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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Poems, by Sir John Carr
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Poems
+
+Author: Sir John Carr
+
+Release Date: December 2, 2003 [EBook #10367]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK POEMS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Jonathan Ingram, Josephine Paolucci and
+the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+POEMS,
+
+BY
+
+SIR JOHN CARR.
+
+
+
+Non ulla Musis pagina gratior,
+Quam quae severis ludicra jungere
+Novit, fatigatamque nugis
+Utilibus recreare mentem.
+
+
+
+1809.
+
+
+
+
+POEMS.
+
+
+
+DEDICATION.
+
+TO
+
+LADY WARREN,
+
+&c. &c. &c.
+
+_MADAM_,
+
+In dedicating the following Poems to your Ladyship, I cannot help
+regretting that they are not more worthy of such an honour; that I
+might consequently have used it as an humble mode of expressing
+my sense of the happy and enlightened hours which I have passed in
+your Ladyship's society, and of the polite attentions which I
+have at various times received from you, and the gallant object of
+your connubial affection, particularly at the House of British Embassy
+at Petersburgh, where you afforded to the Ladies of the North a just
+representation of the dignified virtue, cultivated mind, and
+attractive beauty, of the higher order of females of your own country.
+
+I have the honour to remain,
+
+Madam,
+
+Your Ladyship's
+
+Obedient faithful Servant,
+
+JOHN CARR.
+
+_Temple. June_ 1809
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+This Volume is submitted to the Public with all that diffidence which
+ought to attend the publication of Verses, many of which were written
+in the gay and happy era of boyhood, and others in subsequent periods
+of maturer life, as a relief from more arduous pursuits.
+
+They lay no pretensions to the depth and solidity of the effusions of
+the Muse in her elevated flights; they are the few wild notes of the
+simple shepherd, and do not even affect to imitate the rich cadence of
+the scientific musician.
+
+If the Author might, without the imputation of vanity, select for them
+a place in the Temple of Poetry, he would endeavour to class them in
+that niche which is appropriated for the reception of the light and
+playful _Vers de Societé_.
+
+Should the Reader find them but little worthy of his approval, he will
+not have reason at the same time to condemn their prolixity: their
+brevity will, at least in some degree, atone for their want of fire
+and fancy.
+
+It is thought proper to state that some of the following Poems have
+appeared before at various times, in a fugitive shape; and that the
+Poetry in the Author's Tours is here collected.
+
+
+
+
+POEMS,
+
+&c. &c.
+
+
+
+
+VERSES
+
+WRITTEN IN A GROTTO
+
+_In a Wood on the Side of the River Dart_,
+
+IN DEVONSHIRE.
+
+
+Tell me, thou grotto! o'er whose brow are seen
+Projecting plumes, and shades of deep'ning green,--
+While not a sound disturbs thy stony hall,
+While all thy dewy drops forget to fall,--
+Why canst thou not thy soothing charms impart,
+And shed thy quiet o'er this beating heart?
+Tell me, thou richly-painted river! tell,
+That on thy mirror'd plane dost mimic well
+Each pendent tree and every distant hill,
+Tipp'd with red lustre, beauteous, bright, and still,--
+
+Can I not, gazing on thy tranquil tide,
+Shed ev'ry grief upon thy rocky side?
+Or must I rove thy margin, calm and clear,
+The only agitated object near?
+Oh! tell me, too, thou babbling cold cascade!
+Whose waters, falling thro' successive shade,
+Unspangled by the brightness of the sky,
+Awake each echo to a soft reply,--
+Say, canst thou not my bosom-grief befriend,
+And bid one drop upon my heart descend?
+When all thy songsters soothe themselves to sleep.
+Ah! must these aching eyes for ever weep?
+And must their frequent waters, like thine own,
+Drop, idly drop, on unimpressive stone?
+Or, when my beauteous fair shall deign to grace
+The humid foliage of thy mossy base,
+Canst thou not tell how many a rock below
+Impedes to kiss thy waters as they flow?
+In _her_ mind canst thou not the feeling rear
+To stop, or thus caress, each genuine tear?
+
+Teach her, oh! teach her, then, thou cold cascade!
+Pour all thy lessons for the lovely maid!
+And thou, bless'd grotto! let thy silence prove
+Her mute consenting answer to my love!
+And thou, bright river! as thou roll'st along,
+Bear on thy wand'ring wave a lover's song!
+Strong as thy current, as thy waters pure,
+Teach her to feel the passion I endure!
+
+
+
+
+LINES TO THE MEMORY OF MY DEAR BROTHER,
+
+W.T.P. CARR, ESQ.
+
+
+--manibus date lilia plenis:
+Purpureos spargam flores.
+
+_Aeneid_, lib. vi.
+
+
+Tho' no funereal grandeur swell my song,
+Nor genius, eagle-plum'd, the strain prolong,--
+Tho' Grief and Nature here alone combine
+To weep, my William! o'er a fate like thine,--
+Yet thy fond pray'r, still ling'ring on my ear,
+Shall force its way thro' many a gushing tear:
+The Muse, that saw thy op'ning beauties spread,
+That lov'd thee living, shall lament thee dead!
+Ye graceful Virtues! while the note I breathe,
+Of sweetest flow'rs entwine a fun'ral wreath,--
+Of virgin flow'rs, and place them round his tomb,
+To bud, like him, and perish in their bloom!
+Ah! when these eyes saw thee serenely wait
+The last long separating stroke of Fate,--
+When round thy bed a kindred weeping train
+Call'd on thy voice to greet them, but in vain,--
+When o'er thy lips we watch'd thy fault'ring breath--
+When louder grief proclaim'd th'approach of death,--
+Thro' ev'ry vein an icy horror chill'd,
+Colder than marble ev'ry bosom thrill'd.
+Unsettled still, tho' exercis'd to grieve,
+Scarce would my mind the alter'd sight believe;
+Familiar scenes a transient calm inspire,
+Poor flutt'ring Fancy fann'd the vain desire,
+'Till with sad proof thy wasted relics rise,
+And restless Nature pours uncall'd-for sighs.
+Ah! long, my William! shall thy picture rest,
+Time shall not wear it, imag'd in my breast;
+Yes, thou shall live while fond remembrance lives,
+'Till he who mourns thee asks the line he gives.
+No common joy, no fugitive delight,
+Regret like this could in my breast excite;
+For then my sorrow had been less severe,
+And tears less copious had bedew'd the bier.
+From the same breast our milky food we drew,
+Entwin'd affection strengthen'd as we grew;
+Why further trace? The flatt'ring dream is o'er--
+Thy transient joys and sorrows are no more!
+All, all are fled!--And, ah! where'er I turn,
+Insulting Death directs me to thy urn,
+Throws his cold shadows round me while I sing.
+Damps ev'ry nerve, and slackens ev'ry string.
+So, when the Moon trims up her waning fire,
+Sweep the night-breezes o'er th'Aeolian lyre;
+Ling'ring, perchance, some wild pathetic sound
+Lulls the lorn ear, and dies along the ground.
+Ye kindred train! who, o'er the parting grave,
+Have mourn'd the virtues which ye could not save.
+Ye know how Mem'ry, with excursive pow'r,
+Extracts a sweet from ev'ry faded hour;--
+From scenes long past, regardless of repose,
+She feeds her tears, and treasures up her woes.
+Thou tuneful, mute, companion[A] of my care!
+Where now thy notes, that linger'd in the air?
+That linger still!--Vain thy harmonious store,--
+Thy sweet persuasive triumphs are no more.
+Thy mournful image strikes my wand'ring eye;
+Sad, near thy silent strings, I sit and sigh.
+Cold is that band which Music form'd her own,
+When ev'ry chord resign'd its sweetest tone.
+Ah! long, fair source of rapture, shall thou rest,
+Silent and sad, neglected and unprest,
+'Till years, lov'd shade! superior pow'rs resign,
+Or raise one note more eloquent than thine.
+Tho' with'ring Sickness mark'd thee in the womb,
+And form'd thy cradle but to form thy tomb,
+Yet, like a flow'r, she bade thee reach thy prime,
+The fairer victim for the stroke of Time.
+When fond Invention vainly sought thine ease,
+The wave salubrious and the morning breeze,--
+When even Sleep, sweet Sleep! refus'd thy call,
+Sleep! that with sweet refreshment smiles on all,--
+When, till the morn, thine eyes, unclos'd and damp,
+Trac'd thy sad semblance in the glimm'ring lamp,--
+When from thy face Health's latest relic fled,
+Where Hope might flatter, with reluctant tread,--
+Still, darting forward from the weight of woe,
+Thy soul with all its energy would glow;
+Still with the purest passion wouldst thou prove
+The glow of friendship and the warmth of love.
+And ah! to sacred Memory ever nigh,
+Thy wit and humour claim the passing sigh:
+When, thro' the hour, with unresisted skill,
+I've seen thee mould each feature to thy will,--
+When friends drew round thee with attentive ear,
+Pleas'd with the raill'ry which they could not fear.
+Oh! how I've heard thee, with concealing art,
+Join in the song, tho' sorrow rent thy heart;
+How have I seen thee too, with venial guile,
+O'er many an anguish force the faithless smile,--
+Seen suffering Nature check each sigh, each fear,
+To rob maternal fondness of a tear!
+Alas! those scenes are past!--Vain was the pray'r
+That ask'd of Fate to soften and to spare;
+Ah! vain, if wit and virtue could not save
+Thy youthful honours from an early grave.
+But yet, if here my warm fraternal love
+May claim alliance with the realms above;
+If kindred Nature, with perpetual bloom,
+Transplanted springs, and lives beyond the tomb;
+Thy pitying soul shall smile upon my grief,
+Shall feel a pang that wishes not relief;
+In visions still shall shield me as I go,
+Along this gloomy wilderness of woe;
+Shall still regard me with peculiar pride,
+On earth my brother, and in heav'n my guide!
+Methinks I see thee reach th' empyrean shore,
+And heav'n's full chorus hails one angel more;
+While 'mid the seraph-forms that round thee fly,
+Thy father meets thee with ecstatic eye!
+He springs exulting from his throne of rest,
+Extends his arms, and clasps thee to his breast!
+
+[Footnote A: The piano-forte, on which he excelled.]
+
+
+
+
+PARODY
+
+ON
+
+"_The Golden Days of good Queen Bess_."
+
+
+To my Muse give attention, and deem it not a mystery
+If I jumble up together music, poetry, and history,
+To sing of the vices of wicked Queen Bess, sir,
+Whose memory posterity with blushes shall confess, sir,
+ Detested be the memory of wicked Queen Bess, sir,
+ Whose memory posterity with blushes shall confess, sir.
+
+In saying she would die a maid, she, England! did amuse ye.
+But what she did, and what she died--I hope you will excuse me:
+A gallant Earl a miracle of passion for her fed, sir;
+She kiss'd him, and she clos'd the scene by striking off his head, sir!
+ Detested be, &c.
+
+Oh! rude ungrateful Scotland! had thy desolated Queen, sir,
+No blue eyes ever known, nor had she beauteous been, sir,
+The envy of our old rival hag she might have baffled, sir,
+Nor with her guiltless blood have crimson'd o'er the scaffold, sir.
+ Detested be, &c.
+
+She dress'd just like a porcupine, and din'd just like a pig, sir,
+And an over-running butt of sack she swallow'd at a swig, sir!
+Her brawny maids of honour ate and drank confounded hard, sir,
+And droves of oxen daily bled within her palace-yard, sir!
+ Detested be, &c.
+
+In ruling she was wonderous tyrannical and surly;
+If a patriot only touch'd on the Queen or Master Burleigh,
+She'd send a file of soldiers in less than half an hour, sir,
+Just to bid him make his speeches to the prisons of the Tow'r, sir!
+ Detested be, &c.
+
+
+
+
+REBECCA,
+
+_A Ballad_.
+
+
+Rebecca was the fairest maid
+That on the Danube's borders play'd;
+And many a handsome nobleman
+For her in tilt and tourney ran;
+While fair Rebecca wish'd to see
+What youth her husband was to be.
+
+Rebecca heard the gossips say,
+"Alone from dusk till midnight stay
+Within the church-porch drear and dark,
+Upon the vigil of Saint Mark,
+And, lovely maiden! you shall see
+What youth your husband is to be."
+
+Rebecca, when the night grew dark,
+Upon the vigil of Saint Mark,
+(Observ'd by Paul, a roguish scout,
+Who guess'd the task she went about,)
+Stepp'd to St Stephen's Church to see
+What youth her husband was to be.
+
+Rebecca heard the screech-owl cry,
+And saw the black bat round her fly;
+She sat, 'till, wild with fear, at last
+Her blood ran cold, her pulse beat fast;
+And yet, rash maid! she stopp'd to see
+What youth her husband was to be.
+
+Rebecca heard the midnight chime
+Ring out the yawning peal of time,
+When shrouded Paul, unlucky knave!
+Rose like a spectre from the grave;
+And cried, "Fair maiden, come with me.
+For I your bridegroom am to be."
+
+Rebecca turn'd her head aside,
+Sent forth a hideous shriek, and died!
+While Paul confess'd himself, in vain,
+Rebecca never spoke again!
+Ah! little, hapless maid! did she
+Think Death her bridegroom was to be.
+
+Rebecca! may thy story long
+Instruct the giddy and the young.
+Fright not, fond youths! the timid fair;
+And you too, gentle maids! beware;
+Nor seek by lawless arts to see
+What youths your husbands are to be.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+TO AN AURICULA, BELONGING TO ----.
+
+
+Thou rear'st thy beauteous head, sweet flow'r
+Gemm'd by the soft and vernal show'r;
+ Its drops still round thee shine:
+The florist views thee with delight;
+And, if so precious in _his_ sight,
+ Oh! what art thou in _mine_?
+
+For she, who nurs'd thy drooping form
+When Winter pour'd her snowy storm,
+ Has oft consol'd me too;
+For me a fost'ring tear has shed,--
+She has reviv'd my drooping head,
+ And bade me bloom anew.
+
+When adverse Fortune bade us part,
+And grief depress'd my aching heart,
+ Like yon reviving ray,
+She from behind the cloud would move,
+And with a stolen look of love
+ Would melt my cares away.
+
+Sweet flow'r! supremely dear to me,
+Thy lovely mistress blooms in thee,
+ For, tho' the garden's pride,
+In beauty's grace and tint array'd,
+Thou seem'st to court the secret shade,
+ Thy modest form to hide.
+
+Oh! crown'd with many a roseate year,
+Bless'd may she be who plac'd thee here,
+ Until the tear of love
+Shall tremble in the eye to find
+Her spirit, spotless and refin'd,
+ Borne to the realms above!
+
+And oft for thee, sweet child of spring!
+The Muse shall touch her tend'rest string;
+ And, as thou rear'st thine head,
+She shall invoke the softest air,
+Or ask the chilling storm to spare,
+ And bless thy humble bed.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+TO LADY WARREN,
+
+_On the Departure of Sir John Borlase Warren, K.B_.
+
+TO TAKE THE COMMAND OF A SQUADRON.
+
+
+Oh! why does sorrow shade thy face,
+Where mind and beauty vie with grace?
+Say, dost thou for thy hero weep,
+Who gallantly, upon the deep,
+Is gone to tell the madd'ning foe,
+Tho' vict'ry laid our Nelson low,
+We still have chiefs as greatly brave,
+Proudly triumphant on the wave?
+Dear to thy Country shall thou be,
+Fair mourner! and her sympathy
+Is thine; for, in the war's alarms,
+Thou gav'st thine hero from thine arms;
+And only ask'd to sigh alone,
+To look to heav'n, and weep him gone.
+Oh! soon shall all thy sorrow cease,
+And, to thine aching bosom, peace
+Shall quick return;--another tear
+To love and joy, supremely dear,
+Shall give thy gen'rous mind relief--
+That tear shall gem the laurel leaf.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+TO MISS ----,
+
+ACCOMPANIED BY A ROSE AND A LILY.
+
+
+
+I look'd the fragrant garden round
+ For what I thought would picture best
+ Thy beauty and thy modesty;
+A lily and a rose I found,--
+ With kisses on their leaves imprest,
+ I send the beauteous pair to thee.
+
+
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+Nature's imperfect child, to whom
+The world is wrapt in viewless gloom,
+Can unresisted still impart
+The fondest wishes of his heart.
+
+And he, to whose impervious ear
+ The sweetest sounds no charms dispense,
+Can bid his inmost soul appear
+ In clear, tho' silent, eloquence.
+
+But we, my Julia, not so blest,
+ Are doom'd a diff'rent fate to prove,--
+To feel each joy and hope supprest
+ That flow from pure, but hidden, love.
+
+
+
+
+IMPROMPTU LINES,
+
+UPON ANACREON MOORE'S SAYING THAT HE DISLIKED
+SINGING TO MEN.
+
+
+By Beauty's caresses, like Cupid, half-spoil'd,
+Thus Music's and Poesy's favourite child
+Exclaim'd,--"'Tis, by Heaven! a terrible thing
+Before a _he_-party to sit and to sing!"
+"By my shoul! Master Moore, you there may be right,"
+Said a son of green Erin; "tho' dear to my sight
+Are all the sweet cratures, call'd women, I swear,
+Yet I think we can feel just as well as the fair:
+Tho' you'd bribe us with songs, blood and 'ounds! let me say,
+I'd not be a woman for one in your way."
+
+
+
+
+LINES TO JULIA.
+
+
+Tho', Julia, we are doom'd to part,
+Tho' unknown pangs invade this heart,
+For thee the light of love shall burn,
+To thee my soul in secret turn:
+Upon this bosom, swell'd with care,
+The thought of thee shall tremble there
+'Till Time shall close these weeping eyes,
+And close the soothing source of sighs.
+So, in the silence of the night,
+Shines on the wave the lunar light;
+With its soft image, bright, imprest,
+It heaves, and seems to know no rest:
+Its agitation soon is o'er;
+It sighs, and dies along the shore!
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+_To the Memory of Mrs. A.H. Holdsworth_,
+
+LATE OF MOUNT GALPIN, DEVONSHIRE.
+
+
+Tyrant of all our loves and friendships here,
+ Behold thy beauteous victim!--Ah! tis thine
+To rend fond hearts, and start the tend'rest tear
+ Where joy should long in cloudless radiance shine.
+
+Alas! the mourning Muse in vain would paint,
+ Blest shade! how purely pass'd thy life away,
+Or, with the meekness of a favour'd saint,
+ How rose thy spirit to the realms of day.
+
+'Twas thine to fill each part that gladdens life,
+ Such as approving angels smile upon;--
+The faultless daughter, parent, friend, and wife,--
+ Virtues short-lived! they set just as they shone.
+
+Thus, in the bosom of some winding grove,
+ Where oft the pensive melodist retires,
+From his sweet instrument, the note of love,
+ Charms the rapt ear, but, as it charms, expires.
+
+Farewell, pure spirit! o'er thine early grave
+ Oblivion ne'er shall spread her freezing shade;
+Nature shall bid her richest foliage wave
+ Where her reposing fav'rite child is laid.
+
+There widow'd fondness oft, when summers bloom.
+ Shall with thy infant pledge of love repair;
+Oft shall they kneel beside thy mossy tomb,
+ And tears shall dew the flow'rs that blossom there.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+_Written upon a Watch-String_,
+
+MADE AND PRESENTED TO THE AUTHOR BY MISS ----.
+
+
+Say, lovely Charlotte! will you let me prove
+What diff'rent thoughts thy taste and beauty move?
+This woven chain, which graceful skill displays,
+ Leads me to think of time, and heave a sigh;
+But when on thee and on thy charms I gaze,
+ Time unremember'd moves, or seems to die.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+_Upon a Diamond Cross_,
+
+WORN ON HER BOSOM BY MISS C.M.
+
+
+Well on that neck, sweet Kitty! may you wear
+ The sparkling cross, with hopes to soften Heaven;
+For trust me, tho' so very young and fair,
+ Thou hast some little sins to be forgiven:--
+For all the hopes which wit and grace can spread,
+ For all the sighs which countless charms can move,
+Fall, lovely Kitty! on thy youthful head;
+ Yet fall they gently--for the crime is love.
+
+
+
+
+LINES TO FORTUNE,
+
+Occasioned by a very amiable and generous Friend of mine
+munificently presenting Miss E.S. with a Donation of
+Fifteen Thousand Pounds.
+
+
+Oh, Fortune! I have seen thee shed
+ A plenteous show'r of treasure down
+On many a weak and worthless head,
+ On those who but deserv'd thy frown.
+
+And I have heard, in lonely shade,
+ Her sorrows hapless Merit pour;
+And thou hast pass'd the drooping maid,
+ To give some pamper'd fav'rite more.
+
+But tho' so cold, or strangely wild,
+ It seems that worth can sometimes move;
+Thou hast on gentle Emma smil'd,
+ And thou hast smil'd where all approve:--
+
+For Nature form'd her gen'rous heart
+ With ev'ry virtue, pure, refin'd;
+And wit and taste, and grace and art,
+ United to illume her mind.
+
+So dew-drops fall on some rare flow'r,
+ That merits all their fost'ring care,
+As tho' they knew that, by their pow'r,
+ Grateful 'twould wider scent the air.
+
+
+
+
+A SONG.
+
+THE LOVER
+
+THE LUTE OF HIS DECEASED MISTRESS.
+
+
+Alas! but like a summer's dream
+ All the delight I felt appears,
+While mis'ry's weeping moments seem
+ A ling'ring age of tears.
+
+Then breathe my sorrows, plaintive lute!
+ And pour thy soft consoling tone,
+While I, a list'ning mourner mute,
+ Will call each tender grief my own.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+WRITTEN IN A COTTAGE BY THE SEA-SIDE
+
+(_In which the Author had taken Shelter during a violent Storm_),
+
+UPON SEEING AN IDIOTIC YOUTH SEATED IN THE CHIMNEY-CORNER, CARESSING A
+BROOM.
+
+
+'Twas on a night of wildest storms,
+ When loudly roar'd the raving main,--
+When dark clouds shew'd their shapeless forms,
+ And hail beat hard the cottage pane,--
+
+Tom Fool sat by the chimney-side,
+ With open mouth and staring eyes;
+A batter'd broom was all his pride,--
+ It was his wife, his child, his prize!
+
+Alike to him if tempests howl,
+ Or summer beam its sweetest day;
+For still is pleas'd the silly soul,
+ And still he laughs the hours away.
+
+Alas! I could not stop the sigh,
+ To see him thus so wildly stare,--
+To mark, in ruins, Reason lie,
+ Callous alike to joy and care.
+
+God bless thee, thoughtless soul! I cried;
+ Yet are thy wants but very few:
+The world's hard scenes thou ne'er hast tried;
+ Its cares and crimes to thee are new.
+
+The hoary hag[A], who cross'd thee so,
+ Did not unkindly vex thy brain;
+Indeed she could not be thy foe,
+ To snatch thee thus from grief and pain.
+
+Deceit shall never wring thy heart,
+ And baffled hope awake no sighs;
+And true love, harshly forc'd to part,
+ Shall never swell with tears thine eyes.
+
+Then long enjoy thy batter'd broom,
+ Poor merry fool! and laugh away
+'Till Fate shall bid thy reason bloom
+ In blissful scenes of brighter day.
+
+[Footnote A: It is generally believed by the peasants of Devonshire
+that idiotcy is produced by the influence of a witch.]
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+_To a Laurel-Leaf_,
+
+SENT TO THE AUTHOR BY MISS ----.
+
+
+Tho' unknown is the hand that bestow'd thee on me,
+ Sweet leaf! ev'ry fibre I'll warm with a kiss:
+With the fame of her beauty thou well dost agree,
+ Whose presence shews conquest, whose triumph is bliss!
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+OCCASIONED BY THE DEATH OF LIEUTENANT J----,
+
+_Who was killed by a Pistol-Shot_,
+
+ACCIDENTALLY DISCHARGED BY HIS FRIEND,
+
+CAPTAIN B----.
+
+
+With horror dumb, tho' guiltless, stood
+ Beside his dying friend,
+The hapless wretch who made the blood
+ Sad from his side descend!
+
+"Give me thy hand; lov'd friend, adieu!"
+ The gen'rous suff'rer cried!
+"I do forgive and bless thee too;"
+ And, having said it, died!
+
+And Pity, who stood trembling near
+ Knew not for which to shed,
+So claim'd by both, her saddest tear--
+ The living or the dead!
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+TO AN ACCOMPLISHED YOUNG LADY,
+
+Whose Timidity frequently agitated her, when pressed to gratify her
+Friends by her Musical Talents.
+
+
+'Tis said (and I believe it too)
+ That genuine merit seeks the shade;
+Blushing to think what is her due,
+ As of her own sweet pow'rs afraid:--
+
+Thus, lovely maid! on fluttering wings,
+ Thy pow'rs a thousand fears pursue,
+Which, like thy own harmonious strings,
+ When press'd _enchant_, and _tremble_ too!
+
+The pity, which we give, you owe,
+ For mutual fears on both attend;
+While anxious thus you joy bestow,
+ We fear too soon that joy will end!
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+TO MISS L---- D----.
+
+
+When Heav'n, sweet Laura! form'd thy mind,
+With genius and with taste refin'd,
+ As if the union were too bright,
+It spread the veil of diffidence,
+That ev'ry ray, at first intense,
+ Might shine as soft as lunar light.
+
+To frame a form then Nature strove,
+And call'd on Beauty and on Love,
+ To lodge the mind they priz'd so well:
+Completed was the fair design;
+Thus blended dew-drops mildly shine
+ Within the lily's spotless bell!
+
+
+
+
+LINES[A]
+
+_Written in a beautiful Spot_,
+
+THE FAVOURITE RETREAT OF DELIA.
+
+
+Streams ever limpid, fresh, and clear,
+Where Delia's charms renew'd appear,
+Ye flow'rs that touch'd her snowy breast,
+Ye trees whereon she lov'd to rest,
+Ye scenes adorn'd where'er she flies,
+If grief shall close these woe-worn eyes,
+May some kind form, with hand benign,
+My body with this earth enshrine,
+That, when the fairest nymph shall deign
+To visit this delightful plain,
+That, when she views my silent shade,
+And marks the change her love has made,
+The tear may tremble down her face,
+As show'rs the lily's leaves embrace;
+Then, like the infant at the breast,
+That feels a sorrow unexprest,
+That pang shall gentle Delia know,
+And silent treasure up her woe.
+
+[Footnote A: I am indebted to Petrarch for some of the imagery
+contained in these Lines.]
+
+
+
+
+VALENTINE VERSES,
+
+_Sent to my young Friend, Miss Emma Trevelyan_,
+
+OF WALLINGTON-HOUSE, NORTHUMBERLAND.
+
+
+Emma! 'tis early time for thee
+To hear the sounds of minstrelsy,
+That breathe around the rosy shrine
+Of honest old Saint Valentine.
+
+Too young art thou for strains of love;
+'Tis not thy passion I would move;
+Instead of lover's strains, I send
+The cordial wishes of a friend.
+
+Nobly has Nature done her duty,
+To give thee of thy mother's beauty
+So large a share--oh! then be thine
+The mental charms that in her shine!
+
+And may thy father's taste refin'd
+Still add new graces to thy mind;
+And may'st thou to each charm impart
+The gen'rous frankness of his heart.
+
+Then, my sweet Emma! thou shall move
+In many a heart more genuine love
+Than ever warm'd poetic line,
+Or sigh'd in any Valentine.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+WRITTEN UPON SEEING A BLIND YOUNG WOMAN IN NORTH WALES,
+
+Who supports herself, and an aged and infirm Mother, by selling
+Stockings and Gloves of her own Knitting, which she offers to
+Travellers as they pass by; in doing which she has been known
+to run close by the Side of a Carriage for several Miles.
+
+POOR BLIND BET.
+
+
+The morning purple on the hill,
+ The village spire, the ivy'd tow'r,
+The sparkling wheel of yonder mill,
+ The grove, green field, and op'ning flow'r,
+ Are lost to thee!
+
+Dark child of Nature, as thou art!
+ Yet thy poor bosom heaves no sigh;
+E'en now thy dimpling cheeks impart
+ Their knowledge of some pleasure nigh:--
+ 'Tis good for thee!
+
+Thou seem'st to say "I've sunshine too;
+ 'Tis beaming in a spotless breast;
+No shade of guilt obstructs the view,
+ And there are many not so blest,
+ Who day's blush see.
+
+"Dear are those eyes, by mine ne'er seen,
+ Which I protect from many a tear;
+Kind stranger! 'tis on yonder green
+ A mother's aged form I rear:
+ Oh! buy of me!"
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+UPON SEEING ----
+
+_At one of the annual Banquets given in Guildhall_.
+
+
+Gorgeous and splendid was the sight;
+From myriad lamps a fairy light
+Enshrin'd in wreaths the Gothic wall,
+And heav'nly music fill'd the hall!
+
+But there was one--(alas! that I
+Had ever seen)--the melody
+Her voice surpassed, and brighter far
+Her eyes than ev'ry mimic star!
+
+I gaz'd, until, oh! thought divine!
+I fancied she I saw was mine;
+But soon the beauteous vision flew--
+The stranger-form I lov'd withdrew.
+
+Yet still she lives within my breast,
+There mem'ry has her form imprest:--
+Thus, when some minstrel's strain is done,
+Sounds seem to breathe, for ever gone!
+
+
+
+
+YARRIMORE.
+
+[These Lines were written for a Lady who set them to Music.]
+
+
+My poor heart flutters like the sea
+ Now heaving on the sandy shore;
+It seems to tell me you shall be
+ Never again near Yarrimore.
+
+Far, far beyond the waves, I bend
+ Mine eyes, if I can land explore;
+But o'er the waves I find no end,--
+ Yet there they say's my Yarrimore.
+
+The hut he built is standing still,
+ Deck'd with the shells he cull'd from shore;
+Our bow'r is waving on the hill,
+ But where, alas! is Yarrimore?
+
+Within that bow'r I'll sit and sigh,
+ From dawn of day till day is o'er;
+And, as the wild winds o'er me fly,
+ I'll call on gentle Yarrimore!
+
+
+
+
+LINES TO MISS ----,
+
+Upon her appearing at a Ball in an elegant Plaid Dress,
+
+AND HAVING REPEATEDLY BEFORE EXPRESSED HER PREFERENCE
+OF THE SCOTISH NATION.
+
+
+Is it that plaided thus you wish to prove
+How northern is the region of your love?
+Ah, Mary! tho', within that far-fam'd clime,
+Deeds have been done that mock the wreck of Time;
+Tho' there the brave have bled, or, o'er the wave,
+On distant shores have found a glorious grave;
+Tho' there the mountain-nymph of song has pour'd
+Her loftiest strain, to bless the hero's sword;
+Still, lovely wand'rer, with a jealous eye,
+O'er Scotia's hills we see thy fancy fly;
+For _here_ the warrior oft has rais'd his sword,
+The patriot too his noble blood has pour'd;
+_Here_ too the sweet Recorder of the brave
+Has sat and sung upon her hero's grave.
+Then cease, romantic maid! ah, cease to rove;
+The very wood-dove loves its native grove:
+Oh! then, let Nature bid thy guileless heart
+Here shed its love, and all its warmth impart;
+And on the land that gave thee birth bestow
+The fondness which it claims, and treasures too.
+
+
+
+
+A SONG.
+
+TO THE MOON.
+
+
+Thou, lamp! the gods benignly gave,
+ To light a lover on his way;
+Thou, Moon! along the silv'ry wave,
+ Ah! safe this flutt'ring heart convey:--
+
+Sweet is thy light, and sweet thy shade,
+ The _guide_ and _guardian_ of our bliss,
+A lover's panting lips to lead,
+ Or veil him in the ravish'd kiss.
+
+Her white robe floats upon the air;
+ My Lyra hears the dashing oar:
+Ye floods, oh! speed me to my fair!
+ My soul is with her long before.
+
+Oh! lightly haste, thy lover view,
+ And ev'ry anxious fear resign;
+Ye tow'rs, no longer fear'd, adieu!
+ The treasure which ye held is mine!
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+_Upon the Death of the Lady of Lieutenant-Colonel Adams_,
+
+WHO LATELY DIED OF A DECLINE IN THE EAST INDIES.
+
+
+When Time a mellowing tint has thrown
+ O'er many a scene to mem'ry dear.
+It scatters round a charm, unknown
+ When first th' impression rested there.
+
+But, oh! should distance intervene,
+ Should Ocean's wave, should changeful clime.
+Divide--how sweeter far the scene!
+ How richer ev'ry tint of time!
+
+E'en thus with those (a treasur'd few)
+ Who gladden'd life with many a smile,
+Tho' long has pass'd the sad adieu,
+ In thought we love to dwell awhile.
+
+Then with keen eye, and beating heart,
+ The anxious mind still seeks relief
+From those who can the tale impart,
+ How pass their day, in joy or grief.
+
+If haply health and fortune bless,
+ We feel as if on us they shone;
+If sickness and if sorrow press,
+ Then feeling makes their woes our own.
+
+'Twas thus of Mira oft I thought,
+ Oft dwelt upon the scenes she grac'd:
+Her form in beauty's mould was wrought,
+ Her mind the seat of sense and taste.
+
+Long, hov'ring o'er her fleeting breath,
+ Love kept his watch in silent gloom;
+He saw her meekly yield to Death,
+ And knelt a mourner at her tomb.
+
+When the night-breeze shall softly blow,
+ When the bright moon upon the flood
+Shall spread her beams (a silv'ry show),
+ And dark be many a waving wood,--
+
+When, dimly[A] seen, in robes of white,
+ A mournful train along the grove
+Shall bear the lamp of sacred light,
+ To deck the turf of those they love,--
+
+Then shall the wood-dove quit its bow'r,
+ And seek the spot were she is laid;
+Its wild and mournful notes shall pour
+ A requiem to her hallow'd shade.
+
+And Friendship oft shall raise the veil
+ Time shall have drawn o'er pleasures past,
+And Fancy shall repeat the tale
+ Of happy hours, too sweet to last!
+
+But when she mourns o'er Mira's bier,
+ And when the fond illusion ends,
+Oh! then shall fall the genuine tear
+ That drops for dear departed friends!
+
+[Footnote A: Mr. Hodges, in his Travels in India, page 28, mentions,
+that between Banglepoor and Mobgheir, it is the custom of the women of
+the family to attend the tombs of their friends after sun-set; and
+observes, "it is both affecting and curious to see them proceeding in
+groups, carrying lamps in their hands, which they place at the head of
+the tomb."]
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+TO MISS C.
+
+_On her leaving the Country_.
+
+
+Since Friendship soon must bid a fond adieu,
+And, parting, wish your charms she never knew,
+Dear Laura hear one genuine thought express'd,
+Warm from the heart, and to the heart address'd:--
+Much do I wish you all your soul holds dear,
+To sooth and sweeten ev'ry trouble here;
+But heav'n has yielded such an ample store,
+You cannot ask, nor can I wish you, more;
+Bless'd with a sister's love, whose gentle mind,
+Still pure tho' polish'd, virtuous and refin'd,
+Will aid your tend'rer years and innocence
+Beneath the shelter of her riper sense.
+Charm'd with the bright example may you move,
+And, loving, richly copy what you love.
+Adieu! and blame not if an artless pray'r
+Should, self-directed, ask one moment's care:--
+When years and absence shall their shade extend,
+Reflect who sighs adieu, and call him--friend.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+TO A ROBIN.
+
+_Written during a severe Winter_.
+
+
+Why, trembling, silent, wand'rer! why,
+From me and Pity do you fly?
+Your little heart against your plumes
+Beats hard--ah! dreary are these glooms!
+Famine has chok'd the note of joy
+That charm'd the roving shepherd-boy.
+Why, wand'rer, do you look so shy?
+And why, when I approach you, fly?
+The crumbs which at your feet I strew
+Are only meant to nourish you;
+They are not thrown with base decoy,
+To rob you of one hour of joy.
+Come, follow to my silent mill,
+That stands beneath yon snow-clad hill;
+There will I house your trembling form,
+There shall your shiv'ring breast be warm:
+And, when your little heart grows strong,
+I'll ask you for your simple song;
+And, when you will not tarry more,
+Open shall be my wicket-door;
+And freely, when you chirp "adieu,"
+I'll wish you well, sweet warbler! too;
+I'll wish you many a summer-hour
+On top of tree, or abbey-tow'r.
+When Spring her wasted form retrieves,
+And gives your little roof its leaves,
+May you (a happy lover) find
+A kindred partner to your mind:
+And when, amid the tangled spray,
+The sun shall shoot a parting ray,
+May all within your mossy nest
+Be safe, be merry, and be blest.
+
+
+
+
+LINES TO DELIA,
+
+ON HER WEARING A MUSLIN VEIL.
+
+
+Say, Delia, why, in muslin shade,
+ Ah! say, dost thou conceal those eyes?
+Such little stars were never made,
+ I'm sure, to shine thro' misty skies.
+
+Say, are they wrapt in so much shade,
+ That they may more successful rise,
+Starting from such soft ambuscade,
+ To catch and kill us by surprise?
+
+Or, of their various pow'rs afraid,
+ Is it in mercy to our sighs,
+Lest love, o'er many a heart betray'd,
+ Should sob "a faithful vot'ry dies"?
+
+Then, oh! remove the envious shade;
+ Let others wear, who want, disguise:
+We all had sooner die, sweet maid,
+ To see, than live without, those eyes.
+
+
+
+
+VERSES
+
+TO THE TOMB OF A FRIEND.
+
+
+Dearer to me, thou pile of dust!
+ Tho' with the wild flow'r simply crown'd,
+Than the vast dome or beauteous bust,
+ By genius form'd, by wit renown'd.
+
+Wave, thou wild flow'r! for ever wave,
+ O'er my lov'd relic of delight;
+My tears shall bathe her green-rob'd grave
+ More than the dews of heav'n by night.
+
+Methinks my Delia bids me go,
+ Says, "Florio, dry that fruitless tear!
+Feed not a wild flow'r with thy woe,
+ Thy long-lov'd Delia is not here.
+
+"No drop of feeling from her eye
+ Now starts to hear thy sorrows speak;
+And, did thy bosom know one joy,
+ No smile would bloom upon her cheek.
+
+"Pale, wan, and torpid, droops that cheek,
+ Whereon thy lip impress'd its red;
+Those eyes, which Florio taught to speak,
+ Unnotic'd close amid the dead!"
+
+True, true, too idly mourns this heart;
+ Why, Mem'ry, dost thou paint the past?
+Why say you saw my Delia part,
+ Still press'd, still lov'd her, to the last?
+
+Then, thou wild flow'r, for ever wave!
+ To thee this parting tear is given;
+The sigh I offer at her grave
+ Shall reach my sainted love in heaven!
+
+
+
+
+TIME AND THE LOVER.
+
+
+Oh, Time! thy merits who can know?
+ Thy real nature who discover?
+The absent lover calls thee slow,--
+ "Too rapid," says the happy lover.
+
+With bloom thy cheeks are now refin'd,
+ Now to thine eye the tear is given;
+At once too cruel and too kind,--
+ A little hell, a little heaven.
+
+Go then, thou charming myst'ry, go!--
+ Yes, tho' thou often dost amuse me,
+Tho' many a joy to thee I owe,
+ At once I thank thee and abuse thee.
+
+
+
+
+A ROUNDELAY.
+
+
+Wide thro' the azure blue and bright
+Serenely floats the lamp of night;
+The sleeping waves forget to move,
+And silent is the cedar grove;
+Each breeze suspended seems to say--
+"Now, Leline, for thy Roundelay!"
+
+My Delia's lids are clos'd in rest;
+Ah! were her pillow but my breast!
+Go, dreams! one gentle word impart,
+In whispers place me by her heart;
+While near her door I'll fondly stray,
+And sooth her with my Roundelay.
+
+But, ah! the Night draws in her shade,
+And glimm'ring stars reluctant fade:
+Yet sleep, my love! nor may'st thou feel
+The pangs which griefs like mine reveal:
+Adieu! for Morning's on his way,
+And bids me close my Roundelay.
+
+
+
+
+FAREWELL LINES
+
+TO
+
+_BRISTOL HOT WELLS_.
+
+
+Bristol! in vain thy rocks attempt the sky,
+ The wild woods waving on their giddy brow;
+And vainly, devious Avon! vainly sigh
+ Thy waters, winding thro' the vales below;--
+
+In vain, upon thy glassy bosom borne,
+ Th' expected vessel proudly glides along,
+While, 'mid thy echoes, at the break of morn
+ Is heard the homeward ship-boy's happy song;--
+
+For, ah! amid thy sweet romantic shade,
+ By Friendship led, fair drooping Beauty moves;
+Thy hallow'd cup of health affords no aid,
+ Nor charm thy birds, that chant their woodland loves.
+
+Each morn I view her thro' thy wave-girt grove,
+ Her white robe flutt'ring round her sinking form;
+O'er the sweet ruin shine those eyes of love,
+ As bright stars beaming thro' a midnight storm.
+
+Here sorrowing Love seeks a sequester'd bow'r.
+ Calls on thy spring to calm his troubled breast;
+Bright Hope alights not on his pensive hour,
+ Nor can thy favour'd fountains yield him rest.
+
+Despair across his joys now intervenes,
+ And sternly bids the little cherub fly;
+While his eyes close amid thy beauteous scenes.
+ His last sighs bless the form that bids him die.
+
+Farewell, then, Bristol! thou canst yield no joy,
+ Thy woods look darken'd with funereal gloom,
+Sickness and Sorrow on thy green banks sigh,
+ And all thy form is but a beauteous tomb.
+
+Ah! may each future suff'rer, hov'ring near,
+ Rais'd by thy genial wave, delighted view
+Returning joy and health, supremely dear,
+ Long lost to him who sadly sighs adieu!
+
+
+
+
+A SONG.
+
+
+These shades were made for Love alone,--
+ Here only smiles and kisses sweet
+Shall play around his flow'ry throne,
+ And doves shall sentinel the seat.
+
+Come, Delia! 'tis a genial day;
+ It bids us to his bow'r repair:--
+"But what will little Cupid say?"--
+ "Say! sweet?--why, give a welcome there."
+
+There not a tell-tale beam shall peep
+ Upon thy beauty's rich display,--
+There not a breeze shall dare to sweep
+ The leaves, to whisper what we say.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+ON LADY W---- APPEARING AT THE EXHIBITION.
+
+
+When lovely Delphine sought the crowded scene,
+ The painter's mimic pow'r no longer mov'd;
+All turn'd to gaze upon her beauteous mien,
+ None envied her, for, as they look'd, they lov'd.
+
+Amid the proud display of forms so fair,
+ Of each fine tint the pencil can impart,
+Nature with rapture seem'd to lead her there,
+ To prove how she could triumph over Art.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+WRITTEN AT BRIGHTON.
+
+
+From Mirth's bright circle, from the giddy throng,
+ How sweet it is to steal away at eve,
+To listen to the homeward fisher's song,
+ Whilst dark the waters of the ocean heave;--
+
+And on the sloping beach to bear the spray
+ Dash 'gainst some hoary vessel's broken side;
+Whilst, far illumin'd by the parting ray,
+ The distant sail is faintly seen to glide.
+
+Yes, 'tis Reflection's chosen hour; for then,
+ With pensive pleasure mingling o'er the scene,
+Th' erratic mind treads over life again,
+ And gazes on the past with eye serene.
+
+Those stormy passions which bedimm'd the soul,
+ That oft have bid the joys it treasur'd fly,
+Now, like th' unruffled waves of Ocean, roll
+ With gentle lapse--their only sound a sigh.
+
+The galling wrong no longer knits the brow,
+ Ambition feels the folly of her aim;
+And Pity, from the heart expanding, now
+ Pants to extend relief to ev'ry claim.
+
+Thus, as I sit beside the murm'ring sea,
+ And o'er its darkness trace light's parting streak,
+I feel, O Nature! that serenity
+ Which vainly poetry like mine can speak!
+
+O'er the drear tract of Time, Remembrance views
+ Some dear, some long-departed, pleasure gleam;--
+So o'er the dark expanse the eye pursues
+ Upon the wat'ry edge a transient beam.
+
+The spot fraternal love has sacred made,
+ Solemn, yet sweet, like groves in twilight gloom,
+Mem'ry revisits, and beneath its shade
+ Faintly it sees each faded joy re-bloom.
+
+By Fancy led, from Death's cold bed of stone,
+ Lovely, tho' wan, what cherish'd form appears?
+Oh! gentle Anna[A]! at thy name alone,
+ Genius, and Grace, and Virtue, smile in tears.
+
+Half-wrapp'd in mist I see thy figure move,
+ O'er thy pale cheek appears its wonted smile;
+With lunar lustre beam those looks of love,
+ That once could life of ev'ry care beguile:
+
+Faintly I hear thy angel-voice again;
+ There's music in the sweet and dying sound;
+Like Philomela's soft and echo'd strain,
+ It spreads a soothing consolation round.
+
+Adieu, bless'd shade!--Imagination roves
+ To distant regions, o'er th' Atlantic wave;
+Ah! not to genial skies, or fragrant groves,
+ To drop a tear upon a kindred grave.
+
+Hard was thy fate, Eliza[B]!--It was thine,
+ Tho' wit thy mind, tho' beauty grac'd thy form,
+Behind Affliction's weeping cloud to shine,
+ With star-like radiance, in a night of storm.
+
+Fierce from the sun the fiery fever flew,
+ And bade the burning sand become thy tomb!
+O'er thee no willow drops its mourning dew,
+ Nor spotless lilies o'er thy bosom bloom!
+
+Oh! when we stood around our brother's bier,
+ And wept in life's full bloom to see him torn,
+Ah! little did ye think that such a tear
+ As then ye shed so soon your fate would mourn.
+
+Farewell, dear shades! accept this mournful song,
+ At once the tribute of my grief and love;
+Fain would it try your virtues to prolong,
+ Here priz'd and honour'd, and now bless'd above.
+
+[Footnote A: Mrs. Hodges, a sister of the author.]
+
+[Footnote B: Mrs Fountaine, another sister of the author, who
+accompanied her husband to Africa, and died at the Government-house,
+in one of the British settlements on that coast, where she survived
+but a short time the death of three of her children.]
+
+
+
+
+ECHO.
+
+
+Echo! thou sweet enchantress of the grove!
+Oh! cease to answer to the tones of love;
+Or teach my Delia in thine art divine,
+Thou loveliest nymph! to hear and answer mine!
+
+
+
+
+OCCASIONAL LINES
+
+_Repeated at an elegant Entertainment_
+
+GIVEN BY LIEUTENANT-COLONEL D---- TO HIS FRIENDS
+
+IN THE RUINS OF BERRY CASTLE, DEVONSHIRE.[A]
+
+
+By your permission, Ladies! I address ye,
+And for the boon you grant, my Muse shall bless ye.
+I do not mean in solemn verse to tell
+What fate the race of Pomeroy befell;
+To trace the castle-story of each year,
+To learn how many owls have hooted here;
+What was the weight of stone, which form'd this pile,
+Will on your lovely cheeks awake no smile:
+Such antiquarian sermons suit not me,
+Nor any soul who loves festivity.
+Past times I heed not; be the present hour
+In life, while yet it blooms, my chosen flow'r,
+For well I know, what Time cannot disown,
+Amidst this mossy pile of mould'ring stone,
+That Hospitality was never seen
+To spread more social joy upon the green;
+Or, when its noble and capacious hall
+Rang with the gambol gay, or graceful ball,
+More beauty never charm'd its ancient beaux
+Than what its honour'd ruins now enclose.
+Thanks to the clouds, which from the soaking show'r
+Preserve the vot'ries of the present hour;
+For, strange to tell, beneath the chilling storm,
+Lately the rose reclin'd her frozen form;
+Yet since, beneath the favour of the weather,
+We are (a laughing group) conven'd together,
+Pray let the Muse pursue her merry route,
+To shew what pass'd before we all set out.
+To some fair damsel, who, intent to charm,
+Declares she thinks the weather fine and warm,
+Such words as these address her trembling ear--
+"I really think we shall have rain, my dear;
+Pray do not go, my love," cries soft mama;
+"You shall not go, that's flat," cries stern papa.
+A lucky sunbeam shines on the discourse,
+The parents soften, and Miss mounts her horse.
+Each tickled with some laugh-inspiring notion,
+Behold the jocund party all in motion:
+Some by a rattling buggy are befriended,
+Some mount the cart--but not to be suspended.
+The mourning-coach[B] is wisely counter-order'd
+(The very thought on impious rashness border'd),
+Because the luckless vehicle, one night,
+Put all its merry mourners in a fright,
+Who, to conduct them to the masquerade,
+Sought from its crazy wheels their moving aid.
+Us'd to a soleme pace, the creaking load
+Bounded unwillingly along the road;
+Down came the whole--oh! what a sight was there!
+O'er a blind Fiddler roll'd a Flow'r-Nymph fair;
+A glitt'ring Spaniard, who had lost his nose,
+Roar'd out, "Oh! d--n it, take away your toes;"
+A blooming Nun fell plump upon a Jew,
+Still to the good old cause of traffic true,
+Buried in clothes, exclaim'd the son of barter,
+"Got blesh my shoul! you'll shell this pretty garter?"
+Here let me pause;--the Muse, in sad affright,
+Turns from the dire disasters of that night;
+Quite panic-struck she drops her trembling plumes,
+And thus a moralizing theme assumes:--
+Know, gentle Ladies, once these shapeless walls,
+O'er whose grey wreck the shading ivy crawls,
+Compos'd a graceful mansion, whose fair mould
+Led from the road the trav'ller, to behold.
+Oft, when the morning ting'd the redd'ning skies,
+Far off the spiral smoke was seen to rise;
+At noon the hospitable board was spread,
+Then nappy ale made light the weary head;
+And when grey eve appear'd, in shadows damp,
+Each casement glitter'd with th' enliv'ning lamp;
+Here the laugh titter'd, there the lute of Love
+Fill'd with its melody the moon-light grove:
+All, all are fled!--Time ruthless stalks around,
+And bends the crumbling ruin to the ground:
+Time, Ladies, too (I know you do not like him,
+And, if a fan could end him, you would strike him),
+Will with as little gallantry devour
+From your fair faces their bewitching pow'r;
+Then, like these ruins, beauteous in decay,
+Still shall you charm, and men shall still obey:
+Then, with remembrance soft, and tender smile,
+Perchance you'll think upon this mossy pile;
+And, with a starting tear of joy declare,
+"Oh! how we laugh'd, how merry were we there!"
+
+[Footnote A: The manor of Berry was given by William the Conqueror to
+one of his Normans, Ralph de la Pomerai, who built on it the castle
+which still bears his name, and in whose family it continued till the
+reign of Edward VI. when it was sold by Sir Thomas Pomeroy to Edward
+Seymour, Duke of Somerset, from whom it has descended to the present
+Duke.
+
+The castle is seated upon a rock, which rises almost perpendicularly
+from a narrow valley; through this valley winds a small stream of
+water, which drives the mill seen through the foliage of the
+surrounding woods from the turrets of the castle.
+
+In approaching the castle from the south, the path leads down the
+side of a hill through a thick wood; and on the north side of the
+valley, opposite the rock on which the castle stands, is a high ridge,
+partly covered with oak: these hills completely shut in the ruins on
+both sides. The valley stretches a considerable way both to the east
+and west, and opens a view at either end into the adjacent country.
+
+From the ivy-covered ruins of the fortress which now remain, it is
+scarcely possible to say what was its ancient form; but it is most
+generally supposed to have been quadrangular, having only one
+entrance, a large double portcullis, at the west end of the southern
+front, turreted and embattled, as was the whole of the front, with a
+tower at its eastern end, corresponding with that on the west. This
+front, with its gateway and turrets, are perhaps the only remains of
+the original structure. Winding steps, now almost worn away, lead to
+what once was a chapel, over the portcullis, and thence to the top of
+the turrets.
+
+In more modern times a magnificent building was erected within the
+walls of the castle by the Seymour family; but, although upwards of
+Ł20,000 were said to have been expended on it, it was never finished,
+and now the whole forms one common ruin, which, as it totters on it
+base, the spectator contemplates with awe, while he sighs over the
+remains of fallen grandeur.]
+
+[Footnote B: A party from Totness went to Lord Courtenay's masquerade
+in this way, there being no other conveyance to be had, and met with
+the ridiculous accident here alluded to.]
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+TO SIR ROBERT KER PORTER,
+
+KNIGHT OF THE IMPERIAL ORDER OF ST. JOACHIM,
+
+_Upon his approaching Nuptials with the Princess Shebatoff_.
+
+
+To save the credit of the dame,
+ Poets and painters all agree
+ That Mistress Fortune cannot see,
+And on her bandage cast the blame;
+
+When honours on th' unworthy wait,
+ When riches to the wealthy flow,
+ When high desert, oppress'd by woe,
+Is left to struggle on with Fate.
+
+But, Porter! when on thee she smil'd,
+ The fillet from her eyes she mov'd,
+ To view the merit all approv'd--
+A mind inform'd, a heart unsoil'd.
+
+She saw thy virtues bright appear;
+ A son that mothers seldom know,
+ A brother with affection's glow,
+The soldier brave[A], the friend sincere.
+
+With honours then thy name she grac'd,
+ And call'd on Love to bless thy arms
+ With princely rank, with Virtue's charms,
+And all the pow'rs of wit and taste.
+
+[Footnote A: Sir R.K. Porter was attached to the staff in the late
+campaign in Spain, and was in nearly every engagement with the enemy.]
+
+
+
+
+THE FOLLOWING LINES IN FRENCH,
+
+_Are inscribed upon the Pedestal of a Statue of Cupid_,
+
+IN A GARDEN AT UTRECHT.
+
+
+_ORIGINAL_.
+
+ N'offrant qu'un coeur ŕ la Beauté,
+ Nud comme la Verité,
+ Sans armes comme l'Innocence,
+ Sans aîles comme la Constance,
+ Tel fut l'Amour dans le siecle d'or,
+On ne le trouve plus, quoiqu'on le cherche encore.
+
+
+_TRANSLATION_.
+
+To Beauty give your heart, your sighs,
+No other off'ring will she prize;
+As Truth should unadorn'd appear,
+Behold! the god is naked here!
+Like Innocence, he has no arms
+But those of sweet, of native, charms;
+No wish or pow'r has he to fly,
+Like thy pure spirit, Constancy!
+Such in the golden age was Love;
+But now, oh! whither does he rove?
+
+
+
+
+THE RHINGAU SONG.
+
+This is the favourite Song with the Inhabitants of the vine-covered
+Region of the Rhingau, an extensive District along the Banks of the
+Rhine, where the finest Wines are produced.
+
+
+_ORIGINAL_.
+
+Bekrantzt mit laub den liebe vollen becher,
+ Und trinkt ihn frölich leer;
+In Gauz Europa ihr herren zecher,
+ Ist solch, ein wein micht mehr.
+
+Ihn bringt das vaterland aus seiner fulle,
+ Wie wär er sonst so gut?
+Wie wär er sonst so edel, stille,
+ Und doch voll kraft und muth?
+
+Am Rhein, am Rhein, da wachsen unsre reben:
+ Gesegnet sey der Rhein!
+Da wachsen sie am ufer hin, und geben
+ Uns diesen labe wein.
+
+So trinkt ihn dann, und lasst uns alle wege
+ Uns freun, und frölich seyn;
+Und wüsten wir, wo jemand traurig läge,
+ Wir gaben ihm den wein.
+
+
+_TRANSLATION_.
+
+With wine-leaves crown the jovial cup,
+ For, search all Europe round,
+You'll say, as pleas'd you drink it up,
+ Such wine was never found.
+ Such wine, &c.
+
+Our fathers' land this vine supplies;
+ What soil can e'er produce
+But this, tho' warm'd with genial skies,
+ Such mild, such gen'rous juice?
+ Such mild, &c.
+
+Then shall the Rhine our smiles receive,
+ For on its banks alone
+Can e'er be found a wine to give
+ The soul its proper tone.
+ The soul, &c.
+
+Come, put the jovial cup around,
+ Our joys it will enhance,
+If any one is mournful found,
+ One sip shall make him dance.
+ One sip, &c.
+
+
+
+
+LINES TO HEALTH,
+
+_Upon the Recovery of a Friend from a dangerous Illness_.
+
+
+Sweet guardian of the rosy cheek!
+ Whene'er to thee I raise my hands
+Upon the mountain's breezy peak,
+ Or on the yellow winding sands,
+
+If thou hast deign'd, by Pity mov'd,
+ This fev'rish phantom to prolong,
+I've touch'd my lute, for ever lov'd,
+ And bless'd thee with its earliest song!
+
+And oh! if in thy gentle ear
+ Its simple notes have sounded sweet,
+May the soft breeze, to thee so dear,
+ Now bear them to thy rose-wreath'd seat!
+
+For thou hast dried the dew of grief,
+ And Friendship feels new ecstacy:
+To Pollio thou hast stretch'd relief,
+ And, raising him, hast cherish'd me.
+
+So, whilst some treasur'd plant receives
+ Th' admiring florist's partial show'r,
+The drops that tremble from its leaves
+ Oft feed some near uncultur'd flow'r.
+
+For late connubial Fondness hung
+ Mute o'er the couch where Pollio lay;
+Love, Hope, and Sorrow, fixed her tongue,
+ Thro' sable night till morning grey.
+
+There, too, by drooping Pollio's side,
+ Stood Modesty, a mourner meek,
+Whilst Genius, mov'd by grief and pride,
+ Increas'd the blush which grac'd her cheek;
+
+For much the maiden he reprov'd
+ For having spread her veil of snow
+Upon the mind he form'd and lov'd,
+ Till she was seen to mourn it too.
+
+O Health! when thou art fled, how vain
+ The witchery of earth and skies,
+Love's look, or music's sweetest strain,
+ Or Ocean's softest lullabies!
+
+Oh! ever hover near his bow'r,
+ There let thy fav'rite sylphs repair;
+Fence it with ev'ry sweet-lipp'd flow'r,
+ That Sickness find no entrance there.
+
+So shall his lyre, untouch'd so long,
+ The tone with which it charm'd regain;
+Sweet spirit! thou shall teach his song,
+ With mine, to breathe the grateful strain.
+
+
+
+
+AN IRISH SONG
+
+
+Poor Molly O'Flannagan (Lord rest her soul!)
+Drank so deeply of whiskey, 'twas thought she would die;
+Her fond lover, Pat, from her _nate_ cabin stole,
+And stepp'd into Dublin to buy her a pie.
+ Oh! poor Molly O'Flannagan!
+
+Tho' chin-deep in sorrow, yet fun he lov'd well;
+A pie-man pass'd near, crying "Pies" at his _aise_;
+"Here are pies of all sorts."--"Oh! if all sorts you sell,
+Then a _twopenny magpie_ for me, if you _plaise_!"
+ Oh! poor Molly O'Flannagan!
+
+
+
+
+THE SONG OF GRIEF
+
+
+By the walk of the willows I pour'd out my theme,
+The breath of the evening scarce dimpled the stream;
+By the waters I stood, like an image of Woe,
+And my tears, like the tide, seem'd to tremble and flow.
+
+Ye green scatter'd reeds, that half lean to the wave,
+In your plaintive, your musical, sighs, could ye save
+But one note of my charmer, to soften my doom,
+I would stay till these willows should arch me a tomb!
+
+For ye know, when I pour'd out my soul on the lute,
+How she hung down her head, so expressively mute!
+From my hand she would take it, still breathing my pain;
+She would touch it--return it--and smile at the strain.
+
+Ye wild blooming flow'rs, that enamel this brink,
+Like me could ye feel, and like me could ye think,
+How sadly would droop ev'ry beautiful leaf!
+How soon would your sweetness be wasted with grief!
+
+She is gone, in a cloud, like the star of the night!
+She has left me, heart-broken, to mourn at her flight,--
+To think of the hours she endear'd by her love.
+To sigh till again I shall join her above!
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+UPON HEARING MISS ---- SING AT AN EVENING PARTY.
+
+THE NIGHTINGALE'S COMPLAINT.
+
+
+The Moon had bespangled the murmuring wave,
+The dew-drop had moisten'd the moss of the cave,
+The summer night-breeze, like a sigh, was just heard,
+When thus flow'd the strains of the dark-warbling bird:
+
+"I hear a strange melody breathe thro' the grove,
+Now swelling with joy, and now melting with love;
+Tho' sweet is the sound, yet it should not invade,
+Unbidden, my lonely dominion of shade.
+
+"As long as the stars that now twinkle shall shine,
+This willow's my throne, and all nature is mine:
+Perchance 'tis the breeze on your desolate lute;
+Its strings are now sighing, so long that were mute.
+
+"Ah! no, silly bird that I am! shall I grieve?
+Shall Envy alarm, and shall Folly deceive?
+'Tis the voice of Eliza! I hear it again,
+Enraptur'd I hear it, nor envy the strain."
+Then Philomel flutter'd with tremulous wing
+To Eliza--more happy to listen than sing!
+
+
+
+
+LOVE AND THE SPRING-FLOWER.
+
+
+'Tis pity, ev'ry maiden knows,
+Just as she cools, Love warmer grows;
+But, if the chill be too severe,
+Trust me, he'll wither in a tear.
+
+Thus will the spring-flow'r bud and blow,
+Wrapp'd round in many a fold of snow;
+But, if an ice-wind pierce the sky,
+'Twill drop upon its bed, and die!
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+UPON THE REV. MR. C----'S IMPROMPTU COMPOSITIONS
+
+OF SOME OF BOWLES'S SONNETS.
+
+
+No sweeter verse did e'er inspire
+A kindred Muse with all its fire;
+Nor sweeter strains could Music lend,
+To sooth the sorrows of her friend.
+
+Associate Genius bids them flow
+With sounds that give a charm to woe;
+We weep as tho' it were our own,
+As if our hearts were play'd upon.
+
+
+
+
+SONNET.
+
+
+The leaves are flutter'd by no tell-tale gales,
+ Clear melts the azure in the rosy west,
+Scarce heard, the river winds along the vales,
+ And Eve has lull'd the vocal grove to rest.
+
+To yon thick elms, my Delia! let us rove,
+ As slow the glories of the day retire;
+There to thy lute breathe dulcet notes of love,
+ While thro' the vale they linger and expire.
+
+Those honey'd tones, that melt upon the tongue,--
+ Thy looks, serener than the scenes I sing,--
+Thy chaste desires, which angels might have sung,
+ Alone can quiet in this bosom bring,
+Which burns for thee, and, kindled by thine eyes,
+ Bears a pure flame--the flame that never dies!
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+WRITTEN AT KILKENNY,
+
+ON THE THEATRICALS OF THAT CITY.
+
+
+Amid the ruins of monastic gloom,
+ Where Nore's meand'ring waters wind along,
+Genius and Wealth have rais'd the tasteful dome,
+ Yet not alone for Fashion's brilliant throng;--
+
+In Virtue's cause they take a noble aim;
+ 'Tis theirs in sweetest harmony to blend
+Wit with Compassion, Sympathy with Fame,
+ Pleasure the means, Beneficence the end[A].
+
+There, if on Beauty's cheek the tear appears
+ (Form'd by the mournful Muse's mimic sigh),
+Fast as it falls, a kindred drop it bears,
+ More sadly shed from genuine Misery.
+
+Nor, if the laughter-loving Nymph delight,
+ Does the reviving transport perish there;
+Still, still, with Pity's radiance doubly bright,
+ Its smiles shed sunshine on the cheek of Care.
+
+So, if Pomona's golden fruit descend,
+ Shook by some breeze, into the lake below,
+Quick will the dimple, which it forms, extend,
+ Till all around the joyous circles flow.
+
+Bless'd be the liberal mind, th' undaunted zeal,
+ That bade loud Folly from the Stage retire;
+That teach us how to think, and how to feel,
+ And once again our godlike Bard admire!
+
+Thus aided, see his rescued genius spring;
+ Again he pours the phrenzy of his song;
+With EV'RY FEATHER[B] in his eagle wing,
+ Once more in majesty he soars along.
+
+Oft, deck'd with smiles, his spirit shall explore,
+ Erin! thy beauteous vales and classic ground;
+And ev'ry ripple of thy winding Nore
+ To him shall sweetly as his Avon's sound.
+
+_22d Oct. 1805_.
+
+[Footnote A: The theatricals of Kilkenny are supported by gentlemen of
+rank and fashion in Ireland, and the profits are applied to charitable
+purposes.]
+
+[Footnote B: Alluding to several fine passages of Shakspeare, which
+have been long omitted in representation, but restored at the
+theatricals of Kilkenny.]
+
+
+
+
+EPIGRAM,
+
+UPON SEEING THE DILAPIDATED STATE OF
+
+_BETHLEM HOSPITAL_.
+
+
+Well with the _purpose_ does the _place_ agree;
+For e'en the very house is _crack'd_, you see.
+
+
+
+
+EPIGRAM
+
+ON THE GRAVE OF ROBESPIERRE.
+
+
+_ORIGINAL_.
+
+Passant, ne pleure point son sort;
+Car, s'il vivait, tu serais mort.
+
+
+_TRANSLATION_.
+
+Nay, passenger, don't mourn his lot;
+If he had liv'd, why you had not.
+
+
+
+
+AN INDIAN MASSACRE-SONG.
+
+
+See, the waves clasp the Sun, as he sinks from our sight,
+And Despair sullen rides on the wings of the night;
+Lo! he comes, and reproaches our arms with delay,--
+Then arise, let us go where Revenge points the way!
+
+In the deed should we fall, (since who'll e'er breathe a slave?)
+Our free souls shall repose in the realms of the brave;
+In the song we shall live, and fresh heroes inspire,
+While the son shall exult in the fate of his sire.
+
+Then know, ye white race! ye too long shake the rod;
+By this arm ye shall soon be dismiss'd to your God!
+Then demand, if he bade ye torment, why he gave
+All the soul of a man to the breast of a slave?
+
+Then prepare; know our hatchets atone for our wrong,
+And our hearts, like our hatchets, are stubborn and strong:
+Sleep your last! ye no more shall the morning survey,
+Nor shall sorrow arise with the break of the day.
+
+Yes, remember the lashes that pierc'd thro' our flesh!
+See the wounds of our fathers; they open afresh!
+In the winds, hark! blue Avrin attends to our call;
+I, your chief, will be first in your glories, or fall!
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+WRITTEN ON DELIA, LISTENING TO HER CANARY-BIRD.
+
+
+When thoughtless Delia unconcern'd surveys
+ Her plumy captive, as he leans to sing,
+Lo! while she smiles, the fascination stays
+ The little heaven of its airy wing.
+
+Ah! so she tastes the sorrows I impart,
+ Smiles at the sound, but never feels my pain;
+And many a glance deludes my captive heart
+ To sigh in numbers, tho' I sigh in vain!
+
+
+
+
+THE HECTIC.
+
+
+Upon the breezy cliff's impending brow,
+ With trembling step, the Hectic paus'd awhile;
+As round his wasted form the sea-breeze blew,
+ His flush'd cheek brighten'd with a transient smile:
+
+Refresh'd and cherish'd by its balmy breath,
+ He dreamt of future bliss, of years to come;
+Whilst, with a look of woe, the spectre, Death,
+ Oft shook his head, and pointed to his tomb.
+
+Such sounds as these escap'd his lab'ring breast:--
+ "Sweet Health! thou wilt revisit this sad frame;
+Slumber shall bid these aching eyelids rest,
+ And I shall live for love, perchance for fame."
+Ah! poor enthusiast!--in the day's decline
+A mournful knell was heard, and it was thine!
+
+
+
+
+VERSES TO MISS M. G----,
+
+ACCOMPANIED WITH A DRIED HELIOTROPE,
+
+_Which she had presented to the Author a Year before_.
+
+
+Time, since thou gav'st this flow'r to me,
+ Has often turn'd his glass of sand;
+Perchance 'tis now unknown to thee
+ That once its breath perfum'd thy hand.
+
+Oh, lovely maid! that thou may'st see
+ How much thy gifts my care engage,
+I've sent the cherish'd flow'r to thee
+ Without a blemish, but from age.
+
+Kiss but its leaves;--one kiss from thee,
+ And all its sweetness 'twill regain;
+And, if I live in memory
+ Thus honour'd, send it back again!
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+TO MRS. B----, AT BRISTOL HOT WELLS
+
+
+Tho' nought, amid these darkened groves,
+ But various groups of death appear,
+Scar'd at the sight, tho' fly the Loves,
+ And Sickness saddens all the year,
+
+Yet, Clara, where you deign to stay,
+ Your sense and manners charm us so,
+E'en sick'ning Sorrow's self looks gay,
+ And smiles amid the wreck of woe.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+TO HER ROYAL HIGHNESS THE PRINCESS ELIZABETH,
+
+UPON THE PRINTS
+
+_From her beautiful Drawings of the Birth and Triumph of Cupid_.
+
+
+Once, for a palace, Painting left her grove,
+ And taught her royal fav'rite's hand to trace
+A beauteous maiden's tale of little Love,
+ His silken wings, soft limbs, and laughing face!
+
+Then Nature wept o'er each expressive line,
+ To think the sweet creation so confin'd,
+That such a boy, so fair, and so divine,
+ Was but the playful prattler of her mind;
+
+And had he near the royal easel flown,
+ And seen the features of this mimic brother,
+He would have known the portrait for his own,
+ And claim'd the beauteous painter for his mother.
+
+
+
+
+EPITAPH
+
+TO THE MEMORY OF A WORTHY MAN,
+
+_THE REV. MR. SLEEP_,
+
+CURATE OF KINGSWEAR CHURCH, DEVON,
+
+_Whose devotional Elocution was remarkably impregnated with
+soporific Qualities_.
+
+
+Reader! since Parson Sleep is gone,
+And lies beneath yon humble stone,
+Whene'er to Kingswear Church we go,
+ Holy the sabbath-day to keep
+(Indeed 'tis right it should be so),
+ We never more shall go to _sleep_.
+
+
+
+
+LINES,
+
+SUPPOSED TO BE WRITTEN BY A FEMALE FRIEND,
+
+_Upon an Infant recommended to her Care by its dying Mother_.
+
+
+Bless'd be thy slumbers, little love!
+ Unconscious of the ills so near;
+May no rude noise thy dreams remote,
+ Or prompt the artless early tear;--
+
+For she who gave thee life is gone,
+ Whose trust it was thy life to rear,
+Now in the cold and mould'ring stone
+ Calls for that artless early tear.
+
+Sleep on, thou little dreamer! sleep;
+ For, long as I shall tarry here,
+I'll soothe thee; thou shalt never weep,
+ Tho' flows for thee the tend'rest tear.
+
+Then be thy gentle visions blest,
+ Nor e'er thy bosom know that fear,
+Which thro' the night disturbs my rest,
+ And prompts Affection's trembling tear.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+ON THE CALEDONIAN HARP BEING SUCCEEDED
+
+BY THE HIGHLAND BAGPIPES.
+
+
+In days that long have glided by,
+Beneath keen Scotia's weeping sky,
+On many a hill of purple heath,
+In many a gloomy glen beneath,
+The wand'ring Lyrist once was known
+To pour his harp's entrancing tone.
+Then, when the castle's rocky form
+Rose 'mid the dark surrounding storm,
+The Harper had a sacred seat,
+Whence he might breathe his wild notes sweet.
+Oh! then, when many a twinkling star
+Shone in the azure vault afar,
+And mute was ev'ry mountain-bird,
+Soft music from the harp was heard;
+And when the morning's blushes shed
+On hill, or tow'r, their varying red,
+Oh! then the harp was heard to cheer,
+With earliest sound, th' enraptur'd ear;
+Then many a lady fair was known,
+With snowy hand, to wake its tone;
+And infant fingers press'd the string,
+And back recoil'd, to hear it sing.
+Sweet instrument! such was thy pow'r,
+'Twas thine to gladden ev'ry hour;
+The young and old then honour'd thee,
+And smil'd to hear thy melody.
+
+Alas! as Time has turn'd to dust
+The temple fair, the beauteous bust,
+Thou too hast mark'd his frowning brow;
+No Highland echo knows thee now:
+A savage has usurp'd thy place,
+Once fill'd by thee with ev'ry grace;
+Th' inflated Pipe, with swinish drone,
+Calls forth applauses once thine own.
+
+
+
+
+A SONG.
+
+
+When stormy show'rs from Heav'n descend,
+And with their weight the lily bend,
+The Sun will soon his aid bestow,
+And drink the drops that laid it low.
+
+Oh! thus, when sorrow wrings the heart,
+A sigh may rise, a tear may start;
+Pity shall soon the face impress
+With all its looks of happiness.
+
+
+
+
+VERSES
+
+ON AN AUTUMNAL LEAF.
+
+
+Think not, thou pride of Summer's softest strain!
+ Sweet dress of Nature, in her virgin bloom!
+That thou hast flutter'd to the breeze in vain,
+ Or unlamented found thy native tomb.
+
+The Muse, who sought thee in the whisp'ring shade,
+ When scarce one roving breeze was on the wing,
+With tones of genuine grief beholds thee fade,
+ And asks thy quick return in earliest Spring.
+
+I mark'd the victim of the wintry hour,
+ I heard the winds breathe sad a fun'ral sigh,
+When the lone warbler, from his fav'rite bow'r,
+ Pour'd forth his pensive song to see thee die;--
+
+When, in his little temple, colder grown,
+ He saw its sides of green to yellow grow,
+And mourn'd his little roof, around him blown,
+ Or toss'd in beauteous ruin on the snow;
+
+And vow'd, throughout the dreary day to come,
+ (More sad by far than summer's gloomiest night),
+That not one note should charm the leafless gloom,
+ But silent Sorrow should attend thy flight.
+
+
+
+
+SONG.
+
+THE WORDS ADAPTED TO "THE COSSAKA,"
+
+_One of the most ancient of the Russ Airs_.
+
+
+Has Time a changeling made of thee?
+Oh! no; and thou art all to me:
+He bares the forest, but his pow'rs
+ Impair not love like ours.
+
+Tho' sever'd from each other's sight,
+When once we meet we shall unite,
+As dew-drops down the lily run,
+ And, touching, blend in one.
+
+For thee this bosom learnt to grieve,
+Another never made it heave;
+When present, oh! it was thy throne,
+ And, absent, thine alone.
+
+Then may my trembling pilgrim feet
+In safety find thy lov'd retreat!
+And, if I'm doom'd to drop with care,
+ Still let me perish there!
+
+
+
+
+TO MISS ATKINSON,
+
+ON THE EXTREME DIFFIDENCE WHICH SHE
+
+DISPLAYS TO STRANGERS.
+
+
+Just as a fawn, in forest shade,
+ Trembling to meet th' admiring eye,
+I've seen thee try to hide, sweet maid!
+ Thy charms behind thy modesty.
+
+Thus too I've seen at midnight steal
+ A fleecy cloud before the wind,
+And veil, tho' it could not conceal,
+ The brilliant light that shone behind.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+Upon reading the Journal of a Friend's Tour into Scotland, in which
+the picturesque Scenery and the Character of the People are fairly
+and liberally stated.
+
+
+Much injur'd, Scotia! was thy genuine worth,
+When late the[A] surly Rambler wandered forth
+ In brown[B] surtout, with ragged staff,
+ Enough to make a savage laugh!
+And sent the faithless legend from his hand,
+That Want and Famine scour'd thy bladeless land,
+
+That with thee Nature wore a wrinkled face,
+That not a leaf e'er shed its sylvan grace,
+ But, harden'd by their northern wind,
+ Rude, deceitful, and unkind,
+Thy half-cloth'd sons their oaten cake denied,
+Victims at once of penury and pride.
+
+Happy for thee! a lib'ral Briton here,
+Gentle yet shrewd, tho' learned not severe.
+ Fairly thy merit dares impart,
+ Asserts thy hospitable heart,
+Proves that luxuriance smiles upon thy plains,
+And wit and valour grace thy hardy swains.
+
+[Footnote A: Dr. Johnson, author of the Rambler.]
+[Footnote B: Alluding to his dress, as described by Mr. Boswell.]
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+WRITTEN UPON A HILL,
+
+_On leaving the Country_.
+
+
+Ah! sweet romantic spot, adieu!
+Ere your green fields again I view,
+These looks may change their youthful hue.
+
+Dependence sternly bids me part
+From all that ye, lov'd scenes! impart,
+Far from my treasure and my heart.
+
+Tho' winter shall your bloom invade,
+Fancy may visit ev'ry shade,
+Each bow'r shall kiss the wand'ring maid.
+
+To busier scenes of life I fly,
+Where many smile, where many sigh,
+As Chance, not Worth, turns up the die.
+
+
+
+
+BANKRUPTCY RENDERED EASY.
+
+
+The Cit, relying on his trade,
+Which, like all other things, may fade,
+ Longs for a curricle and villa:
+This Hatchet splendidly supplies,
+The other Cock'ril builds, or buys,
+ To charm himself and Miss Hautilla.
+
+Then swift, O London! he retires,
+To be, from all thy smoke and spires,
+ From Saturday till Sunday, merry:
+On Sunday crowds of friends attend;
+His house and garden some commend,
+ And all admire his port and sherry.
+
+His mistress urg'd him now to play,
+And cut to wealth a shorter way,
+ Now as a bride she heads his table;
+But still our Cit observ'd his time.
+Returning at St. Cripple's chime,
+ At least as near as he was able.
+
+But soon _she_ could not bear the sight
+Of town; for walls with bow'rs unite,
+ As well as smoke with country breezes;
+Without the keenest grief and pride
+_He_ could not quit his _mares_, and _bride_:
+ We yield as soon as passion seizes.
+
+The clock no more his herald prov'd;
+Tuesday, nay Wednesday, morn have mov'd,
+ Ere trembling shopmen saw their master:
+Observing neighbours whisper'd round,
+That ease might do, with plenty crown'd;
+ If not, that ruin came the faster.
+
+His cash grew scarce, his business still,
+At variance were his books and till
+ (For wolves devour when shepherds slumber);
+His creditors around him pour,
+Seize all his horses, household store,
+ And only give him up the lumber!
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+_Written at the Sea-Side in Devonshire_,
+
+IN THE MONTH OF NOVEMBER,
+
+WHEN THE SHIPS FROM NEWFOUNDLAND RETURN.
+
+
+Still Summer lingers on these peaceful shores,
+ Nor yet she quits her rose-erected bow'r;
+Tho' oft in many a dew-drop she explores
+ Her beauties fading in each passing hour!
+
+Tho' Winter's boist'rous child, November, strays
+ Amid those scenes that wak'd the poet's lyre,
+Shakes his green canopy, and loves to raise,
+ Of sapless leaves, an altar for his sire.
+
+Soon shall his wild and stormy sway be o'er;
+ These lovely scenes shall feel his shortest reign;
+And thou, sweet Summer! charming as before,
+ Shall but retire to dress thyself again.
+
+Yet Heaven guides, full provident and kind,
+ With sweet economy, the source of joy,
+From grief extracts some comfort for the mind,
+ And fresh hopes flatter ere the lost annoy.
+
+See where Connubial Love yon rock ascends,
+ To hail each sail, while fav'ring breezes blow;
+There many an hour she o'er the margin bends,
+ Her bosom trembling like the floods below.
+
+Nearer the ocean's graceful burden glides;
+ Cleav'd by its prow, the lines of water yield:
+While adverse mountains, with protective sides,
+ The Heav'n-directed wand'ring seaman shield.
+
+The anchor dropp'd, he springs upon the shore,
+ His wife and children press to meet his kiss;
+Half-told, a thousand things they prattle o'er,
+ And, safe at home, renew their former bliss.
+
+
+
+
+EPIGRAM,
+
+ON WINNING A YOUNG LADY'S MONEY AT CARDS.
+
+
+How fairly Fortune all her gifts imparts;
+We win your money, Ann, and you our hearts.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+WRITTEN IN A FINE WINTER'S DAY,
+
+_At the Shooting-Box of my Friend, W. Cope, Esq_.
+
+NEAR ORPINGTON, KENT.
+
+
+Tho' leafless are the woods, tho' flow'rs no more,
+In beauty blushing, spread their fragrant store,
+Yet still 'tis sweet to quit the crowded scene,
+And rove with Nature, tho' no longer green;
+For Winter bids her winds so softly blow,
+That, cold and famine scorning, even now
+The feather'd warblers still delight the ear,
+And all of Summer, but her leaves, is here.
+Here, on this winding garden's sloping bound,
+'Tis sweet to listen to each rustic sound,
+The distant dog-bark, and the rippling rill,
+Or catch the sparkling of the water-mill.
+The tranquil scene each tender feeling moves;
+As the eye rests on Holwood's naked groves,
+A tear bedims the sight for Chatham's son,
+For him whose god-like eloquence could stun,
+Like some vast cat'ract, Faction's clam'rous tongue,
+Or by its sweetness charm, like Virgil's song,
+For him, whose mighty spirit rous'd afar
+Europe's plum'd legions to the hallow'd war;
+But who, ah! hapless tale! could not inspire
+Their recreant chiefs with his heroic fire;
+Who, as _they_ pass'd the tyrant Conqu'ror's yoke,
+Felt, as the bolt of Heav'n, the ruthless stroke;
+And having long, in vain, the tempest brav'd,
+Could breathe no longer in a world enslav'd.
+
+
+
+
+LINES ON A LITTLE BIRD
+
+_Singing at the Window of the Author_,
+
+SOON AFTER THE DEATH OF A BELOVED SISTER.
+
+
+Go, little flutt'rer! seek thy feather'd loves,
+ And leave a wretched mourner to his woe;
+Seek out the bow'rs of bliss, seek happier groves,
+ Nor here unheeded let thy music flow.
+
+Yet think me not ungrateful for thy song,
+ If meant to cheer me in my lone retreat;
+Ah! not to thee, my little friend! belong
+ The pow'rs to soothe the pangs of adverse fate.
+
+Fly, then! the window of the wretched, fly!
+ And be thy harmless life for ever blest;
+I only can reward thee with a sigh,
+ And wish that joys may crown thy peaceful nest.
+
+
+
+
+EPITAPH ON A FRIEND.
+
+
+By painful sickness long severely prest,
+Here sinks, on Nature's sacred lap of rest,
+A friend, who, in a life too short, display'd
+A mind in virtue bright, without one shade.
+Hence with unusual grief is Fondness mov'd,
+Hence more than Pity's sighs for one belov'd;
+Unshaken Honour sheds a manly tear,
+And weeping Virtue stops, a mourner here.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+TO THE MEMORY OF AN AMIABLE YOUTH,
+
+OF GREAT PROMISE,
+
+Whose afflicted Parents received the Intelligence of his having been
+drowned, at the very time when his Arrival was expected from
+abroad.
+
+
+Dire were the horrors of that ruthless storm,
+ That for young Lycid form'd a wat'ry grave;
+Oh! many wept to see his fainting form
+ Unaided sink beneath th' o'erwhelming wave.
+
+Ah! hapless youth! yet, tho' the billowy waste
+ Has thus, with ruthless fury, snatch'd away
+Thy various charms, thy genius, wit, and taste,
+ From those who fondly watch'd their rich display,--
+
+Their cherish'd, lov'd, impression still shall last;
+ Mem'ry shall ride triumphant o'er the storm,
+Shall shield thy gen'rous virtues from the blast,
+ And Fancy animate again thy form.
+
+Yes, gentle youth! to her, tho' little known,
+ Save by the rich effusions of thy lyre,
+Th' admiring Muse shall breathe a mournful tone,
+ And sounds of grief shall o'er the floods expire.
+
+But, far more grateful to thy pensive shade,
+ Parental Fondness mourns her Lycid gone,
+Lycid! who to her bosom oft convey'd
+ The liveliest joys to tend'rest feelings known.
+
+For her the lustre of the dawning day,
+ With all its charms, no longer yields delight;
+And silent sorrow marks its parting ray,
+ And saddens ev'ry vision of the night.
+
+Oh! what ecstatic joys inspir'd her breast,
+ When, fast advancing to thy native shore,
+She thought she saw thee in the bay at rest,
+ And now in fancy heard th' approaching oar.
+
+Oh! sad reverse! The dire delusive wind,
+ Which promis'd fair to bring thee to her breast,
+Thy youthful honours to the wave consign'd,
+ And bore thy spirit to the realms of rest
+
+Ah! had the song of ancient Bard been true,
+ Had Genius still the pow'r to soothe the storm,
+Harmless had been each blast that round thee blew,
+ And safe and sacred, 'midst its rage, thy form.
+
+What tho' no marble urn thy relics hold,
+ Where grief at midnight hour may sit and sigh,
+Like gem in amber, Fancy shall enfold
+ Thy relics in each wave that murmurs by.
+
+Still shall she listen to thy glowing song,
+ And dwell with rapture on each vivid line,
+Shall round thy lyre, neglected and unstrung,
+ Of sweetest flow'rs a fun'ral wreath entwine.
+
+Ah! since thy tuneful song no more shall flow,
+ Nor here again thy op'ning virtues shine,
+May those who, Lycid! lov'd thee living, know
+ To bear the sorrows of a loss like thine!
+
+And, while they linger yet another hour
+ On life's extended, tempest-beaten, strand,
+Waiting the gale that shall convey them o'er,
+ To hail their Lycid in a happier land,
+
+Oh! may religion lull each sigh to rest,
+ Teach them a God, in mercy rob'd, to praise,
+To know that ev'ry act of his is best,
+ And, tho' mysterious, still to prize his ways!
+
+
+
+
+EPIGRAM
+
+ON THE AUTHOR AND ELIZA FREQUENTLY DIFFERING
+IN OPINION.
+
+
+To such extremes were I and Bet
+ Perpetually driven,
+We quarrell'd every time we met,
+ To kiss, and be forgiven.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+TO MY MOTHER,
+
+_On her attaining her 70th Year_.
+
+
+Oh! with what genuine pleasure do I trace
+Each line of that long-lov'd, accustom'd, face,
+Where Time, as if enchanted, and imprest
+With all the virtues of thy peaceful breast,
+Tho' sev'nty varied years have roll'd away,
+Still loves to linger, and, with soft decay,
+Permits thy cheek to wear a healthy bloom,
+In all the grace of age, without its gloom.
+
+So on some sacred temple's mossy walls,
+With feath'ry force, the snow of winter falls!
+Yes, venerable parent! may I long
+Thus happy hail thee with an annual song.
+Till, having clos'd thine eyes in such soft rest
+As infants feel when to the bosom prest,
+Angels shall bear thy spotless soul away
+To realms of pure delight and endless day!
+
+
+
+
+LINES TO SELINA
+
+
+'Twas when the leaves were yellow turn'd,
+ Selina, with the gentlest sigh,
+Exclaim'd, "For you I long have burn'd,
+ For you alone, my love! I'll die."
+
+Unthinking youth! I thought her true,
+ And, when the trees grew white with snow,
+The wint'ry wind with music blew,
+ So did her love upon me grow.
+
+The Spring had scarce unlock'd her store,
+ When lo! in much ungentle strain,
+She bade me think of her no more,
+ She bade me never love again.
+
+Then did my heart at once reply,
+ "If you are false, who can be true?
+There's nothing here deserves a sigh,
+ Take this, the last, 'tis heav'd for you."
+
+Ah! fickle fair! amid the scene
+ That giddy pleasure may prepare,
+A pensive thought shall intervene,
+ And touch your wand'ring heart with care.
+
+And when, alone, at eve you rove,
+ Where arm in arm we oft have mov'd,
+Each Zephyr in the well-known grove
+ Shall whisper that we once have lov'd.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+WRITTEN IN A HERMITAGE,
+
+AT DRONNINGAARD, NEAR COPENHAGEN.
+
+
+Delicious gloom! asylum of repose!
+ Within your verdant shades, your tranquil bound,
+A wretched fugitive[A], oppress'd by woes,
+ The balm of peace, that long had left him, found.
+
+Ne'er does the trump of war disturb this grove;
+ Throughout its deep recess the warbling bird
+Discourses sweetly of its happy lore,
+ Or distant sounds of rural joy are heard.
+
+Life's checquer'd scene is softly pictur'd here;
+ Here the proud moss-rose spreads its transient pride;
+Close by, the willow drops a dewy tear,
+ And gaudy flow'rs the modest lily hide.
+
+Alas! poor Hermit! happy had it been
+ For thee, if in these shades thy days had past,
+If, well contented with the happy scene,
+ Thou ne'er again had fac'd life's stormy blast!
+
+And Pity oft shall shed the gen'rous tear
+ O'er the sad moral which thy days disclose;
+There view how restless is our nature here,
+ How strangely hostile to its own repose.
+
+[Footnote A: Dronningaard is the first private residence in Denmark:
+it belongs to the wealthy family of the De Conincks. The grounds,
+which are very extensive, and tastefully laid out, slope down to a
+noble lake, twelve English miles in circumference, which is skirted
+with fine woods and romantic country-houses. At the end of a
+beautiful walk is an elegant marble column, with a tablet, on which
+is inscribed by Mr. D.C. "This monument is erected in gratitude to a
+mild and beneficent Government, under whose auspices I enjoy the
+blessings that surround me." In another part of the grounds, in a
+spot of deep seclusion, are the ruins of a Hermitage; and a little
+further, in a nook, an open grave and tombstone. The story connected
+with this retired spot deserves to be mentioned:--Time has shed many
+snows upon the romantic beauties of Dronningaard, since one, who,
+weary of the pomp of courts and the tumult of camps, in the prime of
+life, covered with honours and with fortune, sought from its
+hospitable owner permission to raise a sequestered cell, in which he
+might pass the remainder of his days in all the austerities and
+privations of an Anchorite. This singular man had, long previously to
+the revolution in Holland, distinguished himself at the head of his
+regiment, when, in an unhappy moment, the love of aggrandizement took
+possession of his heart, and, marrying under its influence, misery
+soon followed; and here, in a little wood of tall firs, he raised this
+simple fabric: moss warmed it within, and the bark of the birch
+defended it without; a stream of rock-water once flowed in a bed of
+pebbles before the door, in which the young willow dipped its leaves;
+and, at a little distance from a bed of wild roses, the labernum
+gracefully rose, and suspended her yellow flowers; and adjoining was a
+spot which the Recluse had selected for his grave, of which, like the
+monks of La Trappe, he dug a small portion every day until he had
+finished it. He composed his Epitaph in French, and had it inscribed
+on a stone. If the reader is at much interested as I was in the
+history of the poor Hermit, he will be pleased with the translation of
+it, which follows, from the pen of my respected and distinguished
+friend, William Hayley, Esq. In this solitude he passed several years,
+when the plan of his life became suddenly reversed by a letter of
+recall, which he received from his Prince, containing the most
+flattering expressions of regard. He obeyed the summons, returned to
+Holland, and at the head of his regiment most gallantly fought and
+fell.
+
+THE HERMIT'S EPITAPH.
+
+
+Here may he rest, who, shunning scenes of strife,
+Enjoy'd at Dronningaard a Hermit's life:
+The faithless splendour of a court he knew,
+ And all the ardour of the tented field,
+Soft Passion's idler charm, not less untrue,
+ And all that listless Luxury can yield.
+He tasted, tender Love! thy chatter sweet;
+Thy promis'd happiness prov'd mere deceit.
+To Hymen's hallow'd fane by Reason led,
+ He deem'd the path he trod the path of bliss;
+Oh! ever-mourn'd mistake! from int'rest bred,
+ Its dupe was plung'd in misery's abyss:
+But Friendship offer'd him, benignant pow'r!
+Her cheering hand, in trouble's darkest hour:
+Beside this shaded stream, her soothing voice
+Bade the disconsolate again rejoice:
+ Peace in his heart revives, serenely sweet;
+The calm content, so sought for as his choice,
+ Quits him no more in this belov'd retreat.]
+
+
+
+
+LINES TO MISS E. ATKINSON,
+
+ON HER PRESENTING THE AUTHOR WITH AN IRISH PEBBLE.
+
+
+Oft does the lucid pebble shine,
+ Just cover'd by the murm'ring sea;
+Thus precious, thus conceal'd, it shews,
+ Fair maid! thy mind and modesty.
+
+If searching eyes the stone discern,
+ Quick will the hand of Art remove
+Each ruder part, till, brilliant grown,
+ It seals the fond record of love.
+
+And here the sweet connexion ends,
+ Eliza! 'twixt the gem and thee;
+For thou wast polish'd from the first,
+ By Nature's hand, more happily!
+
+
+
+
+THE WATER-NYMPH OF THE ROCK.
+
+[The French is by Bosquillon, which I translated as under, in a
+beautiful Swedish island in the Baltic, as I sat by the side of a fine
+clear stream of rock-water.]
+
+
+_ORIGINAL_.
+
+La nymphe qui donne de cette eau
+Au plus creux de rocher se cache,
+Suivez un example si beau:
+Donnez sans vouloir qu'on le sache.
+
+
+_TRANSLATION_.
+
+The nymph, to whom this stream you owe,
+ Conceals herself in caves of stone:
+Like her your benefits bestow;
+ Give, without wishing to be known.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+UPON MADEMOISELLE DELPHINE SAULOT
+
+_Singing some equisite Airs_
+
+IN THE GARDENS OF MOUSSEAU, NEAR PARIS.
+
+
+In Mousseau's sweet Arcadian dale
+ Fair Delphine pours the plaintive strain;
+She charms the list'ning nightingale,
+ And seems th' enchantress of the plain.
+
+Bless'd be those lips, to music dear;
+ Sweet songstress! never may they move
+But with such sounds, to soothe the ear,
+ And melt the yielding heart to love.
+
+May sorrow never bid them pour
+ From the torn heart one suff'ring sigh;
+But be thy life a fragrant flow'r,
+ Blooming beneath a cloudless sky!
+
+
+
+
+IMPROMPTU TO MADAME C----
+
+WRITTEN AT PARIS,
+
+Upon her appearing equally modestly and elegantly dressed, amidst the
+Semi-Nakedness of the Rest of the Female Fashionables.
+
+
+Whilst, in a dress that one might swear
+The whole was made of woven air,
+Pert Fashion spreads her senseless sway
+Over the giddy and the gay
+(Who think, by showing all their charms,
+Lovers will fly into their arms),
+In thee shall Wit and Virtue find
+A friend more genial to their mind;
+And Modesty shall gain in thee
+A surer, chaster, victory.
+
+
+
+
+SONNET
+
+UPON A SWEDISH COTTAGE,
+
+_Written on the Road_,
+
+WITHIN A FEW MILES OF STOCKHOLM.
+
+
+Here, far from all the pomp Ambition seeks,
+ Much sought, but only whilst untasted prais'd,
+Content and Innocence, with rosy cheeks,
+ Enjoy the simple shed their hands have rais'd.
+
+On a gray rock it stands, whose fretted base
+ The distant cat'ract's murm'ring waters lave,
+Whilst o'er its mossy roof, with varying grace,
+ The slender branches of the white birch wave.
+
+Around the forest-fir is heard to sigh,
+ On which the pensive ear delights to dwell,
+Whilst, as the gazing trav'ller passes by,
+ The gray goat, starting, sounds his tinkling bell.
+Oh! in my native land, ere life's decline,
+May such a spot, so wild, so sweet, be mine!
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+TO THE MEMORY OF MRS. B----
+
+
+Ah, stranger! if thy pilgrim footsteps love,
+ By meditation led, to wander here,
+A suff'ring husband may thy pity move,
+ Who weeps the loss of all his soul holds dear!
+
+Cold as this mourning marble is that heart,
+ Which Virtue warm'd with pure and gen'rous heat,
+Which to each checquer'd scene could joy impart,
+ Nor ceas'd to love until it ceas'd to beat.
+
+Yet, gentle spirit! o'er thine early grave
+ Shall Consolation, like a seraph, prove,
+When Sickness clos'd thy faultless life, she gave
+ Another angel to the realms above!
+
+
+
+
+STATE TRICKS
+
+_Or a Peep into the Cabinet of the Premier Consul_,
+
+AT ST. CLOUD,
+
+ON THE NIGHT OF THE 26th OCT. 1803.
+
+--"they show an outward hideousness,
+And speak off half a dozen dang'rous words,
+How they might hurt their enemies, if they durst;
+And this is all."
+
+MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING, Act V. Scene 4.
+
+
+FIRST CONSUL.
+
+My dear Talleyrand! I am sorry to send
+For you out of your bed; but you know you're my friend:
+No secret I hide from your generous breast;
+This invasion is always _invading my rest_:
+My soldiers, poor devils! are ready to start,
+But to stay where I am is the wish of my heart;
+And yet I have sworn at their head to appear:
+I am puzzl'd to act 'twixt my threats and my fear;
+If I go, I am lost!--say, what shall I do?
+
+TALLEYRAND.
+
+Why I think I've a snug little project in view:
+I have felt for you long, and have ransack'd my brain
+To relieve you from so much embarrassing pain.
+To-morrow our principal tools shall repair
+To this spot, to implore you to stay where you are:
+Little Jancourt, you know, has a tear at command,
+The rest shall have muslin-wrapp'd onions in hand;
+An expedient which you, my good Consul, must try,
+For a drop never yet wag observ'd in your eye!
+And therefore I think 'twould be better for you
+The largest to pluck from the beds of St Cloud.
+When these fellows appear, they shall fall at your feet,
+Portalis shall pen a few words to repeat;
+He shall state 'tis the nation's imperial will
+That you do not your _dangerous promise_ fulfil;
+But snug in this closet put all into motion,
+Nor hazard your life with these sons of the ocean.
+_You_ shall say, "I have sworn by my glory to go;" }
+_They_ shall all of them blubber out "No, no, no, no!}
+It must not, thou world's second saviour! be so. }
+If you go, mighty Chieftain! and should not escape,
+All Gallia, the world, will be cover'd with crape[A]!
+Oh! stay where you are; on our knees we implore!"
+Then, apparently chok'd, they shall utter no more.
+When thrice sixty seconds have nearly expir'd
+(Now mind, my dear Consul, and do as desir'd),
+You must mimic some hero you've seen at the play,
+Of the tragical cast, when his soul melts away
+(And, without any compliment 'twixt you and I,
+You re'lly have talents and pow'rs very high,
+To make the most striking tragedian alive).
+But now to the point. You must tenderly strive
+To raise these sweet prostrates; then, heaving a sigh,
+And wiping the drops that shall stand in each eye,
+Like one sorely cross'd, you shall, weeping, exclaim,
+"Oh! why do you tear me from conquest and fame?
+But still, if the nation commands me, 'tis fit"
+(Your breast thumping hard) "that its Chief should submit."
+Then you see, if the army of England should sail,
+And the schemes of this cursed armada should fail,
+In the _Moniteur's_ faithful official page,
+I can humbug the people, and soften their rage;
+I will tell them, that, had but the nation permitted
+Her Chief to have gone, we had ne'er been outwitted;
+That merely the terrible glance of his eye
+Would have made all those shop-keeping islanders fly;
+This will quiet our friends, and, to harass our foes,
+A second invasion I'll slyly propose,
+In which, in the van, Buonaparte shall pour
+His vengeance divine on that mercantile shore.
+Not that I, my dear Premier! conceive 'twould be right
+To renew with these cursed tough fellows the fight;
+But our people 'twill please, until some new occasion
+Shall call from this project the eye of the nation.
+
+FIRST CONSUL.
+
+It will do, it will do, my dear Tally! thy brain
+Has my terrors remov'd, and "a man I'm again."
+I will rise with the dawn, for this scene to prepare;
+Denon, with his crayons, so swift shall be there;
+The Parisians the subject with rapture will trace
+In my Nosegay[B]; I'll hang it up full in their face.
+I embrace thee, my dear little Tal! with delight;
+_Ca ira! Ca ira_! Thy hand, and good night.
+
+[The First Consul is said to have enjoyed half an hour's uninterrupted
+repose that night. What followed, the next day, all Europe
+knows, and all Europe laughs at.]
+
+[Footnote A: Black crape and the bolt of Heaven are the favourite
+rhetorical figures of Napoleon the First.]
+
+[Footnote B: "Nosegay"--The anti-chamber of the Hall of the Arts in
+the Louvre, in which there are many fine paintings, is called, by the
+Parisians, Buonaparte's Nosegay.]
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+TO MISS CHINNERY, OF GILLWELL-HOUSE,
+
+_Upon her appearing in a Dress_
+
+WITH MAY-FLOWERS AND LEAVES TASTEFULLY DISPLAYED.
+
+
+Tell me what taught thee to display
+ A choice so sweet, and yet so rare,
+To prize the modest buds of May
+ Beyond the diamond's prouder glare?
+
+Say, was the grateful pref'rence paid
+ To Nature, since, with skill divine,
+So many fairy charms she made,
+ To grace her fav'rite Caroline?
+
+Or was it Taste that bade thee try
+ How soon the richest gem must yield,
+In beauty and attractive die,
+ To this wild blossom of the field?
+
+Whate'er the cause, in Nature's glow
+ Well does the choice thyself pourtray;
+Thine innocence the blossoms show,
+ Thy youth the green leaves well display.
+
+
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+Ah! if my voice is heard in vain,
+ This fond, this falling, tear
+May yet thy dire intent restrain,
+ May yet dissolve my fear.
+
+Th' unsparing wound that lays thee low
+ Will bend thy Julia too:
+Could she survive the fatal blow
+ Who only lives in you?
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+TO MRS. A. CLARKE.
+
+
+Within his cold and cheerless cell,
+I heard the sighing Censor tell
+ That ev'ry charm of life was gone,
+That ev'ry noble virtue long
+Had ceas'd to wake the Minstrel's song,
+ And Vice triumphant stood alone.
+
+"Poor gloomy reas'ner! come with me;
+Smooth each dark frown, and thou shall see
+ Thy tale is but a mournful dream;
+I'll show thee scenes to yield delight,
+I'll show thee forms in Virtue bright,
+ Illum'd by Heav'n's unclouded beam.
+
+"See Clarke, with ev'ry goodness grac'd,
+Her mind the seat of Wit and Taste;
+ Tho' Wealth invites to Pleasure's bow'r,
+See her the haunts of Woe descend;
+Of many a friendless wretch the friend,
+ Pleas'd she exerts sweet Pity's pow'r.
+
+"See her, with parent patriot care,
+The infant orphan-mind prepare,
+ Assur'd, without Instruction's aid,
+The proudest nation soon will show
+A wasted form, a hectic glow,
+ A robb'd, diseas'd, revolting, shade.
+
+"See her with Prince-like spirit pour
+On genuine worth her ample store[A];
+ See her, by ev'ry gentle art,
+Protect the plant she loves to rear,
+And, as she bathes it with a tear,
+ Grateful it twines around her heart.
+
+"And there are more, of kindred mind;"--
+When, with a face more bland and kind,
+ The Sage, in soften'd tone, replied:
+"'Twas Error made to me the den
+More grateful than the haunts of men;
+ Henceforth mankind shall be my pride."
+
+[Footnote A: This alludes to a munificent donation of a very handsome
+fortune, which this Lady presented, without any claim of consanguinity
+or connexion, to a young Lady of great merit.]
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+_To the Tune of "Oh! Lady fair! where art thou going_?"
+
+
+Sing, bird of grief! still eve descending,
+And soothe a mind with sorrow rending;
+Ne'er may I see the blush of morrow,
+But close this night the sigh of sorrow;
+
+Then, if some wand'rer here directed
+Shall find my mossy grave neglected,
+May he replace the weed that's growing
+With the nearest flow'r that's blowing!
+
+
+
+
+IMPROMPTU LINES
+
+UPON A VERY HANDSOME WOMAN
+
+_Keeping the Hotel de Lion Blanc, at Dantzig_.
+
+
+The sign of the house should be chang'd, I'll be sworn,
+ Where enchanted we find so much beauty and grace;
+Then quick from the door let the _lion_ be torn,
+ And an _angel_ expand her white wings in his place.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+UPON SEEING A BEAUTIFUL INFANT SLEEPING ON THE
+BOSOM OF ITS MOTHER.
+
+
+Upon its native pillow dear,
+ The little slumb'rer finds repose;
+His fragrant breath eludes the ear--
+ A zephyr passing o'er a rose.
+
+Yet soon from that pure spot of rest
+ (Love's little throne!) shalt thou be torn;
+Time hovers o'er thy downy nest,
+ To crown thy baby-brow with thorn.
+
+Ah! thoughtless! couldst thou now but see
+ On what a world thou soon must move,
+Or taste the cup prepar'd for thee
+ Of grief, lost hopes, or widow'd love,
+
+Ne'er from that breast thou'd'st raise thine head,
+ But thou would'st breathe to Heav'n a pray'r
+To let thee, ere thy blossom fade,
+ In one fond sigh exhale thee there.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+WRITTEN AT FREDENSBORG,
+
+_The deserted Palace of the late Queen Dowager Juliana Maria_[A].
+
+
+ Bless'd are the steps of Virtue's queen!
+ Where'er she moves fresh roses bloom;
+And, when she droops, kind Nature pours
+Her genuine tears in gentle show'rs,
+ That love to dew the willow green
+ That over-canopies her tomb.
+
+ But, ah! no willing mourner here
+ Attends to tell the tale of woe:
+Why is yon statue prostrate thrown?
+Why has the grass green'd o'er the stone?
+ Why, 'gainst the spider'd casement drear,
+ So sullen seems the wind to blow?
+
+ How mournful was the lonely bird,
+ Within yon dark neglected grove!
+Say, was it fancy? From its throat
+Issu'd a strange and cheerless note;
+ 'Twas not so sad as grief I heard,
+ Nor yet so wildly sweet as love.
+
+ In the deep gloom of yonder dell
+ Ambition's blood-stain'd victims sigh'd;
+While Time beholds, without a tear,
+Fell Desolation hov'ring near,
+ Whose angry blushes seem to tell.
+ Here Juliana shudd'ring died!
+
+[Footnote A: This palace, called the Mansion of Peace, is in the road
+and near to Elsineur; it was the retreat of the ambitious and
+remorseless Juliana Maria, the mother-in-law of Christian VII. whose
+intrigues and jealousy sent Brandt and Struensee to the scaffold, and
+drove the unhappy Matilda, the mother of the present King of Denmark,
+from her throne, and the arms of her royal husband. Juliana died here.
+The palace and grounds, parts of which are beautiful, were, when I
+visited them in 1804, much neglected.]
+
+
+
+
+SONG
+
+Upon the Admiration of the Valour and amiable Qualities of Lord
+Nelson, expressed by Junot, now Duke of Abrantes, who, by the
+Chances of War, was for a short Time the British Hero's Prisoner.
+
+
+A wreath from an immortal bough
+Should deck that gen'rous victor's brow,
+Who hears his captive's grateful praise
+Augment the thanks his country pays;
+For him the minstrel's song shall flow,
+The canvass breathe, the marble glow.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+UPON A LADY DYING
+
+_Soon after she had been wrecked on the Cornish Coast_,
+
+LEAVING A LITTLE INFANT BEHIND HER.
+
+
+Sweet stranger! tho' the merc'less storm
+Here sternly cast thy fainting form,
+What tho' no kindred hand was near
+To wipe away Affliction's tear,
+
+Yet shall thy gentle spirit own,
+Amidst these sea-girt shores unknown,
+That Pity pour'd her balmy store,
+And kindred hands could do no more.
+
+Ne'er shall that pang disturb thy rest,
+That moves the parted mother's breast;
+The object of thy dying fear
+Shall want no father's fondness here.
+
+Oft shall his little lips proclaim,
+With April-tears, thy treasur'd name;
+His little hands, when summers bloom,
+Shall gather flow'rs to deck thy tomb.
+
+
+
+
+JEU D'ESPRIT
+
+UPON A VERY PRETTY WOMAN ASKING THE AUTHOR HIS
+OPINION OF BEAUTY.
+
+
+Madam! you ask what marks for beauty pass:
+Require them rather from your looking-glass!
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+TO THE MEMORY OF ERASMUS,
+
+BY OUDAAN,
+
+Inscribed on the Pedestal of the Statue raised in Honour of the former,
+in Rotterdam.
+
+[_The Original in Dutch_.]
+
+
+_ORIGINAL_.
+
+Hier rees die groote zon, en ging te Bazel onder!
+ De Rykstad eer' en vier' dien Heilig in zyn grav;
+ Dit tweede leeven geevt, die't eerste leeven gav:
+Maar 't ligt der taalen, 't zout der zeden, 't heerlyk wonder.
+
+Waar met de Lievde, en Vreede, en Godgeleerdheid praald,
+Word met geen grav gëerd nog met zeen beeld betaald:
+Dies moet hier't lugtgewele Erasmus overdekken,
+Nadien geen mind're plaats zyn tempel kan verstrekken!
+
+
+_TRANSLATION_.
+
+Erasmus, here, the eloquent and wise,
+ That Sun of Learning! rose, and spread his beam
+O'er a benighted world, thro' low'ring skies,
+ And shed on Basil's tow'rs his parting gleam.
+
+There his great relics lie: he bless'd the place:
+ No proud preserver of his fame shall prove
+The Parian pile, tho' fraught with sculptur'd grace:
+ Reader! his mausoleum is above.
+
+
+
+
+THE FOLLOWING TWO SONGS
+
+Were written during a Period when it was confidently believed that the
+French would invade our Country.
+
+
+SONG.
+
+_To the Tune of "Ye Gentlemen of England_."
+
+
+No gentleman of England now sits at home at ease,
+But emulates on shore the heroes of the seas;
+A common cause unites them, to meet the daring foe,
+All they wish, all they ask, is a fav'ring wind to blow.
+
+Oh! let them come along, and may no tempests low'r,
+But fairly may we try our valour and our pow'r,
+That Hist'ry may not say, should these robbers be laid low,
+To the storm 'tis alone the victory we owe.
+
+Soon shall these infidels the dreadful diff'rence prove,
+'Twixt slaves impell'd by fear, and freemen bound by love;
+Our foes shall never rise again, when once they are laid low,
+On the sea, on the shore, for justice strikes the blow.
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+ When storms on the ocean
+ Create high emotion,
+ It pleases the wish
+ Of the monarch of fish,
+For he gambols and sports in the motion.
+
+ Should a shoal of small fry
+ Attempt to draw nigh,
+ With a flap of his tail,
+ Th' imperial whale
+Makes them pay for their rashness, and die.
+
+ Oh! thus, on the seas,
+ Just with the same ease,
+ Should the enemy come,
+ In ship, boat, or bomb,
+We will knock them about as we please;
+
+ Till at last they shall cry,
+ "We are the small fry,
+ And Britannia's the whale,
+ By a flap of whose tail,
+If we dare to approach her we die."
+
+
+
+
+SONNET,
+
+Occasioned by reading an Inscription on the Tombstone of Captain
+Christensen, of Krajore, in Norway, who died in consequence of
+the Bite of his Dog, when it was mad.
+
+
+Ah! hapless stranger! who, without a tear,
+ Can this sad record of thy fate survey?
+No angry tempest laid thee breathless here,
+ Nor hostile sword, nor Nature's mild decay.
+
+The fond companion of thy pilgrim feet,
+ Who watch'd thee in thy sleep, who moan'd if miss'd,
+And sprung with such delight his Lord to greet,
+ Imbu'd with death the hand he oft had kiss'd.
+
+And here, remov'd from Love's lamenting eye,
+ Far from thy native cat'racts' awful sound,
+Far from thy dusky forests' pensive sigh,
+ Thy poor remains repose on alien ground;
+Yet Pity oft shall sit beside thy stone,
+And sigh as tho' she mourn'd a brother gone.
+
+
+
+
+IMPROMPTU,
+
+IN REPLY TO A LADY,
+
+_Who asked the Author what Childhood resembled_.
+
+
+How like is childhood to the lucid tide
+ That calmly wanders thro' the mossy dell,
+Sweeps o'er the lily by the margin's side,
+ And, as it kisses, murmurs out, Farewell!
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+ADDRESSED TO A YOUNG LADY IN GERMANY,
+
+_Who, until her Sister, honoured the Author by walking with him in
+the Evening_.
+
+
+Adieu! dear girl! if we are doom'd to part,
+Take with thee, take, the blessing of this heart,
+Due to thy gentle mind, and cultur'd sense;
+Perhaps 'twill please, but, sure, can't give offence.
+Tho', when we met, the solar ray was gone,
+And on our steps the moon-beam only shone,
+Yet well I mark'd thy form and native grace,
+And all the sweet expression of thy face;
+And pleas'd I listen'd as thy accents fell,
+Accents that spoke a feeling mind so well
+Lo, when the birds repose at ev'ning hour,
+The sweetest of them carols from her bow'r!
+So, when the dews the garden's fragrance close,
+The night-flow'r[A] blooms, the rival of the rose!
+
+[Footnote A: One of the creeping cereuses, usually known by the name
+of the night-flower, is said to be as grand and as beautiful as any in
+the vegetable system. It begins to open in the evening, about seven
+o'clock; is in perfection about eleven, perfuming the air to a
+considerable distance, and fades about four in the morning.]
+
+
+
+
+LINES TO STUDY.
+
+
+O Study! while thy lovers raise
+Thy name with all the pow'r of praise,
+Frown not, thou nymph with piercing mind!
+If in this bosom thou should'st find
+That all thy deep, thy brilliant, lore,
+Which charm'd it once, now charms no more:
+Frown not, if, on thy classic line,
+One strange, uncall'd-for, tear should shine;
+Frown not, if, when a smile should start,
+A sigh should heave an aching heart:
+If Mem'ry, roving far away,
+Should an unmeaning homage pay,
+Should ask thee for thy golden fruit,
+And, when thou deign'st to hear her suit,
+Should turn her from the proffer'd food,
+To tread the shades of Solitude:
+Frown not, if, in the humble line,
+Ungrac'd by any thought of thine,
+Should but that gentle name appear,
+Fond cause of ev'ry joy and fear;
+I love, tho' rude, I love it more,
+Than all thy piles of letter'd lore:
+Frown not if ev'ry airy word,
+Which Beauty breathes, or Love has heard,
+More rich, more eloquently, flow,
+To Mem'ry gives a warmer glow,
+Than all by thee so much approv'd,
+The wit of age on age improv'd.
+Go, then! and, since it is denied
+That thou shalt be my radiant guide!
+Leave me to sigh, to weep, to prove
+How little Learning is to Love.
+
+
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+Wilt thou, because thy Florio loves,
+ Forsake the giddy glitt'ring throng,
+With him to dwell in peaceful groves,
+ With him to hear the shepherd's song?
+
+Can'st thou, without a sigh, resign
+ The homage by thy charms inspir'd?
+To one, oh! say, can'st thou confine
+ What oft so many have admir'd?
+
+Sweet maid! oh! bless'd shall be our love,
+ Till time shall bid it cease to flow;
+With thee shall ev'ry moment prove
+ A little heaven form'd below!
+
+
+
+
+THE FURY OF DISCORD
+
+
+In a chariot of fire, thro Hell's flaming arch,
+ The Fury of Discord appear'd;
+A myriad of demons attended her march,
+ And in Gallia her standard she rear'd.
+
+Thy name, so enchanting, sweet Freedom! she took,
+ But in vain did she try to assume
+Thy smile of content, thy enlivening look,
+ And thy roseate mountainous bloom.
+
+For wan was her visage, and phrensied her eye,
+ At her girdle a poniard she wore;
+Her bosom and limbs were expos'd to the sky,
+ And her robe was besprinkled with gore.
+
+Nature shudder'd, and sigh'd as the wild rabble past,
+ Each flow'r droop'd its beautiful head;
+The groves became dusky, and moan'd in the blast,
+ And Virtue and Innocence fled.
+
+She rose from her car 'midst the yell of her crew;
+ Emblazon'd, a scroll she unfurl'd,
+And on it the dreams of Philosophy drew;
+ "'Tis the Charter, she cried, of the World."
+
+Plunder, keen-ey'd and lean, rang with plaudits the sky,
+ Murder grinn'd as he whetted his steel;
+While Blasphemy swore the Redeemer on high
+ Was the creature of Folly and Zeal.
+
+The scaffold grew red with the blood of the brave,
+ Kings turn'd pale on their thrones at her nod;
+While Loyalty fled to the gloom of the cave,
+ And Piety knelt to her God.
+
+At length, after changing her chiefs at her will,
+ As their mischievous zeal grew remiss,
+She sought a fresh fav'rite, with dexterous skill,
+ From Obscurity's darkest abyss.
+
+The pow'rs of her monstrous adoption to try,
+ 'Midst, Syria! thy waterless waste,
+She bade him the blast of thy desert outvie,
+ And defile all thy relics of taste.
+
+The chieftain obey'd: with a merciful air
+ He wrung from thy natives a tear;
+But the justice and valour of Britain, e'en there,
+ Shook his legions, recoiling with fear.
+
+Well-pleas'd with his crimes, the Fury, with flight,
+ To her empire safe wafted him o'er;
+Whilst the spectres of Jaffa, with ghastly delight,
+ The murd'rer pursued to the shore.
+
+Arriv'd, for his brow, lo! a turban she made,
+ Bright with gems pluck'd from Gallia's crown;
+To give him a name, she Rome's hist'ry survey'd,
+ In the days of her early renown.
+
+To embellish his guilt, or to soften its shade,
+ The Arts mournful captives she kept;
+And the plund'rer and plunder of Europe display'd
+ To the wand'rer, who wonder'd and wept.
+
+To support this apostate imperial shade,
+ This impious mock'ry of good,
+She rais'd a banditti, to whom she convey'd
+ His spirit for plunder and blood.
+
+The chiefs of the earth in a panic beheld
+ The flash of his sabre afar;
+They enter'd, but pensively mov'd from the field,
+ And bow'd to this idol of war.
+
+Till, fum'd with the incense of slavish applause,
+ O'er the globe's fairest portion he trod;
+And, spurning its liberty, spirit, and laws,
+ Conceiv'd himself rais'd to a god.
+
+But England disdain'd to the Tyrant to bend;
+ Still erect, undismay'd, she was found;
+Infuriate, he swore that "his bolt should descend,"
+ And her temples should fall to the ground.
+
+Yes, here, if his banner is destin'd to wave,
+ It shall float o'er her temples laid low,
+O'er piles of her children, who, loyal and brave,
+ Such a victory never will know.
+
+Oh! banish the thought; for, learn 'tis in vain,
+ Thus, thou maniac Tyrant, to boast;
+As soon shall her base be remov'd by the main,
+ As her empire by thee and thy host.
+
+The sound is gone forth, 'tis recorded above,
+ To the mountain it spread from the vale;
+"Our God, and our King, and our Country, we love,
+ And for them we will die or prevail."
+
+Then hasten the day, if thy threat be sincere,
+ Let the winds blow thy myriads along;
+Then soon may thy boasted armada appear,
+ And our rocks catch thy death-breathing song.
+
+Thy guardian, foul deity! hideous with crime,
+ Shall view, as she moves to our shore,
+The Genius of Britain, mild, brave, and sublime,
+ And shall boast her achievements no more.
+
+Oh! direful and strange will the contest appear,
+ Big with freedom to nations afar;
+The good, who confide, and the guilty, who fear,
+ Shall join in the conflict of war.
+
+In Heaven, with smiles, shall the happy and blest
+ Lean over its bright-beaming walls,
+To guide and support to the regions of rest
+ The soul of the patriot who falls.
+
+Britannia! thy Muse, on a rock high and steep,
+ The fate of the fight shall proclaim;
+The strings of her lyre Inspiration shall sweep,
+ Recording each hero by name.
+
+The world to its centre shall shake with delight,
+ As thus she announces their fall;
+"They sink! our invaders submit to our might,
+ The ocean has buried them all!"
+
+
+
+
+LINES TO ANNETTE.
+
+
+Canst thou, Annette, thy lover see?
+ His trembling love unfolded hear?
+ And mark the while th' impassion'd tear,
+Th' impassion'd tear of agony?
+
+Adown his anxious features steal,
+Nor then one burst of pity feel?
+But, as bereav'd of ev'ry sense,
+Look on with cold indifference.
+Go, then, Annette, in all thy charms,
+Go bless some gayer, happier, arms;
+Go, rest secure, thy fear give o'er,
+These eyes shall follow thee no more;
+And never shall these lips impart
+One thought of all that rends my heart.
+
+Yet, since will burst the frequent sigh,
+ And since the tear will ever fall,
+From thee and from the world I'll fly;
+ Deserts shall hide, shall silence, all.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+SENT WITH SOME INDIAN ROUGE TO MISS W----.
+
+
+Go, faithless bloom! on Delia's cheek
+ Your boasted captivations try;
+Alas! o'er Nature would you seek
+ To gain one moment's victory?
+Her softer tint, sweet look, and gentle air,
+Shall prove you're but a vain intruder there.
+
+But go, display your charms and taste;
+ Soon shall you blush a richer red,
+To find your mimic pow'r surpass'd;
+ And, whilst upon her cheek you spread
+Your vermeil hue, tell her ingenuous heart,
+'Tis the first time she ever practis'd art.
+
+
+
+
+MISS W---- RETURNED THE ROUGE
+
+_With the following elegant Lines_.
+
+
+When men exert their utmost pow'rs,
+To while away the tedious hours,
+ With soothing Flatt'ry's art,
+When ev'ry art and work well skill'd,
+And ev'ry look with poison fill'd,
+ Assail a woman's heart,
+
+Tho' ardently she'd wish to be
+Proof 'gainst the charms of Flattery,
+ The task is hard, I ween;
+Self-love will whisper "'Tis quite true,
+Who can there be more fair than you?
+ Who more admir'd, when seen?"
+
+Then take this tempting gift of thine,
+Nor e'er again wish me to shine
+ In any borrow'd bloom:
+Nor rouge, nor compliments, can charm;
+Full well I know they both will harm;
+ Truth is my only plume.
+
+
+
+
+LINES TO A YOUNG LADY,
+
+OCCASIONED BY HER DECLINING AN OFFER OF MARRIAGE
+
+_Made her by a very accomplished Friend of the Author_.
+
+
+Oh! form'd to prompt the smile or tear,
+At once so sweet, yet so severe!
+As much for you as him I grieve;
+Ah! thoughtless! if you thus can leave
+A mind with wit and learning bright,
+Where Temper sheds its cloudless light;
+Where manly honour, taste refin'd,
+With ev'ry virtue, are combin'd;
+If you can quit a heart so true,
+Which has so often throbb'd for you,
+I'll pity, tho' I can't reprove;
+And did I, such is Florio's love,
+Eager he'd fly to take thy part,
+E'en in a war against his heart.
+
+
+
+
+THE MUSHROOM.
+
+
+Awake, my Muse! awake each slumb'ring string,
+And (mighty subject!) of a Mushroom sing,
+Fair to the eye, and pleasant to the taste;
+Charm'd by the note, a pigmy group, in haste,
+Lay down their grainy loads, as slow they move
+Thro' lanes of reed and grass, to them a grove!
+As if an Orpheus thou, they gather round,
+Erect their tiny ears, and drink the sound.
+Gray was the sky, save where the eastern ray
+O'er fragrant hills proclaim'd th' approaching day;
+Rurilla, loveliest virgin of the plain,
+With spirits light, and mind without a stain,
+Rose from her simple bed, refresh'd with rest;
+Ah, Sleep! with marble finger had'st thou prest
+Her lovely eyelids till a later hour,
+And by a blissful vision's fairy pow'r
+Hadst thou impress'd her mind with forms of love,
+The walk at eve, the kiss, the murm'ring dove,
+The little nymph had never sought the plain,
+Nor fill'd with one romantic thought this brain.
+In russet gown, with sweet and simple air,
+She issued forth, like Hebe, young and fair,
+To neighb'ring field, fresh as the rosy dawn;
+Nor stile oppos'd her; like a bounding fawn
+Graceful she sprang: so prankish was the air,
+Had but the love-sick Daphanel been there,
+He would have sigh'd: alas! poor love-sick fool!
+Thou rather Zephyr dost inflame than cool!
+And now, my Muse, the fatal spot disclose,
+Where, bath'd with dew, the modest Mushroom rose.
+Less fair the swan, by Richmond's flow'ry side,
+That in the river views herself with pride,
+As, gazing on her, some their stay prolong,
+To see her sail in majesty along.
+Ill-fated child of earth! thy charms so fair,
+As oft with youthful beauty, prove thy snare:
+Now, as with dewy-spangled feet is seen
+The lovely maid to trace each ringlet green,
+Not distant far thy skin of velvet white
+She views, and to thee presses with delight
+Oh! might some deity, with potent arm,
+Arrest her flight, and alter ev'ry charm;
+Like Niobe dissolve into a tear,
+Or like the Delian virgin, when with fear
+She fled!--See on each beauteous limb appear
+Soft leaves and flow'rs, the sweetest of the year;
+And, taking root, spread round her fragrant breath
+O'er the fair form that now she dooms to death:
+But, ah! in vain, the pray'r no goddess hears; }
+She bends--she plucks--and, bath'd in purple tears,}
+The much-priz'd victim in her lap she bears! }
+Tears that, preserv'd in crystal, will prolong,
+And paint its worth beyond this simple song.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+Written _en badinage_, after visiting a Paper-Mill near
+Tunbridge-Wells, in consequence of the lovely Miss W----, who excels
+in Drawing, requesting the Author to describe the Process of making
+Paper, in Verse.
+
+
+Reader! I do not wish to brag;
+ But, to display Eliza's skill,
+I'd proudly be the vilest rag
+ That ever went to paper-mill.
+
+Content in pieces to be cut;
+ Tho' sultry were the summer-skies,
+Pleas'd between flannel I'd be put,
+ And after bath'd in jellied size.
+
+Tho' to be squeez'd and hang'd I hate,
+ For thee, sweet girl! upon my word,
+When the stout press had forc'd me flat,
+ I'd be suspended on a cord.
+
+And then, when dried and fit for use,
+ Eliza! I would pray to thee,
+If with thy pen thou would'st amuse,
+ That thou would'st deign to write on me.
+
+Gad's bud! how pleasant it would prove
+ Her pretty chit-chat to convey,
+P'rhaps be the record of her love,
+ Told in some coy enchanting way.
+
+Or, if her pencil she would try,
+ On me, oh! may she still imprint
+Those forms that fix th' admiring eye,
+ Each graceful line, each glowing tint!
+
+Then shall I reason have to brag,
+ For thus, to high importance grown,
+The world will see a simple rag
+ Become a treasure rarely known.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+TO A PROMISING YOUNG ARTIST.
+
+
+These bays be thine; and, tho' not form'd to shine
+Clear as thy colour, faultless as thy line,
+Yet shall the Muse essay, in humble verse,
+Thy merits, lovely Painting! to rehearse.
+As when the demon of the winter storm
+Robs each sweet flow'ret of its beauteous form,
+The Spirit of the stream, in crystal wave,
+Sleeps whilst the chilling blasts above him rave,
+Till the Sun spreads his animating fires,
+And sullen Darkness from the scene retires,
+Then mountain-nymphs discard their robes of snow,
+And in green mantles smile in roseate glow,
+And rivers, loosen'd from their icy chain,
+Spread joy and richness thro' the verdant plain,
+Thus, in those climes where skies are ever fair,
+Each infant Science breath'd a genial air,
+Climes where the Earth her stores to all resign'd,
+Nor left one selfish passion to the mind;
+On her green lap the swain reclin'd his head,
+And found his banquet where he found his bed.
+Then Painting grew, and from the shades of flow'rs[A]
+There first essay'd her imitative pow'rs,
+When, urg'd by plunder, with the torrent's might,
+Nerv'd by the storm, and harden'd in the fight,
+A race barbarian left their forests wild,
+And sought the spot where Love and Learning smil'd.
+By Taste unsoften'd, these relentless droves
+Burst, fair Italia! thro' thy sacred groves,
+Laid ev'ry flow'r of Art and Fancy waste,
+And pour'd a winter o'er the realms of Taste,
+Each Science trembled at the ruffian sound,
+Forsook her shades, and fled her classic ground;
+The lofty column prostrate in the dust,
+Defac'd the arch, o'erthrown the matchless bust;
+The shatter'd fresco animates no more,
+And ruthless winds thro' clefted temples roar!
+Florence beheld the scene with sad surprise,
+And bade the prostrate pile in grandeur rise.
+Then, oh! thou truly "Father of the Art[B]!"
+'Twas thine superior vigour to impart;
+Illustrious Cimabue! it was thine
+To soar beyond Example's bounded line,
+And, as the Heav'n-directed sceptre's shock,
+Produc'd full torrents from the flinty rock,
+So streams of taste obey'd thy pencil's call,
+And Nature seem'd to start from out the wall.
+Hail, beauteous art! oh! that in equal lay
+Could but my Muse thy various pow'rs convey!
+'Tis thine with silent eloquence to shew
+Passion's strong image, Beauty's rapt'rous glow,
+To soothe the parted lover's anxious care,
+Who owns thee fairest of thy sisters fair;
+When waves divide him, still thro' thee to trace
+The dear resemblance of that cherish'd face,
+Which he so oft with trembling lips has prest,
+So often gaz'd upon, so often blest!
+Thine too it is to seek the verdant plains
+Where Peace resides, where Rustic Beauty reigns;
+Or bid the torrent on thy canvass roar,
+Or calmly spread the yellow winding shore;
+Or show, from some vast cliff's extremest verge,
+The frail bark combating the angry surge.
+Oft too on some lone turret wilt thou stand,
+To trace the fury of th' embattled band,
+To darken with the clouds of death the skies,
+And bid the scenes of blood and havoc rise!
+Such, and far more, thy pow'rs, bless'd art! to thee
+Inferior far descriptive Poesy;
+And tho' sweet Music, when she strikes the strings,
+When thro' the grove with seraph-voice she sings,
+The soul, enraptur'd with the thrilling stream,
+Would hail the Maid of Harmony supreme!
+Yet, while her dulcet sounds enchant, they die;}
+So shooting stare illume the midnight sky, }
+And, as we wonder, vanish from the eye. }
+But when resistless Death, in mournful hour,
+Withdraws the drooping painter's mimic pow'r,
+Improv'd by time, his works still charm the sight,
+And thro' successive ages yield delight
+Greece early bade the painter's pencil trace
+Each form with force; to force she added grace:
+For this her Zeuxis she a garland wove,
+For[C] that Apelles won her grateful love.
+Chiefly she called on Painting's magic powers
+To deck the guardians of her lofty tow'rs;
+Here[D] Jove in lightning show'd his awful mien.
+There Venus with her doves was smiling seen!
+Till ruthless Time, with unabating flight,
+O'er Grecian grandeur flung the shades of night
+Long did they settle o'er the darken'd world.
+Till Raphael's hand the sable curtain furl'd;
+A pious calm, an elevated grace,
+Then on the canvass mark'd th' Apostle's face;
+Devout applauses ev'ry feature drew,
+E'en[E] such as graceful Sculpture never knew.
+In nearer times, and on a neighb'ring shore,
+Painting but feebly shone, obscur'd by pow'r.
+See Rubens' soul indignantly advance,
+Press'd by the pride and vanity of France;
+Behold, [F] in fulsome allegory spread,
+The gaudy iris o'er the victor's head!
+See Genius, deaf to Nature's nobler call,
+Waste all its strength upon the banner'd hall!
+E'en now, tho' Gallia, in her blood-stain'd car,
+Spreads over Europe all the woes of war,
+Still with consummate craft she tries to prove
+How much the peaceful charms engage her love:
+Treasures of art in lengthen'd gall'ries glow,
+And[G] Europe's plunder Europe's plund'rers show!
+Yet of her living artists few can claim
+Half the mix'd praise that waits on David's fame.
+Thrice happy Britain! in thy favour'd isle
+The sister Arts in health and beauty smile!
+Tho' no Imperial Gall'ries grace thy shores,
+Tho' wealth the public bounty seldom pours,
+Yet private taste rewards thy painter's toil,
+And bids his genius grace his native soil.
+Bless'd country! here thy artists can supply
+Abundant charms to fix th' admiring eye:
+In furtive splendour ne'er art thou array'd,
+No plunder'd country mourns thy ruthless blade,
+Sees its transported treasures torn away,
+To grace a fierce ambitious Tyrant's sway.
+Long in this isle, where Freedom finds repose,
+Whilst, raving round her, loud the tempest blows,
+Oh! long befriended, may the Arts excel,
+And bless the sacred spot they love so well!
+
+[Footnote A: "_Then painting grew, and from the shades_,"
+&c.--The shadows of plants, and indeed of every object in Nature,
+must, at a very early period, have furnished ideas of imitation.]
+
+[Footnote B: _"Then, oh! thou_," &c.--After the ravages of the
+northern barbarians, painting was revived in Italy, about the
+fourteenth century, by Cimabue, who was hence styled the Father of
+Painting.]
+
+[Footnote C: "_For that Apelles_," &c.--Painting attained so
+great a perfection amongst the Greeks, under Zeuxis, that Apelles
+found nothing wanting but grace, which in those times he bestowed upon
+the art, as Corregio did after Raphael.]
+
+[Footnote D: "_Here Jove in_," &c.--The Greeks excelled in the
+delineation of their deities, to whom they attributed all the human
+passions: their Jupiter they elevated to the highest degree of
+majesty, their Venus to the utmost pitch of human beauty.]
+
+[Footnote E: "_E'en such as graceful Sculpture_," &c.--From
+Cimabue to Raphael, the painters were employed by the church; and they
+gave a character to the Prophets, Apostles, and our Saviour, which was
+never known to the ancient sculptors. The power which the former
+possessed of uniting dignity to humility is without a parallel.]
+
+[Footnote F: "_Behold, in fulsome allegory_," &c.--As long as
+the French school adhered to the principles of the Italian school, it
+produced many great masters; however, the art certainly degenerated
+after Raphael, by being employed in adulatory allegory, in honour of
+Princes, as is to be seen in the works of Rubens and Le Brun at Paris,
+artists of great talents, which they were led to misapply, through the
+supreme vanity of Louis the Fourteenth.]
+
+[Footnote G: "_And Europe's plunder_," &c.--Those who have
+visited the Napoleon Gallery at Paris can attest the truth of this
+observation, as those who are acquainted with the modern state of
+painting in France well know, and, knowing, cannot but be surprised
+at, the small number of French painters of any tolerable celebrity.]
+
+FINIS.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Poems, by Sir John Carr
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Poems, by Sir John Carr
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Poems
+
+Author: Sir John Carr
+
+Release Date: December 2, 2003 [EBook #10367]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK POEMS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Jonathan Ingram, Josephine Paolucci and
+the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+POEMS,
+
+BY
+
+SIR JOHN CARR.
+
+
+
+Non ulla Musis pagina gratior,
+Quam quae severis ludicra jungere
+Novit, fatigatamque nugis
+Utilibus recreare mentem.
+
+
+
+1809.
+
+
+
+
+POEMS.
+
+
+
+DEDICATION.
+
+TO
+
+LADY WARREN,
+
+&c. &c. &c.
+
+_MADAM_,
+
+In dedicating the following Poems to your Ladyship, I cannot help
+regretting that they are not more worthy of such an honour; that I
+might consequently have used it as an humble mode of expressing
+my sense of the happy and enlightened hours which I have passed in
+your Ladyship's society, and of the polite attentions which I
+have at various times received from you, and the gallant object of
+your connubial affection, particularly at the House of British Embassy
+at Petersburgh, where you afforded to the Ladies of the North a just
+representation of the dignified virtue, cultivated mind, and
+attractive beauty, of the higher order of females of your own country.
+
+I have the honour to remain,
+
+Madam,
+
+Your Ladyship's
+
+Obedient faithful Servant,
+
+JOHN CARR.
+
+_Temple. June_ 1809
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+This Volume is submitted to the Public with all that diffidence which
+ought to attend the publication of Verses, many of which were written
+in the gay and happy era of boyhood, and others in subsequent periods
+of maturer life, as a relief from more arduous pursuits.
+
+They lay no pretensions to the depth and solidity of the effusions of
+the Muse in her elevated flights; they are the few wild notes of the
+simple shepherd, and do not even affect to imitate the rich cadence of
+the scientific musician.
+
+If the Author might, without the imputation of vanity, select for them
+a place in the Temple of Poetry, he would endeavour to class them in
+that niche which is appropriated for the reception of the light and
+playful _Vers de Societe_.
+
+Should the Reader find them but little worthy of his approval, he will
+not have reason at the same time to condemn their prolixity: their
+brevity will, at least in some degree, atone for their want of fire
+and fancy.
+
+It is thought proper to state that some of the following Poems have
+appeared before at various times, in a fugitive shape; and that the
+Poetry in the Author's Tours is here collected.
+
+
+
+
+POEMS,
+
+&c. &c.
+
+
+
+
+VERSES
+
+WRITTEN IN A GROTTO
+
+_In a Wood on the Side of the River Dart_,
+
+IN DEVONSHIRE.
+
+
+Tell me, thou grotto! o'er whose brow are seen
+Projecting plumes, and shades of deep'ning green,--
+While not a sound disturbs thy stony hall,
+While all thy dewy drops forget to fall,--
+Why canst thou not thy soothing charms impart,
+And shed thy quiet o'er this beating heart?
+Tell me, thou richly-painted river! tell,
+That on thy mirror'd plane dost mimic well
+Each pendent tree and every distant hill,
+Tipp'd with red lustre, beauteous, bright, and still,--
+
+Can I not, gazing on thy tranquil tide,
+Shed ev'ry grief upon thy rocky side?
+Or must I rove thy margin, calm and clear,
+The only agitated object near?
+Oh! tell me, too, thou babbling cold cascade!
+Whose waters, falling thro' successive shade,
+Unspangled by the brightness of the sky,
+Awake each echo to a soft reply,--
+Say, canst thou not my bosom-grief befriend,
+And bid one drop upon my heart descend?
+When all thy songsters soothe themselves to sleep.
+Ah! must these aching eyes for ever weep?
+And must their frequent waters, like thine own,
+Drop, idly drop, on unimpressive stone?
+Or, when my beauteous fair shall deign to grace
+The humid foliage of thy mossy base,
+Canst thou not tell how many a rock below
+Impedes to kiss thy waters as they flow?
+In _her_ mind canst thou not the feeling rear
+To stop, or thus caress, each genuine tear?
+
+Teach her, oh! teach her, then, thou cold cascade!
+Pour all thy lessons for the lovely maid!
+And thou, bless'd grotto! let thy silence prove
+Her mute consenting answer to my love!
+And thou, bright river! as thou roll'st along,
+Bear on thy wand'ring wave a lover's song!
+Strong as thy current, as thy waters pure,
+Teach her to feel the passion I endure!
+
+
+
+
+LINES TO THE MEMORY OF MY DEAR BROTHER,
+
+W.T.P. CARR, ESQ.
+
+
+--manibus date lilia plenis:
+Purpureos spargam flores.
+
+_Aeneid_, lib. vi.
+
+
+Tho' no funereal grandeur swell my song,
+Nor genius, eagle-plum'd, the strain prolong,--
+Tho' Grief and Nature here alone combine
+To weep, my William! o'er a fate like thine,--
+Yet thy fond pray'r, still ling'ring on my ear,
+Shall force its way thro' many a gushing tear:
+The Muse, that saw thy op'ning beauties spread,
+That lov'd thee living, shall lament thee dead!
+Ye graceful Virtues! while the note I breathe,
+Of sweetest flow'rs entwine a fun'ral wreath,--
+Of virgin flow'rs, and place them round his tomb,
+To bud, like him, and perish in their bloom!
+Ah! when these eyes saw thee serenely wait
+The last long separating stroke of Fate,--
+When round thy bed a kindred weeping train
+Call'd on thy voice to greet them, but in vain,--
+When o'er thy lips we watch'd thy fault'ring breath--
+When louder grief proclaim'd th'approach of death,--
+Thro' ev'ry vein an icy horror chill'd,
+Colder than marble ev'ry bosom thrill'd.
+Unsettled still, tho' exercis'd to grieve,
+Scarce would my mind the alter'd sight believe;
+Familiar scenes a transient calm inspire,
+Poor flutt'ring Fancy fann'd the vain desire,
+'Till with sad proof thy wasted relics rise,
+And restless Nature pours uncall'd-for sighs.
+Ah! long, my William! shall thy picture rest,
+Time shall not wear it, imag'd in my breast;
+Yes, thou shall live while fond remembrance lives,
+'Till he who mourns thee asks the line he gives.
+No common joy, no fugitive delight,
+Regret like this could in my breast excite;
+For then my sorrow had been less severe,
+And tears less copious had bedew'd the bier.
+From the same breast our milky food we drew,
+Entwin'd affection strengthen'd as we grew;
+Why further trace? The flatt'ring dream is o'er--
+Thy transient joys and sorrows are no more!
+All, all are fled!--And, ah! where'er I turn,
+Insulting Death directs me to thy urn,
+Throws his cold shadows round me while I sing.
+Damps ev'ry nerve, and slackens ev'ry string.
+So, when the Moon trims up her waning fire,
+Sweep the night-breezes o'er th'Aeolian lyre;
+Ling'ring, perchance, some wild pathetic sound
+Lulls the lorn ear, and dies along the ground.
+Ye kindred train! who, o'er the parting grave,
+Have mourn'd the virtues which ye could not save.
+Ye know how Mem'ry, with excursive pow'r,
+Extracts a sweet from ev'ry faded hour;--
+From scenes long past, regardless of repose,
+She feeds her tears, and treasures up her woes.
+Thou tuneful, mute, companion[A] of my care!
+Where now thy notes, that linger'd in the air?
+That linger still!--Vain thy harmonious store,--
+Thy sweet persuasive triumphs are no more.
+Thy mournful image strikes my wand'ring eye;
+Sad, near thy silent strings, I sit and sigh.
+Cold is that band which Music form'd her own,
+When ev'ry chord resign'd its sweetest tone.
+Ah! long, fair source of rapture, shall thou rest,
+Silent and sad, neglected and unprest,
+'Till years, lov'd shade! superior pow'rs resign,
+Or raise one note more eloquent than thine.
+Tho' with'ring Sickness mark'd thee in the womb,
+And form'd thy cradle but to form thy tomb,
+Yet, like a flow'r, she bade thee reach thy prime,
+The fairer victim for the stroke of Time.
+When fond Invention vainly sought thine ease,
+The wave salubrious and the morning breeze,--
+When even Sleep, sweet Sleep! refus'd thy call,
+Sleep! that with sweet refreshment smiles on all,--
+When, till the morn, thine eyes, unclos'd and damp,
+Trac'd thy sad semblance in the glimm'ring lamp,--
+When from thy face Health's latest relic fled,
+Where Hope might flatter, with reluctant tread,--
+Still, darting forward from the weight of woe,
+Thy soul with all its energy would glow;
+Still with the purest passion wouldst thou prove
+The glow of friendship and the warmth of love.
+And ah! to sacred Memory ever nigh,
+Thy wit and humour claim the passing sigh:
+When, thro' the hour, with unresisted skill,
+I've seen thee mould each feature to thy will,--
+When friends drew round thee with attentive ear,
+Pleas'd with the raill'ry which they could not fear.
+Oh! how I've heard thee, with concealing art,
+Join in the song, tho' sorrow rent thy heart;
+How have I seen thee too, with venial guile,
+O'er many an anguish force the faithless smile,--
+Seen suffering Nature check each sigh, each fear,
+To rob maternal fondness of a tear!
+Alas! those scenes are past!--Vain was the pray'r
+That ask'd of Fate to soften and to spare;
+Ah! vain, if wit and virtue could not save
+Thy youthful honours from an early grave.
+But yet, if here my warm fraternal love
+May claim alliance with the realms above;
+If kindred Nature, with perpetual bloom,
+Transplanted springs, and lives beyond the tomb;
+Thy pitying soul shall smile upon my grief,
+Shall feel a pang that wishes not relief;
+In visions still shall shield me as I go,
+Along this gloomy wilderness of woe;
+Shall still regard me with peculiar pride,
+On earth my brother, and in heav'n my guide!
+Methinks I see thee reach th' empyrean shore,
+And heav'n's full chorus hails one angel more;
+While 'mid the seraph-forms that round thee fly,
+Thy father meets thee with ecstatic eye!
+He springs exulting from his throne of rest,
+Extends his arms, and clasps thee to his breast!
+
+[Footnote A: The piano-forte, on which he excelled.]
+
+
+
+
+PARODY
+
+ON
+
+"_The Golden Days of good Queen Bess_."
+
+
+To my Muse give attention, and deem it not a mystery
+If I jumble up together music, poetry, and history,
+To sing of the vices of wicked Queen Bess, sir,
+Whose memory posterity with blushes shall confess, sir,
+ Detested be the memory of wicked Queen Bess, sir,
+ Whose memory posterity with blushes shall confess, sir.
+
+In saying she would die a maid, she, England! did amuse ye.
+But what she did, and what she died--I hope you will excuse me:
+A gallant Earl a miracle of passion for her fed, sir;
+She kiss'd him, and she clos'd the scene by striking off his head, sir!
+ Detested be, &c.
+
+Oh! rude ungrateful Scotland! had thy desolated Queen, sir,
+No blue eyes ever known, nor had she beauteous been, sir,
+The envy of our old rival hag she might have baffled, sir,
+Nor with her guiltless blood have crimson'd o'er the scaffold, sir.
+ Detested be, &c.
+
+She dress'd just like a porcupine, and din'd just like a pig, sir,
+And an over-running butt of sack she swallow'd at a swig, sir!
+Her brawny maids of honour ate and drank confounded hard, sir,
+And droves of oxen daily bled within her palace-yard, sir!
+ Detested be, &c.
+
+In ruling she was wonderous tyrannical and surly;
+If a patriot only touch'd on the Queen or Master Burleigh,
+She'd send a file of soldiers in less than half an hour, sir,
+Just to bid him make his speeches to the prisons of the Tow'r, sir!
+ Detested be, &c.
+
+
+
+
+REBECCA,
+
+_A Ballad_.
+
+
+Rebecca was the fairest maid
+That on the Danube's borders play'd;
+And many a handsome nobleman
+For her in tilt and tourney ran;
+While fair Rebecca wish'd to see
+What youth her husband was to be.
+
+Rebecca heard the gossips say,
+"Alone from dusk till midnight stay
+Within the church-porch drear and dark,
+Upon the vigil of Saint Mark,
+And, lovely maiden! you shall see
+What youth your husband is to be."
+
+Rebecca, when the night grew dark,
+Upon the vigil of Saint Mark,
+(Observ'd by Paul, a roguish scout,
+Who guess'd the task she went about,)
+Stepp'd to St Stephen's Church to see
+What youth her husband was to be.
+
+Rebecca heard the screech-owl cry,
+And saw the black bat round her fly;
+She sat, 'till, wild with fear, at last
+Her blood ran cold, her pulse beat fast;
+And yet, rash maid! she stopp'd to see
+What youth her husband was to be.
+
+Rebecca heard the midnight chime
+Ring out the yawning peal of time,
+When shrouded Paul, unlucky knave!
+Rose like a spectre from the grave;
+And cried, "Fair maiden, come with me.
+For I your bridegroom am to be."
+
+Rebecca turn'd her head aside,
+Sent forth a hideous shriek, and died!
+While Paul confess'd himself, in vain,
+Rebecca never spoke again!
+Ah! little, hapless maid! did she
+Think Death her bridegroom was to be.
+
+Rebecca! may thy story long
+Instruct the giddy and the young.
+Fright not, fond youths! the timid fair;
+And you too, gentle maids! beware;
+Nor seek by lawless arts to see
+What youths your husbands are to be.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+TO AN AURICULA, BELONGING TO ----.
+
+
+Thou rear'st thy beauteous head, sweet flow'r
+Gemm'd by the soft and vernal show'r;
+ Its drops still round thee shine:
+The florist views thee with delight;
+And, if so precious in _his_ sight,
+ Oh! what art thou in _mine_?
+
+For she, who nurs'd thy drooping form
+When Winter pour'd her snowy storm,
+ Has oft consol'd me too;
+For me a fost'ring tear has shed,--
+She has reviv'd my drooping head,
+ And bade me bloom anew.
+
+When adverse Fortune bade us part,
+And grief depress'd my aching heart,
+ Like yon reviving ray,
+She from behind the cloud would move,
+And with a stolen look of love
+ Would melt my cares away.
+
+Sweet flow'r! supremely dear to me,
+Thy lovely mistress blooms in thee,
+ For, tho' the garden's pride,
+In beauty's grace and tint array'd,
+Thou seem'st to court the secret shade,
+ Thy modest form to hide.
+
+Oh! crown'd with many a roseate year,
+Bless'd may she be who plac'd thee here,
+ Until the tear of love
+Shall tremble in the eye to find
+Her spirit, spotless and refin'd,
+ Borne to the realms above!
+
+And oft for thee, sweet child of spring!
+The Muse shall touch her tend'rest string;
+ And, as thou rear'st thine head,
+She shall invoke the softest air,
+Or ask the chilling storm to spare,
+ And bless thy humble bed.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+TO LADY WARREN,
+
+_On the Departure of Sir John Borlase Warren, K.B_.
+
+TO TAKE THE COMMAND OF A SQUADRON.
+
+
+Oh! why does sorrow shade thy face,
+Where mind and beauty vie with grace?
+Say, dost thou for thy hero weep,
+Who gallantly, upon the deep,
+Is gone to tell the madd'ning foe,
+Tho' vict'ry laid our Nelson low,
+We still have chiefs as greatly brave,
+Proudly triumphant on the wave?
+Dear to thy Country shall thou be,
+Fair mourner! and her sympathy
+Is thine; for, in the war's alarms,
+Thou gav'st thine hero from thine arms;
+And only ask'd to sigh alone,
+To look to heav'n, and weep him gone.
+Oh! soon shall all thy sorrow cease,
+And, to thine aching bosom, peace
+Shall quick return;--another tear
+To love and joy, supremely dear,
+Shall give thy gen'rous mind relief--
+That tear shall gem the laurel leaf.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+TO MISS ----,
+
+ACCOMPANIED BY A ROSE AND A LILY.
+
+
+
+I look'd the fragrant garden round
+ For what I thought would picture best
+ Thy beauty and thy modesty;
+A lily and a rose I found,--
+ With kisses on their leaves imprest,
+ I send the beauteous pair to thee.
+
+
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+Nature's imperfect child, to whom
+The world is wrapt in viewless gloom,
+Can unresisted still impart
+The fondest wishes of his heart.
+
+And he, to whose impervious ear
+ The sweetest sounds no charms dispense,
+Can bid his inmost soul appear
+ In clear, tho' silent, eloquence.
+
+But we, my Julia, not so blest,
+ Are doom'd a diff'rent fate to prove,--
+To feel each joy and hope supprest
+ That flow from pure, but hidden, love.
+
+
+
+
+IMPROMPTU LINES,
+
+UPON ANACREON MOORE'S SAYING THAT HE DISLIKED
+SINGING TO MEN.
+
+
+By Beauty's caresses, like Cupid, half-spoil'd,
+Thus Music's and Poesy's favourite child
+Exclaim'd,--"'Tis, by Heaven! a terrible thing
+Before a _he_-party to sit and to sing!"
+"By my shoul! Master Moore, you there may be right,"
+Said a son of green Erin; "tho' dear to my sight
+Are all the sweet cratures, call'd women, I swear,
+Yet I think we can feel just as well as the fair:
+Tho' you'd bribe us with songs, blood and 'ounds! let me say,
+I'd not be a woman for one in your way."
+
+
+
+
+LINES TO JULIA.
+
+
+Tho', Julia, we are doom'd to part,
+Tho' unknown pangs invade this heart,
+For thee the light of love shall burn,
+To thee my soul in secret turn:
+Upon this bosom, swell'd with care,
+The thought of thee shall tremble there
+'Till Time shall close these weeping eyes,
+And close the soothing source of sighs.
+So, in the silence of the night,
+Shines on the wave the lunar light;
+With its soft image, bright, imprest,
+It heaves, and seems to know no rest:
+Its agitation soon is o'er;
+It sighs, and dies along the shore!
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+_To the Memory of Mrs. A.H. Holdsworth_,
+
+LATE OF MOUNT GALPIN, DEVONSHIRE.
+
+
+Tyrant of all our loves and friendships here,
+ Behold thy beauteous victim!--Ah! tis thine
+To rend fond hearts, and start the tend'rest tear
+ Where joy should long in cloudless radiance shine.
+
+Alas! the mourning Muse in vain would paint,
+ Blest shade! how purely pass'd thy life away,
+Or, with the meekness of a favour'd saint,
+ How rose thy spirit to the realms of day.
+
+'Twas thine to fill each part that gladdens life,
+ Such as approving angels smile upon;--
+The faultless daughter, parent, friend, and wife,--
+ Virtues short-lived! they set just as they shone.
+
+Thus, in the bosom of some winding grove,
+ Where oft the pensive melodist retires,
+From his sweet instrument, the note of love,
+ Charms the rapt ear, but, as it charms, expires.
+
+Farewell, pure spirit! o'er thine early grave
+ Oblivion ne'er shall spread her freezing shade;
+Nature shall bid her richest foliage wave
+ Where her reposing fav'rite child is laid.
+
+There widow'd fondness oft, when summers bloom.
+ Shall with thy infant pledge of love repair;
+Oft shall they kneel beside thy mossy tomb,
+ And tears shall dew the flow'rs that blossom there.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+_Written upon a Watch-String_,
+
+MADE AND PRESENTED TO THE AUTHOR BY MISS ----.
+
+
+Say, lovely Charlotte! will you let me prove
+What diff'rent thoughts thy taste and beauty move?
+This woven chain, which graceful skill displays,
+ Leads me to think of time, and heave a sigh;
+But when on thee and on thy charms I gaze,
+ Time unremember'd moves, or seems to die.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+_Upon a Diamond Cross_,
+
+WORN ON HER BOSOM BY MISS C.M.
+
+
+Well on that neck, sweet Kitty! may you wear
+ The sparkling cross, with hopes to soften Heaven;
+For trust me, tho' so very young and fair,
+ Thou hast some little sins to be forgiven:--
+For all the hopes which wit and grace can spread,
+ For all the sighs which countless charms can move,
+Fall, lovely Kitty! on thy youthful head;
+ Yet fall they gently--for the crime is love.
+
+
+
+
+LINES TO FORTUNE,
+
+Occasioned by a very amiable and generous Friend of mine
+munificently presenting Miss E.S. with a Donation of
+Fifteen Thousand Pounds.
+
+
+Oh, Fortune! I have seen thee shed
+ A plenteous show'r of treasure down
+On many a weak and worthless head,
+ On those who but deserv'd thy frown.
+
+And I have heard, in lonely shade,
+ Her sorrows hapless Merit pour;
+And thou hast pass'd the drooping maid,
+ To give some pamper'd fav'rite more.
+
+But tho' so cold, or strangely wild,
+ It seems that worth can sometimes move;
+Thou hast on gentle Emma smil'd,
+ And thou hast smil'd where all approve:--
+
+For Nature form'd her gen'rous heart
+ With ev'ry virtue, pure, refin'd;
+And wit and taste, and grace and art,
+ United to illume her mind.
+
+So dew-drops fall on some rare flow'r,
+ That merits all their fost'ring care,
+As tho' they knew that, by their pow'r,
+ Grateful 'twould wider scent the air.
+
+
+
+
+A SONG.
+
+THE LOVER
+
+THE LUTE OF HIS DECEASED MISTRESS.
+
+
+Alas! but like a summer's dream
+ All the delight I felt appears,
+While mis'ry's weeping moments seem
+ A ling'ring age of tears.
+
+Then breathe my sorrows, plaintive lute!
+ And pour thy soft consoling tone,
+While I, a list'ning mourner mute,
+ Will call each tender grief my own.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+WRITTEN IN A COTTAGE BY THE SEA-SIDE
+
+(_In which the Author had taken Shelter during a violent Storm_),
+
+UPON SEEING AN IDIOTIC YOUTH SEATED IN THE CHIMNEY-CORNER, CARESSING A
+BROOM.
+
+
+'Twas on a night of wildest storms,
+ When loudly roar'd the raving main,--
+When dark clouds shew'd their shapeless forms,
+ And hail beat hard the cottage pane,--
+
+Tom Fool sat by the chimney-side,
+ With open mouth and staring eyes;
+A batter'd broom was all his pride,--
+ It was his wife, his child, his prize!
+
+Alike to him if tempests howl,
+ Or summer beam its sweetest day;
+For still is pleas'd the silly soul,
+ And still he laughs the hours away.
+
+Alas! I could not stop the sigh,
+ To see him thus so wildly stare,--
+To mark, in ruins, Reason lie,
+ Callous alike to joy and care.
+
+God bless thee, thoughtless soul! I cried;
+ Yet are thy wants but very few:
+The world's hard scenes thou ne'er hast tried;
+ Its cares and crimes to thee are new.
+
+The hoary hag[A], who cross'd thee so,
+ Did not unkindly vex thy brain;
+Indeed she could not be thy foe,
+ To snatch thee thus from grief and pain.
+
+Deceit shall never wring thy heart,
+ And baffled hope awake no sighs;
+And true love, harshly forc'd to part,
+ Shall never swell with tears thine eyes.
+
+Then long enjoy thy batter'd broom,
+ Poor merry fool! and laugh away
+'Till Fate shall bid thy reason bloom
+ In blissful scenes of brighter day.
+
+[Footnote A: It is generally believed by the peasants of Devonshire
+that idiotcy is produced by the influence of a witch.]
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+_To a Laurel-Leaf_,
+
+SENT TO THE AUTHOR BY MISS ----.
+
+
+Tho' unknown is the hand that bestow'd thee on me,
+ Sweet leaf! ev'ry fibre I'll warm with a kiss:
+With the fame of her beauty thou well dost agree,
+ Whose presence shews conquest, whose triumph is bliss!
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+OCCASIONED BY THE DEATH OF LIEUTENANT J----,
+
+_Who was killed by a Pistol-Shot_,
+
+ACCIDENTALLY DISCHARGED BY HIS FRIEND,
+
+CAPTAIN B----.
+
+
+With horror dumb, tho' guiltless, stood
+ Beside his dying friend,
+The hapless wretch who made the blood
+ Sad from his side descend!
+
+"Give me thy hand; lov'd friend, adieu!"
+ The gen'rous suff'rer cried!
+"I do forgive and bless thee too;"
+ And, having said it, died!
+
+And Pity, who stood trembling near
+ Knew not for which to shed,
+So claim'd by both, her saddest tear--
+ The living or the dead!
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+TO AN ACCOMPLISHED YOUNG LADY,
+
+Whose Timidity frequently agitated her, when pressed to gratify her
+Friends by her Musical Talents.
+
+
+'Tis said (and I believe it too)
+ That genuine merit seeks the shade;
+Blushing to think what is her due,
+ As of her own sweet pow'rs afraid:--
+
+Thus, lovely maid! on fluttering wings,
+ Thy pow'rs a thousand fears pursue,
+Which, like thy own harmonious strings,
+ When press'd _enchant_, and _tremble_ too!
+
+The pity, which we give, you owe,
+ For mutual fears on both attend;
+While anxious thus you joy bestow,
+ We fear too soon that joy will end!
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+TO MISS L---- D----.
+
+
+When Heav'n, sweet Laura! form'd thy mind,
+With genius and with taste refin'd,
+ As if the union were too bright,
+It spread the veil of diffidence,
+That ev'ry ray, at first intense,
+ Might shine as soft as lunar light.
+
+To frame a form then Nature strove,
+And call'd on Beauty and on Love,
+ To lodge the mind they priz'd so well:
+Completed was the fair design;
+Thus blended dew-drops mildly shine
+ Within the lily's spotless bell!
+
+
+
+
+LINES[A]
+
+_Written in a beautiful Spot_,
+
+THE FAVOURITE RETREAT OF DELIA.
+
+
+Streams ever limpid, fresh, and clear,
+Where Delia's charms renew'd appear,
+Ye flow'rs that touch'd her snowy breast,
+Ye trees whereon she lov'd to rest,
+Ye scenes adorn'd where'er she flies,
+If grief shall close these woe-worn eyes,
+May some kind form, with hand benign,
+My body with this earth enshrine,
+That, when the fairest nymph shall deign
+To visit this delightful plain,
+That, when she views my silent shade,
+And marks the change her love has made,
+The tear may tremble down her face,
+As show'rs the lily's leaves embrace;
+Then, like the infant at the breast,
+That feels a sorrow unexprest,
+That pang shall gentle Delia know,
+And silent treasure up her woe.
+
+[Footnote A: I am indebted to Petrarch for some of the imagery
+contained in these Lines.]
+
+
+
+
+VALENTINE VERSES,
+
+_Sent to my young Friend, Miss Emma Trevelyan_,
+
+OF WALLINGTON-HOUSE, NORTHUMBERLAND.
+
+
+Emma! 'tis early time for thee
+To hear the sounds of minstrelsy,
+That breathe around the rosy shrine
+Of honest old Saint Valentine.
+
+Too young art thou for strains of love;
+'Tis not thy passion I would move;
+Instead of lover's strains, I send
+The cordial wishes of a friend.
+
+Nobly has Nature done her duty,
+To give thee of thy mother's beauty
+So large a share--oh! then be thine
+The mental charms that in her shine!
+
+And may thy father's taste refin'd
+Still add new graces to thy mind;
+And may'st thou to each charm impart
+The gen'rous frankness of his heart.
+
+Then, my sweet Emma! thou shall move
+In many a heart more genuine love
+Than ever warm'd poetic line,
+Or sigh'd in any Valentine.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+WRITTEN UPON SEEING A BLIND YOUNG WOMAN IN NORTH WALES,
+
+Who supports herself, and an aged and infirm Mother, by selling
+Stockings and Gloves of her own Knitting, which she offers to
+Travellers as they pass by; in doing which she has been known
+to run close by the Side of a Carriage for several Miles.
+
+POOR BLIND BET.
+
+
+The morning purple on the hill,
+ The village spire, the ivy'd tow'r,
+The sparkling wheel of yonder mill,
+ The grove, green field, and op'ning flow'r,
+ Are lost to thee!
+
+Dark child of Nature, as thou art!
+ Yet thy poor bosom heaves no sigh;
+E'en now thy dimpling cheeks impart
+ Their knowledge of some pleasure nigh:--
+ 'Tis good for thee!
+
+Thou seem'st to say "I've sunshine too;
+ 'Tis beaming in a spotless breast;
+No shade of guilt obstructs the view,
+ And there are many not so blest,
+ Who day's blush see.
+
+"Dear are those eyes, by mine ne'er seen,
+ Which I protect from many a tear;
+Kind stranger! 'tis on yonder green
+ A mother's aged form I rear:
+ Oh! buy of me!"
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+UPON SEEING ----
+
+_At one of the annual Banquets given in Guildhall_.
+
+
+Gorgeous and splendid was the sight;
+From myriad lamps a fairy light
+Enshrin'd in wreaths the Gothic wall,
+And heav'nly music fill'd the hall!
+
+But there was one--(alas! that I
+Had ever seen)--the melody
+Her voice surpassed, and brighter far
+Her eyes than ev'ry mimic star!
+
+I gaz'd, until, oh! thought divine!
+I fancied she I saw was mine;
+But soon the beauteous vision flew--
+The stranger-form I lov'd withdrew.
+
+Yet still she lives within my breast,
+There mem'ry has her form imprest:--
+Thus, when some minstrel's strain is done,
+Sounds seem to breathe, for ever gone!
+
+
+
+
+YARRIMORE.
+
+[These Lines were written for a Lady who set them to Music.]
+
+
+My poor heart flutters like the sea
+ Now heaving on the sandy shore;
+It seems to tell me you shall be
+ Never again near Yarrimore.
+
+Far, far beyond the waves, I bend
+ Mine eyes, if I can land explore;
+But o'er the waves I find no end,--
+ Yet there they say's my Yarrimore.
+
+The hut he built is standing still,
+ Deck'd with the shells he cull'd from shore;
+Our bow'r is waving on the hill,
+ But where, alas! is Yarrimore?
+
+Within that bow'r I'll sit and sigh,
+ From dawn of day till day is o'er;
+And, as the wild winds o'er me fly,
+ I'll call on gentle Yarrimore!
+
+
+
+
+LINES TO MISS ----,
+
+Upon her appearing at a Ball in an elegant Plaid Dress,
+
+AND HAVING REPEATEDLY BEFORE EXPRESSED HER PREFERENCE
+OF THE SCOTISH NATION.
+
+
+Is it that plaided thus you wish to prove
+How northern is the region of your love?
+Ah, Mary! tho', within that far-fam'd clime,
+Deeds have been done that mock the wreck of Time;
+Tho' there the brave have bled, or, o'er the wave,
+On distant shores have found a glorious grave;
+Tho' there the mountain-nymph of song has pour'd
+Her loftiest strain, to bless the hero's sword;
+Still, lovely wand'rer, with a jealous eye,
+O'er Scotia's hills we see thy fancy fly;
+For _here_ the warrior oft has rais'd his sword,
+The patriot too his noble blood has pour'd;
+_Here_ too the sweet Recorder of the brave
+Has sat and sung upon her hero's grave.
+Then cease, romantic maid! ah, cease to rove;
+The very wood-dove loves its native grove:
+Oh! then, let Nature bid thy guileless heart
+Here shed its love, and all its warmth impart;
+And on the land that gave thee birth bestow
+The fondness which it claims, and treasures too.
+
+
+
+
+A SONG.
+
+TO THE MOON.
+
+
+Thou, lamp! the gods benignly gave,
+ To light a lover on his way;
+Thou, Moon! along the silv'ry wave,
+ Ah! safe this flutt'ring heart convey:--
+
+Sweet is thy light, and sweet thy shade,
+ The _guide_ and _guardian_ of our bliss,
+A lover's panting lips to lead,
+ Or veil him in the ravish'd kiss.
+
+Her white robe floats upon the air;
+ My Lyra hears the dashing oar:
+Ye floods, oh! speed me to my fair!
+ My soul is with her long before.
+
+Oh! lightly haste, thy lover view,
+ And ev'ry anxious fear resign;
+Ye tow'rs, no longer fear'd, adieu!
+ The treasure which ye held is mine!
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+_Upon the Death of the Lady of Lieutenant-Colonel Adams_,
+
+WHO LATELY DIED OF A DECLINE IN THE EAST INDIES.
+
+
+When Time a mellowing tint has thrown
+ O'er many a scene to mem'ry dear.
+It scatters round a charm, unknown
+ When first th' impression rested there.
+
+But, oh! should distance intervene,
+ Should Ocean's wave, should changeful clime.
+Divide--how sweeter far the scene!
+ How richer ev'ry tint of time!
+
+E'en thus with those (a treasur'd few)
+ Who gladden'd life with many a smile,
+Tho' long has pass'd the sad adieu,
+ In thought we love to dwell awhile.
+
+Then with keen eye, and beating heart,
+ The anxious mind still seeks relief
+From those who can the tale impart,
+ How pass their day, in joy or grief.
+
+If haply health and fortune bless,
+ We feel as if on us they shone;
+If sickness and if sorrow press,
+ Then feeling makes their woes our own.
+
+'Twas thus of Mira oft I thought,
+ Oft dwelt upon the scenes she grac'd:
+Her form in beauty's mould was wrought,
+ Her mind the seat of sense and taste.
+
+Long, hov'ring o'er her fleeting breath,
+ Love kept his watch in silent gloom;
+He saw her meekly yield to Death,
+ And knelt a mourner at her tomb.
+
+When the night-breeze shall softly blow,
+ When the bright moon upon the flood
+Shall spread her beams (a silv'ry show),
+ And dark be many a waving wood,--
+
+When, dimly[A] seen, in robes of white,
+ A mournful train along the grove
+Shall bear the lamp of sacred light,
+ To deck the turf of those they love,--
+
+Then shall the wood-dove quit its bow'r,
+ And seek the spot were she is laid;
+Its wild and mournful notes shall pour
+ A requiem to her hallow'd shade.
+
+And Friendship oft shall raise the veil
+ Time shall have drawn o'er pleasures past,
+And Fancy shall repeat the tale
+ Of happy hours, too sweet to last!
+
+But when she mourns o'er Mira's bier,
+ And when the fond illusion ends,
+Oh! then shall fall the genuine tear
+ That drops for dear departed friends!
+
+[Footnote A: Mr. Hodges, in his Travels in India, page 28, mentions,
+that between Banglepoor and Mobgheir, it is the custom of the women of
+the family to attend the tombs of their friends after sun-set; and
+observes, "it is both affecting and curious to see them proceeding in
+groups, carrying lamps in their hands, which they place at the head of
+the tomb."]
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+TO MISS C.
+
+_On her leaving the Country_.
+
+
+Since Friendship soon must bid a fond adieu,
+And, parting, wish your charms she never knew,
+Dear Laura hear one genuine thought express'd,
+Warm from the heart, and to the heart address'd:--
+Much do I wish you all your soul holds dear,
+To sooth and sweeten ev'ry trouble here;
+But heav'n has yielded such an ample store,
+You cannot ask, nor can I wish you, more;
+Bless'd with a sister's love, whose gentle mind,
+Still pure tho' polish'd, virtuous and refin'd,
+Will aid your tend'rer years and innocence
+Beneath the shelter of her riper sense.
+Charm'd with the bright example may you move,
+And, loving, richly copy what you love.
+Adieu! and blame not if an artless pray'r
+Should, self-directed, ask one moment's care:--
+When years and absence shall their shade extend,
+Reflect who sighs adieu, and call him--friend.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+TO A ROBIN.
+
+_Written during a severe Winter_.
+
+
+Why, trembling, silent, wand'rer! why,
+From me and Pity do you fly?
+Your little heart against your plumes
+Beats hard--ah! dreary are these glooms!
+Famine has chok'd the note of joy
+That charm'd the roving shepherd-boy.
+Why, wand'rer, do you look so shy?
+And why, when I approach you, fly?
+The crumbs which at your feet I strew
+Are only meant to nourish you;
+They are not thrown with base decoy,
+To rob you of one hour of joy.
+Come, follow to my silent mill,
+That stands beneath yon snow-clad hill;
+There will I house your trembling form,
+There shall your shiv'ring breast be warm:
+And, when your little heart grows strong,
+I'll ask you for your simple song;
+And, when you will not tarry more,
+Open shall be my wicket-door;
+And freely, when you chirp "adieu,"
+I'll wish you well, sweet warbler! too;
+I'll wish you many a summer-hour
+On top of tree, or abbey-tow'r.
+When Spring her wasted form retrieves,
+And gives your little roof its leaves,
+May you (a happy lover) find
+A kindred partner to your mind:
+And when, amid the tangled spray,
+The sun shall shoot a parting ray,
+May all within your mossy nest
+Be safe, be merry, and be blest.
+
+
+
+
+LINES TO DELIA,
+
+ON HER WEARING A MUSLIN VEIL.
+
+
+Say, Delia, why, in muslin shade,
+ Ah! say, dost thou conceal those eyes?
+Such little stars were never made,
+ I'm sure, to shine thro' misty skies.
+
+Say, are they wrapt in so much shade,
+ That they may more successful rise,
+Starting from such soft ambuscade,
+ To catch and kill us by surprise?
+
+Or, of their various pow'rs afraid,
+ Is it in mercy to our sighs,
+Lest love, o'er many a heart betray'd,
+ Should sob "a faithful vot'ry dies"?
+
+Then, oh! remove the envious shade;
+ Let others wear, who want, disguise:
+We all had sooner die, sweet maid,
+ To see, than live without, those eyes.
+
+
+
+
+VERSES
+
+TO THE TOMB OF A FRIEND.
+
+
+Dearer to me, thou pile of dust!
+ Tho' with the wild flow'r simply crown'd,
+Than the vast dome or beauteous bust,
+ By genius form'd, by wit renown'd.
+
+Wave, thou wild flow'r! for ever wave,
+ O'er my lov'd relic of delight;
+My tears shall bathe her green-rob'd grave
+ More than the dews of heav'n by night.
+
+Methinks my Delia bids me go,
+ Says, "Florio, dry that fruitless tear!
+Feed not a wild flow'r with thy woe,
+ Thy long-lov'd Delia is not here.
+
+"No drop of feeling from her eye
+ Now starts to hear thy sorrows speak;
+And, did thy bosom know one joy,
+ No smile would bloom upon her cheek.
+
+"Pale, wan, and torpid, droops that cheek,
+ Whereon thy lip impress'd its red;
+Those eyes, which Florio taught to speak,
+ Unnotic'd close amid the dead!"
+
+True, true, too idly mourns this heart;
+ Why, Mem'ry, dost thou paint the past?
+Why say you saw my Delia part,
+ Still press'd, still lov'd her, to the last?
+
+Then, thou wild flow'r, for ever wave!
+ To thee this parting tear is given;
+The sigh I offer at her grave
+ Shall reach my sainted love in heaven!
+
+
+
+
+TIME AND THE LOVER.
+
+
+Oh, Time! thy merits who can know?
+ Thy real nature who discover?
+The absent lover calls thee slow,--
+ "Too rapid," says the happy lover.
+
+With bloom thy cheeks are now refin'd,
+ Now to thine eye the tear is given;
+At once too cruel and too kind,--
+ A little hell, a little heaven.
+
+Go then, thou charming myst'ry, go!--
+ Yes, tho' thou often dost amuse me,
+Tho' many a joy to thee I owe,
+ At once I thank thee and abuse thee.
+
+
+
+
+A ROUNDELAY.
+
+
+Wide thro' the azure blue and bright
+Serenely floats the lamp of night;
+The sleeping waves forget to move,
+And silent is the cedar grove;
+Each breeze suspended seems to say--
+"Now, Leline, for thy Roundelay!"
+
+My Delia's lids are clos'd in rest;
+Ah! were her pillow but my breast!
+Go, dreams! one gentle word impart,
+In whispers place me by her heart;
+While near her door I'll fondly stray,
+And sooth her with my Roundelay.
+
+But, ah! the Night draws in her shade,
+And glimm'ring stars reluctant fade:
+Yet sleep, my love! nor may'st thou feel
+The pangs which griefs like mine reveal:
+Adieu! for Morning's on his way,
+And bids me close my Roundelay.
+
+
+
+
+FAREWELL LINES
+
+TO
+
+_BRISTOL HOT WELLS_.
+
+
+Bristol! in vain thy rocks attempt the sky,
+ The wild woods waving on their giddy brow;
+And vainly, devious Avon! vainly sigh
+ Thy waters, winding thro' the vales below;--
+
+In vain, upon thy glassy bosom borne,
+ Th' expected vessel proudly glides along,
+While, 'mid thy echoes, at the break of morn
+ Is heard the homeward ship-boy's happy song;--
+
+For, ah! amid thy sweet romantic shade,
+ By Friendship led, fair drooping Beauty moves;
+Thy hallow'd cup of health affords no aid,
+ Nor charm thy birds, that chant their woodland loves.
+
+Each morn I view her thro' thy wave-girt grove,
+ Her white robe flutt'ring round her sinking form;
+O'er the sweet ruin shine those eyes of love,
+ As bright stars beaming thro' a midnight storm.
+
+Here sorrowing Love seeks a sequester'd bow'r.
+ Calls on thy spring to calm his troubled breast;
+Bright Hope alights not on his pensive hour,
+ Nor can thy favour'd fountains yield him rest.
+
+Despair across his joys now intervenes,
+ And sternly bids the little cherub fly;
+While his eyes close amid thy beauteous scenes.
+ His last sighs bless the form that bids him die.
+
+Farewell, then, Bristol! thou canst yield no joy,
+ Thy woods look darken'd with funereal gloom,
+Sickness and Sorrow on thy green banks sigh,
+ And all thy form is but a beauteous tomb.
+
+Ah! may each future suff'rer, hov'ring near,
+ Rais'd by thy genial wave, delighted view
+Returning joy and health, supremely dear,
+ Long lost to him who sadly sighs adieu!
+
+
+
+
+A SONG.
+
+
+These shades were made for Love alone,--
+ Here only smiles and kisses sweet
+Shall play around his flow'ry throne,
+ And doves shall sentinel the seat.
+
+Come, Delia! 'tis a genial day;
+ It bids us to his bow'r repair:--
+"But what will little Cupid say?"--
+ "Say! sweet?--why, give a welcome there."
+
+There not a tell-tale beam shall peep
+ Upon thy beauty's rich display,--
+There not a breeze shall dare to sweep
+ The leaves, to whisper what we say.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+ON LADY W---- APPEARING AT THE EXHIBITION.
+
+
+When lovely Delphine sought the crowded scene,
+ The painter's mimic pow'r no longer mov'd;
+All turn'd to gaze upon her beauteous mien,
+ None envied her, for, as they look'd, they lov'd.
+
+Amid the proud display of forms so fair,
+ Of each fine tint the pencil can impart,
+Nature with rapture seem'd to lead her there,
+ To prove how she could triumph over Art.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+WRITTEN AT BRIGHTON.
+
+
+From Mirth's bright circle, from the giddy throng,
+ How sweet it is to steal away at eve,
+To listen to the homeward fisher's song,
+ Whilst dark the waters of the ocean heave;--
+
+And on the sloping beach to bear the spray
+ Dash 'gainst some hoary vessel's broken side;
+Whilst, far illumin'd by the parting ray,
+ The distant sail is faintly seen to glide.
+
+Yes, 'tis Reflection's chosen hour; for then,
+ With pensive pleasure mingling o'er the scene,
+Th' erratic mind treads over life again,
+ And gazes on the past with eye serene.
+
+Those stormy passions which bedimm'd the soul,
+ That oft have bid the joys it treasur'd fly,
+Now, like th' unruffled waves of Ocean, roll
+ With gentle lapse--their only sound a sigh.
+
+The galling wrong no longer knits the brow,
+ Ambition feels the folly of her aim;
+And Pity, from the heart expanding, now
+ Pants to extend relief to ev'ry claim.
+
+Thus, as I sit beside the murm'ring sea,
+ And o'er its darkness trace light's parting streak,
+I feel, O Nature! that serenity
+ Which vainly poetry like mine can speak!
+
+O'er the drear tract of Time, Remembrance views
+ Some dear, some long-departed, pleasure gleam;--
+So o'er the dark expanse the eye pursues
+ Upon the wat'ry edge a transient beam.
+
+The spot fraternal love has sacred made,
+ Solemn, yet sweet, like groves in twilight gloom,
+Mem'ry revisits, and beneath its shade
+ Faintly it sees each faded joy re-bloom.
+
+By Fancy led, from Death's cold bed of stone,
+ Lovely, tho' wan, what cherish'd form appears?
+Oh! gentle Anna[A]! at thy name alone,
+ Genius, and Grace, and Virtue, smile in tears.
+
+Half-wrapp'd in mist I see thy figure move,
+ O'er thy pale cheek appears its wonted smile;
+With lunar lustre beam those looks of love,
+ That once could life of ev'ry care beguile:
+
+Faintly I hear thy angel-voice again;
+ There's music in the sweet and dying sound;
+Like Philomela's soft and echo'd strain,
+ It spreads a soothing consolation round.
+
+Adieu, bless'd shade!--Imagination roves
+ To distant regions, o'er th' Atlantic wave;
+Ah! not to genial skies, or fragrant groves,
+ To drop a tear upon a kindred grave.
+
+Hard was thy fate, Eliza[B]!--It was thine,
+ Tho' wit thy mind, tho' beauty grac'd thy form,
+Behind Affliction's weeping cloud to shine,
+ With star-like radiance, in a night of storm.
+
+Fierce from the sun the fiery fever flew,
+ And bade the burning sand become thy tomb!
+O'er thee no willow drops its mourning dew,
+ Nor spotless lilies o'er thy bosom bloom!
+
+Oh! when we stood around our brother's bier,
+ And wept in life's full bloom to see him torn,
+Ah! little did ye think that such a tear
+ As then ye shed so soon your fate would mourn.
+
+Farewell, dear shades! accept this mournful song,
+ At once the tribute of my grief and love;
+Fain would it try your virtues to prolong,
+ Here priz'd and honour'd, and now bless'd above.
+
+[Footnote A: Mrs. Hodges, a sister of the author.]
+
+[Footnote B: Mrs Fountaine, another sister of the author, who
+accompanied her husband to Africa, and died at the Government-house,
+in one of the British settlements on that coast, where she survived
+but a short time the death of three of her children.]
+
+
+
+
+ECHO.
+
+
+Echo! thou sweet enchantress of the grove!
+Oh! cease to answer to the tones of love;
+Or teach my Delia in thine art divine,
+Thou loveliest nymph! to hear and answer mine!
+
+
+
+
+OCCASIONAL LINES
+
+_Repeated at an elegant Entertainment_
+
+GIVEN BY LIEUTENANT-COLONEL D---- TO HIS FRIENDS
+
+IN THE RUINS OF BERRY CASTLE, DEVONSHIRE.[A]
+
+
+By your permission, Ladies! I address ye,
+And for the boon you grant, my Muse shall bless ye.
+I do not mean in solemn verse to tell
+What fate the race of Pomeroy befell;
+To trace the castle-story of each year,
+To learn how many owls have hooted here;
+What was the weight of stone, which form'd this pile,
+Will on your lovely cheeks awake no smile:
+Such antiquarian sermons suit not me,
+Nor any soul who loves festivity.
+Past times I heed not; be the present hour
+In life, while yet it blooms, my chosen flow'r,
+For well I know, what Time cannot disown,
+Amidst this mossy pile of mould'ring stone,
+That Hospitality was never seen
+To spread more social joy upon the green;
+Or, when its noble and capacious hall
+Rang with the gambol gay, or graceful ball,
+More beauty never charm'd its ancient beaux
+Than what its honour'd ruins now enclose.
+Thanks to the clouds, which from the soaking show'r
+Preserve the vot'ries of the present hour;
+For, strange to tell, beneath the chilling storm,
+Lately the rose reclin'd her frozen form;
+Yet since, beneath the favour of the weather,
+We are (a laughing group) conven'd together,
+Pray let the Muse pursue her merry route,
+To shew what pass'd before we all set out.
+To some fair damsel, who, intent to charm,
+Declares she thinks the weather fine and warm,
+Such words as these address her trembling ear--
+"I really think we shall have rain, my dear;
+Pray do not go, my love," cries soft mama;
+"You shall not go, that's flat," cries stern papa.
+A lucky sunbeam shines on the discourse,
+The parents soften, and Miss mounts her horse.
+Each tickled with some laugh-inspiring notion,
+Behold the jocund party all in motion:
+Some by a rattling buggy are befriended,
+Some mount the cart--but not to be suspended.
+The mourning-coach[B] is wisely counter-order'd
+(The very thought on impious rashness border'd),
+Because the luckless vehicle, one night,
+Put all its merry mourners in a fright,
+Who, to conduct them to the masquerade,
+Sought from its crazy wheels their moving aid.
+Us'd to a soleme pace, the creaking load
+Bounded unwillingly along the road;
+Down came the whole--oh! what a sight was there!
+O'er a blind Fiddler roll'd a Flow'r-Nymph fair;
+A glitt'ring Spaniard, who had lost his nose,
+Roar'd out, "Oh! d--n it, take away your toes;"
+A blooming Nun fell plump upon a Jew,
+Still to the good old cause of traffic true,
+Buried in clothes, exclaim'd the son of barter,
+"Got blesh my shoul! you'll shell this pretty garter?"
+Here let me pause;--the Muse, in sad affright,
+Turns from the dire disasters of that night;
+Quite panic-struck she drops her trembling plumes,
+And thus a moralizing theme assumes:--
+Know, gentle Ladies, once these shapeless walls,
+O'er whose grey wreck the shading ivy crawls,
+Compos'd a graceful mansion, whose fair mould
+Led from the road the trav'ller, to behold.
+Oft, when the morning ting'd the redd'ning skies,
+Far off the spiral smoke was seen to rise;
+At noon the hospitable board was spread,
+Then nappy ale made light the weary head;
+And when grey eve appear'd, in shadows damp,
+Each casement glitter'd with th' enliv'ning lamp;
+Here the laugh titter'd, there the lute of Love
+Fill'd with its melody the moon-light grove:
+All, all are fled!--Time ruthless stalks around,
+And bends the crumbling ruin to the ground:
+Time, Ladies, too (I know you do not like him,
+And, if a fan could end him, you would strike him),
+Will with as little gallantry devour
+From your fair faces their bewitching pow'r;
+Then, like these ruins, beauteous in decay,
+Still shall you charm, and men shall still obey:
+Then, with remembrance soft, and tender smile,
+Perchance you'll think upon this mossy pile;
+And, with a starting tear of joy declare,
+"Oh! how we laugh'd, how merry were we there!"
+
+[Footnote A: The manor of Berry was given by William the Conqueror to
+one of his Normans, Ralph de la Pomerai, who built on it the castle
+which still bears his name, and in whose family it continued till the
+reign of Edward VI. when it was sold by Sir Thomas Pomeroy to Edward
+Seymour, Duke of Somerset, from whom it has descended to the present
+Duke.
+
+The castle is seated upon a rock, which rises almost perpendicularly
+from a narrow valley; through this valley winds a small stream of
+water, which drives the mill seen through the foliage of the
+surrounding woods from the turrets of the castle.
+
+In approaching the castle from the south, the path leads down the
+side of a hill through a thick wood; and on the north side of the
+valley, opposite the rock on which the castle stands, is a high ridge,
+partly covered with oak: these hills completely shut in the ruins on
+both sides. The valley stretches a considerable way both to the east
+and west, and opens a view at either end into the adjacent country.
+
+From the ivy-covered ruins of the fortress which now remain, it is
+scarcely possible to say what was its ancient form; but it is most
+generally supposed to have been quadrangular, having only one
+entrance, a large double portcullis, at the west end of the southern
+front, turreted and embattled, as was the whole of the front, with a
+tower at its eastern end, corresponding with that on the west. This
+front, with its gateway and turrets, are perhaps the only remains of
+the original structure. Winding steps, now almost worn away, lead to
+what once was a chapel, over the portcullis, and thence to the top of
+the turrets.
+
+In more modern times a magnificent building was erected within the
+walls of the castle by the Seymour family; but, although upwards of
+L20,000 were said to have been expended on it, it was never finished,
+and now the whole forms one common ruin, which, as it totters on it
+base, the spectator contemplates with awe, while he sighs over the
+remains of fallen grandeur.]
+
+[Footnote B: A party from Totness went to Lord Courtenay's masquerade
+in this way, there being no other conveyance to be had, and met with
+the ridiculous accident here alluded to.]
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+TO SIR ROBERT KER PORTER,
+
+KNIGHT OF THE IMPERIAL ORDER OF ST. JOACHIM,
+
+_Upon his approaching Nuptials with the Princess Shebatoff_.
+
+
+To save the credit of the dame,
+ Poets and painters all agree
+ That Mistress Fortune cannot see,
+And on her bandage cast the blame;
+
+When honours on th' unworthy wait,
+ When riches to the wealthy flow,
+ When high desert, oppress'd by woe,
+Is left to struggle on with Fate.
+
+But, Porter! when on thee she smil'd,
+ The fillet from her eyes she mov'd,
+ To view the merit all approv'd--
+A mind inform'd, a heart unsoil'd.
+
+She saw thy virtues bright appear;
+ A son that mothers seldom know,
+ A brother with affection's glow,
+The soldier brave[A], the friend sincere.
+
+With honours then thy name she grac'd,
+ And call'd on Love to bless thy arms
+ With princely rank, with Virtue's charms,
+And all the pow'rs of wit and taste.
+
+[Footnote A: Sir R.K. Porter was attached to the staff in the late
+campaign in Spain, and was in nearly every engagement with the enemy.]
+
+
+
+
+THE FOLLOWING LINES IN FRENCH,
+
+_Are inscribed upon the Pedestal of a Statue of Cupid_,
+
+IN A GARDEN AT UTRECHT.
+
+
+_ORIGINAL_.
+
+ N'offrant qu'un coeur a la Beaute,
+ Nud comme la Verite,
+ Sans armes comme l'Innocence,
+ Sans ailes comme la Constance,
+ Tel fut l'Amour dans le siecle d'or,
+On ne le trouve plus, quoiqu'on le cherche encore.
+
+
+_TRANSLATION_.
+
+To Beauty give your heart, your sighs,
+No other off'ring will she prize;
+As Truth should unadorn'd appear,
+Behold! the god is naked here!
+Like Innocence, he has no arms
+But those of sweet, of native, charms;
+No wish or pow'r has he to fly,
+Like thy pure spirit, Constancy!
+Such in the golden age was Love;
+But now, oh! whither does he rove?
+
+
+
+
+THE RHINGAU SONG.
+
+This is the favourite Song with the Inhabitants of the vine-covered
+Region of the Rhingau, an extensive District along the Banks of the
+Rhine, where the finest Wines are produced.
+
+
+_ORIGINAL_.
+
+Bekrantzt mit laub den liebe vollen becher,
+ Und trinkt ihn froelich leer;
+In Gauz Europa ihr herren zecher,
+ Ist solch, ein wein micht mehr.
+
+Ihn bringt das vaterland aus seiner fulle,
+ Wie waer er sonst so gut?
+Wie waer er sonst so edel, stille,
+ Und doch voll kraft und muth?
+
+Am Rhein, am Rhein, da wachsen unsre reben:
+ Gesegnet sey der Rhein!
+Da wachsen sie am ufer hin, und geben
+ Uns diesen labe wein.
+
+So trinkt ihn dann, und lasst uns alle wege
+ Uns freun, und froelich seyn;
+Und wuesten wir, wo jemand traurig laege,
+ Wir gaben ihm den wein.
+
+
+_TRANSLATION_.
+
+With wine-leaves crown the jovial cup,
+ For, search all Europe round,
+You'll say, as pleas'd you drink it up,
+ Such wine was never found.
+ Such wine, &c.
+
+Our fathers' land this vine supplies;
+ What soil can e'er produce
+But this, tho' warm'd with genial skies,
+ Such mild, such gen'rous juice?
+ Such mild, &c.
+
+Then shall the Rhine our smiles receive,
+ For on its banks alone
+Can e'er be found a wine to give
+ The soul its proper tone.
+ The soul, &c.
+
+Come, put the jovial cup around,
+ Our joys it will enhance,
+If any one is mournful found,
+ One sip shall make him dance.
+ One sip, &c.
+
+
+
+
+LINES TO HEALTH,
+
+_Upon the Recovery of a Friend from a dangerous Illness_.
+
+
+Sweet guardian of the rosy cheek!
+ Whene'er to thee I raise my hands
+Upon the mountain's breezy peak,
+ Or on the yellow winding sands,
+
+If thou hast deign'd, by Pity mov'd,
+ This fev'rish phantom to prolong,
+I've touch'd my lute, for ever lov'd,
+ And bless'd thee with its earliest song!
+
+And oh! if in thy gentle ear
+ Its simple notes have sounded sweet,
+May the soft breeze, to thee so dear,
+ Now bear them to thy rose-wreath'd seat!
+
+For thou hast dried the dew of grief,
+ And Friendship feels new ecstacy:
+To Pollio thou hast stretch'd relief,
+ And, raising him, hast cherish'd me.
+
+So, whilst some treasur'd plant receives
+ Th' admiring florist's partial show'r,
+The drops that tremble from its leaves
+ Oft feed some near uncultur'd flow'r.
+
+For late connubial Fondness hung
+ Mute o'er the couch where Pollio lay;
+Love, Hope, and Sorrow, fixed her tongue,
+ Thro' sable night till morning grey.
+
+There, too, by drooping Pollio's side,
+ Stood Modesty, a mourner meek,
+Whilst Genius, mov'd by grief and pride,
+ Increas'd the blush which grac'd her cheek;
+
+For much the maiden he reprov'd
+ For having spread her veil of snow
+Upon the mind he form'd and lov'd,
+ Till she was seen to mourn it too.
+
+O Health! when thou art fled, how vain
+ The witchery of earth and skies,
+Love's look, or music's sweetest strain,
+ Or Ocean's softest lullabies!
+
+Oh! ever hover near his bow'r,
+ There let thy fav'rite sylphs repair;
+Fence it with ev'ry sweet-lipp'd flow'r,
+ That Sickness find no entrance there.
+
+So shall his lyre, untouch'd so long,
+ The tone with which it charm'd regain;
+Sweet spirit! thou shall teach his song,
+ With mine, to breathe the grateful strain.
+
+
+
+
+AN IRISH SONG
+
+
+Poor Molly O'Flannagan (Lord rest her soul!)
+Drank so deeply of whiskey, 'twas thought she would die;
+Her fond lover, Pat, from her _nate_ cabin stole,
+And stepp'd into Dublin to buy her a pie.
+ Oh! poor Molly O'Flannagan!
+
+Tho' chin-deep in sorrow, yet fun he lov'd well;
+A pie-man pass'd near, crying "Pies" at his _aise_;
+"Here are pies of all sorts."--"Oh! if all sorts you sell,
+Then a _twopenny magpie_ for me, if you _plaise_!"
+ Oh! poor Molly O'Flannagan!
+
+
+
+
+THE SONG OF GRIEF
+
+
+By the walk of the willows I pour'd out my theme,
+The breath of the evening scarce dimpled the stream;
+By the waters I stood, like an image of Woe,
+And my tears, like the tide, seem'd to tremble and flow.
+
+Ye green scatter'd reeds, that half lean to the wave,
+In your plaintive, your musical, sighs, could ye save
+But one note of my charmer, to soften my doom,
+I would stay till these willows should arch me a tomb!
+
+For ye know, when I pour'd out my soul on the lute,
+How she hung down her head, so expressively mute!
+From my hand she would take it, still breathing my pain;
+She would touch it--return it--and smile at the strain.
+
+Ye wild blooming flow'rs, that enamel this brink,
+Like me could ye feel, and like me could ye think,
+How sadly would droop ev'ry beautiful leaf!
+How soon would your sweetness be wasted with grief!
+
+She is gone, in a cloud, like the star of the night!
+She has left me, heart-broken, to mourn at her flight,--
+To think of the hours she endear'd by her love.
+To sigh till again I shall join her above!
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+UPON HEARING MISS ---- SING AT AN EVENING PARTY.
+
+THE NIGHTINGALE'S COMPLAINT.
+
+
+The Moon had bespangled the murmuring wave,
+The dew-drop had moisten'd the moss of the cave,
+The summer night-breeze, like a sigh, was just heard,
+When thus flow'd the strains of the dark-warbling bird:
+
+"I hear a strange melody breathe thro' the grove,
+Now swelling with joy, and now melting with love;
+Tho' sweet is the sound, yet it should not invade,
+Unbidden, my lonely dominion of shade.
+
+"As long as the stars that now twinkle shall shine,
+This willow's my throne, and all nature is mine:
+Perchance 'tis the breeze on your desolate lute;
+Its strings are now sighing, so long that were mute.
+
+"Ah! no, silly bird that I am! shall I grieve?
+Shall Envy alarm, and shall Folly deceive?
+'Tis the voice of Eliza! I hear it again,
+Enraptur'd I hear it, nor envy the strain."
+Then Philomel flutter'd with tremulous wing
+To Eliza--more happy to listen than sing!
+
+
+
+
+LOVE AND THE SPRING-FLOWER.
+
+
+'Tis pity, ev'ry maiden knows,
+Just as she cools, Love warmer grows;
+But, if the chill be too severe,
+Trust me, he'll wither in a tear.
+
+Thus will the spring-flow'r bud and blow,
+Wrapp'd round in many a fold of snow;
+But, if an ice-wind pierce the sky,
+'Twill drop upon its bed, and die!
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+UPON THE REV. MR. C----'S IMPROMPTU COMPOSITIONS
+
+OF SOME OF BOWLES'S SONNETS.
+
+
+No sweeter verse did e'er inspire
+A kindred Muse with all its fire;
+Nor sweeter strains could Music lend,
+To sooth the sorrows of her friend.
+
+Associate Genius bids them flow
+With sounds that give a charm to woe;
+We weep as tho' it were our own,
+As if our hearts were play'd upon.
+
+
+
+
+SONNET.
+
+
+The leaves are flutter'd by no tell-tale gales,
+ Clear melts the azure in the rosy west,
+Scarce heard, the river winds along the vales,
+ And Eve has lull'd the vocal grove to rest.
+
+To yon thick elms, my Delia! let us rove,
+ As slow the glories of the day retire;
+There to thy lute breathe dulcet notes of love,
+ While thro' the vale they linger and expire.
+
+Those honey'd tones, that melt upon the tongue,--
+ Thy looks, serener than the scenes I sing,--
+Thy chaste desires, which angels might have sung,
+ Alone can quiet in this bosom bring,
+Which burns for thee, and, kindled by thine eyes,
+ Bears a pure flame--the flame that never dies!
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+WRITTEN AT KILKENNY,
+
+ON THE THEATRICALS OF THAT CITY.
+
+
+Amid the ruins of monastic gloom,
+ Where Nore's meand'ring waters wind along,
+Genius and Wealth have rais'd the tasteful dome,
+ Yet not alone for Fashion's brilliant throng;--
+
+In Virtue's cause they take a noble aim;
+ 'Tis theirs in sweetest harmony to blend
+Wit with Compassion, Sympathy with Fame,
+ Pleasure the means, Beneficence the end[A].
+
+There, if on Beauty's cheek the tear appears
+ (Form'd by the mournful Muse's mimic sigh),
+Fast as it falls, a kindred drop it bears,
+ More sadly shed from genuine Misery.
+
+Nor, if the laughter-loving Nymph delight,
+ Does the reviving transport perish there;
+Still, still, with Pity's radiance doubly bright,
+ Its smiles shed sunshine on the cheek of Care.
+
+So, if Pomona's golden fruit descend,
+ Shook by some breeze, into the lake below,
+Quick will the dimple, which it forms, extend,
+ Till all around the joyous circles flow.
+
+Bless'd be the liberal mind, th' undaunted zeal,
+ That bade loud Folly from the Stage retire;
+That teach us how to think, and how to feel,
+ And once again our godlike Bard admire!
+
+Thus aided, see his rescued genius spring;
+ Again he pours the phrenzy of his song;
+With EV'RY FEATHER[B] in his eagle wing,
+ Once more in majesty he soars along.
+
+Oft, deck'd with smiles, his spirit shall explore,
+ Erin! thy beauteous vales and classic ground;
+And ev'ry ripple of thy winding Nore
+ To him shall sweetly as his Avon's sound.
+
+_22d Oct. 1805_.
+
+[Footnote A: The theatricals of Kilkenny are supported by gentlemen of
+rank and fashion in Ireland, and the profits are applied to charitable
+purposes.]
+
+[Footnote B: Alluding to several fine passages of Shakspeare, which
+have been long omitted in representation, but restored at the
+theatricals of Kilkenny.]
+
+
+
+
+EPIGRAM,
+
+UPON SEEING THE DILAPIDATED STATE OF
+
+_BETHLEM HOSPITAL_.
+
+
+Well with the _purpose_ does the _place_ agree;
+For e'en the very house is _crack'd_, you see.
+
+
+
+
+EPIGRAM
+
+ON THE GRAVE OF ROBESPIERRE.
+
+
+_ORIGINAL_.
+
+Passant, ne pleure point son sort;
+Car, s'il vivait, tu serais mort.
+
+
+_TRANSLATION_.
+
+Nay, passenger, don't mourn his lot;
+If he had liv'd, why you had not.
+
+
+
+
+AN INDIAN MASSACRE-SONG.
+
+
+See, the waves clasp the Sun, as he sinks from our sight,
+And Despair sullen rides on the wings of the night;
+Lo! he comes, and reproaches our arms with delay,--
+Then arise, let us go where Revenge points the way!
+
+In the deed should we fall, (since who'll e'er breathe a slave?)
+Our free souls shall repose in the realms of the brave;
+In the song we shall live, and fresh heroes inspire,
+While the son shall exult in the fate of his sire.
+
+Then know, ye white race! ye too long shake the rod;
+By this arm ye shall soon be dismiss'd to your God!
+Then demand, if he bade ye torment, why he gave
+All the soul of a man to the breast of a slave?
+
+Then prepare; know our hatchets atone for our wrong,
+And our hearts, like our hatchets, are stubborn and strong:
+Sleep your last! ye no more shall the morning survey,
+Nor shall sorrow arise with the break of the day.
+
+Yes, remember the lashes that pierc'd thro' our flesh!
+See the wounds of our fathers; they open afresh!
+In the winds, hark! blue Avrin attends to our call;
+I, your chief, will be first in your glories, or fall!
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+WRITTEN ON DELIA, LISTENING TO HER CANARY-BIRD.
+
+
+When thoughtless Delia unconcern'd surveys
+ Her plumy captive, as he leans to sing,
+Lo! while she smiles, the fascination stays
+ The little heaven of its airy wing.
+
+Ah! so she tastes the sorrows I impart,
+ Smiles at the sound, but never feels my pain;
+And many a glance deludes my captive heart
+ To sigh in numbers, tho' I sigh in vain!
+
+
+
+
+THE HECTIC.
+
+
+Upon the breezy cliff's impending brow,
+ With trembling step, the Hectic paus'd awhile;
+As round his wasted form the sea-breeze blew,
+ His flush'd cheek brighten'd with a transient smile:
+
+Refresh'd and cherish'd by its balmy breath,
+ He dreamt of future bliss, of years to come;
+Whilst, with a look of woe, the spectre, Death,
+ Oft shook his head, and pointed to his tomb.
+
+Such sounds as these escap'd his lab'ring breast:--
+ "Sweet Health! thou wilt revisit this sad frame;
+Slumber shall bid these aching eyelids rest,
+ And I shall live for love, perchance for fame."
+Ah! poor enthusiast!--in the day's decline
+A mournful knell was heard, and it was thine!
+
+
+
+
+VERSES TO MISS M. G----,
+
+ACCOMPANIED WITH A DRIED HELIOTROPE,
+
+_Which she had presented to the Author a Year before_.
+
+
+Time, since thou gav'st this flow'r to me,
+ Has often turn'd his glass of sand;
+Perchance 'tis now unknown to thee
+ That once its breath perfum'd thy hand.
+
+Oh, lovely maid! that thou may'st see
+ How much thy gifts my care engage,
+I've sent the cherish'd flow'r to thee
+ Without a blemish, but from age.
+
+Kiss but its leaves;--one kiss from thee,
+ And all its sweetness 'twill regain;
+And, if I live in memory
+ Thus honour'd, send it back again!
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+TO MRS. B----, AT BRISTOL HOT WELLS
+
+
+Tho' nought, amid these darkened groves,
+ But various groups of death appear,
+Scar'd at the sight, tho' fly the Loves,
+ And Sickness saddens all the year,
+
+Yet, Clara, where you deign to stay,
+ Your sense and manners charm us so,
+E'en sick'ning Sorrow's self looks gay,
+ And smiles amid the wreck of woe.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+TO HER ROYAL HIGHNESS THE PRINCESS ELIZABETH,
+
+UPON THE PRINTS
+
+_From her beautiful Drawings of the Birth and Triumph of Cupid_.
+
+
+Once, for a palace, Painting left her grove,
+ And taught her royal fav'rite's hand to trace
+A beauteous maiden's tale of little Love,
+ His silken wings, soft limbs, and laughing face!
+
+Then Nature wept o'er each expressive line,
+ To think the sweet creation so confin'd,
+That such a boy, so fair, and so divine,
+ Was but the playful prattler of her mind;
+
+And had he near the royal easel flown,
+ And seen the features of this mimic brother,
+He would have known the portrait for his own,
+ And claim'd the beauteous painter for his mother.
+
+
+
+
+EPITAPH
+
+TO THE MEMORY OF A WORTHY MAN,
+
+_THE REV. MR. SLEEP_,
+
+CURATE OF KINGSWEAR CHURCH, DEVON,
+
+_Whose devotional Elocution was remarkably impregnated with
+soporific Qualities_.
+
+
+Reader! since Parson Sleep is gone,
+And lies beneath yon humble stone,
+Whene'er to Kingswear Church we go,
+ Holy the sabbath-day to keep
+(Indeed 'tis right it should be so),
+ We never more shall go to _sleep_.
+
+
+
+
+LINES,
+
+SUPPOSED TO BE WRITTEN BY A FEMALE FRIEND,
+
+_Upon an Infant recommended to her Care by its dying Mother_.
+
+
+Bless'd be thy slumbers, little love!
+ Unconscious of the ills so near;
+May no rude noise thy dreams remote,
+ Or prompt the artless early tear;--
+
+For she who gave thee life is gone,
+ Whose trust it was thy life to rear,
+Now in the cold and mould'ring stone
+ Calls for that artless early tear.
+
+Sleep on, thou little dreamer! sleep;
+ For, long as I shall tarry here,
+I'll soothe thee; thou shalt never weep,
+ Tho' flows for thee the tend'rest tear.
+
+Then be thy gentle visions blest,
+ Nor e'er thy bosom know that fear,
+Which thro' the night disturbs my rest,
+ And prompts Affection's trembling tear.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+ON THE CALEDONIAN HARP BEING SUCCEEDED
+
+BY THE HIGHLAND BAGPIPES.
+
+
+In days that long have glided by,
+Beneath keen Scotia's weeping sky,
+On many a hill of purple heath,
+In many a gloomy glen beneath,
+The wand'ring Lyrist once was known
+To pour his harp's entrancing tone.
+Then, when the castle's rocky form
+Rose 'mid the dark surrounding storm,
+The Harper had a sacred seat,
+Whence he might breathe his wild notes sweet.
+Oh! then, when many a twinkling star
+Shone in the azure vault afar,
+And mute was ev'ry mountain-bird,
+Soft music from the harp was heard;
+And when the morning's blushes shed
+On hill, or tow'r, their varying red,
+Oh! then the harp was heard to cheer,
+With earliest sound, th' enraptur'd ear;
+Then many a lady fair was known,
+With snowy hand, to wake its tone;
+And infant fingers press'd the string,
+And back recoil'd, to hear it sing.
+Sweet instrument! such was thy pow'r,
+'Twas thine to gladden ev'ry hour;
+The young and old then honour'd thee,
+And smil'd to hear thy melody.
+
+Alas! as Time has turn'd to dust
+The temple fair, the beauteous bust,
+Thou too hast mark'd his frowning brow;
+No Highland echo knows thee now:
+A savage has usurp'd thy place,
+Once fill'd by thee with ev'ry grace;
+Th' inflated Pipe, with swinish drone,
+Calls forth applauses once thine own.
+
+
+
+
+A SONG.
+
+
+When stormy show'rs from Heav'n descend,
+And with their weight the lily bend,
+The Sun will soon his aid bestow,
+And drink the drops that laid it low.
+
+Oh! thus, when sorrow wrings the heart,
+A sigh may rise, a tear may start;
+Pity shall soon the face impress
+With all its looks of happiness.
+
+
+
+
+VERSES
+
+ON AN AUTUMNAL LEAF.
+
+
+Think not, thou pride of Summer's softest strain!
+ Sweet dress of Nature, in her virgin bloom!
+That thou hast flutter'd to the breeze in vain,
+ Or unlamented found thy native tomb.
+
+The Muse, who sought thee in the whisp'ring shade,
+ When scarce one roving breeze was on the wing,
+With tones of genuine grief beholds thee fade,
+ And asks thy quick return in earliest Spring.
+
+I mark'd the victim of the wintry hour,
+ I heard the winds breathe sad a fun'ral sigh,
+When the lone warbler, from his fav'rite bow'r,
+ Pour'd forth his pensive song to see thee die;--
+
+When, in his little temple, colder grown,
+ He saw its sides of green to yellow grow,
+And mourn'd his little roof, around him blown,
+ Or toss'd in beauteous ruin on the snow;
+
+And vow'd, throughout the dreary day to come,
+ (More sad by far than summer's gloomiest night),
+That not one note should charm the leafless gloom,
+ But silent Sorrow should attend thy flight.
+
+
+
+
+SONG.
+
+THE WORDS ADAPTED TO "THE COSSAKA,"
+
+_One of the most ancient of the Russ Airs_.
+
+
+Has Time a changeling made of thee?
+Oh! no; and thou art all to me:
+He bares the forest, but his pow'rs
+ Impair not love like ours.
+
+Tho' sever'd from each other's sight,
+When once we meet we shall unite,
+As dew-drops down the lily run,
+ And, touching, blend in one.
+
+For thee this bosom learnt to grieve,
+Another never made it heave;
+When present, oh! it was thy throne,
+ And, absent, thine alone.
+
+Then may my trembling pilgrim feet
+In safety find thy lov'd retreat!
+And, if I'm doom'd to drop with care,
+ Still let me perish there!
+
+
+
+
+TO MISS ATKINSON,
+
+ON THE EXTREME DIFFIDENCE WHICH SHE
+
+DISPLAYS TO STRANGERS.
+
+
+Just as a fawn, in forest shade,
+ Trembling to meet th' admiring eye,
+I've seen thee try to hide, sweet maid!
+ Thy charms behind thy modesty.
+
+Thus too I've seen at midnight steal
+ A fleecy cloud before the wind,
+And veil, tho' it could not conceal,
+ The brilliant light that shone behind.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+Upon reading the Journal of a Friend's Tour into Scotland, in which
+the picturesque Scenery and the Character of the People are fairly
+and liberally stated.
+
+
+Much injur'd, Scotia! was thy genuine worth,
+When late the[A] surly Rambler wandered forth
+ In brown[B] surtout, with ragged staff,
+ Enough to make a savage laugh!
+And sent the faithless legend from his hand,
+That Want and Famine scour'd thy bladeless land,
+
+That with thee Nature wore a wrinkled face,
+That not a leaf e'er shed its sylvan grace,
+ But, harden'd by their northern wind,
+ Rude, deceitful, and unkind,
+Thy half-cloth'd sons their oaten cake denied,
+Victims at once of penury and pride.
+
+Happy for thee! a lib'ral Briton here,
+Gentle yet shrewd, tho' learned not severe.
+ Fairly thy merit dares impart,
+ Asserts thy hospitable heart,
+Proves that luxuriance smiles upon thy plains,
+And wit and valour grace thy hardy swains.
+
+[Footnote A: Dr. Johnson, author of the Rambler.]
+[Footnote B: Alluding to his dress, as described by Mr. Boswell.]
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+WRITTEN UPON A HILL,
+
+_On leaving the Country_.
+
+
+Ah! sweet romantic spot, adieu!
+Ere your green fields again I view,
+These looks may change their youthful hue.
+
+Dependence sternly bids me part
+From all that ye, lov'd scenes! impart,
+Far from my treasure and my heart.
+
+Tho' winter shall your bloom invade,
+Fancy may visit ev'ry shade,
+Each bow'r shall kiss the wand'ring maid.
+
+To busier scenes of life I fly,
+Where many smile, where many sigh,
+As Chance, not Worth, turns up the die.
+
+
+
+
+BANKRUPTCY RENDERED EASY.
+
+
+The Cit, relying on his trade,
+Which, like all other things, may fade,
+ Longs for a curricle and villa:
+This Hatchet splendidly supplies,
+The other Cock'ril builds, or buys,
+ To charm himself and Miss Hautilla.
+
+Then swift, O London! he retires,
+To be, from all thy smoke and spires,
+ From Saturday till Sunday, merry:
+On Sunday crowds of friends attend;
+His house and garden some commend,
+ And all admire his port and sherry.
+
+His mistress urg'd him now to play,
+And cut to wealth a shorter way,
+ Now as a bride she heads his table;
+But still our Cit observ'd his time.
+Returning at St. Cripple's chime,
+ At least as near as he was able.
+
+But soon _she_ could not bear the sight
+Of town; for walls with bow'rs unite,
+ As well as smoke with country breezes;
+Without the keenest grief and pride
+_He_ could not quit his _mares_, and _bride_:
+ We yield as soon as passion seizes.
+
+The clock no more his herald prov'd;
+Tuesday, nay Wednesday, morn have mov'd,
+ Ere trembling shopmen saw their master:
+Observing neighbours whisper'd round,
+That ease might do, with plenty crown'd;
+ If not, that ruin came the faster.
+
+His cash grew scarce, his business still,
+At variance were his books and till
+ (For wolves devour when shepherds slumber);
+His creditors around him pour,
+Seize all his horses, household store,
+ And only give him up the lumber!
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+_Written at the Sea-Side in Devonshire_,
+
+IN THE MONTH OF NOVEMBER,
+
+WHEN THE SHIPS FROM NEWFOUNDLAND RETURN.
+
+
+Still Summer lingers on these peaceful shores,
+ Nor yet she quits her rose-erected bow'r;
+Tho' oft in many a dew-drop she explores
+ Her beauties fading in each passing hour!
+
+Tho' Winter's boist'rous child, November, strays
+ Amid those scenes that wak'd the poet's lyre,
+Shakes his green canopy, and loves to raise,
+ Of sapless leaves, an altar for his sire.
+
+Soon shall his wild and stormy sway be o'er;
+ These lovely scenes shall feel his shortest reign;
+And thou, sweet Summer! charming as before,
+ Shall but retire to dress thyself again.
+
+Yet Heaven guides, full provident and kind,
+ With sweet economy, the source of joy,
+From grief extracts some comfort for the mind,
+ And fresh hopes flatter ere the lost annoy.
+
+See where Connubial Love yon rock ascends,
+ To hail each sail, while fav'ring breezes blow;
+There many an hour she o'er the margin bends,
+ Her bosom trembling like the floods below.
+
+Nearer the ocean's graceful burden glides;
+ Cleav'd by its prow, the lines of water yield:
+While adverse mountains, with protective sides,
+ The Heav'n-directed wand'ring seaman shield.
+
+The anchor dropp'd, he springs upon the shore,
+ His wife and children press to meet his kiss;
+Half-told, a thousand things they prattle o'er,
+ And, safe at home, renew their former bliss.
+
+
+
+
+EPIGRAM,
+
+ON WINNING A YOUNG LADY'S MONEY AT CARDS.
+
+
+How fairly Fortune all her gifts imparts;
+We win your money, Ann, and you our hearts.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+WRITTEN IN A FINE WINTER'S DAY,
+
+_At the Shooting-Box of my Friend, W. Cope, Esq_.
+
+NEAR ORPINGTON, KENT.
+
+
+Tho' leafless are the woods, tho' flow'rs no more,
+In beauty blushing, spread their fragrant store,
+Yet still 'tis sweet to quit the crowded scene,
+And rove with Nature, tho' no longer green;
+For Winter bids her winds so softly blow,
+That, cold and famine scorning, even now
+The feather'd warblers still delight the ear,
+And all of Summer, but her leaves, is here.
+Here, on this winding garden's sloping bound,
+'Tis sweet to listen to each rustic sound,
+The distant dog-bark, and the rippling rill,
+Or catch the sparkling of the water-mill.
+The tranquil scene each tender feeling moves;
+As the eye rests on Holwood's naked groves,
+A tear bedims the sight for Chatham's son,
+For him whose god-like eloquence could stun,
+Like some vast cat'ract, Faction's clam'rous tongue,
+Or by its sweetness charm, like Virgil's song,
+For him, whose mighty spirit rous'd afar
+Europe's plum'd legions to the hallow'd war;
+But who, ah! hapless tale! could not inspire
+Their recreant chiefs with his heroic fire;
+Who, as _they_ pass'd the tyrant Conqu'ror's yoke,
+Felt, as the bolt of Heav'n, the ruthless stroke;
+And having long, in vain, the tempest brav'd,
+Could breathe no longer in a world enslav'd.
+
+
+
+
+LINES ON A LITTLE BIRD
+
+_Singing at the Window of the Author_,
+
+SOON AFTER THE DEATH OF A BELOVED SISTER.
+
+
+Go, little flutt'rer! seek thy feather'd loves,
+ And leave a wretched mourner to his woe;
+Seek out the bow'rs of bliss, seek happier groves,
+ Nor here unheeded let thy music flow.
+
+Yet think me not ungrateful for thy song,
+ If meant to cheer me in my lone retreat;
+Ah! not to thee, my little friend! belong
+ The pow'rs to soothe the pangs of adverse fate.
+
+Fly, then! the window of the wretched, fly!
+ And be thy harmless life for ever blest;
+I only can reward thee with a sigh,
+ And wish that joys may crown thy peaceful nest.
+
+
+
+
+EPITAPH ON A FRIEND.
+
+
+By painful sickness long severely prest,
+Here sinks, on Nature's sacred lap of rest,
+A friend, who, in a life too short, display'd
+A mind in virtue bright, without one shade.
+Hence with unusual grief is Fondness mov'd,
+Hence more than Pity's sighs for one belov'd;
+Unshaken Honour sheds a manly tear,
+And weeping Virtue stops, a mourner here.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+TO THE MEMORY OF AN AMIABLE YOUTH,
+
+OF GREAT PROMISE,
+
+Whose afflicted Parents received the Intelligence of his having been
+drowned, at the very time when his Arrival was expected from
+abroad.
+
+
+Dire were the horrors of that ruthless storm,
+ That for young Lycid form'd a wat'ry grave;
+Oh! many wept to see his fainting form
+ Unaided sink beneath th' o'erwhelming wave.
+
+Ah! hapless youth! yet, tho' the billowy waste
+ Has thus, with ruthless fury, snatch'd away
+Thy various charms, thy genius, wit, and taste,
+ From those who fondly watch'd their rich display,--
+
+Their cherish'd, lov'd, impression still shall last;
+ Mem'ry shall ride triumphant o'er the storm,
+Shall shield thy gen'rous virtues from the blast,
+ And Fancy animate again thy form.
+
+Yes, gentle youth! to her, tho' little known,
+ Save by the rich effusions of thy lyre,
+Th' admiring Muse shall breathe a mournful tone,
+ And sounds of grief shall o'er the floods expire.
+
+But, far more grateful to thy pensive shade,
+ Parental Fondness mourns her Lycid gone,
+Lycid! who to her bosom oft convey'd
+ The liveliest joys to tend'rest feelings known.
+
+For her the lustre of the dawning day,
+ With all its charms, no longer yields delight;
+And silent sorrow marks its parting ray,
+ And saddens ev'ry vision of the night.
+
+Oh! what ecstatic joys inspir'd her breast,
+ When, fast advancing to thy native shore,
+She thought she saw thee in the bay at rest,
+ And now in fancy heard th' approaching oar.
+
+Oh! sad reverse! The dire delusive wind,
+ Which promis'd fair to bring thee to her breast,
+Thy youthful honours to the wave consign'd,
+ And bore thy spirit to the realms of rest
+
+Ah! had the song of ancient Bard been true,
+ Had Genius still the pow'r to soothe the storm,
+Harmless had been each blast that round thee blew,
+ And safe and sacred, 'midst its rage, thy form.
+
+What tho' no marble urn thy relics hold,
+ Where grief at midnight hour may sit and sigh,
+Like gem in amber, Fancy shall enfold
+ Thy relics in each wave that murmurs by.
+
+Still shall she listen to thy glowing song,
+ And dwell with rapture on each vivid line,
+Shall round thy lyre, neglected and unstrung,
+ Of sweetest flow'rs a fun'ral wreath entwine.
+
+Ah! since thy tuneful song no more shall flow,
+ Nor here again thy op'ning virtues shine,
+May those who, Lycid! lov'd thee living, know
+ To bear the sorrows of a loss like thine!
+
+And, while they linger yet another hour
+ On life's extended, tempest-beaten, strand,
+Waiting the gale that shall convey them o'er,
+ To hail their Lycid in a happier land,
+
+Oh! may religion lull each sigh to rest,
+ Teach them a God, in mercy rob'd, to praise,
+To know that ev'ry act of his is best,
+ And, tho' mysterious, still to prize his ways!
+
+
+
+
+EPIGRAM
+
+ON THE AUTHOR AND ELIZA FREQUENTLY DIFFERING
+IN OPINION.
+
+
+To such extremes were I and Bet
+ Perpetually driven,
+We quarrell'd every time we met,
+ To kiss, and be forgiven.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+TO MY MOTHER,
+
+_On her attaining her 70th Year_.
+
+
+Oh! with what genuine pleasure do I trace
+Each line of that long-lov'd, accustom'd, face,
+Where Time, as if enchanted, and imprest
+With all the virtues of thy peaceful breast,
+Tho' sev'nty varied years have roll'd away,
+Still loves to linger, and, with soft decay,
+Permits thy cheek to wear a healthy bloom,
+In all the grace of age, without its gloom.
+
+So on some sacred temple's mossy walls,
+With feath'ry force, the snow of winter falls!
+Yes, venerable parent! may I long
+Thus happy hail thee with an annual song.
+Till, having clos'd thine eyes in such soft rest
+As infants feel when to the bosom prest,
+Angels shall bear thy spotless soul away
+To realms of pure delight and endless day!
+
+
+
+
+LINES TO SELINA
+
+
+'Twas when the leaves were yellow turn'd,
+ Selina, with the gentlest sigh,
+Exclaim'd, "For you I long have burn'd,
+ For you alone, my love! I'll die."
+
+Unthinking youth! I thought her true,
+ And, when the trees grew white with snow,
+The wint'ry wind with music blew,
+ So did her love upon me grow.
+
+The Spring had scarce unlock'd her store,
+ When lo! in much ungentle strain,
+She bade me think of her no more,
+ She bade me never love again.
+
+Then did my heart at once reply,
+ "If you are false, who can be true?
+There's nothing here deserves a sigh,
+ Take this, the last, 'tis heav'd for you."
+
+Ah! fickle fair! amid the scene
+ That giddy pleasure may prepare,
+A pensive thought shall intervene,
+ And touch your wand'ring heart with care.
+
+And when, alone, at eve you rove,
+ Where arm in arm we oft have mov'd,
+Each Zephyr in the well-known grove
+ Shall whisper that we once have lov'd.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+WRITTEN IN A HERMITAGE,
+
+AT DRONNINGAARD, NEAR COPENHAGEN.
+
+
+Delicious gloom! asylum of repose!
+ Within your verdant shades, your tranquil bound,
+A wretched fugitive[A], oppress'd by woes,
+ The balm of peace, that long had left him, found.
+
+Ne'er does the trump of war disturb this grove;
+ Throughout its deep recess the warbling bird
+Discourses sweetly of its happy lore,
+ Or distant sounds of rural joy are heard.
+
+Life's checquer'd scene is softly pictur'd here;
+ Here the proud moss-rose spreads its transient pride;
+Close by, the willow drops a dewy tear,
+ And gaudy flow'rs the modest lily hide.
+
+Alas! poor Hermit! happy had it been
+ For thee, if in these shades thy days had past,
+If, well contented with the happy scene,
+ Thou ne'er again had fac'd life's stormy blast!
+
+And Pity oft shall shed the gen'rous tear
+ O'er the sad moral which thy days disclose;
+There view how restless is our nature here,
+ How strangely hostile to its own repose.
+
+[Footnote A: Dronningaard is the first private residence in Denmark:
+it belongs to the wealthy family of the De Conincks. The grounds,
+which are very extensive, and tastefully laid out, slope down to a
+noble lake, twelve English miles in circumference, which is skirted
+with fine woods and romantic country-houses. At the end of a
+beautiful walk is an elegant marble column, with a tablet, on which
+is inscribed by Mr. D.C. "This monument is erected in gratitude to a
+mild and beneficent Government, under whose auspices I enjoy the
+blessings that surround me." In another part of the grounds, in a
+spot of deep seclusion, are the ruins of a Hermitage; and a little
+further, in a nook, an open grave and tombstone. The story connected
+with this retired spot deserves to be mentioned:--Time has shed many
+snows upon the romantic beauties of Dronningaard, since one, who,
+weary of the pomp of courts and the tumult of camps, in the prime of
+life, covered with honours and with fortune, sought from its
+hospitable owner permission to raise a sequestered cell, in which he
+might pass the remainder of his days in all the austerities and
+privations of an Anchorite. This singular man had, long previously to
+the revolution in Holland, distinguished himself at the head of his
+regiment, when, in an unhappy moment, the love of aggrandizement took
+possession of his heart, and, marrying under its influence, misery
+soon followed; and here, in a little wood of tall firs, he raised this
+simple fabric: moss warmed it within, and the bark of the birch
+defended it without; a stream of rock-water once flowed in a bed of
+pebbles before the door, in which the young willow dipped its leaves;
+and, at a little distance from a bed of wild roses, the labernum
+gracefully rose, and suspended her yellow flowers; and adjoining was a
+spot which the Recluse had selected for his grave, of which, like the
+monks of La Trappe, he dug a small portion every day until he had
+finished it. He composed his Epitaph in French, and had it inscribed
+on a stone. If the reader is at much interested as I was in the
+history of the poor Hermit, he will be pleased with the translation of
+it, which follows, from the pen of my respected and distinguished
+friend, William Hayley, Esq. In this solitude he passed several years,
+when the plan of his life became suddenly reversed by a letter of
+recall, which he received from his Prince, containing the most
+flattering expressions of regard. He obeyed the summons, returned to
+Holland, and at the head of his regiment most gallantly fought and
+fell.
+
+THE HERMIT'S EPITAPH.
+
+
+Here may he rest, who, shunning scenes of strife,
+Enjoy'd at Dronningaard a Hermit's life:
+The faithless splendour of a court he knew,
+ And all the ardour of the tented field,
+Soft Passion's idler charm, not less untrue,
+ And all that listless Luxury can yield.
+He tasted, tender Love! thy chatter sweet;
+Thy promis'd happiness prov'd mere deceit.
+To Hymen's hallow'd fane by Reason led,
+ He deem'd the path he trod the path of bliss;
+Oh! ever-mourn'd mistake! from int'rest bred,
+ Its dupe was plung'd in misery's abyss:
+But Friendship offer'd him, benignant pow'r!
+Her cheering hand, in trouble's darkest hour:
+Beside this shaded stream, her soothing voice
+Bade the disconsolate again rejoice:
+ Peace in his heart revives, serenely sweet;
+The calm content, so sought for as his choice,
+ Quits him no more in this belov'd retreat.]
+
+
+
+
+LINES TO MISS E. ATKINSON,
+
+ON HER PRESENTING THE AUTHOR WITH AN IRISH PEBBLE.
+
+
+Oft does the lucid pebble shine,
+ Just cover'd by the murm'ring sea;
+Thus precious, thus conceal'd, it shews,
+ Fair maid! thy mind and modesty.
+
+If searching eyes the stone discern,
+ Quick will the hand of Art remove
+Each ruder part, till, brilliant grown,
+ It seals the fond record of love.
+
+And here the sweet connexion ends,
+ Eliza! 'twixt the gem and thee;
+For thou wast polish'd from the first,
+ By Nature's hand, more happily!
+
+
+
+
+THE WATER-NYMPH OF THE ROCK.
+
+[The French is by Bosquillon, which I translated as under, in a
+beautiful Swedish island in the Baltic, as I sat by the side of a fine
+clear stream of rock-water.]
+
+
+_ORIGINAL_.
+
+La nymphe qui donne de cette eau
+Au plus creux de rocher se cache,
+Suivez un example si beau:
+Donnez sans vouloir qu'on le sache.
+
+
+_TRANSLATION_.
+
+The nymph, to whom this stream you owe,
+ Conceals herself in caves of stone:
+Like her your benefits bestow;
+ Give, without wishing to be known.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+UPON MADEMOISELLE DELPHINE SAULOT
+
+_Singing some equisite Airs_
+
+IN THE GARDENS OF MOUSSEAU, NEAR PARIS.
+
+
+In Mousseau's sweet Arcadian dale
+ Fair Delphine pours the plaintive strain;
+She charms the list'ning nightingale,
+ And seems th' enchantress of the plain.
+
+Bless'd be those lips, to music dear;
+ Sweet songstress! never may they move
+But with such sounds, to soothe the ear,
+ And melt the yielding heart to love.
+
+May sorrow never bid them pour
+ From the torn heart one suff'ring sigh;
+But be thy life a fragrant flow'r,
+ Blooming beneath a cloudless sky!
+
+
+
+
+IMPROMPTU TO MADAME C----
+
+WRITTEN AT PARIS,
+
+Upon her appearing equally modestly and elegantly dressed, amidst the
+Semi-Nakedness of the Rest of the Female Fashionables.
+
+
+Whilst, in a dress that one might swear
+The whole was made of woven air,
+Pert Fashion spreads her senseless sway
+Over the giddy and the gay
+(Who think, by showing all their charms,
+Lovers will fly into their arms),
+In thee shall Wit and Virtue find
+A friend more genial to their mind;
+And Modesty shall gain in thee
+A surer, chaster, victory.
+
+
+
+
+SONNET
+
+UPON A SWEDISH COTTAGE,
+
+_Written on the Road_,
+
+WITHIN A FEW MILES OF STOCKHOLM.
+
+
+Here, far from all the pomp Ambition seeks,
+ Much sought, but only whilst untasted prais'd,
+Content and Innocence, with rosy cheeks,
+ Enjoy the simple shed their hands have rais'd.
+
+On a gray rock it stands, whose fretted base
+ The distant cat'ract's murm'ring waters lave,
+Whilst o'er its mossy roof, with varying grace,
+ The slender branches of the white birch wave.
+
+Around the forest-fir is heard to sigh,
+ On which the pensive ear delights to dwell,
+Whilst, as the gazing trav'ller passes by,
+ The gray goat, starting, sounds his tinkling bell.
+Oh! in my native land, ere life's decline,
+May such a spot, so wild, so sweet, be mine!
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+TO THE MEMORY OF MRS. B----
+
+
+Ah, stranger! if thy pilgrim footsteps love,
+ By meditation led, to wander here,
+A suff'ring husband may thy pity move,
+ Who weeps the loss of all his soul holds dear!
+
+Cold as this mourning marble is that heart,
+ Which Virtue warm'd with pure and gen'rous heat,
+Which to each checquer'd scene could joy impart,
+ Nor ceas'd to love until it ceas'd to beat.
+
+Yet, gentle spirit! o'er thine early grave
+ Shall Consolation, like a seraph, prove,
+When Sickness clos'd thy faultless life, she gave
+ Another angel to the realms above!
+
+
+
+
+STATE TRICKS
+
+_Or a Peep into the Cabinet of the Premier Consul_,
+
+AT ST. CLOUD,
+
+ON THE NIGHT OF THE 26th OCT. 1803.
+
+--"they show an outward hideousness,
+And speak off half a dozen dang'rous words,
+How they might hurt their enemies, if they durst;
+And this is all."
+
+MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING, Act V. Scene 4.
+
+
+FIRST CONSUL.
+
+My dear Talleyrand! I am sorry to send
+For you out of your bed; but you know you're my friend:
+No secret I hide from your generous breast;
+This invasion is always _invading my rest_:
+My soldiers, poor devils! are ready to start,
+But to stay where I am is the wish of my heart;
+And yet I have sworn at their head to appear:
+I am puzzl'd to act 'twixt my threats and my fear;
+If I go, I am lost!--say, what shall I do?
+
+TALLEYRAND.
+
+Why I think I've a snug little project in view:
+I have felt for you long, and have ransack'd my brain
+To relieve you from so much embarrassing pain.
+To-morrow our principal tools shall repair
+To this spot, to implore you to stay where you are:
+Little Jancourt, you know, has a tear at command,
+The rest shall have muslin-wrapp'd onions in hand;
+An expedient which you, my good Consul, must try,
+For a drop never yet wag observ'd in your eye!
+And therefore I think 'twould be better for you
+The largest to pluck from the beds of St Cloud.
+When these fellows appear, they shall fall at your feet,
+Portalis shall pen a few words to repeat;
+He shall state 'tis the nation's imperial will
+That you do not your _dangerous promise_ fulfil;
+But snug in this closet put all into motion,
+Nor hazard your life with these sons of the ocean.
+_You_ shall say, "I have sworn by my glory to go;" }
+_They_ shall all of them blubber out "No, no, no, no!}
+It must not, thou world's second saviour! be so. }
+If you go, mighty Chieftain! and should not escape,
+All Gallia, the world, will be cover'd with crape[A]!
+Oh! stay where you are; on our knees we implore!"
+Then, apparently chok'd, they shall utter no more.
+When thrice sixty seconds have nearly expir'd
+(Now mind, my dear Consul, and do as desir'd),
+You must mimic some hero you've seen at the play,
+Of the tragical cast, when his soul melts away
+(And, without any compliment 'twixt you and I,
+You re'lly have talents and pow'rs very high,
+To make the most striking tragedian alive).
+But now to the point. You must tenderly strive
+To raise these sweet prostrates; then, heaving a sigh,
+And wiping the drops that shall stand in each eye,
+Like one sorely cross'd, you shall, weeping, exclaim,
+"Oh! why do you tear me from conquest and fame?
+But still, if the nation commands me, 'tis fit"
+(Your breast thumping hard) "that its Chief should submit."
+Then you see, if the army of England should sail,
+And the schemes of this cursed armada should fail,
+In the _Moniteur's_ faithful official page,
+I can humbug the people, and soften their rage;
+I will tell them, that, had but the nation permitted
+Her Chief to have gone, we had ne'er been outwitted;
+That merely the terrible glance of his eye
+Would have made all those shop-keeping islanders fly;
+This will quiet our friends, and, to harass our foes,
+A second invasion I'll slyly propose,
+In which, in the van, Buonaparte shall pour
+His vengeance divine on that mercantile shore.
+Not that I, my dear Premier! conceive 'twould be right
+To renew with these cursed tough fellows the fight;
+But our people 'twill please, until some new occasion
+Shall call from this project the eye of the nation.
+
+FIRST CONSUL.
+
+It will do, it will do, my dear Tally! thy brain
+Has my terrors remov'd, and "a man I'm again."
+I will rise with the dawn, for this scene to prepare;
+Denon, with his crayons, so swift shall be there;
+The Parisians the subject with rapture will trace
+In my Nosegay[B]; I'll hang it up full in their face.
+I embrace thee, my dear little Tal! with delight;
+_Ca ira! Ca ira_! Thy hand, and good night.
+
+[The First Consul is said to have enjoyed half an hour's uninterrupted
+repose that night. What followed, the next day, all Europe
+knows, and all Europe laughs at.]
+
+[Footnote A: Black crape and the bolt of Heaven are the favourite
+rhetorical figures of Napoleon the First.]
+
+[Footnote B: "Nosegay"--The anti-chamber of the Hall of the Arts in
+the Louvre, in which there are many fine paintings, is called, by the
+Parisians, Buonaparte's Nosegay.]
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+TO MISS CHINNERY, OF GILLWELL-HOUSE,
+
+_Upon her appearing in a Dress_
+
+WITH MAY-FLOWERS AND LEAVES TASTEFULLY DISPLAYED.
+
+
+Tell me what taught thee to display
+ A choice so sweet, and yet so rare,
+To prize the modest buds of May
+ Beyond the diamond's prouder glare?
+
+Say, was the grateful pref'rence paid
+ To Nature, since, with skill divine,
+So many fairy charms she made,
+ To grace her fav'rite Caroline?
+
+Or was it Taste that bade thee try
+ How soon the richest gem must yield,
+In beauty and attractive die,
+ To this wild blossom of the field?
+
+Whate'er the cause, in Nature's glow
+ Well does the choice thyself pourtray;
+Thine innocence the blossoms show,
+ Thy youth the green leaves well display.
+
+
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+Ah! if my voice is heard in vain,
+ This fond, this falling, tear
+May yet thy dire intent restrain,
+ May yet dissolve my fear.
+
+Th' unsparing wound that lays thee low
+ Will bend thy Julia too:
+Could she survive the fatal blow
+ Who only lives in you?
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+TO MRS. A. CLARKE.
+
+
+Within his cold and cheerless cell,
+I heard the sighing Censor tell
+ That ev'ry charm of life was gone,
+That ev'ry noble virtue long
+Had ceas'd to wake the Minstrel's song,
+ And Vice triumphant stood alone.
+
+"Poor gloomy reas'ner! come with me;
+Smooth each dark frown, and thou shall see
+ Thy tale is but a mournful dream;
+I'll show thee scenes to yield delight,
+I'll show thee forms in Virtue bright,
+ Illum'd by Heav'n's unclouded beam.
+
+"See Clarke, with ev'ry goodness grac'd,
+Her mind the seat of Wit and Taste;
+ Tho' Wealth invites to Pleasure's bow'r,
+See her the haunts of Woe descend;
+Of many a friendless wretch the friend,
+ Pleas'd she exerts sweet Pity's pow'r.
+
+"See her, with parent patriot care,
+The infant orphan-mind prepare,
+ Assur'd, without Instruction's aid,
+The proudest nation soon will show
+A wasted form, a hectic glow,
+ A robb'd, diseas'd, revolting, shade.
+
+"See her with Prince-like spirit pour
+On genuine worth her ample store[A];
+ See her, by ev'ry gentle art,
+Protect the plant she loves to rear,
+And, as she bathes it with a tear,
+ Grateful it twines around her heart.
+
+"And there are more, of kindred mind;"--
+When, with a face more bland and kind,
+ The Sage, in soften'd tone, replied:
+"'Twas Error made to me the den
+More grateful than the haunts of men;
+ Henceforth mankind shall be my pride."
+
+[Footnote A: This alludes to a munificent donation of a very handsome
+fortune, which this Lady presented, without any claim of consanguinity
+or connexion, to a young Lady of great merit.]
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+_To the Tune of "Oh! Lady fair! where art thou going_?"
+
+
+Sing, bird of grief! still eve descending,
+And soothe a mind with sorrow rending;
+Ne'er may I see the blush of morrow,
+But close this night the sigh of sorrow;
+
+Then, if some wand'rer here directed
+Shall find my mossy grave neglected,
+May he replace the weed that's growing
+With the nearest flow'r that's blowing!
+
+
+
+
+IMPROMPTU LINES
+
+UPON A VERY HANDSOME WOMAN
+
+_Keeping the Hotel de Lion Blanc, at Dantzig_.
+
+
+The sign of the house should be chang'd, I'll be sworn,
+ Where enchanted we find so much beauty and grace;
+Then quick from the door let the _lion_ be torn,
+ And an _angel_ expand her white wings in his place.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+UPON SEEING A BEAUTIFUL INFANT SLEEPING ON THE
+BOSOM OF ITS MOTHER.
+
+
+Upon its native pillow dear,
+ The little slumb'rer finds repose;
+His fragrant breath eludes the ear--
+ A zephyr passing o'er a rose.
+
+Yet soon from that pure spot of rest
+ (Love's little throne!) shalt thou be torn;
+Time hovers o'er thy downy nest,
+ To crown thy baby-brow with thorn.
+
+Ah! thoughtless! couldst thou now but see
+ On what a world thou soon must move,
+Or taste the cup prepar'd for thee
+ Of grief, lost hopes, or widow'd love,
+
+Ne'er from that breast thou'd'st raise thine head,
+ But thou would'st breathe to Heav'n a pray'r
+To let thee, ere thy blossom fade,
+ In one fond sigh exhale thee there.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+WRITTEN AT FREDENSBORG,
+
+_The deserted Palace of the late Queen Dowager Juliana Maria_[A].
+
+
+ Bless'd are the steps of Virtue's queen!
+ Where'er she moves fresh roses bloom;
+And, when she droops, kind Nature pours
+Her genuine tears in gentle show'rs,
+ That love to dew the willow green
+ That over-canopies her tomb.
+
+ But, ah! no willing mourner here
+ Attends to tell the tale of woe:
+Why is yon statue prostrate thrown?
+Why has the grass green'd o'er the stone?
+ Why, 'gainst the spider'd casement drear,
+ So sullen seems the wind to blow?
+
+ How mournful was the lonely bird,
+ Within yon dark neglected grove!
+Say, was it fancy? From its throat
+Issu'd a strange and cheerless note;
+ 'Twas not so sad as grief I heard,
+ Nor yet so wildly sweet as love.
+
+ In the deep gloom of yonder dell
+ Ambition's blood-stain'd victims sigh'd;
+While Time beholds, without a tear,
+Fell Desolation hov'ring near,
+ Whose angry blushes seem to tell.
+ Here Juliana shudd'ring died!
+
+[Footnote A: This palace, called the Mansion of Peace, is in the road
+and near to Elsineur; it was the retreat of the ambitious and
+remorseless Juliana Maria, the mother-in-law of Christian VII. whose
+intrigues and jealousy sent Brandt and Struensee to the scaffold, and
+drove the unhappy Matilda, the mother of the present King of Denmark,
+from her throne, and the arms of her royal husband. Juliana died here.
+The palace and grounds, parts of which are beautiful, were, when I
+visited them in 1804, much neglected.]
+
+
+
+
+SONG
+
+Upon the Admiration of the Valour and amiable Qualities of Lord
+Nelson, expressed by Junot, now Duke of Abrantes, who, by the
+Chances of War, was for a short Time the British Hero's Prisoner.
+
+
+A wreath from an immortal bough
+Should deck that gen'rous victor's brow,
+Who hears his captive's grateful praise
+Augment the thanks his country pays;
+For him the minstrel's song shall flow,
+The canvass breathe, the marble glow.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+UPON A LADY DYING
+
+_Soon after she had been wrecked on the Cornish Coast_,
+
+LEAVING A LITTLE INFANT BEHIND HER.
+
+
+Sweet stranger! tho' the merc'less storm
+Here sternly cast thy fainting form,
+What tho' no kindred hand was near
+To wipe away Affliction's tear,
+
+Yet shall thy gentle spirit own,
+Amidst these sea-girt shores unknown,
+That Pity pour'd her balmy store,
+And kindred hands could do no more.
+
+Ne'er shall that pang disturb thy rest,
+That moves the parted mother's breast;
+The object of thy dying fear
+Shall want no father's fondness here.
+
+Oft shall his little lips proclaim,
+With April-tears, thy treasur'd name;
+His little hands, when summers bloom,
+Shall gather flow'rs to deck thy tomb.
+
+
+
+
+JEU D'ESPRIT
+
+UPON A VERY PRETTY WOMAN ASKING THE AUTHOR HIS
+OPINION OF BEAUTY.
+
+
+Madam! you ask what marks for beauty pass:
+Require them rather from your looking-glass!
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+TO THE MEMORY OF ERASMUS,
+
+BY OUDAAN,
+
+Inscribed on the Pedestal of the Statue raised in Honour of the former,
+in Rotterdam.
+
+[_The Original in Dutch_.]
+
+
+_ORIGINAL_.
+
+Hier rees die groote zon, en ging te Bazel onder!
+ De Rykstad eer' en vier' dien Heilig in zyn grav;
+ Dit tweede leeven geevt, die't eerste leeven gav:
+Maar 't ligt der taalen, 't zout der zeden, 't heerlyk wonder.
+
+Waar met de Lievde, en Vreede, en Godgeleerdheid praald,
+Word met geen grav geerd nog met zeen beeld betaald:
+Dies moet hier't lugtgewele Erasmus overdekken,
+Nadien geen mind're plaats zyn tempel kan verstrekken!
+
+
+_TRANSLATION_.
+
+Erasmus, here, the eloquent and wise,
+ That Sun of Learning! rose, and spread his beam
+O'er a benighted world, thro' low'ring skies,
+ And shed on Basil's tow'rs his parting gleam.
+
+There his great relics lie: he bless'd the place:
+ No proud preserver of his fame shall prove
+The Parian pile, tho' fraught with sculptur'd grace:
+ Reader! his mausoleum is above.
+
+
+
+
+THE FOLLOWING TWO SONGS
+
+Were written during a Period when it was confidently believed that the
+French would invade our Country.
+
+
+SONG.
+
+_To the Tune of "Ye Gentlemen of England_."
+
+
+No gentleman of England now sits at home at ease,
+But emulates on shore the heroes of the seas;
+A common cause unites them, to meet the daring foe,
+All they wish, all they ask, is a fav'ring wind to blow.
+
+Oh! let them come along, and may no tempests low'r,
+But fairly may we try our valour and our pow'r,
+That Hist'ry may not say, should these robbers be laid low,
+To the storm 'tis alone the victory we owe.
+
+Soon shall these infidels the dreadful diff'rence prove,
+'Twixt slaves impell'd by fear, and freemen bound by love;
+Our foes shall never rise again, when once they are laid low,
+On the sea, on the shore, for justice strikes the blow.
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+ When storms on the ocean
+ Create high emotion,
+ It pleases the wish
+ Of the monarch of fish,
+For he gambols and sports in the motion.
+
+ Should a shoal of small fry
+ Attempt to draw nigh,
+ With a flap of his tail,
+ Th' imperial whale
+Makes them pay for their rashness, and die.
+
+ Oh! thus, on the seas,
+ Just with the same ease,
+ Should the enemy come,
+ In ship, boat, or bomb,
+We will knock them about as we please;
+
+ Till at last they shall cry,
+ "We are the small fry,
+ And Britannia's the whale,
+ By a flap of whose tail,
+If we dare to approach her we die."
+
+
+
+
+SONNET,
+
+Occasioned by reading an Inscription on the Tombstone of Captain
+Christensen, of Krajore, in Norway, who died in consequence of
+the Bite of his Dog, when it was mad.
+
+
+Ah! hapless stranger! who, without a tear,
+ Can this sad record of thy fate survey?
+No angry tempest laid thee breathless here,
+ Nor hostile sword, nor Nature's mild decay.
+
+The fond companion of thy pilgrim feet,
+ Who watch'd thee in thy sleep, who moan'd if miss'd,
+And sprung with such delight his Lord to greet,
+ Imbu'd with death the hand he oft had kiss'd.
+
+And here, remov'd from Love's lamenting eye,
+ Far from thy native cat'racts' awful sound,
+Far from thy dusky forests' pensive sigh,
+ Thy poor remains repose on alien ground;
+Yet Pity oft shall sit beside thy stone,
+And sigh as tho' she mourn'd a brother gone.
+
+
+
+
+IMPROMPTU,
+
+IN REPLY TO A LADY,
+
+_Who asked the Author what Childhood resembled_.
+
+
+How like is childhood to the lucid tide
+ That calmly wanders thro' the mossy dell,
+Sweeps o'er the lily by the margin's side,
+ And, as it kisses, murmurs out, Farewell!
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+ADDRESSED TO A YOUNG LADY IN GERMANY,
+
+_Who, until her Sister, honoured the Author by walking with him in
+the Evening_.
+
+
+Adieu! dear girl! if we are doom'd to part,
+Take with thee, take, the blessing of this heart,
+Due to thy gentle mind, and cultur'd sense;
+Perhaps 'twill please, but, sure, can't give offence.
+Tho', when we met, the solar ray was gone,
+And on our steps the moon-beam only shone,
+Yet well I mark'd thy form and native grace,
+And all the sweet expression of thy face;
+And pleas'd I listen'd as thy accents fell,
+Accents that spoke a feeling mind so well
+Lo, when the birds repose at ev'ning hour,
+The sweetest of them carols from her bow'r!
+So, when the dews the garden's fragrance close,
+The night-flow'r[A] blooms, the rival of the rose!
+
+[Footnote A: One of the creeping cereuses, usually known by the name
+of the night-flower, is said to be as grand and as beautiful as any in
+the vegetable system. It begins to open in the evening, about seven
+o'clock; is in perfection about eleven, perfuming the air to a
+considerable distance, and fades about four in the morning.]
+
+
+
+
+LINES TO STUDY.
+
+
+O Study! while thy lovers raise
+Thy name with all the pow'r of praise,
+Frown not, thou nymph with piercing mind!
+If in this bosom thou should'st find
+That all thy deep, thy brilliant, lore,
+Which charm'd it once, now charms no more:
+Frown not, if, on thy classic line,
+One strange, uncall'd-for, tear should shine;
+Frown not, if, when a smile should start,
+A sigh should heave an aching heart:
+If Mem'ry, roving far away,
+Should an unmeaning homage pay,
+Should ask thee for thy golden fruit,
+And, when thou deign'st to hear her suit,
+Should turn her from the proffer'd food,
+To tread the shades of Solitude:
+Frown not, if, in the humble line,
+Ungrac'd by any thought of thine,
+Should but that gentle name appear,
+Fond cause of ev'ry joy and fear;
+I love, tho' rude, I love it more,
+Than all thy piles of letter'd lore:
+Frown not if ev'ry airy word,
+Which Beauty breathes, or Love has heard,
+More rich, more eloquently, flow,
+To Mem'ry gives a warmer glow,
+Than all by thee so much approv'd,
+The wit of age on age improv'd.
+Go, then! and, since it is denied
+That thou shalt be my radiant guide!
+Leave me to sigh, to weep, to prove
+How little Learning is to Love.
+
+
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+Wilt thou, because thy Florio loves,
+ Forsake the giddy glitt'ring throng,
+With him to dwell in peaceful groves,
+ With him to hear the shepherd's song?
+
+Can'st thou, without a sigh, resign
+ The homage by thy charms inspir'd?
+To one, oh! say, can'st thou confine
+ What oft so many have admir'd?
+
+Sweet maid! oh! bless'd shall be our love,
+ Till time shall bid it cease to flow;
+With thee shall ev'ry moment prove
+ A little heaven form'd below!
+
+
+
+
+THE FURY OF DISCORD
+
+
+In a chariot of fire, thro Hell's flaming arch,
+ The Fury of Discord appear'd;
+A myriad of demons attended her march,
+ And in Gallia her standard she rear'd.
+
+Thy name, so enchanting, sweet Freedom! she took,
+ But in vain did she try to assume
+Thy smile of content, thy enlivening look,
+ And thy roseate mountainous bloom.
+
+For wan was her visage, and phrensied her eye,
+ At her girdle a poniard she wore;
+Her bosom and limbs were expos'd to the sky,
+ And her robe was besprinkled with gore.
+
+Nature shudder'd, and sigh'd as the wild rabble past,
+ Each flow'r droop'd its beautiful head;
+The groves became dusky, and moan'd in the blast,
+ And Virtue and Innocence fled.
+
+She rose from her car 'midst the yell of her crew;
+ Emblazon'd, a scroll she unfurl'd,
+And on it the dreams of Philosophy drew;
+ "'Tis the Charter, she cried, of the World."
+
+Plunder, keen-ey'd and lean, rang with plaudits the sky,
+ Murder grinn'd as he whetted his steel;
+While Blasphemy swore the Redeemer on high
+ Was the creature of Folly and Zeal.
+
+The scaffold grew red with the blood of the brave,
+ Kings turn'd pale on their thrones at her nod;
+While Loyalty fled to the gloom of the cave,
+ And Piety knelt to her God.
+
+At length, after changing her chiefs at her will,
+ As their mischievous zeal grew remiss,
+She sought a fresh fav'rite, with dexterous skill,
+ From Obscurity's darkest abyss.
+
+The pow'rs of her monstrous adoption to try,
+ 'Midst, Syria! thy waterless waste,
+She bade him the blast of thy desert outvie,
+ And defile all thy relics of taste.
+
+The chieftain obey'd: with a merciful air
+ He wrung from thy natives a tear;
+But the justice and valour of Britain, e'en there,
+ Shook his legions, recoiling with fear.
+
+Well-pleas'd with his crimes, the Fury, with flight,
+ To her empire safe wafted him o'er;
+Whilst the spectres of Jaffa, with ghastly delight,
+ The murd'rer pursued to the shore.
+
+Arriv'd, for his brow, lo! a turban she made,
+ Bright with gems pluck'd from Gallia's crown;
+To give him a name, she Rome's hist'ry survey'd,
+ In the days of her early renown.
+
+To embellish his guilt, or to soften its shade,
+ The Arts mournful captives she kept;
+And the plund'rer and plunder of Europe display'd
+ To the wand'rer, who wonder'd and wept.
+
+To support this apostate imperial shade,
+ This impious mock'ry of good,
+She rais'd a banditti, to whom she convey'd
+ His spirit for plunder and blood.
+
+The chiefs of the earth in a panic beheld
+ The flash of his sabre afar;
+They enter'd, but pensively mov'd from the field,
+ And bow'd to this idol of war.
+
+Till, fum'd with the incense of slavish applause,
+ O'er the globe's fairest portion he trod;
+And, spurning its liberty, spirit, and laws,
+ Conceiv'd himself rais'd to a god.
+
+But England disdain'd to the Tyrant to bend;
+ Still erect, undismay'd, she was found;
+Infuriate, he swore that "his bolt should descend,"
+ And her temples should fall to the ground.
+
+Yes, here, if his banner is destin'd to wave,
+ It shall float o'er her temples laid low,
+O'er piles of her children, who, loyal and brave,
+ Such a victory never will know.
+
+Oh! banish the thought; for, learn 'tis in vain,
+ Thus, thou maniac Tyrant, to boast;
+As soon shall her base be remov'd by the main,
+ As her empire by thee and thy host.
+
+The sound is gone forth, 'tis recorded above,
+ To the mountain it spread from the vale;
+"Our God, and our King, and our Country, we love,
+ And for them we will die or prevail."
+
+Then hasten the day, if thy threat be sincere,
+ Let the winds blow thy myriads along;
+Then soon may thy boasted armada appear,
+ And our rocks catch thy death-breathing song.
+
+Thy guardian, foul deity! hideous with crime,
+ Shall view, as she moves to our shore,
+The Genius of Britain, mild, brave, and sublime,
+ And shall boast her achievements no more.
+
+Oh! direful and strange will the contest appear,
+ Big with freedom to nations afar;
+The good, who confide, and the guilty, who fear,
+ Shall join in the conflict of war.
+
+In Heaven, with smiles, shall the happy and blest
+ Lean over its bright-beaming walls,
+To guide and support to the regions of rest
+ The soul of the patriot who falls.
+
+Britannia! thy Muse, on a rock high and steep,
+ The fate of the fight shall proclaim;
+The strings of her lyre Inspiration shall sweep,
+ Recording each hero by name.
+
+The world to its centre shall shake with delight,
+ As thus she announces their fall;
+"They sink! our invaders submit to our might,
+ The ocean has buried them all!"
+
+
+
+
+LINES TO ANNETTE.
+
+
+Canst thou, Annette, thy lover see?
+ His trembling love unfolded hear?
+ And mark the while th' impassion'd tear,
+Th' impassion'd tear of agony?
+
+Adown his anxious features steal,
+Nor then one burst of pity feel?
+But, as bereav'd of ev'ry sense,
+Look on with cold indifference.
+Go, then, Annette, in all thy charms,
+Go bless some gayer, happier, arms;
+Go, rest secure, thy fear give o'er,
+These eyes shall follow thee no more;
+And never shall these lips impart
+One thought of all that rends my heart.
+
+Yet, since will burst the frequent sigh,
+ And since the tear will ever fall,
+From thee and from the world I'll fly;
+ Deserts shall hide, shall silence, all.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+SENT WITH SOME INDIAN ROUGE TO MISS W----.
+
+
+Go, faithless bloom! on Delia's cheek
+ Your boasted captivations try;
+Alas! o'er Nature would you seek
+ To gain one moment's victory?
+Her softer tint, sweet look, and gentle air,
+Shall prove you're but a vain intruder there.
+
+But go, display your charms and taste;
+ Soon shall you blush a richer red,
+To find your mimic pow'r surpass'd;
+ And, whilst upon her cheek you spread
+Your vermeil hue, tell her ingenuous heart,
+'Tis the first time she ever practis'd art.
+
+
+
+
+MISS W---- RETURNED THE ROUGE
+
+_With the following elegant Lines_.
+
+
+When men exert their utmost pow'rs,
+To while away the tedious hours,
+ With soothing Flatt'ry's art,
+When ev'ry art and work well skill'd,
+And ev'ry look with poison fill'd,
+ Assail a woman's heart,
+
+Tho' ardently she'd wish to be
+Proof 'gainst the charms of Flattery,
+ The task is hard, I ween;
+Self-love will whisper "'Tis quite true,
+Who can there be more fair than you?
+ Who more admir'd, when seen?"
+
+Then take this tempting gift of thine,
+Nor e'er again wish me to shine
+ In any borrow'd bloom:
+Nor rouge, nor compliments, can charm;
+Full well I know they both will harm;
+ Truth is my only plume.
+
+
+
+
+LINES TO A YOUNG LADY,
+
+OCCASIONED BY HER DECLINING AN OFFER OF MARRIAGE
+
+_Made her by a very accomplished Friend of the Author_.
+
+
+Oh! form'd to prompt the smile or tear,
+At once so sweet, yet so severe!
+As much for you as him I grieve;
+Ah! thoughtless! if you thus can leave
+A mind with wit and learning bright,
+Where Temper sheds its cloudless light;
+Where manly honour, taste refin'd,
+With ev'ry virtue, are combin'd;
+If you can quit a heart so true,
+Which has so often throbb'd for you,
+I'll pity, tho' I can't reprove;
+And did I, such is Florio's love,
+Eager he'd fly to take thy part,
+E'en in a war against his heart.
+
+
+
+
+THE MUSHROOM.
+
+
+Awake, my Muse! awake each slumb'ring string,
+And (mighty subject!) of a Mushroom sing,
+Fair to the eye, and pleasant to the taste;
+Charm'd by the note, a pigmy group, in haste,
+Lay down their grainy loads, as slow they move
+Thro' lanes of reed and grass, to them a grove!
+As if an Orpheus thou, they gather round,
+Erect their tiny ears, and drink the sound.
+Gray was the sky, save where the eastern ray
+O'er fragrant hills proclaim'd th' approaching day;
+Rurilla, loveliest virgin of the plain,
+With spirits light, and mind without a stain,
+Rose from her simple bed, refresh'd with rest;
+Ah, Sleep! with marble finger had'st thou prest
+Her lovely eyelids till a later hour,
+And by a blissful vision's fairy pow'r
+Hadst thou impress'd her mind with forms of love,
+The walk at eve, the kiss, the murm'ring dove,
+The little nymph had never sought the plain,
+Nor fill'd with one romantic thought this brain.
+In russet gown, with sweet and simple air,
+She issued forth, like Hebe, young and fair,
+To neighb'ring field, fresh as the rosy dawn;
+Nor stile oppos'd her; like a bounding fawn
+Graceful she sprang: so prankish was the air,
+Had but the love-sick Daphanel been there,
+He would have sigh'd: alas! poor love-sick fool!
+Thou rather Zephyr dost inflame than cool!
+And now, my Muse, the fatal spot disclose,
+Where, bath'd with dew, the modest Mushroom rose.
+Less fair the swan, by Richmond's flow'ry side,
+That in the river views herself with pride,
+As, gazing on her, some their stay prolong,
+To see her sail in majesty along.
+Ill-fated child of earth! thy charms so fair,
+As oft with youthful beauty, prove thy snare:
+Now, as with dewy-spangled feet is seen
+The lovely maid to trace each ringlet green,
+Not distant far thy skin of velvet white
+She views, and to thee presses with delight
+Oh! might some deity, with potent arm,
+Arrest her flight, and alter ev'ry charm;
+Like Niobe dissolve into a tear,
+Or like the Delian virgin, when with fear
+She fled!--See on each beauteous limb appear
+Soft leaves and flow'rs, the sweetest of the year;
+And, taking root, spread round her fragrant breath
+O'er the fair form that now she dooms to death:
+But, ah! in vain, the pray'r no goddess hears; }
+She bends--she plucks--and, bath'd in purple tears,}
+The much-priz'd victim in her lap she bears! }
+Tears that, preserv'd in crystal, will prolong,
+And paint its worth beyond this simple song.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+Written _en badinage_, after visiting a Paper-Mill near
+Tunbridge-Wells, in consequence of the lovely Miss W----, who excels
+in Drawing, requesting the Author to describe the Process of making
+Paper, in Verse.
+
+
+Reader! I do not wish to brag;
+ But, to display Eliza's skill,
+I'd proudly be the vilest rag
+ That ever went to paper-mill.
+
+Content in pieces to be cut;
+ Tho' sultry were the summer-skies,
+Pleas'd between flannel I'd be put,
+ And after bath'd in jellied size.
+
+Tho' to be squeez'd and hang'd I hate,
+ For thee, sweet girl! upon my word,
+When the stout press had forc'd me flat,
+ I'd be suspended on a cord.
+
+And then, when dried and fit for use,
+ Eliza! I would pray to thee,
+If with thy pen thou would'st amuse,
+ That thou would'st deign to write on me.
+
+Gad's bud! how pleasant it would prove
+ Her pretty chit-chat to convey,
+P'rhaps be the record of her love,
+ Told in some coy enchanting way.
+
+Or, if her pencil she would try,
+ On me, oh! may she still imprint
+Those forms that fix th' admiring eye,
+ Each graceful line, each glowing tint!
+
+Then shall I reason have to brag,
+ For thus, to high importance grown,
+The world will see a simple rag
+ Become a treasure rarely known.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+TO A PROMISING YOUNG ARTIST.
+
+
+These bays be thine; and, tho' not form'd to shine
+Clear as thy colour, faultless as thy line,
+Yet shall the Muse essay, in humble verse,
+Thy merits, lovely Painting! to rehearse.
+As when the demon of the winter storm
+Robs each sweet flow'ret of its beauteous form,
+The Spirit of the stream, in crystal wave,
+Sleeps whilst the chilling blasts above him rave,
+Till the Sun spreads his animating fires,
+And sullen Darkness from the scene retires,
+Then mountain-nymphs discard their robes of snow,
+And in green mantles smile in roseate glow,
+And rivers, loosen'd from their icy chain,
+Spread joy and richness thro' the verdant plain,
+Thus, in those climes where skies are ever fair,
+Each infant Science breath'd a genial air,
+Climes where the Earth her stores to all resign'd,
+Nor left one selfish passion to the mind;
+On her green lap the swain reclin'd his head,
+And found his banquet where he found his bed.
+Then Painting grew, and from the shades of flow'rs[A]
+There first essay'd her imitative pow'rs,
+When, urg'd by plunder, with the torrent's might,
+Nerv'd by the storm, and harden'd in the fight,
+A race barbarian left their forests wild,
+And sought the spot where Love and Learning smil'd.
+By Taste unsoften'd, these relentless droves
+Burst, fair Italia! thro' thy sacred groves,
+Laid ev'ry flow'r of Art and Fancy waste,
+And pour'd a winter o'er the realms of Taste,
+Each Science trembled at the ruffian sound,
+Forsook her shades, and fled her classic ground;
+The lofty column prostrate in the dust,
+Defac'd the arch, o'erthrown the matchless bust;
+The shatter'd fresco animates no more,
+And ruthless winds thro' clefted temples roar!
+Florence beheld the scene with sad surprise,
+And bade the prostrate pile in grandeur rise.
+Then, oh! thou truly "Father of the Art[B]!"
+'Twas thine superior vigour to impart;
+Illustrious Cimabue! it was thine
+To soar beyond Example's bounded line,
+And, as the Heav'n-directed sceptre's shock,
+Produc'd full torrents from the flinty rock,
+So streams of taste obey'd thy pencil's call,
+And Nature seem'd to start from out the wall.
+Hail, beauteous art! oh! that in equal lay
+Could but my Muse thy various pow'rs convey!
+'Tis thine with silent eloquence to shew
+Passion's strong image, Beauty's rapt'rous glow,
+To soothe the parted lover's anxious care,
+Who owns thee fairest of thy sisters fair;
+When waves divide him, still thro' thee to trace
+The dear resemblance of that cherish'd face,
+Which he so oft with trembling lips has prest,
+So often gaz'd upon, so often blest!
+Thine too it is to seek the verdant plains
+Where Peace resides, where Rustic Beauty reigns;
+Or bid the torrent on thy canvass roar,
+Or calmly spread the yellow winding shore;
+Or show, from some vast cliff's extremest verge,
+The frail bark combating the angry surge.
+Oft too on some lone turret wilt thou stand,
+To trace the fury of th' embattled band,
+To darken with the clouds of death the skies,
+And bid the scenes of blood and havoc rise!
+Such, and far more, thy pow'rs, bless'd art! to thee
+Inferior far descriptive Poesy;
+And tho' sweet Music, when she strikes the strings,
+When thro' the grove with seraph-voice she sings,
+The soul, enraptur'd with the thrilling stream,
+Would hail the Maid of Harmony supreme!
+Yet, while her dulcet sounds enchant, they die;}
+So shooting stare illume the midnight sky, }
+And, as we wonder, vanish from the eye. }
+But when resistless Death, in mournful hour,
+Withdraws the drooping painter's mimic pow'r,
+Improv'd by time, his works still charm the sight,
+And thro' successive ages yield delight
+Greece early bade the painter's pencil trace
+Each form with force; to force she added grace:
+For this her Zeuxis she a garland wove,
+For[C] that Apelles won her grateful love.
+Chiefly she called on Painting's magic powers
+To deck the guardians of her lofty tow'rs;
+Here[D] Jove in lightning show'd his awful mien.
+There Venus with her doves was smiling seen!
+Till ruthless Time, with unabating flight,
+O'er Grecian grandeur flung the shades of night
+Long did they settle o'er the darken'd world.
+Till Raphael's hand the sable curtain furl'd;
+A pious calm, an elevated grace,
+Then on the canvass mark'd th' Apostle's face;
+Devout applauses ev'ry feature drew,
+E'en[E] such as graceful Sculpture never knew.
+In nearer times, and on a neighb'ring shore,
+Painting but feebly shone, obscur'd by pow'r.
+See Rubens' soul indignantly advance,
+Press'd by the pride and vanity of France;
+Behold, [F] in fulsome allegory spread,
+The gaudy iris o'er the victor's head!
+See Genius, deaf to Nature's nobler call,
+Waste all its strength upon the banner'd hall!
+E'en now, tho' Gallia, in her blood-stain'd car,
+Spreads over Europe all the woes of war,
+Still with consummate craft she tries to prove
+How much the peaceful charms engage her love:
+Treasures of art in lengthen'd gall'ries glow,
+And[G] Europe's plunder Europe's plund'rers show!
+Yet of her living artists few can claim
+Half the mix'd praise that waits on David's fame.
+Thrice happy Britain! in thy favour'd isle
+The sister Arts in health and beauty smile!
+Tho' no Imperial Gall'ries grace thy shores,
+Tho' wealth the public bounty seldom pours,
+Yet private taste rewards thy painter's toil,
+And bids his genius grace his native soil.
+Bless'd country! here thy artists can supply
+Abundant charms to fix th' admiring eye:
+In furtive splendour ne'er art thou array'd,
+No plunder'd country mourns thy ruthless blade,
+Sees its transported treasures torn away,
+To grace a fierce ambitious Tyrant's sway.
+Long in this isle, where Freedom finds repose,
+Whilst, raving round her, loud the tempest blows,
+Oh! long befriended, may the Arts excel,
+And bless the sacred spot they love so well!
+
+[Footnote A: "_Then painting grew, and from the shades_,"
+&c.--The shadows of plants, and indeed of every object in Nature,
+must, at a very early period, have furnished ideas of imitation.]
+
+[Footnote B: _"Then, oh! thou_," &c.--After the ravages of the
+northern barbarians, painting was revived in Italy, about the
+fourteenth century, by Cimabue, who was hence styled the Father of
+Painting.]
+
+[Footnote C: "_For that Apelles_," &c.--Painting attained so
+great a perfection amongst the Greeks, under Zeuxis, that Apelles
+found nothing wanting but grace, which in those times he bestowed upon
+the art, as Corregio did after Raphael.]
+
+[Footnote D: "_Here Jove in_," &c.--The Greeks excelled in the
+delineation of their deities, to whom they attributed all the human
+passions: their Jupiter they elevated to the highest degree of
+majesty, their Venus to the utmost pitch of human beauty.]
+
+[Footnote E: "_E'en such as graceful Sculpture_," &c.--From
+Cimabue to Raphael, the painters were employed by the church; and they
+gave a character to the Prophets, Apostles, and our Saviour, which was
+never known to the ancient sculptors. The power which the former
+possessed of uniting dignity to humility is without a parallel.]
+
+[Footnote F: "_Behold, in fulsome allegory_," &c.--As long as
+the French school adhered to the principles of the Italian school, it
+produced many great masters; however, the art certainly degenerated
+after Raphael, by being employed in adulatory allegory, in honour of
+Princes, as is to be seen in the works of Rubens and Le Brun at Paris,
+artists of great talents, which they were led to misapply, through the
+supreme vanity of Louis the Fourteenth.]
+
+[Footnote G: "_And Europe's plunder_," &c.--Those who have
+visited the Napoleon Gallery at Paris can attest the truth of this
+observation, as those who are acquainted with the modern state of
+painting in France well know, and, knowing, cannot but be surprised
+at, the small number of French painters of any tolerable celebrity.]
+
+FINIS.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Poems, by Sir John Carr
+
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