That oft we owe our safety to a skill<br />
+We could not teach, and must despair to learn.<br />
+But learn we might, if not too proud to stoop<br />
+To quadruped instructors, many a good<br />
+And useful quality, and virtue too,<br />
+Rarely exemplified among ourselves;<br />
+Attachment never to be weaned, or changed<br />
+By any change of fortune, proof alike<br />
+Against unkindness, absence, and neglect;<br />
+Fidelity, that neither bribe nor threat<br />
+Can move or warp; and gratitude for small<br />
+And trivial favours, lasting as the life,<br />
+And glistening even in the dying eye.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Man praises man.&nbsp; Desert
+in arts or arms<br />
+Wins public honour; and ten thousand sit<br />
+Patiently present at a sacred song,<br />
+Commemoration-mad; content to hear<br />
+(Oh wonderful effect of music&rsquo;s power!)<br />
+Messiah&rsquo;s eulogy, for Handel&rsquo;s sake.<br />
+But less, methinks, than sacrilege might serve&mdash;<br />
+(For was it less?&nbsp; What heathen would have dared<br />
+To strip Jove&rsquo;s statue of his oaken wreath<br />
+And hang it up in honour of a man?)<br />
+Much less might serve, when all that we design<br />
+Is but to gratify an itching ear,<br />
+And give the day to a musician&rsquo;s praise.<br />
+Remember Handel! who, that was not born<br />
+Deaf as the dead to harmony, forgets,<br />
+Or can, the more than Homer of his age?<br />
+Yes&mdash;we remember him; and, while we praise<br />
+A talent so divine, remember too<br />
+That His most holy Book from whom it came<br />
+Was never meant, was never used before<br />
+To buckram out the memory of a man.<br />
+But hush!&mdash;the muse perhaps is too severe,<br />
+And with a gravity beyond the size<br />
+And measure of the offence, rebukes a deed<br />
+Less impious than absurd, and owing more<br />
+To want of judgment than to wrong design.<br />
+So in the chapel of old Ely House,<br />
+When wandering Charles, who meant to be the third,<br />
+Had fled from William, and the news was fresh,<br />
+The simple clerk, but loyal, did announce,<br />
+And eke did rear right merrily, two staves,<br />
+Sung to the praise and glory of King George.<br />
+&mdash;Man praises man; and Garrick&rsquo;s memory next,<br />
+When time has somewhat mellowed it, and made<br />
+The idol of our worship while he lived<br />
+The god of our idolatry once more,<br />
+Shall have its altar; and the world shall go<br />
+In pilgrimage to bow before his shrine.<br />
+The theatre, too small, shall suffocate<br />
+Its squeezed contents, and more than it admits<br />
+Shall sigh at their exclusion, and return<br />
+Ungratified.&nbsp; For there some noble lord<br />
+Shall stuff his shoulders with King Richard&rsquo;s bunch,<br />
+Or wrap himself in Hamlet&rsquo;s inky cloak,<br />
+And strut, and storm, and straddle, stamp, and stare,<br />
+To show the world how Garrick did not act,<br />
+For Garrick was a worshipper himself;<br />
+He drew the liturgy, and framed the rites<br />
+And solemn ceremonial of the day,<br />
+And called the world to worship on the banks<br />
+Of Avon famed in song.&nbsp; Ah! pleasant proof<br />
+That piety has still in human hearts<br />
+Some place, a spark or two not yet extinct.<br />
+The mulberry-tree was hung with blooming wreaths,<br />
+The mulberry-tree stood centre of the dance,<br />
+The mulberry-tree was hymned with dulcet airs,<br />
+And from his touchwood trunk the mulberry-tree<br />
+Supplied such relics as devotion holds<br />
+Still sacred, and preserves with pious care.<br />
+So &rsquo;twas a hallowed time: decorum reigned,<br />
+And mirth without offence.&nbsp; No few returned<br />
+Doubtless much edified, and all refreshed.<br />
+&mdash;Man praises man.&nbsp; The rabble all alive,<br />
+From tippling benches, cellars, stalls, and styes,<br />
+Swarm in the streets.&nbsp; The statesman of the day,<br />
+A pompous and slow-moving pageant, comes;<br />
+Some shout him, and some hang upon his car<br />
+To gaze in his eyes and bless him.&nbsp; Maidens wave<br />
+Their kerchiefs, and old women weep for joy<br />
+While others not so satisfied unhorse<br />
+The gilded equipage, and, turning loose<br />
+His steeds, usurp a place they well deserve.<br />
+Why? what has charmed them?&nbsp; Hath he saved the state?<br />
+No.&nbsp; Doth he purpose its salvation?&nbsp; No.<br />
+Enchanting novelty, that moon at full<br />
+That finds out every crevice of the head<br />
+That is not sound and perfect, hath in theirs<br />
+Wrought this disturbance.&nbsp; But the wane is near,<br />
+And his own cattle must suffice him soon.<br />
+Thus idly do we waste the breath of praise,<br />
+And dedicate a tribute, in its use<br />
+And just direction sacred, to a thing<br />
+Doomed to the dust, or lodged already there.<br />
+Encomium in old time was poet&rsquo;s work;<br />
+But, poets having lavishly long since<br />
+Exhausted all materials of the art,<br />
+The task now falls into the public hand;<br />
+And I, contented with a humble theme,<br />
+Have poured my stream of panegyric down<br />
+The vale of Nature, where it creeps and winds<br />
+Among her lovely works, with a secure<br />
+And unambitious course, reflecting clear<br />
+If not the virtues yet the worth of brutes.<br />
+And I am recompensed, and deem the toil<br />
+Of poetry not lost, if verse of mine<br />
+May stand between an animal and woe,<br />
+And teach one tyrant pity for his drudge.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The groans of Nature in this
+nether world,<br />
+Which Heaven has heard for ages, have an end.<br />
+Foretold by prophets, and by poets sung,<br />
+Whose fire was kindled at the prophets&rsquo; lamp,<br />
+The time of rest, the promised Sabbath, comes.<br />
+Six thousand years of sorrow have well-nigh<br />
+Fulfilled their tardy and disastrous course<br />
+Over a sinful world; and what remains<br />
+Of this tempestuous state of human things,<br />
+Is merely as the working of a sea<br />
+Before a calm, that rocks itself to rest.<br />
+For He, whose car the winds are, and the clouds<br />
+The dust that waits upon His sultry march,<br />
+When sin hath moved Him, and His wrath is hot,<br />
+Shall visit earth in mercy; shall descend<br />
+Propitious, in His chariot paved with love,<br />
+And what His storms have blasted and defaced<br />
+For man&rsquo;s revolt, shall with a smile repair.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sweet is the harp of
+prophecy; too sweet<br />
+Not to be wronged by a mere mortal touch;<br />
+Nor can the wonders it records be sung<br />
+To meaner music, and not suffer loss.<br />
+But when a poet, or when one like me,<br />
+Happy to rove among poetic flowers,<br />
+Though poor in skill to rear them, lights at last<br />
+On some fair theme, some theme divinely fair,<br />
+Such is the impulse and the spur he feels<br />
+To give it praise proportioned to its worth,<br />
+That not to attempt it, arduous as he deems<br />
+The labour, were a task more arduous still.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Oh scenes surpassing fable,
+and yet true,<br />
+Scenes of accomplished bliss! which who can see,<br />
+Though but in distant prospect, and not feel<br />
+His soul refreshed with foretaste of the joy?<br />
+Rivers of gladness water all the earth,<br />
+And clothe all climes with beauty; the reproach<br />
+Of barrenness is past.&nbsp; The fruitful field<br />
+Laughs with abundance, and the land once lean,<br />
+Or fertile only in its own disgrace,<br />
+Exults to see its thistly curse repealed.<br />
+The various seasons woven into one,<br />
+And that one season an eternal spring,<br />
+The garden fears no blight, and needs no fence,<br />
+For there is none to covet, all are full.<br />
+The lion and the libbard and the bear<br />
+Graze with the fearless flocks.&nbsp; All bask at noon<br />
+Together, or all gambol in the shade<br />
+Of the same grove, and drink one common stream.<br />
+Antipathies are none.&nbsp; No foe to man<br />
+Lurks in the serpent now.&nbsp; The mother sees,<br />
+And smiles to see, her infant&rsquo;s playful hand<br />
+Stretched forth to dally with the crested worm,<br />
+To stroke his azure neck, or to receive<br />
+The lambent homage of his arrowy tongue.<br />
+All creatures worship man, and all mankind<br />
+One Lord, one Father.&nbsp; Error has no place;<br />
+That creeping pestilence is driven away,<br />
+The breath of heaven has chased it.&nbsp; In the heart<br />
+No passion touches a discordant string,<br />
+But all is harmony and love.&nbsp; Disease<br />
+Is not.&nbsp; The pure and uncontaminated blood<br />
+Holds its due course, nor fears the frost of age.<br />
+One song employs all nations; and all cry,<br />
+&ldquo;Worthy the Lamb, for He was slain for us!&rdquo;<br />
+The dwellers in the vales and on the rocks<br />
+Shout to each other, and the mountain-tops<br />
+From distant mountains catch the flying joy,<br />
+Till nation after nation taught the strain,<br />
+Each rolls the rapturous Hosanna round.<br />
+Behold the measure of the promise filled,<br />
+See Salem built, the labour of a God!<br />
+Bright as a sun the sacred city shines;<br />
+All kingdoms and all princes of the earth<br />
+Flock to that light; the glory of all lands<br />
+Flows into her, unbounded is her joy<br />
+And endless her increase.&nbsp; Thy rams are there,<br />
+Nebaioth, <a name="citation170"></a><a href="#footnote170"
+class="citation">[170]</a> and the flocks of Kedar there;<br />
+The looms of Ormus, and the mines of Ind,<br />
+And Saba&rsquo;s spicy groves pay tribute there.<br />
+Praise is in all her gates.&nbsp; Upon her walls,<br />
+And in her streets, and in her spacious courts<br />
+Is heard salvation.&nbsp; Eastern Java there<br />
+Kneels with the native of the farthest West,<br />
+And &AElig;thiopia spreads abroad the hand,<br />
+And worships.&nbsp; Her report has travelled forth<br />
+Into all lands.&nbsp; From every clime they come<br />
+To see thy beauty and to share thy joy,<br />
+O Sion! an assembly such as earth<br />
+Saw never; such as heaven stoops down to see.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Thus heavenward all things
+tend.&nbsp; For all were once<br />
+Perfect, and all must be at length restored.<br />
+So God has greatly purposed; who would else<br />
+In His dishonoured works Himself endure<br />
+Dishonour, and be wronged without redress.<br />
+Haste then, and wheel away a shattered world,<br />
+Ye slow-revolving seasons!&nbsp; We would see<br />
+(A sight to which our eyes are strangers yet)<br />
+A world that does not dread and hate His laws,<br />
+And suffer for its crime: would learn how fair<br />
+The creature is that God pronounces good,<br />
+How pleasant in itself what pleases Him.<br />
+Here every drop of honey hides a sting;<br />
+Worms wind themselves into our sweetest flowers,<br />
+And even the joy, that haply some poor heart<br />
+Derives from heaven, pure as the fountain is,<br />
+Is sullied in the stream; taking a taint<br />
+From touch of human lips, at best impure.<br />
+Oh for a world in principle as chaste<br />
+As this is gross and selfish! over which<br />
+Custom and prejudice shall bear no sway,<br />
+That govern all things here, shouldering aside<br />
+The meek and modest Truth, and forcing her<br />
+To seek a refuge from the tongue of strife<br />
+In nooks obscure, far from the ways of men,<br />
+Where violence shall never lift the sword,<br />
+Nor cunning justify the proud man&rsquo;s wrong,<br />
+Leaving the poor no remedy but tears;<br />
+Where he that fills an office, shall esteem<br />
+The occasion it presents of doing good<br />
+More than the perquisite; where laws shall speak<br />
+Seldom, and never but as wisdom prompts,<br />
+And equity, not jealous more to guard<br />
+A worthless form, than to decide aright;<br />
+Where fashion shall not sanctify abuse,<br />
+Nor smooth good-breeding (supplemental grace)<br />
+With lean performance ape the work of love.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Come then, and added to Thy
+many crowns<br />
+Receive yet one, the crown of all the earth,<br />
+Thou who alone art worthy! it was Thine<br />
+By ancient covenant, ere nature&rsquo;s birth,<br />
+And Thou hast made it Thine by purchase since,<br />
+And overpaid its value with Thy blood.<br />
+Thy saints proclaim Thee King; and in their hearts<br />
+Thy title is engraven with a pen<br />
+Dipt in the fountain of eternal love.<br />
+Thy saints proclaim Thee King; and Thy delay<br />
+Gives courage to their foes, who, could they see<br />
+The dawn of Thy last advent, long-desired,<br />
+Would creep into the bowels of the hills,<br />
+And flee for safety to the falling rocks.<br />
+The very spirit of the world is tired<br />
+Of its own taunting question, asked so long,<br />
+&ldquo;Where is the promise of your Lord&rsquo;s
+approach?&rdquo;<br />
+The infidel has shot his bolts away,<br />
+Till, his exhausted quiver yielding none,<br />
+He gleans the blunted shafts that have recoiled,<br />
+And aims them at the shield of truth again.<br />
+The veil is rent, rent too by priestly hands,<br />
+That hides divinity from mortal eyes;<br />
+And all the mysteries to faith proposed,<br />
+Insulted and traduced, are cast aside,<br />
+As useless, to the moles and to the bats.<br />
+They now are deemed the faithful and are praised,<br />
+Who, constant only in rejecting Thee,<br />
+Deny Thy Godhead with a martyr&rsquo;s zeal,<br />
+And quit their office for their error&rsquo;s sake.<br />
+Blind and in love with darkness! yet even these<br />
+Worthy, compared with sycophants, who kneel,<br />
+Thy Name adoring, and then preach Thee man!<br />
+So fares Thy Church.&nbsp; But how Thy Church may fare,<br />
+The world takes little thought; who will may preach,<br />
+And what they will.&nbsp; All pastors are alike<br />
+To wandering sheep resolved to follow none.<br />
+Two gods divide them all, Pleasure and Gain;<br />
+For these they live, they sacrifice to these,<br />
+And in their service wage perpetual war<br />
+With conscience and with Thee.&nbsp; Lust in their hearts,<br />
+And mischief in their hands, they roam the earth<br />
+To prey upon each other; stubborn, fierce,<br />
+High-minded, foaming out their own disgrace.<br />
+Thy prophets speak of such; and noting down<br />
+The features of the last degenerate times,<br />
+Exhibit every lineament of these.<br />
+Come then, and added to Thy many crowns<br />
+Receive yet one as radiant as the rest,<br />
+Due to Thy last and most effectual work,<br />
+Thy Word fulfilled, the conquest of a world.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;He is the happy man, whose
+life even now<br />
+Shows somewhat of that happier life to come;<br />
+Who, doomed to an obscure but tranquil state,<br />
+Is pleased with it, and, were he free to choose,<br />
+Would make his fate his choice; whom peace, the fruit<br />
+Of virtue, and whom virtue, fruit of faith,<br />
+Prepare for happiness; bespeak him one<br />
+Content indeed to sojourn while he must<br />
+Below the skies, but having there his home.<br />
+The world o&rsquo;erlooks him in her busy search<br />
+Of objects more illustrious in her view;<br />
+And occupied as earnestly as she,<br />
+Though more sublimely, he o&rsquo;erlooks the world.<br />
+She scorns his pleasures, for she knows them not;<br />
+He seeks not hers, for he has proved them vain.<br />
+He cannot skim the ground like summer birds<br />
+Pursuing gilded flies, and such he deems<br />
+Her honours, her emoluments, her joys;<br />
+Therefore in contemplation is his bliss,<br />
+Whose power is such, that whom she lifts from earth<br />
+She makes familiar with a heaven unseen,<br />
+And shows him glories yet to be revealed.<br />
+Not slothful he, though seeming unemployed,<br />
+And censured oft as useless.&nbsp; Stillest streams<br />
+Oft water fairest meadows; and the bird<br />
+That flutters least is longest on the wing.<br />
+Ask him, indeed, what trophies he has raised,<br />
+Or what achievements of immortal fame<br />
+He purposes, and he shall answer&mdash;None.<br />
+His warfare is within.&nbsp; There unfatigued<br />
+His fervent spirit labours.&nbsp; There he fights,<br />
+And there obtains fresh triumphs o&rsquo;er himself,<br />
+And never-withering wreaths, compared with which<br />
+The laurels that a C&aelig;sar reaps are weeds.<br />
+Perhaps the self-approving haughty world,<br />
+That, as she sweeps him with her whistling silks,<br />
+Scarce deigns to notice him, or if she see,<br />
+Deems him a cipher in the works of God,<br />
+Receives advantage from his noiseless hours<br />
+Of which she little dreams.&nbsp; Perhaps she owes<br />
+Her sunshine and her rain, her blooming spring<br />
+And plenteous harvest, to the prayer he makes<br />
+When, Isaac-like, the solitary saint<br />
+Walks forth to meditate at eventide,<br />
+And think on her who thinks not for herself.<br />
+Forgive him then, thou bustler in concerns<br />
+Of little worth, and idler in the best,<br />
+If, author of no mischief and some good,<br />
+He seeks his proper happiness by means<br />
+That may advance, but cannot hinder thine.<br />
+Nor, though he tread the secret path of life,<br />
+Engage no notice, and enjoy much ease,<br />
+Account him an encumbrance on the state,<br />
+Receiving benefits, and rendering none.<br />
+His sphere though humble, if that humble sphere<br />
+Shine with his fair example, and though small<br />
+His influence, if that influence all be spent<br />
+In soothing sorrow and in quenching strife,<br />
+In aiding helpless indigence, in works<br />
+From which at least a grateful few derive<br />
+Some taste of comfort in a world of woe,<br />
+Then let the supercilious great confess<br />
+He serves his country; recompenses well<br />
+The state beneath the shadow of whose vine<br />
+He sits secure, and in the scale of life<br />
+Holds no ignoble, though a slighted place.<br />
+The man whose virtues are more felt than seen,<br />
+Must drop, indeed, the hope of public praise;<br />
+But he may boast, what few that win it can,<br />
+That if his country stand not by his skill,<br />
+At least his follies have not wrought her fall.<br />
+Polite refinement offers him in vain<br />
+Her golden tube, through which a sensual world<br />
+Draws gross impurity, and likes it well,<br />
+The neat conveyance hiding all the offence.<br />
+Not that he peevishly rejects a mode<br />
+Because that world adopts it.&nbsp; If it bear<br />
+The stamp and clear impression of good sense,<br />
+And be not costly more than of true worth,<br />
+He puts it on, and for decorum sake<br />
+Can wear it e&rsquo;en as gracefully as she.<br />
+She judges of refinement by the eye,<br />
+He by the test of conscience, and a heart<br />
+Not soon deceived; aware that what is base<br />
+No polish can make sterling, and that vice,<br />
+Though well-perfumed and elegantly dressed,<br />
+Like an unburied carcass tricked with flowers,<br />
+Is but a garnished nuisance, fitter far<br />
+For cleanly riddance than for fair attire.<br />
+So life glides smoothly and by stealth away,<br />
+More golden than that age of fabled gold<br />
+Renowned in ancient song; not vexed with care,<br />
+Or stained with guilt, beneficent, approved<br />
+Of God and man, and peaceful in its end.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;So glide my life away! and so
+at last,<br />
+My share of duties decently fulfilled,<br />
+May some disease, not tardy to perform<br />
+Its destined office, yet with gentle stroke,<br />
+Dismiss me weary to a safe retreat<br />
+Beneath the turf that I have often trod.<br />
+It shall not grieve me, then, that once, when called<br />
+To dress a Sofa with the flowers of verse,<br />
+I played awhile, obedient to the fair,<br />
+With that light task, but soon to please her more,<br />
+Whom flowers alone I knew would little please,<br />
+Let fall the unfinished wreath, and roved for fruit;<br />
+Roved far and gathered much; some harsh, &rsquo;tis true,<br />
+Picked from the thorns and briars of reproof,<br />
+But wholesome, well-digested; grateful some<br />
+To palates that can taste immortal truth;<br />
+Insipid else, and sure to be despised.<br />
+But all is in His hand whose praise I seek,<br />
+In vain the poet sings, and the world hears,<br />
+If He regard not, though divine the theme.<br />
+&rsquo;Tis not in artful measures, in the chime<br />
+And idle tinkling of a minstrel&rsquo;s lyre,<br />
+To charm His ear, whose eye is on the heart;<br />
+Whose frown can disappoint the proudest strain,<br />
+Whose approbation&mdash;prosper even mine.</p>
+<h2>THE DIVERTING HISTORY OF JOHN GILPIN;</h2>
+<p style="text-align: center" class="gutsumm"><span
+class="GutSmall">SHOWING HOW HE WENT FARTHER THAN HE
+INTENDED,</span><br />
+<span class="GutSmall">AND CAME SAFE HOME AGAIN.</span></p>
+<p class="poetry"><span class="smcap">John Gilpin</span> was a
+citizen<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of credit and renown,<br />
+A train-band captain eke was he<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of famous London town.</p>
+<p class="poetry">John Gilpin&rsquo;s spouse said to her dear,<br
+/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &ldquo;Though wedded we have been<br />
+These twice ten tedious years, yet we<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; No holiday have seen.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&ldquo;To-morrow is our wedding-day,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And we will then repair<br />
+Unto &lsquo;The Bell&rsquo; at Edmonton,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; All in a chaise and pair.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&ldquo;My sister and my sister&rsquo;s
+child,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Myself and children three,<br />
+Will fill the chaise; so you must ride<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; On horseback after we.&rdquo;</p>
+<p class="poetry">He soon replied, &ldquo;I do admire<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of womankind but one,<br />
+And you are she, my dearest dear,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Therefore it shall be done.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&ldquo;I am a linen-draper bold,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; As all the world doth know,<br />
+And my good friend the Calender<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Will lend his horse to go.&rdquo;</p>
+<p class="poetry">Quoth Mistress Gilpin, &ldquo;That&rsquo;s well
+said;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And, for that wine is dear,<br />
+We will be furnished with our own,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Which is both bright and clear.&rdquo;</p>
+<p class="poetry">John Gilpin kissed his loving wife;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; O&rsquo;erjoyed was he to find<br />
+That though on pleasure she was bent,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; She had a frugal mind.</p>
+<p class="poetry">The morning came, the chaise was brought,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But yet was not allowed<br />
+To drive up to the door, lest all<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Should say that she was proud.</p>
+<p class="poetry">So three doors off the chaise was stayed,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Where they did all get in;<br />
+Six precious souls, and all agog<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To dash through thick and thin.</p>
+<p class="poetry">Smack went the whip, round went the wheels,<br
+/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Were never folk so glad;<br />
+The stones did rattle underneath<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; As if Cheapside were mad.</p>
+<p class="poetry">John Gilpin at his horse&rsquo;s side<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Seized fast the flowing mane,<br />
+And up he got, in haste to ride,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But soon came down again;</p>
+<p class="poetry">For saddle-tree scarce reached had he,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; His journey to begin,<br />
+When, turning round his head, he saw<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Three customers come in.</p>
+<p class="poetry">So down he came; for loss of time,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Although it grieved him sore,<br />
+Yet loss of pence, full well he knew,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Would trouble him much more.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&rsquo;Twas long before the customers<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Were suited to their mind.<br />
+When Betty, screaming, came down stairs,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &ldquo;The wine is left behind!&rdquo;</p>
+<p class="poetry">&ldquo;Good lack!&rdquo; quoth he; &ldquo;yet
+bring it me,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; My leathern belt likewise,<br />
+In which I bear my trusty sword,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; When I do exercise.&rdquo;</p>
+<p class="poetry">Now Mistress Gilpin (careful soul!)<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Had two stone bottles found,<br />
+To hold the liquor that she loved,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And keep it safe and sound.</p>
+<p class="poetry">Each bottle had a curling ear,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Through which the belt he drew,<br />
+And hung a bottle on each side,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To make his balance true.</p>
+<p class="poetry">Then over all, that he might be<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Equipped from top to toe,<br />
+His long red cloak, well brushed and neat,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; He manfully did throw.</p>
+<p class="poetry">Now see him mounted once again<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Upon his nimble steed,<br />
+Full slowly pacing o&rsquo;er the stones<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With caution and good heed!</p>
+<p class="poetry">But, finding soon a smoother road<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Beneath his well-shod feet,<br />
+The snorting beast began to trot,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Which galled him in his seat.</p>
+<p class="poetry">So, &ldquo;Fair and softly,&rdquo; John he
+cried,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But John he cried in vain;<br />
+That trot became a gallop soon,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In spite of curb and rein.</p>
+<p class="poetry">So stooping down, as needs he must<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Who cannot sit upright,<br />
+He grasped the mane with both his hands,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And eke with all his might.</p>
+<p class="poetry">His horse, who never in that sort<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Had handled been before,<br />
+What thing upon his back had got<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Did wonder more and more.</p>
+<p class="poetry">Away went Gilpin, neck or naught;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Away went hat and wig;<br />
+He little dreamt, when he set out,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of running such a rig.</p>
+<p class="poetry">The wind did blow, the cloak did fly,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Like streamer long and gay,<br />
+Till, loop and button failing both,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; At last it flew away.</p>
+<p class="poetry">Then might all people well discern<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The bottles he had slung;<br />
+A bottle swinging at each side,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; As hath been said or sung.</p>
+<p class="poetry">The dogs did bark, the children screamed,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Up flew the windows all;<br />
+And every soul cried out, &ldquo;Well done!&rdquo;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; As loud as he could bawl.</p>
+<p class="poetry">Away went Gilpin&mdash;who but he?<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; His fame soon spread around&mdash;<br />
+He carries weight! he rides a race!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis for a thousand pound!</p>
+<p class="poetry">And still, as fast as he drew near,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &rsquo;Twas wonderful to view<br />
+How in a trice the turnpike men<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Their gates wide open threw.</p>
+<p class="poetry">And now, as he went bowing down<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; His reeking head full low,<br />
+The bottles twain behind his back<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Were shattered at a blow.</p>
+<p class="poetry">Down ran the wine into the road,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Most piteous to be seen,<br />
+Which made his horse&rsquo;s flanks to smoke<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; As they had basted been.</p>
+<p class="poetry">But still he seemed to carry weight,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With leathern girdle braced;<br />
+For all might see the bottle-necks<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Still dangling at his waist.</p>
+<p class="poetry">Thus all through merry Islington<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; These gambols he did play,<br />
+And till he came unto the Wash<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of Edmonton so gay.</p>
+<p class="poetry">And there he threw the wash about<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; On both sides of the way,<br />
+Just like unto a trundling mop,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Or a wild goose at play.</p>
+<p class="poetry">At Edmonton, his loving wife<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; From the bal-cony spied<br />
+Her tender husband, wondering much<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To see how he did ride.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&ldquo;Stop, stop, John
+Gilpin!&mdash;here&rsquo;s the house!&rdquo;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; They all at once did cry;<br />
+&ldquo;The dinner waits, and we are tired.&rdquo;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Said Gilpin, &ldquo;So am I!&rdquo;</p>
+<p class="poetry">But yet his horse was not a whit<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Inclined to tarry there;<br />
+For why?&mdash;his owner had a house<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Full ten miles off, at Ware.</p>
+<p class="poetry">So like an arrow swift he flew,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Shot by an archer strong;<br />
+So did he fly&mdash;which brings me to<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The middle of my song.</p>
+<p class="poetry">Away went Gilpin, out of breath,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And sore against his will,<br />
+Till at his friend the Calender&rsquo;s<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; His horse at last stood still.</p>
+<p class="poetry">The Calender, amazed to see<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; His neighbour in such trim,<br />
+Laid down his pipe, flew to the gate,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And thus accosted him:&mdash;</p>
+<p class="poetry">&ldquo;What news? what news? your tidings
+tell:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Tell me you must and shall&mdash;<br />
+Say why bareheaded you are come,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Or why you come at all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p class="poetry">Now Gilpin had a pleasant wit,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And loved a timely joke;<br />
+And thus unto the Calender<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In merry guise he spoke:</p>
+<p class="poetry">&ldquo;I came because your horse would come;<br
+/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And if I well forebode,<br />
+My hat and wig will soon be here;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; They are upon the road.&rdquo;</p>
+<p class="poetry">The Calender, right glad to find<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; His friend in merry pin,<br />
+Returned him not a single word,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But to the house went in;</p>
+<p class="poetry">Whence straight he came with hat and wig,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A wig that flowed behind,<br />
+A hat not much the worse for wear,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Each comely in its kind.</p>
+<p class="poetry">He held them up, and, in his turn,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Thus showed his ready wit,&mdash;<br />
+&ldquo;My head is twice as big as yours;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; They therefore needs must fit.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&ldquo;But let me scrape the dirt away<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That hangs upon your face;<br />
+And stop and eat, for well you may<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Be in a hungry case.&rdquo;</p>
+<p class="poetry">Says John, &ldquo;It is my wedding-day,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And all the world would stare,<br />
+If wife should dine at Edmonton,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And I should dine at Ware.&rdquo;</p>
+<p class="poetry">So turning to his horse, he said,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &ldquo;I am in haste to dine;<br />
+&rsquo;Twas for your pleasure you came here,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; You shall go back for mine.&rdquo;</p>
+<p class="poetry">Ah, luckless speech, and bootless boast!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; For which he paid full dear;<br />
+For while he spake, a braying ass<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Did sing most loud and clear;</p>
+<p class="poetry">Whereat his horse did snort as he<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Had heard a lion roar,<br />
+And galloped off with all his might,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; As he had done before.</p>
+<p class="poetry">Away went Gilpin, and away<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Went Gilpin&rsquo;s hat and wig;<br />
+He lost them sooner than at first,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; For why?&mdash;they were too big.</p>
+<p class="poetry">Now Mistress Gilpin, when she saw<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Her husband posting down<br />
+Into the country far away,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; She pulled out half-a-crown.</p>
+<p class="poetry">And thus unto the youth she said,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That drove them to &ldquo;The Bell,&rdquo;<br />
+&ldquo;This shall be yours when you bring back<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; My husband safe and well.&rdquo;</p>
+<p class="poetry">The youth did ride, and soon did meet<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; John coming back amain,<br />
+Whom in a trice he tried to stop<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; By catching at his rein;</p>
+<p class="poetry">But not performing what he meant,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And gladly would have done,<br />
+The frighted steed he frighted more,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And made him faster run.</p>
+<p class="poetry">Away went Gilpin, and away<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Went postboy at his heels,<br />
+The postboy&rsquo;s horse right glad to miss<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The lumbering of the wheels.</p>
+<p class="poetry">Six gentlemen upon the road<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Thus seeing Gilpin fly,<br />
+With postboy scampering in the rear,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; They raised the hue and cry:</p>
+<p class="poetry">&ldquo;Stop thief! stop thief!&mdash;a
+highwayman!&rdquo;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Not one of them was mute;<br />
+And all and each that passed that way<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Did join in the pursuit.</p>
+<p class="poetry">And now the turnpike gates again<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Flew open in short space,<br />
+The tollmen thinking, as before,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That Gilpin rode a race.</p>
+<p class="poetry">And so he did, and won it too,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; For he got first to town;<br />
+Nor stopped till where he had got up<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; He did again get down.</p>
+<p class="poetry">Now let us sing, &ldquo;Long live the king,<br
+/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And Gilpin, long live he;<br />
+And when he next doth ride abroad,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; May I be there to see!&rdquo;</p>
+<h2>AN EPISTLE TO JOSEPH HILL, ESQ.</h2>
+<p class="poetry"><span class="smcap">Dear
+Joseph</span>,&mdash;five and twenty years ago&mdash;<br />
+Alas, how time escapes!&mdash;&rsquo;tis even so&mdash;<br />
+With frequent intercourse, and always sweet<br />
+And always friendly, we were wont to cheat<br />
+A tedious hour&mdash;and now we never meet.<br />
+As some grave gentleman in Terence says<br />
+(&rsquo;Twas therefore much the same in ancient days),<br />
+&ldquo;Good lack, we know not what to-morrow brings&mdash;<br />
+Strange fluctuation of all human things!&rdquo;<br />
+True.&nbsp; Changes will befall, and friends may part,<br />
+But distance only cannot change the heart:<br />
+And were I called to prove the assertion true,<br />
+One proof should serve&mdash;a reference to you.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Whence comes it, then, that
+in the wane of life,<br />
+Though nothing have occurred to kindle strife,<br />
+We find the friends we fancied we had won,<br />
+Though numerous once, reduced to few or none?<br />
+Can gold grow worthless that has stood the touch?<br />
+No.&nbsp; Gold they seemed, but they were never such.<br />
+Horatio&rsquo;s servant once, with bow and cringe,<br />
+Swinging the parlour-door upon its hinge,<br />
+Dreading a negative, and overawed<br />
+Lest he should trespass, begged to go abroad.<br />
+&ldquo;Go, fellow!&mdash;whither?&rdquo;&mdash;turning short
+about&mdash;<br />
+&ldquo;Nay.&nbsp; Stay at home; you&rsquo;re always going
+out.&rdquo;&mdash;<br />
+&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis but a step, sir; just at the street&rsquo;s
+end.&rdquo;<br />
+&ldquo;For what?&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;An please you, sir, to see a
+friend.&rdquo;<br />
+&ldquo;A friend!&rdquo; Horatio cried, and seemed to start;<br />
+&ldquo;Yea, marry shalt thou, and with all my heart&mdash;<br />
+And fetch my cloak, for though the night be raw<br />
+I&rsquo;ll see him too&mdash;the first I ever saw.&rdquo;</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I knew the man, and knew his
+nature mild,<br />
+And was his plaything often when a child;<br />
+But somewhat at that moment pinched him close,<br />
+Else he was seldom bitter or morose.<br />
+Perhaps, his confidence just then betrayed,<br />
+His grief might prompt him with the speech he made;<br />
+Perhaps &rsquo;twas mere good-humour gave it birth,<br />
+The harmless play of pleasantry and mirth.<br />
+Howe&rsquo;er it was, his language in my mind<br />
+Bespoke at least a man that knew mankind.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But not to moralise too much,
+and strain<br />
+To prove an evil of which all complain<br />
+(I hate long arguments, verbosely spun),<br />
+One story more, dear Hill, and I have done.<br />
+Once on a time, an emperor, a wise man.<br />
+No matter where, in China or Japan,<br />
+Decreed that whosoever should offend<br />
+Against the well-known duties of a friend,<br />
+Convicted once, should ever after wear<br />
+But half a coat, and show his bosom bare;<br />
+The punishment importing this, no doubt,<br />
+That all was naught within and all found out.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Oh happy Britain! we have not
+to fear<br />
+Such hard and arbitrary measure here;<br />
+Else could a law, like that which I relate,<br />
+Once have the sanction of our triple state,<br />
+Some few that I have known in days of old<br />
+Would run most dreadful risk of catching cold.<br />
+While you, my friend, whatever wind should blow,<br />
+Might traverse England safely to and fro,<br />
+An honest man, close buttoned to the chin,<br />
+Broad-cloth without, and a warm heart within.</p>
+<h2>TO MARY.</h2>
+<p class="poetry"><span class="smcap">The</span> twentieth year
+is well-nigh past<br />
+Since first our sky was overcast,<br />
+Ah, would that this might be the last!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; My Mary!</p>
+<p class="poetry">Thy spirits have a fainter flow,<br />
+I see thee daily weaker grow&mdash;<br />
+&rsquo;Twas my distress that brought thee low,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; My Mary!</p>
+<p class="poetry">Thy needles, once a shining store,<br />
+For my sake restless heretofore,<br />
+Now rust disused, and shine no more,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; My Mary!</p>
+<p class="poetry">For though thou gladly wouldst fulfil<br />
+The same kind office for me still,<br />
+Thy sight now seconds not thy will,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; My Mary!</p>
+<p class="poetry">But well thou playedst the housewife&rsquo;s
+part,<br />
+And all thy threads with magic art<br />
+Have wound themselves about this heart,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; My Mary!</p>
+<p class="poetry">Thy indistinct expressions seem<br />
+Like language uttered in a dream;<br />
+Yet me they charm, whate&rsquo;er the theme,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; My Mary!</p>
+<p class="poetry">Thy silver locks, once auburn bright,<br />
+Are still more lovely in my sight<br />
+Than golden beams of orient light,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; My Mary!</p>
+<p class="poetry">For could I view nor them nor thee,<br />
+What sight worth seeing could I see?<br />
+The sun would rise in vain for me,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; My Mary!</p>
+<p class="poetry">Partakers of thy sad decline,<br />
+Thy hands their little force resign;<br />
+Yet gently prest, press gently mine,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; My Mary!</p>
+<p class="poetry">Such feebleness of limbs thou prov&rsquo;st,<br
+/>
+That now at every step thou mov&rsquo;st<br />
+Upheld by two, yet still thou lov&rsquo;st,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; My Mary!</p>
+<p class="poetry">And still to love, though prest with ill,<br />
+In wintry age to feel no chill,<br />
+With me, is to be lovely still,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; My Mary!</p>
+<p class="poetry">But ah! by constant heed I know,<br />
+How oft the sadness that I show,<br />
+Transforms thy smiles to looks of woe,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; My Mary!</p>
+<p class="poetry">And should my future lot be cast<br />
+With much resemblance of the past,<br />
+Thy worn-out heart will break at last,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; My Mary!</p>
+<h2>FOOTNOTES.</h2>
+<p><a name="footnote127"></a><a href="#citation127"
+class="footnote">[127]</a>&nbsp; The author hopes that he shall
+not be censured for unnecessary warmth upon so interesting a
+subject.&nbsp; He is aware that it is become almost fashionable
+to stigmatise such sentiments as no better than empty
+declamation.&nbsp; But it is an ill symptom, and peculiar to
+modern times.&mdash;C.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote170"></a><a href="#citation170"
+class="footnote">[170]</a>&nbsp; Nebaioth and Kedar, the sons of
+Ishmael, and progenitors of the Arabs, in the prophetic scripture
+here alluded to may be reasonably considered as representatives
+of the Gentiles at large.&mdash;C.</p>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE TASK***</p>
+<pre>
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