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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Poems, by Robert Southey
+#3 in our series by Robert Southey
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
+copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing
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+**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
+
+**eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
+
+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
+
+Title: Poems
+
+Author: Robert Southey
+
+Release Date: June, 2005 [EBook #8212]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on July 2, 2003]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK POEMS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Clytie Siddall
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+POEMS
+
+by
+
+Robert Southey
+
+
+1797
+
+
+
+
+
+GODDESS of the LYRE! with thee comes
+Majestic TRUTH; and where TRUTH deigns to come,
+Her sister LIBERTY will not be far.
+
+Akenside.
+
+
+
+
+SONNET.
+
+
+With wayworn feet a Pilgrim woe-begone
+ Life's upward road I journeyed many a day,
+ And hymning many a sad yet soothing lay
+Beguil'd my wandering with the charms of song.
+ Lonely my heart and rugged was my way,
+Yet often pluck'd I as I past along
+ The wild and simple flowers of Poesy,
+And as beseem'd the wayward Fancy's child
+ Entwin'd each random weed that pleas'd mine eye.
+Accept the wreath, BELOVED! it is wild
+ And rudely garlanded; yet scorn not thou
+The humble offering, where the sad rue weaves
+'Mid gayer flowers its intermingled leaves,
+ And I have twin'd the myrtle for thy brow.
+
+
+
+
+I have collected in this Volume the productions of very distant periods.
+The lyric pieces were written in earlier youth; I now think the Ode the
+most worthless species of composition as well as the most difficult, and
+should never again attempt it, even if my future pursuits were such as
+allowed leisure for poetry. The poems addressed to the heart and the
+understanding are those of my maturer judgment. The Inscriptions will be
+found to differ from the Greek simplicity of Akenside's in the point
+that generally concludes them. The Sonnets were written first, or I
+would have adopted a different title, and avoided the shackle of rhyme
+and the confinement to fourteen lines.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+To Mary Wollstonecraft ............. 3
+The Triumph of Woman ............... 7
+Poems on the Slave-Trade .......... 29
+Sonnet 1 .......................... 33
+ 2 .......................... 34
+ 3 .......................... 35
+ 4 .......................... 36
+ 5 .......................... 37
+ 6 .......................... 38
+To the Genius of Africa ........... 39
+To my own Miniature Picture ....... 44
+The Pauper's Funeral .............. 47
+Ode written on 1st of January ..... 49
+Inscription 1 ..................... 55
+ 2 ..................... 56
+ 3 ..................... 57
+ 4 ..................... 59
+ 5 ..................... 61
+ 6 ..................... 62
+ 7 ..................... 63
+ 8 ..................... 64
+Birth-Day Ode ..................... 67
+Birth-Day Ode ..................... 71
+Botany-bay Eclogues ............... 75
+Elinor ............................ 77
+Humphrey and William .............. 83
+John, Samuel, and Richard ......... 92
+Frederic .......................... 99
+Sonnet 1 ......................... 107
+ 2 ......................... 108
+ 3 ......................... 109
+ 4 ......................... 110
+ 5 ......................... 111
+ 6 ......................... 112
+ 7 ......................... 113
+ 8 ......................... 114
+ 9 ......................... 115
+ 10 ......................... 116
+Sappho ........................... 121
+Ode written on 1st. Dece. ........ 126
+Written on Sunday Morning ........ 129
+On the death of a favorite
+ old Spaniel .................... 132
+To Contemplation ................. 135
+To Horror ........................ 140
+The Soldier's Wife ............... 145
+The Widow ........................ 147
+The Chapel Bell .................. 149
+The Race of Banquo ............... 152
+Musings on a landscape of
+ Caspar Poussin ................. 154
+Mary ............................. 163
+Donica ........................... 175
+Rudiger .......................... 187
+Hymn to the Penates .............. 203
+
+
+
+ERRORS
+
+p.151 - in the last line but one, for nosal, read nasal.
+p.192 - line 8, for wild, read mild.
+p. 203 - in the note, for Complicces, read Complices.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE TRIUMPH OF WOMAN
+
+
+[Greek (transliterated):
+ Ou gar thaeluierais demas opasen aemiielesion
+ Morphaen, ophra xai allaperi chroi technaesainio.
+
+ NATMACHIOS.]
+
+
+
+
+
+TO MARY WOLLSTONECRAFT.
+
+
+The lilly cheek, the "purple light of love,"
+The liquid lustre of the melting eye,--
+Mary! of these the Poet sung, for these
+Did Woman triumph! with no angry frown
+View this degrading conquest. At that age
+No MAID OF ARC had snatch'd from coward man
+The heaven-blest sword of Liberty; thy sex
+Could boast no female ROLAND'S martyrdom;
+No CORDE'S angel and avenging arm
+Had sanctified again the Murderer's name
+As erst when Caesar perish'd: yet some strains
+May even adorn this theme, befitting me
+To offer, nor unworthy thy regard.
+
+
+ ROBERT SOUTHEY.
+
+
+
+The Subject of the following Poem may be found in the Third and Fourth
+Chapters of the first Book of Esdras.
+
+
+
+THE TRIUMPH of WOMAN.
+
+
+ Glad as the weary traveller tempest-tost
+To reach secure at length his native coast,
+Who wandering long o'er distant lands has sped,
+The night-blast wildly howling round his head,
+Known all the woes of want, and felt the storm
+Of the bleak winter parch his shivering form;
+The journey o'er and every peril past
+Beholds his little cottage-home at last,
+And as he sees afar the smoke curl slow,
+Feels his full eyes with transport overflow:
+So from the scene where Death and Anguish reign,
+And Vice and Folly drench with blood the plain,
+Joyful I turn, to sing how Woman's praise
+Avail'd again Jerusalem to raise,
+Call'd forth the sanction of the Despot's nod,
+And freed the nation best-belov'd of God.
+
+ Darius gives the feast: to Persia's court,
+Awed by his will, the obedient throng resort,
+Attending Satraps swell the Prince's pride,
+And vanquish'd Monarchs grace their Conqueror's side.
+No more the Warrior wears the garb of war,
+Sharps the strong steel, or mounts the scythed car;
+No more Judaea's sons dejected go,
+And hang the head and heave the sigh of woe.
+From Persia's rugged hills descend the train.
+From where Orontes foams along the plain,
+From where Choaspes rolls his royal waves,
+And India sends her sons, submissive slaves.
+Thy daughters Babylon to grace the feast
+Weave the loose robe, and paint the flowery vest,
+With roseate wreaths they braid the glossy hair.
+They tinge the cheek which Nature form'd so fair,
+Learn the soft step, the soul-subduing glance,
+Melt in the song, and swim adown the dance.
+Exalted on the Monarch's golden throne
+In royal state the fair Apame shone;
+
+Her form of majesty, her eyes of fire
+Chill with respect, or kindle with desire.
+The admiring multitude her charms adore,
+And own her worthy of the crown she wore.
+
+ Now on his couch reclin'd Darius lay,
+Tir'd with the toilsome pleasures of the day;
+Without Judaea's watchful sons await
+To guard the sleeping pageant of the state.
+Three youths were these of Judah's royal race,
+Three youths whom Nature dower'd with every grace,
+To each the form of symmetry she gave,
+And haughty Genius curs'd each favorite slave;
+These fill'd the cup, around the Monarch kept,
+Serv'd as he spake, and guarded whilst he slept.
+
+ Yet oft for Salem's hallowed towers laid low
+The sigh would heave, the unbidden tear would flow;
+And when the dull and wearying round of Power
+Allowed Zorobabel one vacant hour,
+He lov'd on Babylon's high wall to roam,
+And stretch the gaze towards his distant home,
+Or on Euphrates' willowy banks reclin'd
+Hear the sad harp moan fitful to the wind.
+
+ As now the perfum'd lamps stream wide their light,
+And social converse chears the livelong night,
+Thus spake Zorobabel, "too long in vain
+"For Sion desolate her sons complain;
+"In anguish worn the joyless years lag slow,
+"And these proud conquerors mock their captive's woe.
+"Whilst Cyrus triumph'd here in victor state
+"A brighter prospect chear'd our exil'd fate,
+"Our sacred walls again he bade us raise,
+"And to Jehovah rear the pile of praise.
+"Quickly these fond hopes faded from our eyes,
+"As the frail sun that gilds the wintry skies,
+"And spreads a moment's radiance o'er the plain,
+"Soon hid by clouds that dim the scene again.
+
+ "Opprest by Artaxerxes' jealous reign
+"We vainly pleaded here, and wept in vain.
+"Now when Darius, chief of mild command,
+"Bids joy and pleasure fill the festive land,
+"Still shall we droop the head in sullen grief,
+"And sternly silent shun to seek relief?
+"What if amid the Monarch's mirthful throng
+"Our harps should echo to the chearful song?
+
+ "Fair is the occasion," thus the one replied,
+"And now let all our tuneful skill be tried.
+"Whilst the gay courtiers quaff the smiling bowl,
+"And wine's strong fumes inspire the madden'd soul,
+"Where all around is merriment, be mine
+"To strike the lute, and praise the power of Wine.
+
+ "And whilst" his friend replied in state alone
+"Lord of the earth Darius fills the throne,
+"Be yours the mighty power of Wine to sing,
+"My lute shall sound the praise of Persia's King."
+
+ To them Zorobabel, on themes like these
+"Seek ye the Monarch of Mankind to please;
+"To Wine superior or to Power's strong arms,
+"Be mine to sing resistless Woman's charms.
+"To him victorious in the rival lays
+"Shall just Darius give the meed of praise;
+"The purple robe his honor'd frame shall fold,
+"The beverage sparkle in his cup of gold;
+"A golden couch support his bed of rest,
+"The chain of honor grace his favor'd breast;
+"His the soft turban, his the car's array
+"O'er Babylon's high wall to wheel its way;
+"And for his wisdom seated on the throne,
+"For the KING'S COUSIN shall the Bard be known."
+
+ Intent they meditate the future lay,
+And watch impatient for the dawn of day.
+The morn rose clear, and shrill were heard the flute,
+The cornet, sackbut, dulcimer, and lute;
+To Babylon's gay streets the throng resort,
+Swarm thro' the gates, and fill the festive court.
+High on his throne Darius tower'd in pride,
+The fair Apame grac'd the Sovereign's side;
+And now she smil'd, and now with mimic frown
+Placed on her brow the Monarch's sacred crown.
+In transport o'er her faultless form he bends,
+Loves every look, and every act commends.
+
+ And now Darius bids the herald call
+Judaea's Bard to grace the thronging hall.
+Hush'd is each sound--the attending crowd are mute,
+The Hebrew lightly strikes the chearful lute:
+
+ When the Traveller on his way,
+ Who has toil'd the livelong day,
+ Feels around on every side
+ The chilly mists of eventide,
+ Fatigued and faint his wearied mind
+ Recurs to all he leaves behind;
+ He thinks upon the well-trimm'd hearth,
+ The evening hour of social mirth,
+ And her who at departing day
+ Weeps for her husband far away.
+ Oh give to him the flowing bowl,
+ Bid it renovate his soul;
+ Then shall sorrow sink to sleep,
+ And he who wept, no more shall weep;
+ For his care-clouded brow shall clear,
+And his glad eye shall sparkle thro' the tear.
+
+ When the poor man heart-opprest
+ Betakes him to his evening rest,
+ And worn with labour thinks in sorrow
+ Of the labor of to-morrow;
+ When sadly musing on his lot
+ He hies him to his joyless cot,
+ And loathes to meet his children there,
+ The rivals for his scanty fare:
+ Oh give to him the flowing bowl,
+ Bid it renovate his soul;
+ The generous juice with magic power
+ Shall cheat with happiness the hour,
+ And with each warm affection fill
+The heart by want and wretchedness made chill.
+
+ When, at the dim close of day,
+ The Captive loves alone to stray
+ Along the haunts recluse and rude
+ Of sorrow and of solitude;
+ When he sits with moveless eye
+ To mark the lingering radiance die,
+ And lets distemper'd Fancy roam
+ Amid the ruins of his home,--
+ Oh give to him the flowing bowl,
+ Bid it renovate his soul;
+ The bowl shall better thoughts bestow,
+ And lull to rest his wakeful woe,
+ And Joy shall bless the evening hour,
+And make the Captive Fortune's conqueror.
+
+ When the wearying cares of state
+ Oppress the Monarch with their weight,
+ When from his pomp retir'd alone
+ He feels the duties of the throne,
+ Feels that the multitude below
+ Depend on him for weal or woe;
+ When his powerful will may bless
+ A realm with peace and happiness,
+ Or with desolating breath
+ Breathe ruin round, and woe, and death:
+ Oh give to him the flowing bowl,
+ Bid it humanize his soul;
+ He shall not feel the empire's weight,
+ He shall not feel the cares of state,
+ The bowl shall each dark thought beguile,
+And Nations live and prosper from his smile.
+
+ Husht was the lute, the Hebrew ceas'd the song;
+Long peals of plaudits echoed from the throng;
+Each tongue the liberal words of praise repaid,
+On every cheek a smile applauding play'd;
+The rival Bard advanced, he struck the string,
+And pour'd the loftier song to Persia's King.
+
+ Why should the wearying cares of state
+ Oppress the Monarch with their weight?
+ Alike to him if Peace shall bless
+ The multitude with happiness;
+Alike to him if frenzied War
+ Careers triumphant on the embattled plain,
+ And rolling on o'er myriads slain,
+With gore and wounds shall clog his scythed car.
+What tho' the tempest rage! no sound
+ Of the deep thunder shakes his distant throne,
+And the red flash that spreads destruction round,
+ Reflects a glorious splendour on the Crown.
+
+ Where is the Man who with ennobling pride
+Beholds not his own nature? where is he
+ Who but with deep amazement awe allied
+Must muse the mysteries of the human mind,
+ The miniature of Deity.
+For Man the vernal clouds descending
+ Shower down their fertilizing rain,
+For Man the ripen'd harvest bending
+ Waves with soft murmur o'er the plenteous plain.
+ He spreads the sail on high,
+ The rude gale wafts him o'er the main;
+ For him the winds of Heaven subservient blow,
+ Earth teems for him, for him the waters flow,
+He thinks, and wills, and acts, a Deity below!
+
+Where is the King who with elating pride
+ Sees not this Man--this godlike Man his Slave?
+Mean are the mighty by the Monarch's side,
+ Alike the wife, alike the brave
+ With timid step and pale, advance,
+ And tremble at the royal glance;
+ Suspended millions watch his breath
+Whose smile is happiness, whose frown is death.
+
+Why goes the Peasant from that little cot,
+Where PEACE and LOVE have blest his humble life?
+ In vain his agonizing wife
+ With tears bedews her husband's face,
+And clasps him in a long and last embrace;
+ In vain his children round his bosom creep,
+ And weep to see their mother weep,
+Fettering their father with their little arms;
+ What are to him the wars alarms?
+ What are to him the distant foes?
+ He at the earliest dawn of day
+ To daily labor went his way;
+ And when he saw the sun decline,
+ He sat in peace beneath his vine:--
+ The king commands, the peasant goes,
+ From all he lov'd on earth he flies,
+And for his monarch toils, and fights, and bleeds, and dies.
+
+ What tho' yon City's castled wall
+ Casts o'er the darken'd plain its crested shade?
+ What tho' their Priests in earnest terror call
+ On all their host of Gods to aid?
+ Vain is the bulwark, vain the tower;
+ In vain her gallant youths expose
+ Their breasts, a bulwark, to the foes.
+ In vain at that tremendous hour,
+ Clasp'd in the savage soldier's reeking arms,
+ Shrieks to tame Heaven the violated Maid.
+ By the rude hand of Ruin scatter'd round
+Their moss-grown towers shall spread the desart ground.
+ Low shall the mouldering palace lie,
+ Amid the princely halls the grass wave high,
+And thro' the shatter'd roof descend the inclement sky.
+
+ Gay o'er the embattled plain
+ Moves yonder warrior train,
+ Their banners wanton on the morning gale!
+ Full on their bucklers beams the rising ray,
+ Their glittering helmets flash a brighter day,
+ The shout of war rings echoing o'er the vale:
+ Far reaches as the aching eye can strain
+ The splendid horror of their wide array.
+ Ah! not in vain expectant, o'er
+ Their glorious pomp the Vultures soar!
+ Amid the Conqueror's palace high
+ Shall sound the song of victory:
+ Long after journeying o'er the plain
+ The Traveller shall with startled eye
+See their white bones then blanched by many a winter sky.
+
+ Lord of the Earth! we will not raise
+ The Temple to thy bounded praise.
+ For thee no victim need expire,
+ For thee no altar blaze with hallowed fire!
+ The burning city flames for thee--
+ Thine altar is the field of victory!
+ Thy sacred Majesty to bless
+ Man a self-offer'd victim freely flies;
+ To thee he sacrifices Happiness,
+ And Peace, and Love's endearing ties,
+To thee a Slave he lives, to thee a Slave he dies.
+
+
+Husht was the lute, the Hebrew ceas'd to sing;
+The shout rush'd forth--for ever live the King!
+Loud was the uproar, as when Rome's decree
+Pronounc'd Achaia once again was free;
+Assembled Greece enrapt with fond belief
+Heard the false boon, and bless'd the villain Chief;
+Each breast with Freedom's holy ardor glows,
+From every voice the cry of rapture rose;
+Their thundering clamors burst the astonish'd sky,
+And birds o'erpassing hear, and drop, and die.
+Thus o'er the Persian dome their plaudits ring,
+And the high hall re-echoed--live the King!
+The Mutes bow'd reverent down before their Lord,
+The assembled Satraps envied and ador'd,
+Joy sparkled in the Monarch's conscious eyes,
+And his pleas'd pride already doom'd the prize.
+
+Silent they saw Zorobabel advance:
+Quick on Apame shot his timid glance,
+With downward eye he paus'd a moment mute,
+And with light finger touch'd the softer lute.
+Apame knew the Hebrew's grateful cause,
+And bent her head and sweetly smil'd applause.
+
+ Why is the Warrior's cheek so red?
+ Why downward droops his musing head?
+ Why that slow step, that faint advance,
+ That keen yet quick-retreating glance?
+ That crested head in war tower'd high,
+ No backward glance disgrac'd that eye,
+ No flushing fear that cheek o'erspread
+ When stern he strode o'er heaps of dead;
+ Strange tumult now his bosom moves--
+ The Warrior fears because he loves.
+
+ Why does the Youth delight to rove
+ Amid the dark and lonely grove?
+ Why in the throng where all are gay,
+ His wandering eye with meaning fraught,
+ Sits he alone in silent thought?
+ Silent he sits; for far away
+ His passion'd soul delights to stray;
+ Recluse he roves and strives to shun
+All human-kind because he loves but One!
+
+ Yes, King of Persia, thou art blest;
+ But not because the sparkling bowl
+ To rapture lifts thy waken'd soul [1]
+ But not because of Power possest,
+ Not that the Nations dread thy nod,
+ And Princes reverence thee their earthly God,
+ Even on a Monarch's solitude
+ Care the black Spectre will intrude,
+ The bowl brief pleasure can bestow,
+ The Purple cannot shield from Woe.
+ But King of Persia thou art blest,
+For Heaven who rais'd thee thus the world above
+Has made thee happy in Apame's love!
+
+ Oh! I have seen his fond looks trace
+ Each angel feature of her face,
+ Rove o'er her form with eager eye,
+ And sigh and gaze, and gaze and sigh.
+ Lo! from his brow with mimic frown,
+ Apame takes the sacred crown;
+ Her faultless form, her lovely face
+ Add to the diadem new grace
+ And subject to a Woman's laws
+ Darius sees and smiles applause!
+
+He ceas'd, and silent still remain'd the throng
+Whilst rapt attention own'd the power of song.
+Then loud as when the wintry whirlwinds blow
+From ev'ry voice the thundering plaudits flow;
+Darius smil'd, Apame's sparkling eyes
+Glanc'd on the King, and Woman won the prize.
+
+Now silent sat the expectant crowd, alone
+The victor Hebrew gaz'd not on the throne;
+With deeper hue his cheek distemper'd glows,
+With statelier stature, loftier now he rose;
+Heavenward he gaz'd, regardless of the throng,
+And pour'd with awful voice sublimer song.
+
+ Ancient of Days! Eternal Truth! one hymn
+One holier strain the Bard shall raise to thee,
+Thee Powerful! Thee Benevolent! Thee Just!
+Friend! Father! All in All! the Vines rich blood,
+The Monarch's might, and Woman's conquering charms,--
+These shall we praise alone? Oh ye who sit
+Beneath your vine, and quaff at evening hour
+The healthful bowl, remember him whose dews,
+Whose rains, whose sun, matur'd the growing fruit,
+Creator and Preserver! Reverence Him,
+O thou who from thy throne dispensest life
+And death, for He has delegated power.
+And thou shalt one day at the throne of God
+Render most strict account! O ye who gaze
+Enrapt on Beauty's fascinating form,
+Gaze on with love, and loving Beauty, learn
+To shun abhorrent all the mental eye
+Beholds deform'd and foul; for so shall Love
+Climb to the Source of Virtue. God of Truth!
+All-Just! All-Mighty! I should ill deserve
+Thy noblest gift, the gift divine of song,
+If, so content with ear-deep melodies [2]
+To please all profitless, I did not pour
+Severer strains; of Truth--eternal Truth,
+Unchanging Justice, universal Love.
+Such strains awake the soul to loftiest thoughts,
+Such strains the Blessed Spirits of the Good
+Waft, grateful incense, to the Halls of Heaven.
+
+The dying notes still murmur'd on the string,
+When from his throne arose the raptur'd King.
+About to speak he stood, and wav'd his hand,
+And all expectant sat the obedient band.
+
+Then just and gen'rous, thus the Monarch cries,
+"Be thine Zorobabel the well earned prize.
+"The purple robe of state thy form shall fold,
+"The beverage sparkle in thy cup of gold;
+"The golden couch, the car, and honor'd chain,
+"Requite the merits of thy favor'd strain,
+"And rais'd supreme the ennobled race among
+"Be call'd MY COUSIN for the victor song.
+"Nor these alone the victor song shall bless,
+"Ask what thou wilt, and what thou wilt, possess."
+"Fall'n is Jerusalem!" the Hebrew cries.
+And patriot anguish fills his streaming eyes,
+"Hurl'd to the earth by Rapine's vengeful rod,
+"Polluted lies the temple of our God,
+"Far in a foreign land her sons remain,
+"Hear the keen taunt, and drag the captive chain:
+"In fruitless woe they wear the wearying years,
+"And steep the bread of bitterness in tears.
+"O Monarch, greatest, mildest, best of men,
+"Restore us to those ruin'd walls again!
+"Allow our race to rear that sacred dome,
+"To live in liberty, and die at Home."
+
+So spake Zorobabel--thus Woman's praise
+Avail'd again Jerusalem to raise,
+Call'd forth the sanction of the Despot's nod,
+And freed the Nation best belov'd of God.
+
+
+
+
+[Footnote 1: text showed "foul" which we think was a long s transferred
+to the modern edition by mistake. Gutenberg Proofreading.]
+
+[Footnote 2: This expression is from OWEN FELLTHAM.]
+
+
+
+POEMS
+
+on the
+
+SLAVE TRADE.
+
+
+I am Innocent of this Blood, SEE YE TO IT!
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+When first the Abolition of the SLAVE-TRADE was agitated in England, the
+friends of humanity endeavoured by two means to accomplish it.--To
+destroy the Trade immediately by the interference of Government or by
+the disuse of West-Indian productions: a slow but certain method. For a
+while Government held the language of justice, and individuals with
+enthusiasm banished sugar from their tables. This enthusiasm soon
+cooled; the majority of those who had made this sacrifice (I prostitute
+the word, but they thought it a sacrifice) persuaded themselves that
+Parliament would do all, and that individual efforts were no longer
+necessary. Thus ended the one attempt; and the duplicity with which Mr.
+Wilberforce has been amused, and the Slave-Merchants satisfied, has now
+effectually destroyed the other.
+
+There are yet two other methods remaining, by which this traffic will
+probably be abolished. By the introduction of East-Indian or Maple
+Sugar, or by the just and general rebellion of the Negroes: by the
+vindictive justice of the Africans, or by the civilized Christians
+finding it their interest to be humane.
+
+To these past and present prospects the following Poems occasionally
+allude: to the English custom of exciting wars upon the Slave Coast that
+they may purchase prisoners, and to the punishment sometimes inflicted
+upon a Negro for murder, of which Hector St. John was an eye-witness.
+
+
+
+SONNET I
+
+Hold your mad hands! for ever on your plain
+ Must the gorged vulture clog his beak with blood?
+ For ever must your Nigers tainted flood
+Roll to the ravenous shark his banquet slain?
+Hold your mad hands! what daemon prompts to rear
+ The arm of Slaughter? on your savage shore
+ Can hell-sprung Glory claim the feast of gore,
+With laurels water'd by the widow's tear
+Wreathing his helmet crown? lift high the spear!
+ And like the desolating whirlwinds sweep,
+ Plunge ye yon bark of anguish in the deep;
+For the pale fiend, cold-hearted Commerce there
+Breathes his gold-gender'd pestilence afar,
+And calls to share the prey his kindred Daemon War.
+
+
+
+SONNET II
+
+Why dost thou beat thy breast and rend thine hair,
+ And to the deaf sea pour thy frantic cries?
+ Before the gale the laden vessel flies;
+The Heavens all-favoring smile, the breeze is fair;
+Hark to the clamors of the exulting crew!
+ Hark how their thunders mock the patient skies!
+ Why dost thou shriek and strain thy red-swoln eyes
+As the white sail dim lessens from thy view?
+Go pine in want and anguish and despair,
+ There is no mercy found in human-kind--
+Go Widow to thy grave and rest thee there!
+ But may the God of Justice bid the wind
+Whelm that curst bark beneath the mountain wave,
+And bless with Liberty and Death the Slave!
+
+
+
+SONNET III
+
+Oh he is worn with toil! the big drops run
+ Down his dark cheek; hold--hold thy merciless hand,
+ Pale tyrant! for beneath thy hard command
+O'erwearied Nature sinks. The scorching Sun,
+As pityless as proud Prosperity,
+ Darts on him his full beams; gasping he lies
+ Arraigning with his looks the patient skies,
+While that inhuman trader lifts on high
+ The mangling scourge. Oh ye who at your ease
+ Sip the blood-sweeten'd beverage! thoughts like these
+Haply ye scorn: I thank thee Gracious God!
+ That I do feel upon my cheek the glow
+Of indignation, when beneath the rod
+ A sable brother writhes in silent woe.
+
+
+
+SONNET IV
+
+'Tis night; the mercenary tyrants sleep
+ As undisturb'd as Justice! but no more
+ The wretched Slave, as on his native shore,
+Rests on his reedy couch: he wakes to weep!
+Tho' thro' the toil and anguish of the day
+ No tear escap'd him, not one suffering groan
+ Beneath the twisted thong, he weeps alone
+In bitterness; thinking that far away
+Tho' the gay negroes join the midnight song,
+ Tho' merriment resounds on Niger's shore,
+She whom he loves far from the chearful throng
+ Stands sad, and gazes from her lowly door
+With dim grown eye, silent and woe-begone,
+ And weeps for him who will return no more.
+
+
+
+SONNET V
+
+Did then the bold Slave rear at last the Sword
+ Of Vengeance? drench'd he deep its thirsty blade
+In the cold bosom of his tyrant lord?
+ Oh! who shall blame him? thro' the midnight shade
+Still o'er his tortur'd memory rush'd the thought
+ Of every past delight; his native grove,
+ Friendship's best joys, and Liberty and Love,
+All lost for ever! then Remembrance wrought
+His soul to madness; round his restless bed
+ Freedom's pale spectre stalk'd, with a stern smile
+ Pointing the wounds of slavery, the while
+She shook her chains and hung her sullen head:
+No more on Heaven he calls with fruitless breath,
+But sweetens with revenge, the draught of death.
+
+
+
+SONNET VI
+
+High in the air expos'd the Slave is hung
+ To all the birds of Heaven, their living food!
+He groans not, tho' awaked by that fierce Sun
+ New torturers live to drink their parent blood!
+He groans not, tho' the gorging Vulture tear
+ The quivering fibre! hither gaze O ye
+ Who tore this Man from Peace and Liberty!
+Gaze hither ye who weigh with scrupulous care
+The right and prudent; for beyond the grave
+ There is another world! and call to mind,
+ Ere your decrees proclaim to all mankind
+Murder is legalized, that there the Slave
+Before the Eternal, "thunder-tongued shall plead
+"Against the deep damnation of your deed."
+
+
+
+TO THE GENIUS OF AFRICA
+
+ O thou who from the mountain's height
+ Roll'st down thy clouds with all their weight
+Of waters to old Niles majestic tide;
+ Or o'er the dark sepulchral plain
+Recallest thy Palmyra's ancient pride,
+ Amid whose desolated domes
+ Secure the savage chacal roams,
+Where from the fragments of the hallow'd fane
+The Arabs rear their miserable homes!
+
+Hear Genius hear thy children's cry!
+ Not always should'st thou love to brood
+ Stern o'er the desert solitude
+Where seas of sand toss their hot surges high;
+ Nor Genius should the midnight song
+Detain thee in some milder mood
+ The palmy plains among
+Where Gambia to the torches light
+Flows radiant thro' the awaken'd night.
+
+Ah, linger not to hear the song!
+Genius avenge thy children's wrong!
+The Daemon COMMERCE on your shore
+ Pours all the horrors of his train,
+And hark! where from the field of gore
+ Howls the hyena o'er the slain!
+Lo! where the flaming village fires the skies!
+Avenging Power awake--arise!
+
+Arise thy children's wrong redress!
+Ah heed the mother's wretchedness
+When in the hot infectious air
+ O'er her sick babe she bows opprest--
+Ah hear her when the Christians tear
+ The drooping infant from her breast!
+ Whelm'd in the waters he shall rest!
+Hear thou the wretched mother's cries,
+Avenging Power awake! arise!
+
+ By the rank infected air
+ That taints those dungeons of despair,
+ By those who there imprison'd die
+ Where the black herd promiscuous lie,
+ By the scourges blacken'd o'er
+ And stiff and hard with human gore,
+ By every groan of deep distress
+ By every curse of wretchedness,
+ By all the train of Crimes that flow
+ From the hopelessness of Woe,
+ By every drop of blood bespilt,
+ By Afric's wrongs and Europe's guilt,
+ Awake! arise! avenge!
+
+And thou hast heard! and o'er their blood-fed plains
+Swept thine avenging hurricanes;
+And bade thy storms with whirlwind roar
+Dash their proud navies on the shore;
+And where their armies claim'd the fight
+Wither'd the warrior's might;
+And o'er the unholy host with baneful breath
+There Genius thou hast breath'd the gales of Death.
+
+So perish still the robbers of mankind!
+What tho' from Justice bound and blind
+Inhuman Power has snatch'd the sword!
+ What tho' thro' many an ignominious age
+ That Fiend with desolating rage
+The tide of carnage pour'd!
+Justice shall yet unclose her eyes,
+Terrific yet in wrath arise,
+And trample on the tyrant's breast,
+And make Oppresion groan opprest.
+
+
+
+To my own
+MINIATURE PICTURE
+taken at two years of age.
+
+And I was once like this! that glowing cheek
+Was mine, those pleasure-sparkling eyes, that brow
+Smooth as the level lake, when not a breeze
+Dies o'er the sleeping surface! twenty years
+Have wrought strange alteration! Of the friends
+Who once so dearly prized this miniature,
+And loved it for its likeness, some are gone
+To their last home; and some, estranged in heart,
+Beholding me with quick-averted glance
+Pass on the other side! But still these hues
+Remain unalter'd, and these features wear
+The look of Infancy and Innocence.
+I search myself in vain, and find no trace
+Of what I was: those lightly-arching lines
+Dark and o'erhanging now; and that mild face
+Settled in these strong lineaments!--There were
+Who form'd high hopes and flattering ones of thee
+Young Robert! for thine eye was quick to speak
+Each opening feeling: should they not have known
+When the rich rainbow on the morning cloud
+Reflects its radiant dies, the husbandman
+Beholds the ominous glory sad, and fears
+Impending storms? they augur'd happily,
+For thou didst love each wild and wonderous tale
+Of faery fiction, and thine infant tongue
+Lisp'd with delight the godlike deeds of Greece
+And rising Rome; therefore they deem'd forsooth
+That thou shouldst tread PREFERMENT'S pleasant path.
+Ill-judging ones! they let thy little feet
+Stray in the pleasant paths of POESY,
+And when thou shouldst have prest amid the crowd
+There didst thou love to linger out the day
+Loitering beneath the laurels barren shade.
+SPIRIT of SPENSER! was the wanderer wrong?
+This little picture was for ornament
+Design'd, to shine amid the motley mob
+Of Fashion and of Folly,--is it not
+More honour'd by this solitary song?
+
+
+
+THE PAUPER'S FUNERAL
+
+What! and not one to heave the pious sigh!
+Not one whose sorrow-swoln and aching eye
+For social scenes, for life's endearments fled,
+Shall drop a tear and dwell upon the dead!
+Poor wretched Outcast! I will weep for thee,
+And sorrow for forlorn humanity.
+Yes I will weep, but not that thou art come
+To the stern Sabbath of the silent tomb:
+For squalid Want, and the black scorpion Care,
+Heart-withering fiends! shall never enter there.
+I sorrow for the ills thy life has known
+As thro' the world's long pilgrimage, alone,
+Haunted by Poverty and woe-begone,
+Unloved, unfriended, thou didst journey on:
+Thy youth in ignorance and labour past,
+And thine old age all barrenness and blast!
+Hard was thy Fate, which, while it doom'd to woe,
+Denied thee wisdom to support the blow;
+And robb'd of all its energy thy mind,
+Ere yet it cast thee on thy fellow-kind,
+Abject of thought, the victim of distress,
+To wander in the world's wide wilderness.
+
+Poor Outcast sleep in peace! the wintry storm
+Blows bleak no more on thine unshelter'd form;
+Thy woes are past; thou restest in the tomb;--
+I pause--and ponder on the days to come.
+
+
+
+ODE
+
+written on the first of January, 1794
+
+Come melancholy Moralizer--come!
+Gather with me the dark and wintry wreath;
+ With me engarland now
+ The SEPULCHRE OF TIME!
+
+Come Moralizer to the funeral song!
+I pour the dirge of the Departed Days,
+ For well the funeral song
+ Befits this solemn hour.
+
+But hark! even now the merry bells ring round
+With clamorous joy to welcome in this day,
+ This consecrated day,
+ To Mirth and Indolence.
+
+Mortal! whilst Fortune with benignant hand
+Fills to the brim thy cup of happiness,
+ Whilst her unclouded sun
+ Illumes thy summer day,
+
+Canst thou rejoice--rejoice that Time flies fast?
+That Night shall shadow soon thy summer sun?
+ That swift the stream of Years
+ Rolls to Eternity?
+
+If thou hast wealth to gratify each wish,
+If Power be thine, remember what thou art--
+ Remember thou art Man,
+ And Death thine heritage!
+
+Hast thou known Love? does Beauty's better sun
+Cheer thy fond heart with no capricious smile,
+ Her eye all eloquence,
+ Her voice all harmony?
+
+Oh state of happiness! hark how the gale
+Moans deep and hollow o'er the leafless grove!
+ Winter is dark and cold--
+ Where now the charms of Spring?
+
+Sayst thou that Fancy paints the future scene
+In hues too sombrous? that the dark-stol'd Maid
+ With stern and frowning front
+ Appals the shuddering soul?
+
+And would'st thou bid me court her faery form
+When, as she sports her in some happier mood,
+ Her many-colour'd robes
+ Dance varying to the Sun?
+
+Ah vainly does the Pilgrim, whose long road
+Leads o'er the barren mountain's storm-vext height,
+ With anxious gaze survey
+ The fruitful far-off vale.
+
+Oh there are those who love the pensive song
+To whom all sounds of Mirth are dissonant!
+ There are who at this hour
+ Will love to contemplate!
+
+For hopeless Sorrow hails the lapse of Time,
+Rejoicing when the fading orb of day
+ Is sunk again in night,
+ That one day more is gone.
+
+And he who bears Affliction's heavy load
+With patient piety, well pleas'd he knows
+ The World a pilgrimage,
+ The Grave the inn of rest.
+
+
+
+
+
+Inscriptions
+
+The three Utilitise of Poetry: the praise of Virtue and Goodness, the
+Memory of things remarkable, and to invigorate the affections.
+
+
+Welsh Triad.
+
+
+INSCRIPTION I.
+
+For a TABLET at GODSTOW NUNNERY.
+
+Here Stranger rest thee! from the neighbouring towers
+Of Oxford, haply thou hast forced thy bark
+Up this strong stream, whose broken waters here
+Send pleasant murmurs to the listening sense:
+Rest thee beneath this hazel; its green boughs
+Afford a grateful shade, and to the eye
+Fair is its fruit: Stranger! the seemly fruit
+Is worthless, all[1] is hollowness within,
+For on the grave of ROSAMUND it grows!
+Young lovely and beloved she fell seduced,
+And here retir'd to wear her wretched age
+In earnest prayer and bitter penitence,
+Despis'd and self-despising: think of her
+Young Man! and learn to reverence Womankind!
+
+
+
+
+[Footnote 1: I have often seen this hazel: its nuts are apparently very
+fine, but always without a kernel.]
+
+
+
+INSCRIPTION II.
+
+For a COLUMN at NEWBURY.
+
+Art thou a Patriot Traveller? on this field
+Did FALKLAND fall the blameless and the brave
+Beneath a Tyrant's banners: dost thou boast
+Of loyal ardor? HAMBDEN perish'd here,
+The rebel HAMBDEN, at whose glorious name
+The heart of every honest Englishman
+Beats high with conscious pride. Both uncorrupt,
+Friends to their common country both, they fought,
+They died in adverse armies. Traveller!
+If with thy neighbour thou should'st not accord,
+In charity remember these good men,
+And quell each angry and injurious thought.
+
+
+
+INSCRIPTION III.
+
+For a CAVERN that overlooks the River AVON.
+
+Enter this cavern Stranger! the ascent
+Is long and steep and toilsome; here awhile
+Thou mayest repose thee, from the noontide heat
+O'ercanopied by this arch'd rock that strikes
+A grateful coolness: clasping its rough arms
+Round the rude portal, the old ivy hangs
+Its dark green branches down, and the wild Bees,
+O'er its grey blossoms murmuring ceaseless, make
+Most pleasant melody. No common spot
+Receives thee, for the Power who prompts the song,
+Loves this secluded haunt. The tide below
+Scarce sends the sound of waters to thine ear;
+And this high-hanging forest to the wind
+Varies its many hues. Gaze Stranger here!
+And let thy soften'd heart intensely feel
+How good, how lovely, Nature! When from hence
+Departing to the City's crouded streets,
+Thy sickening eye at every step revolts
+From scenes of vice and wretchedness; reflect
+That Man creates the evil he endures.
+
+
+
+INSCRIPTION IV.
+
+For the Apartment in CHEPSTOW-CASTLE where HENRY MARTEN the Regicide was
+imprisoned Thirty Years.
+
+For thirty years secluded from mankind,
+Here Marten linger'd. Often have these walls
+Echoed his footsteps, as with even tread
+He paced around his prison: not to him
+Did Nature's fair varieties exist;
+He never saw the Sun's delightful beams,
+Save when thro' yon high bars it pour'd a sad
+And broken splendor. Dost thou ask his crime?
+He had rebell'd against the King, and sat
+In judgment on him; for his ardent mind
+Shaped goodliest plans of happiness on earth,
+And peace and liberty. Wild dreams! But such
+As PLATO lov'd; such as with holy zeal
+Our MILTON worshipp'd. Blessed hopes! awhile
+From man withheld, even to the latter days,
+When CHRIST shall come and all things be fulfill'd.
+
+
+
+INSCRIPTION V.
+
+For a MONUMENT at SILBURY-HILL.
+
+This mound in some remote and dateless day
+Rear'd o'er a Chieftain of the Age [1] of Hills,
+May here detain thee Traveller! from thy road
+Not idly lingering. In his narrow house
+Some Warrior sleeps below: his gallant deeds
+Haply at many a solemn festival
+The Bard has harp'd, but perish'd is the song
+Of praise, as o'er these bleak and barren downs
+The wind that passes and is heard no more.
+Go Traveller on thy way, and contemplate
+Glory's brief pageant, and remember then
+That one good deed was never wrought in vain.
+
+
+
+[Footnote 1: The Northern Nations distinguished the two periods when the
+bodies of the dead were consumed by fire, and when they were buried
+beneath the tumuli so common in this country, by the Age of Fire and the
+Age of Hills.]
+
+
+
+INSCRIPTION VI.
+
+For a MONUMENT in the NEW FOREST.
+
+This is the place where William's kingly power
+Did from their poor and peaceful homes expel,
+Unfriended, desolate, and shelterless,
+The habitants of all the fertile track
+Far as these wilds extend. He levell'd down
+Their little cottages, he bade their fields
+Lie barren, so that o'er the forest waste
+He might most royally pursue his sports!
+If that thine heart be human, Passenger!
+Sure it will swell within thee, and thy lips
+Will mutter curses on him. Think thou then
+What cities flame, what hosts unsepulchred
+Pollute the passing wind, when raging Power
+Drives on his blood-hounds to the chase of Man;
+And as thy thoughts anticipate that day
+When God shall judge aright, in charity
+Pray for the wicked rulers of mankind.
+
+
+
+INSCRIPTION VII.
+
+For a TABLET on the Banks of a Stream.
+
+Stranger! awhile upon this mossy bank
+Recline thee. If the Sun rides high, the breeze,
+That loves to ripple o'er the rivulet,
+Will play around thy brow, and the cool sound
+Of running waters soothe thee. Mark how clear
+It sparkles o'er the shallows, and behold
+Where o'er its surface wheels with restless speed
+Yon glossy insect, on the sand below
+How the swift shadow flies. The stream is pure
+In solitude, and many a healthful herb
+Bends o'er its course and drinks the vital wave:
+But passing on amid the haunts of man,
+It finds pollution there, and rolls from thence
+A tainted tide. Seek'st thou for HAPPINESS?
+Go Stranger, sojourn in the woodland cot
+Of INNOCENCE, and thou shalt find her there.
+
+
+
+INSCRIPTION VIII.
+
+For the CENOTAPH at ERMENONVILLE.
+
+STRANGER! the MAN OF NATURE lies not here:
+Enshrin'd far distant by his [1] rival's side
+His relics rest, there by the giddy throng
+With blind idolatry alike revered!
+Wiselier directed have thy pilgrim feet
+Explor'd the scenes of Ermenonville. ROUSSEAU
+Loved these calm haunts of Solitude and Peace;
+Here he has heard the murmurs of the stream,
+And the soft rustling of the poplar grove,
+When o'er their bending boughs the passing wind
+Swept a grey shade. Here if thy breast be full,
+If in thine eye the tear devout should gush,
+His SPIRIT shall behold thee, to thine home
+From hence returning, purified of heart.
+
+
+
+[Footnote 1: Voltaire.]
+
+
+
+
+Birth-Day Odes.
+
+
+
+ O my faithful Friend!
+O early chosen, ever found the same,
+And trusted and beloved! once more the verse
+Long destin'd, always obvious to thine ear,
+Attend indulgent.
+
+AKENSIDE.
+
+
+
+BIRTH-DAY ODE,
+1793.
+
+ Small is the new-born plant scarce seen
+ Amid the soft encircling green,
+ Where yonder budding acorn rears,
+ Just o'er the waving grass, its tender head:
+ Slow pass along the train of years,
+ And on the growing plant, their dews and showers they shed.
+ Anon it rears aloft its giant form,
+ And spreads its broad-brown arms to meet the storm.
+ Beneath its boughs far shadowing o'er the plain,
+From summer suns, repair the grateful village train.
+
+ Nor BEDFORD will my friend survey
+ The book of Nature with unheeding eye;
+ For never beams the rising orb of day,
+ For never dimly dies the refluent ray,
+ But as the moralizer marks the sky,
+He broods with strange delight upon futurity.
+
+ And we must muse my friend! maturer years
+ Arise, and other Hopes and other Fears,
+ For we have past the pleasant plains of Youth.
+ Oh pleasant plains! that we might stray
+ For ever o'er your faery ground--
+ For ever roam your vales around,
+ Nor onward tempt the dangerous way--
+ For oh--what numerous foes assail
+ The Traveller, from that chearful vale!
+
+ With toil and heaviness opprest
+ Seek not the flowery bank for rest,
+ Tho' there the bowering woodbine spread
+ Its fragrant shelter o'er thy head,
+Tho' Zephyr there should linger long
+To hear the sky-lark's wildly-warbled song,
+There heedless Youth shalt thou awake
+The vengeance of the coiling snake!
+
+Tho' fairly smiles the vernal mead
+To tempt thy pilgrim feet, proceed
+ Hold on thy steady course aright,
+Else shalt thou wandering o'er the pathless plain,
+ When damp and dark descends the night
+Shivering and shelterless, repent in vain.
+
+And yet--tho' Dangers lurk on every side
+Receive not WORLDLY WISDOM for thy guide!
+ Beneath his care thou wilt not know
+ The throb of unavailing woe,
+ No tear shall tremble in thine eye
+ Thy breast shall struggle with no sigh,
+ He will security impart,
+ But he will apathize thy heart!
+
+ Ah no!
+ Fly Fly that fatal foe,
+Virtue shall shrink from his torpedo grasp--
+ For not more fatal thro' the Wretches veins
+ Benumb'd in Death's cold pains
+Creeps the chill poison of the deadly asp.
+
+ Serener joys my friend await
+ Maturer manhood's steady state.
+ The wild brook bursting from its source
+ Meanders on its early course,
+ Delighting there with winding way
+ Amid the vernal vale to stray,
+ Emerging thence more widely spread
+ It foams along its craggy bed,
+ And shatter'd with the mighty shock
+ Rushes from the giddy rock--
+ Hurl'd headlong o'er the dangerous steep
+ On runs the current to the deep,
+ And gathering waters as it goes
+ Serene and calm the river flows,
+ Diffuses plenty o'er the smiling coast,
+Rolls on its stately waves and is in ocean lost.
+
+
+
+BIRTH-DAY ODE,
+1796.
+
+ And wouldst thou seek the low abode
+ Where PEACE delights to dwell?
+ Pause Traveller on thy way of life!
+ With many a snare and peril rife
+ Is that long labyrinth of road:
+ Dark is the vale of years before
+ Pause Traveller on thy way!
+ Nor dare the dangerous path explore
+Till old EXPERIENCE comes to lend his leading ray.
+
+ Not he who comes with lanthorn light
+ Shall guide thy groping pace aright
+ With faltering feet and slow;
+ No! let him rear the torch on high
+ And every maze shall meet thine eye,
+ And every snare and every foe;
+ Then with steady step and strong,
+ Traveller, shalt thou march along.
+
+ Tho' POWER invite thee to her hall,
+ Regard not thou her tempting call
+ Her splendors meteor glare;
+ Tho' courteous Flattery there await
+ And Wealth adorn the dome of State,
+ There stalks the midnight spectre CARE;
+ PEACE, Traveller! does not sojourn there.
+
+ If FAME allure thee, climb not thou
+ To that steep mountain's craggy brow
+ Where stands her stately pile;
+ For far from thence does PEACE abide,
+ And thou shall find FAME'S favouring smile
+Cold as the feeble Sun on Heclas snow-clad side,
+
+And Traveller! as thou hopest to find
+ That low and loved abode,
+ Retire thee from the thronging road
+And shun the mob of human kind.
+Ah I hear how old EXPERIENCE schools,
+"Fly fly the crowd of Knaves and Fools
+ "And thou shalt fly from woe;
+"The one thy heedless heart will greet
+"With Judas smile, and thou wilt meet
+ "In every Fool a Foe!"
+
+So safely mayest thou pass from these,
+And reach secure the home of PEACE,
+ And FRIENDSHIP find thee there.
+No happier state can mortal know,
+No happier lot can Earth bestow
+ If LOVE thy lot shall share.
+Yet still CONTENT with him may dwell
+ Whom HYMEN will not bless,
+And VIRTUE sojourn in the cell
+ Of HERMIT HAPPINESS.
+
+
+
+
+BOTANY BAY
+
+Eclogues
+
+
+
+Where a sight shall shuddering Sorrow find.
+Sad as the ruins of the human mind!
+
+BOWLES.
+
+
+
+ELINOR.
+
+(Time, Morning. Scene, the Shore.[1])
+
+Once more to daily toil--once more to wear
+The weeds of infamy--from every joy
+The heart can feel excluded, I arise
+Worn out and faint with unremitting woe;
+And once again with wearied steps I trace
+The hollow-sounding shore. The swelling waves
+Gleam to the morning sun, and dazzle o'er
+With many a splendid hue the breezy strand.
+Oh there was once a time when ELINOR
+Gazed on thy opening beam with joyous eye
+Undimm'd by guilt and grief! when her full soul
+Felt thy mild radiance, and the rising day
+Waked but to pleasure! on thy sea-girt verge
+Oft England! have my evening steps stole on,
+Oft have mine eyes surveyed the blue expanse,
+And mark'd the wild wind swell the ruffled surge,
+And seen the upheaved billows bosomed rage
+Rush on the rock; and then my timid soul
+Shrunk at the perils of the boundless deep,
+And heaved a sigh for suffering mariners.
+Ah! little deeming I myself was doom'd.
+To tempt the perils of the boundless deep,
+An Outcast--unbeloved and unbewail'd.
+
+Why stern Remembrance! must thine iron hand
+Harrow my soul? why calls thy cruel power
+The fields of England to my exil'd eyes,
+The joys which once were mine? even now I see
+The lowly lovely dwelling! even now
+Behold the woodbine clasping its white walls
+And hear the fearless red-breasts chirp around
+To ask their morning meal:--for I was wont
+With friendly band to give their morning meal,
+Was wont to love their song, when lingering morn
+Streak'd o'er the chilly landskip the dim light,
+And thro' the open'd lattice hung my head
+To view the snow-drop's bud: and thence at eve
+When mildly fading sunk the summer sun,
+Oft have I loved to mark the rook's slow course
+And hear his hollow croak, what time he sought
+The church-yard elm, whose wide-embowering boughs
+Full foliaged, half conceal'd the house of God.
+There, my dead father! often have I heard
+Thy hallowed voice explain the wonderous works
+Of Heaven to sinful man. Ah! little deem'd
+Thy virtuous bosom, that thy shameless child
+So soon should spurn the lesson! sink the slave
+Of Vice and Infamy! the hireling prey
+Of brutal appetite! at length worn out
+With famine, and the avenging scourge of guilt,
+Should dare dishonesty--yet dread to die!
+
+ Welcome ye savage lands, ye barbarous climes,
+Where angry England sends her outcast sons--
+I hail your joyless shores! my weary bark
+Long tempest-tost on Life's inclement sea,
+Here hails her haven! welcomes the drear scene,
+The marshy plain, the briar-entangled wood,
+And all the perils of a world unknown.
+For Elinor has nothing new to fear
+From fickle Fortune! all her rankling shafts
+Barb'd with disgrace, and venom'd with disease.
+Have pierced my bosom, and the dart of death
+Has lost its terrors to a wretch like me.
+
+ Welcome ye marshy heaths! ye pathless woods,
+Where the rude native rests his wearied frame
+Beneath the sheltering shade; where, when the storm,
+As rough and bleak it rolls along the sky,
+Benumbs his naked limbs, he flies to seek
+The dripping shelter. Welcome ye wild plains
+Unbroken by the plough, undelv'd by hand
+Of patient rustic; where for lowing herds,
+And for the music of the bleating flocks,
+Alone is heard the kangaroo's sad note
+Deepening in distance. Welcome ye rude climes,
+The realm of Nature! for as yet unknown
+The crimes and comforts of luxurious life,
+Nature benignly gives to all enough,
+Denies to all a superfluity,
+What tho' the garb of infamy I wear,
+Tho' day by day along the echoing beach
+I cull the wave-worn shells, yet day by day
+I earn in honesty my frugal food,
+And lay me down at night to calm repose.
+No more condemn'd the mercenary tool
+Of brutal lust, while heaves the indignant heart
+With Virtue's stiffled sigh, to fold my arms
+Round the rank felon, and for daily bread
+To hug contagion to my poison'd breast;
+On these wild shores Repentance' saviour hand
+Shall probe my secret soul, shall cleanse its wounds
+And fit the faithful penitent for Heaven.
+
+
+
+[Footnote 1: The female convicts are frequently employed in collecting
+shells for the purpose of making lime.]
+
+
+
+
+HUMPHREY and WILLIAM.
+
+(Time, Noon.)
+
+
+HUMPHREY:
+
+See'st thou not William that the scorching Sun
+By this time half his daily race has run?
+The savage thrusts his light canoe to shore
+And hurries homeward with his fishy store.
+Suppose we leave awhile this stubborn soil
+To eat our dinner and to rest from toil!
+
+
+WILLIAM:
+
+Agreed. Yon tree whose purple gum bestows
+A ready medicine for the sick-man's woes,
+Forms with its shadowy boughs a cool retreat
+To shield us from the noontide's sultry heat.
+Ah Humphrey! now upon old England's shore
+The weary labourer's morning work is o'er:
+The woodman now rests from his measur'd stroke
+Flings down his axe and sits beneath the oak,
+Savour'd with hunger there he eats his food,
+There drinks the cooling streamlet of the wood.
+To us no cooling streamlet winds its way,
+No joys domestic crown for us the day,
+The felon's name, the outcast's garb we wear,
+Toil all the day, and all the night despair.
+
+
+HUMPHREY:
+
+Ah William! labouring up the furrowed ground
+I used to love the village clock's dull sound,
+Rejoice to hear my morning toil was done,
+And trudge it homewards when the clock went one.
+'Twas ere I turn'd a soldier and a sinner!
+Pshaw! curse this whining--let us fall to dinner.
+
+
+WILLIAM:
+
+I too have loved this hour, nor yet forgot
+Each joy domestic of my little cot.
+For at this hour my wife with watchful care
+Was wont each humbler dainty to prepare,
+The keenest sauce by hunger was supplied
+And my poor children prattled at my side.
+Methinks I see the old oak table spread,
+The clean white trencher and the good brown bread,
+The cheese my daily food which Mary made,
+For Mary knew full well the housewife's trade:
+The jug of cyder,--cyder I could make,
+And then the knives--I won 'em at the wake.
+Another has them now! I toiling here
+Look backward like a child and drop a tear.
+
+
+HUMPHREY:
+
+I love a dismal story, tell me thine,
+Meantime, good Will, I'll listen as I dine.
+I too my friend can tell a piteous story
+When I turn'd hero how I purchas'd glory.
+
+
+WILLIAM:
+
+But Humphrey, sure thou never canst have known
+The comforts of a little home thine own:
+A home so snug, So chearful too as mine,
+'Twas always clean, and we could make it fine;
+For there King Charles's golden rules were seen,
+And there--God bless 'em both--the King and Queen.
+The pewter plates our garnish'd chimney grace
+So nicely scour'd, you might have seen your face;
+And over all, to frighten thieves, was hung
+Well clean'd, altho' but seldom us'd, my gun.
+Ah! that damn'd gun! I took it down one morn--
+A desperate deal of harm they did my corn!
+Our testy Squire too loved to save the breed,
+So covey upon covey eat my seed.
+I mark'd the mischievous rogues, and took my aim,
+I fir'd, they fell, and--up the keeper came.
+That cursed morning brought on my undoing,
+I went to prison and my farm to ruin.
+Poor Mary! for her grave the parish paid,
+No tomb-stone tells where her cold corpse is laid!
+My children--my dear boys--
+
+
+HUMPHREY:
+
+ Come--Grief is dry--
+You to your dinner--to my story I.
+To you my friend who happier days have known
+And each calm comfort of a home your own,
+This is bad living: I have spent my life
+In hardest toil and unavailing strife,
+And here (from forest ambush safe at least)
+To me this scanty pittance seems a feast.
+I was a plough-boy once; as free from woes
+And blithesome as the lark with whom I rose.
+Each evening at return a meal I found
+And, tho' my bed was hard, my sleep was sound.
+One Whitsuntide, to go to fair, I drest
+Like a great bumkin in my Sunday's best;
+A primrose posey in my hat I stuck
+And to the revel went to try my luck.
+From show to show, from booth to booth I stray,
+See stare and wonder all the live-long day.
+A Serjeant to the fair recruiting came
+Skill'd in man-catching to beat up for game;
+Our booth he enter'd and sat down by me;--
+Methinks even now the very scene I see!
+The canvass roof, the hogshead's running store,
+The old blind fiddler seated next the door,
+The frothy tankard passing to and fro
+And the rude rabble round the puppet-show;
+The Serjeant eyed me well--the punch-bowl comes,
+And as we laugh'd and drank, up struck the drums--
+And now he gives a bumper to his Wench--
+God save the King, and then--God damn the French.
+Then tells the story of his last campaign.
+How many wounded and how many slain,
+Flags flying, cannons roaring, drums a-beating,
+The English marching on, the French retreating,--
+"Push on--push on my lads! they fly before ye,
+"March on to riches, happiness and glory!"
+At first I wonder'd, by degrees grew bolder,
+Then cried--"tis a fine thing to be a soldier!"
+"Aye Humphrey!" says the Serjeant--"that's your name?
+"'Tis a fine thing to fight the French for fame!
+"March to the field--knock out a Mounseer's brains
+"And pick the scoundrel's pocket for your pains.
+"Come Humphrey come! thou art a lad of spirit!
+"Rise to a halbert--as I did--by merit!
+"Would'st thou believe it? even I was once
+"As thou art now, a plough-boy and a dunce;
+"But Courage rais'd me to my rank. How now boy!
+"Shall Hero Humphrey still be Numps the plough-boy?
+"A proper shaped young fellow! tall and straight!
+"Why thou wert made for glory! five feet eight!
+"The road to riches is the field of fight,--
+"Didst ever see a guinea look so bright?
+"Why regimentals Numps would give thee grace,
+"A hat and feather would become that face;
+"The girls would crowd around thee to be kist--
+"Dost love a girl?" "Od Zounds!" I cried "I'll list!"
+So past the night: anon the morning came,
+And off I set a volunteer for fame.
+"Back shoulders, turn out your toes, hold up your head,
+"Stand easy!" so I did--till almost dead.
+Oh how I long'd to tend the plough again
+Trudge up the field and whistle o'er the plain,
+When tir'd and sore amid the piteous throng
+Hungry and cold and wet I limp'd along,
+And growing fainter as I pass'd and colder,
+Curs'd that ill hour when I became a soldier!
+In town I found the hours more gayly pass
+And Time fled swiftly with my girl and glass;
+The girls were wonderous kind and wonderous fair,
+They soon transferred me to the Doctor's care,
+The Doctor undertook to cure the evil,
+And he almost transferred me to the Devil.
+'Twere tedious to relate the dismal story
+Of fighting, fasting, wretchedness and glory.
+At last discharg'd, to England's shores I came
+Paid for my wounds with want instead of fame,
+Found my fair friends and plunder'd as they bade me,
+They kist me, coax'd me, robb'd me and betray'd me.
+Tried and condemn'd his Majesty transports me,
+And here in peace, I thank him, he supports me,
+So ends my dismal and heroic story
+And Humphrey gets more good from guilt than glory.
+
+
+
+
+JOHN, SAMUEL, & RICHARD.
+
+(Time, Evening.)
+
+
+JOHN.
+
+'Tis a calm pleasant evening, the light fades away,
+And the Sun going down has done watch for the day.
+To my mind we live wonderous well when transported,
+It is but to work and we must be supported.
+Fill the cann, Dick! success here to Botany Bay!
+
+
+RICHARD.
+
+Success if you will,--but God send me away.
+
+
+JOHN.
+
+Ah! you lubberly landsmen don't know when you're well;
+Hadst thou known half the hardships of which I can tell!
+The sailor has no place of safety in store--
+From the tempest at sea, to the press-gang on shore!
+When Roguery rules all the rest of the earth,
+God be thanked in this corner I've got a good birth.
+Talk of hardships! what these are the sailor don't know!
+'Tis the soldier my friend that's acquainted with woe,
+Long journeys, short halting, hard work and small pay,
+To be popt at like pidgeons for sixpence a day!--
+Thank God! I'm safe quarter'd at Botany Bay.
+
+
+JOHN:
+
+Ah! you know but little! I'll wager a pot
+I have suffer'd more evils than fell to your lot.
+Come we'll have it all fairly and properly tried,
+Tell story for story, and Dick shall decide.
+
+
+SAMUEL:
+
+Done.
+
+
+JOHN:
+
+ Done. 'Tis a wager and I shall be winner;
+Thou wilt go without grog Sam to-morrow at dinner.
+
+
+SAMUEL:
+
+I was trapp'd by the Serjeant's palavering pretences,
+He listed me when I was out of my senses.
+So I took leave to-day of all care and all sorrow
+And was drill'd to repentance and reason to-morrow.
+
+
+JOHN:
+
+I would be a sailor and plough the wide ocean,
+And was soon sick and sad with the billow's commotion.
+So the Captain he sent me aloft on the mast,
+And curs'd me, and bid me cry there--and hold fast!
+
+
+SAMUEL:
+
+After marching all day, faint and hungry and sore,
+I have lain down at night on the swamps of the moor,
+Unshelter'd and forced by fatigue to remain.
+All chill'd by the wind and benumb'd by the rain.
+
+
+JOHN:
+
+I have rode out the storm when the billows beat high
+And the red gleaming lightnings flash'd thro' the dark sky,
+When the tempest of night the black sea overcast
+Wet and weary I labour'd, yet sung to the blast.
+
+
+SAMUEL:
+
+I have march'd, trumpets sounding--drums beating--flags flying,
+Where the music of war drown'd the shrieks of the dying,
+When the shots whizz'd around me all dangers defied,
+Push'd on when my comrades fell dead at my side,
+Drove the foe from the mouth of the Cannon away,
+Fought, conquer'd and bled, all for sixpence a day.
+
+
+JOHN:
+
+And I too friend Samuel! have heard the shots rattle,
+But we seamen rejoice in the play of the battle;
+Tho' the chain and the grape-shot roll splintering around,
+With the blood of our messmates tho' slippery the ground,
+The fiercer the fight, still the fiercer we grow,
+We heed not our loss so we conquer the foe.
+And the hard battle won, so the prize be not sunk,
+The Captain gets rich, and the Sailors get drunk.
+
+
+SAMUEL:
+
+God help the poor soldier when backward he goes
+In disgraceful retreat thro' a country of foes!
+No respite from danger by day or by night
+He is still forced to fly, still o'ertaken to fight,
+Every step that he takes he must battle his way,
+He must force his hard meal from the peasant away;
+No rest--and no hope, from all succour afar,
+God forgive the poor Soldier for going to the war!
+
+
+JOHN:
+
+But what are these dangers to those I have past
+When the dark billows roar'd to the roar of the blast?
+When we work'd at the pumps worn with labour and weak
+And with dread still beheld the increase of the leak,
+Sometimes as we rose on the wave could our sight
+From the rocks of the shore catch the light-houses light;
+In vain to the beach to assist us they press,
+We fire faster and faster our guns of distress,
+Still with rage unabating the wind and waves roar--
+How the giddy wreck reels--as the billows burst o'er--
+Leap--leap--for she yawns--for she sinks in the wave--
+Call on God to preserve--for God only can save!
+
+
+SAMUEL:
+
+There's an end of all troubles however at last!
+And when I in the waggon of wounded was cast,
+When my wounds with the chilly night-wind smarted sore
+And I thought of the friends I should never see more,
+No hand to relieve--scarce a morsel of bread--
+Sick at heart I have envied the peace of the dead!
+Left to rot in a jail till by treaty set free,
+Old England's white cliffs with what joy did I see!
+I had gain'd enough glory, some wounds, but no good,
+And was turn'd on the public to shift how I could.
+When I think what I've suffer'd and where I am now
+I curse him who snared me away from the plough.
+
+
+JOHN:
+
+When I was discharged I went home to my wife,
+There in comfort to spend all the rest of my life.
+My wife was industrious, we earn'd what we spent,
+And tho' little we had, were with little content;
+And whenever I listen'd and heard the wind roar,
+I bless'd God for my little snug cabin on shore.
+At midnight they seiz'd me, they dragg'd me away,
+They wounded me sore when I would not obey,
+And because for my country I'd ventur'd my life,
+I was dragg'd like a thief from my home and my wife.
+Then the fair wind of Fortune chopp'd round in my face
+And Want at length drove me to guilt and disgrace--
+But all's for the best;--on the world's wide sea cast,
+I am haven'd in peace in this corner at last.
+
+
+SAMUEL:
+
+Come Dick! we have done--and for judgment we call.
+
+
+RICHARD:
+
+And in faith I can give ye no judgment at all.
+I've been listening to all the hard labours you've past
+And think in plain troth, you're two blockheads at last.
+My lads where the Deuce was the wit which God gave ye
+When you sold yourselves first to the army or navy?
+By land and by sea hunting dangers to roam,
+When you might have been hang'd so much easier at home!
+But you're now snug and settled and safe from foul weather,
+So drink up your grog and be merry together.
+
+
+
+
+
+FREDERIC.
+
+(Time Night. Scene the woods.)
+
+
+Where shall I turn me? whither shall I bend
+My weary way? thus worn with toil and faint
+How thro' the thorny mazes of this wood
+Attain my distant dwelling? that deep cry
+That rings along the forest seems to sound
+My parting knell: it is the midnight howl
+Of hungry monsters prowling for their prey!
+Again! oh save me--save me gracious Heaven!
+I am not fit to die!
+ Thou coward wretch
+Why heaves thy trembling heart? why shake thy limbs
+Beneath their palsied burden? is there ought
+So lovely in existence? would'st thou drain
+Even to its dregs the bitter draught of life?
+Dash down the loathly bowl! poor outcast slave
+Stamp'd with the brand of Vice and Infamy
+Why should the villain Frederic shrink from Death?
+
+Death! where the magic in that empty name
+That chills my inmost heart? why at the thought
+Starts the cold dew of fear on every limb?
+There are no terrors to surround the Grave,
+When the calm Mind collected in itself
+Surveys that narrow house: the ghastly train
+That haunt the midnight of delirious Guilt
+Then vanish; in that home of endless rest
+All sorrows cease.--Would I might slumber there!
+
+Why then this panting of the fearful heart?
+This miser love of Life that dreads to lose
+Its cherish'd torment? shall the diseased man
+Yield up his members to the surgeon's knife,
+Doubtful of succour, but to ease his frame
+Of fleshly anguish, and the coward wretch,
+Whose ulcered soul can know no human help
+Shrink from the best Physician's certain aid?
+Oh it were better far to lay me down
+Here on this cold damp earth, till some wild beast
+Seize on his willing victim!
+
+ If to die
+Were all, it were most sweet to rest my head
+On the cold clod, and sleep the sleep of Death.
+But if the Archangel's trump at the last hour
+Startle the ear of Death and wake the soul
+To frenzy!--dreams of infancy! fit tales
+For garrulous beldames to affrighten babes!
+I have been guilty, yet my mind can bear
+The retrospect of guilt, yet in the hour
+Of deep contrition to THE ETERNAL look
+For mercy! for the child of Poverty,
+And "disinherited of happiness,"
+
+What if I warr'd upon the world? the world
+Had wrong'd me first: I had endur'd the ills
+Of hard injustice; all this goodly earth
+Was but to me one wild waste wilderness;
+I had no share in Nature's patrimony,
+Blasted were all my morning hopes of Youth,
+Dark DISAPPOINTMENT follow'd on my ways,
+CARE was my bosom inmate, and keen WANT
+Gnaw'd at my heart. ETERNAL ONE thou know'st
+How that poor heart even in the bitter hour
+Of lewdest revelry has inly yearn'd
+For peace!
+
+ My FATHER! I will call on thee,
+Pour to thy mercy seat my earnest prayer,
+And wait thy peace in bowedness of soul.
+Oh thoughts of comfort! how the afflicted heart,
+Tired with the tempest of its passions, rests
+On you with holy hope! the hollow howl
+Of yonder harmless tenant of the woods
+Bursts not with terror on the sober'd sense.
+If I have sinn'd against mankind, on them
+Be that past sin; they made me what I was.
+In these extremest climes can Want no more
+Urge to the deeds of darkness, and at length
+Here shall I rest. What tho' my hut be poor--
+The rains descend not thro' its humble roof:
+Would I were there again! the night is cold;
+And what if in my wanderings I should rouse
+The savage from his thicket!
+
+ Hark! the gun!
+And lo--the fire of safety! I shall reach
+My little hut again! again by toil
+Force from the stubborn earth my sustenance,
+And quick-ear'd guilt will never start alarm'd
+Amid the well-earn'd meal. This felon's garb--
+Will it not shield me from the winds of Heaven?
+And what could purple more? Oh strengthen me
+Eternal One in this serener state!
+Cleanse thou mine heart, so PENITENCE and FAITH
+Shall heal my soul and my last days be peace.
+
+
+
+
+Sonnets
+
+
+SONNET I.
+
+Go Valentine and tell that lovely maid
+ Whom Fancy still will pourtray to my sight,
+How her Bard lingers in this sullen shade,
+ This dreary gloom of dull monastic night.
+Say that from every joy of life remote
+ At evening's closing hour he quits the throng,
+Listening alone the ring-dove's plaintive note
+ Who pours like him her solitary song.
+Say that her absence calls the sorrowing sigh,
+ Say that of all her charms he loves to speak,
+In fancy feels the magic of her eye,
+ In fancy views the smile illume her cheek,
+Courts the lone hour when Silence stills the grove
+And heaves the sigh of Memory and of Love.
+
+
+
+SONNET II.
+
+ Think Valentine, as speeding on thy way
+ Homeward thou hastest light of heart along,
+ If heavily creep on one little day
+ The medley crew of travellers among,
+ Think on thine absent friend: reflect that here
+ On Life's sad journey comfortless he roves,
+ Remote from every scene his heart holds dear,
+ From him he values, and from her he loves.
+ And when disgusted with the vain and dull
+ Whom chance companions of thy way may doom,
+ Thy mind, of each domestic comfort full,
+ Turns to itself and meditates on home,
+ Ah think what Cares must ache within his breast
+Who loaths the lingering road, yet has no home of rest!
+
+
+
+SONNET III.
+
+ Not to thee Bedford mournful is the tale
+ Of days departed. Time in his career
+ Arraigns not thee that the neglected year
+ Has past unheeded onward. To the vale
+ Of years thou journeyest. May the future road
+ Be pleasant as the past! and on my friend
+ Friendship and Love, best blessings! still attend,
+ 'Till full of days he reach the calm abode
+ Where Nature slumbers. Lovely is the age
+ Of Virtue. With such reverence we behold
+ The silver hairs, as some grey oak grown old
+ That whilome mock'd the rushing tempest's rage
+ Now like the monument of strength decayed
+With rarely-sprinkled leaves casting a trembling shade.
+
+
+
+SONNET IV.
+
+What tho' no sculptur'd monument proclaim
+ Thy fate-yet Albert in my breast I bear
+Inshrin'd the sad remembrance; yet thy name
+ Will fill my throbbing bosom. When DESPAIR
+The child of murdered HOPE, fed on thy heart,
+ Loved honored friend, I saw thee sink forlorn
+Pierced to the soul by cold Neglect's keen dart,
+ And Penury's hard ills, and pitying Scorn,
+And the dark spectre of departed JOY
+ Inhuman MEMORY. Often on thy grave
+Love I the solitary hour to employ
+Thinking on other days; and heave the sigh
+ Responsive, when I mark the high grass wave
+Sad sounding as the cold breeze rustles by.
+
+
+
+SONNET V.
+
+Hard by the road, where on that little mound
+ The high grass rustles to the passing breeze,
+ The child of Misery rests her head in peace.
+Pause there in sadness. That unhallowed ground
+Inshrines what once was Isabel. Sleep on
+ Sleep on, poor Outcast! lovely was thy cheek,
+ And thy mild eye was eloquent to speak
+The soul of Pity. Pale and woe-begone
+Soon did thy fair cheek fade, and thine eye weep
+ The tear of anguish for the babe unborn,
+ The helpless heir of Poverty and Scorn.
+She drank the draught that chill'd her soul to sleep.
+I pause and wipe the big drop from mine eye,
+Whilst the proud Levite scowls and passes by.
+
+
+
+SONNET VI
+ to a brook near the village of Corston.
+
+ As thus I bend me o'er thy babbling stream
+ And watch thy current, Memory's hand pourtrays
+ The faint form'd scenes of the departed days,
+ Like the far forest by the moon's pale beam
+ Dimly descried yet lovely. I have worn
+ Upon thy banks the live-long hour away,
+ When sportive Childhood wantoned thro' the day,
+ Joy'd at the opening splendour of the morn,
+ Or as the twilight darken'd, heaved the sigh
+ Thinking of distant home; as down my cheek
+ At the fond thought slow stealing on, would speak
+ The silent eloquence of the full eye.
+ Dim are the long past days, yet still they please
+As thy soft sounds half heard, borne on the inconstant breeze.
+
+
+
+SONNET VII
+ to the evening rainbow.
+
+Mild arch of promise! on the evening sky
+ Thou shinest fair with many a lovely ray
+Each in the other melting. Much mine eye
+ Delights to linger on thee; for the day,
+Changeful and many-weather'd, seem'd to smile
+Flashing brief splendor thro' its clouds awhile,
+ That deepen'd dark anon and fell in rain:
+But pleasant is it now to pause, and view
+Thy various tints of frail and watery hue,
+ And think the storm shall not return again.
+Such is the smile that Piety bestows
+ On the good man's pale cheek, when he in peace
+Departing gently from a world of woes,
+ Anticipates the realm where sorrows cease.
+
+
+
+SONNET VIII.
+
+With many a weary step, at length I gain
+ Thy summit, Lansdown; and the cool breeze plays,
+ Gratefully round my brow, as hence the gaze
+Returns to dwell upon the journeyed plain.
+ 'Twas a long way and tedious! to the eye
+Tho fair the extended vale, and fair to view
+The falling leaves of many a faded hue,
+ That eddy in the wild gust moaning by.
+Even so it fared with Life! in discontent
+Restless thro' Fortune's mingled scenes I went,
+ Yet wept to think they would return no more!
+But cease fond heart in such sad thoughts to roam,
+For surely thou ere long shall reach thy home,
+ And pleasant is the way that lies before.
+
+
+
+SONNET IX.
+
+Fair is the rising morn when o'er the sky
+ The orient sun expands his roseate ray,
+And lovely to the Bard's enthusiast eye
+ Fades the meek radiance of departing day;
+But fairer is the smile of one we love,
+ Than all the scenes in Nature's ample sway.
+And sweeter than the music of the grove,
+ The voice that bids us welcome. Such delight
+ EDITH! is mine, escaping to thy sight
+From the hard durance of the empty throng.
+ Too swiftly then towards the silent night
+Ye Hours of happiness! ye speed along,
+ Whilst I, from all the World's cold cares apart,
+ Pour out the feelings of my burthen'd heart.
+
+
+
+SONNET X.
+
+How darkly o'er yon far-off mountain frowns
+ The gather'd tempest! from that lurid cloud
+ The deep-voiced thunders roll, aweful and loud
+Tho' distant; while upon the misty downs
+Fast falls in shadowy streaks the pelting rain.
+ I never saw so terrible a storm!
+Perhaps some way-worn traveller in vain
+ Wraps his torn raiment round his shivering form
+Cold even as Hope within him! I the while
+Pause me in sadness tho' the sunbeams smile
+ Cheerily round me. Ah that thus my lot
+Might be with Peace and Solitude assign'd,
+ Where I might from some little quiet cot,
+Sigh for the crimes and miseries of mankind!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Sappho.
+
+A MONODRAMA.
+
+
+Argument.
+
+To leap from the promontory of LEUCADIA was believed by the Greeks to be
+a remedy for hopeless love, if the self-devoted victim escaped with
+life. Artemisia lost her life in the dangerous experiment: and Sappho is
+said thus to have perished, in attempting to cure her passion for Phaon.
+
+
+SAPPHO
+
+(Scene the promontory of Leucadia.)
+
+This is the spot:--'tis here Tradition says
+That hopeless Love from this high towering rock
+Leaps headlong to Oblivion or to Death.
+Oh 'tis a giddy height! my dizzy head
+Swims at the precipice--'tis death to fall!
+
+Lie still, thou coward heart! this is no time
+To shake with thy strong throbs the frame convuls'd.
+To die,--to be at rest--oh pleasant thought!
+Perchance to leap and live; the soul all still,
+And the wild tempest of the passions husht
+In one deep calm; the heart, no more diseas'd
+By the quick ague fits of hope and fear,
+Quietly cold!
+ Presiding Powers look down!
+In vain to you I pour'd my earnest prayers,
+In vain I sung your praises: chiefly thou
+VENUS! ungrateful Goddess, whom my lyre
+Hymn'd with such full devotion! Lesbian groves,
+Witness how often at the languid hour
+Of summer twilight, to the melting song
+Ye gave your choral echoes! Grecian Maids
+Who hear with downcast look and flushing cheek
+That lay of love bear witness! and ye Youths,
+Who hang enraptur'd on the empassion'd strain
+Gazing with eloquent eye, even till the heart
+Sinks in the deep delirium! and ye too
+Shall witness, unborn Ages! to that song
+Of warmest zeal; ah witness ye, how hard,
+Her fate who hymn'd the votive hymn in vain!
+Ungrateful Goddess! I have hung my lute
+In yonder holy pile: my hand no more
+Shall wake the melodies that fail'd to move
+The heart of Phaon--yet when Rumour tells
+How from Leucadia Sappho hurl'd her down
+A self-devoted victim--he may melt
+Too late in pity, obstinate to love.
+
+Oh haunt his midnight dreams, black NEMESIS!
+Whom,[1] self-conceiving in the inmost depths
+Of CHAOS, blackest NIGHT long-labouring bore,
+When the stern DESTINIES, her elder brood.
+And shapeless DEATH, from that more monstrous birth
+Leapt shuddering! haunt his slumbers, Nemesis,
+Scorch with the fires of Phlegethon his heart,
+Till helpless, hopeless, heaven-abandon'd wretch
+He too shall seek beneath the unfathom'd deep
+To hide him from thy fury.
+
+ How the sea
+Far distant glitters as the sun-beams smile,
+And gayly wanton o'er its heaving breast
+Phoebus shines forth, nor wears one cloud to mourn
+His votary's sorrows! God of Day shine on--
+By Man despis'd, forsaken by the Gods,
+I supplicate no more.
+
+ How many a day,
+O pleasant Lesbos! in thy secret streams
+Delighted have I plung'd, from the hot sun
+Screen'd by the o'er-arching groves delightful shade,
+And pillowed on the waters: now the waves
+Shall chill me to repose.
+
+ Tremendous height!
+Scarce to the brink will these rebellious limbs
+Support me. Hark! how the rude deep below
+Roars round the rugged base, as if it called
+Its long-reluctant victim! I will come.
+One leap, and all is over! The deep rest
+Of Death, or tranquil Apathy's dead calm
+Welcome alike to me. Away vain fears!
+Phaon is cold, and why should Sappho live?
+Phaon is cold, or with some fairer one--
+Thought worse than death!
+
+(She throws herself from the precipice.)
+
+
+
+[Footnote A: [Greek (transliterated)]:
+ Ou tini choimaetheisa thea teche NUTH erezennae. HESIOD]
+
+
+
+
+ODE
+
+(Written on the FIRST of DECEMBER, 1793.)
+
+Tho' now no more the musing ear
+Delights to listen to the breeze
+That lingers o'er the green wood shade,
+ I love thee Winter! well.
+
+Sweet are the harmonies of Spring,
+Sweet is the summer's evening gale,
+Pleasant the autumnal winds that shake
+ The many-colour'd grove.
+
+And pleasant to the sober'd soul
+The silence of the wintry scene,
+When Nature shrouds her in her trance
+
+Not undelightful now to roam
+The wild heath sparkling on the sight;
+Not undelightful now to pace
+ The forest's ample rounds;
+
+And see the spangled branches shine,
+And mark the moss of many a hue
+That varies the old tree's brown bark,
+ Or o'er the grey stone spreads.
+
+The cluster'd berries claim the eye
+O'er the bright hollies gay green leaves,
+The ivy round the leafless oak
+ Clasps its full foliage close.
+
+So VIRTUE diffident of strength
+Clings to RELIGION'S firmer aid,
+And by RELIGION'S aid upheld
+ Endures calamity.
+
+Nor void of beauties now the spring,
+Whose waters hid from summer sun
+Have sooth'd the thirsty pilgrim's ear
+ With more than melody.
+
+The green moss shines with icey glare,
+The long grass bends its spear-like form,
+And lovely is the silvery scene
+ When faint the sunbeams smile.
+
+Reflection too may love the hour
+When Nature, hid in Winter's grave,
+No more expands the bursting bud
+ Or bids the flowret bloom.
+
+For Nature soon in Spring's best charms
+Shall rise reviv'd from Winter's grave.
+Again expand the bursting bud,
+ And bid the flowret bloom.
+
+
+
+
+Written on SUNDAY MORNING.
+
+ Go thou and seek the House of Prayer!
+ I to the Woodlands wend, and there
+In lovely Nature see the GOD OF LOVE.
+ The swelling organ's peal
+ Wakes not my soul to zeal,
+Like the wild music of the wind-swept grove.
+The gorgeous altar and the mystic vest
+Rouse not such ardor in my breast,
+ As where the noon-tide beam
+ Flash'd from the broken stream,
+Quick vibrates on the dazzled sight;
+ Or where the cloud-suspended rain
+ Sweeps in shadows o'er the plain;
+Or when reclining on the clift's huge height
+I mark the billows burst in silver light.
+
+ Go thou and seek the House of Prayer!
+ I to the Woodlands shall repair,
+ Feed with all Natures charms mine eyes,
+ And hear all Natures melodies.
+ The primrose bank shall there dispense
+ Faint fragrance to the awaken'd sense,
+ The morning beams that life and joy impart
+ Shall with their influence warm my heart.
+ And the full tear that down my cheek will steal,
+ Shall speak the prayer of praise I feel!
+
+ Go thou and seek the House of Prayer!
+I to the woodlands bend my way
+ And meet RELIGION there.
+She needs not haunt the high-arch'd dome to pray
+Where storied windows dim the doubtful day:
+With LIBERTY she loves to rove.
+ Wide o'er the heathy hill or cowslip'd dale;
+Or seek the shelter of the embowering grove,
+Sweet are these scenes to her, and when the night
+Pours in the north her silver streams of light,
+She woos Reflexion in the silent gloom,
+And ponders on the world to come.
+
+
+
+
+ON THE DEATH
+Of a Favourite Old SPANIEL.
+
+And they have drown'd thee then at last! poor Phillis!
+The burthen of old age was heavy on thee.
+And yet thou should'st have lived! what tho' thine eye
+Was dim, and watch'd no more with eager joy
+The wonted call that on thy dull sense sunk
+With fruitless repetition, the warm Sun
+Would still have cheer'd thy slumber, thou didst love
+To lick the hand that fed thee, and tho' past
+Youth's active season, even Life itself
+Was comfort. Poor old friend! most earnestly
+Would I have pleaded for thee: thou hadst been
+Still the companion of my childish sports,
+And, as I roam'd o'er Avon's woody clifts,
+From many a day-dream has thy short quick bark
+Recall'd my wandering soul. I have beguil'd
+Often the melancholy hours at school,
+Sour'd by some little tyrant, with the thought
+Of distant home, and I remember'd then
+Thy faithful fondness: for not mean the joy,
+Returning at the pleasant holydays,
+I felt from thy dumb welcome. Pensively
+Sometimes have I remark'd thy slow decay,
+Feeling myself changed too, and musing much
+On many a sad vicissitude of Life!
+Ah poor companion! when thou followedst last
+Thy master's parting footsteps to the gate
+That clos'd for ever on him, thou didst lose
+Thy truest friend, and none was left to plead
+For the old age of brute fidelity!
+But fare thee well! mine is no narrow creed,
+And HE who gave thee being did not frame
+The mystery of life to be the sport
+Of merciless man! there is another world
+For all that live and move--a better one!
+Where the proud bipeds, who would fain confine
+INFINITE GOODNESS to the little bounds
+Of their own charity, may envy thee!
+
+
+
+
+To CONTEMPLATION.
+
+[Greek (transliterated):
+ Kai pagas fileoimi ton enguthen aechon achthein,
+ A terpei psopheoisa ton agrikon, thchi tarassei.
+
+MOSCHOS.]
+
+
+
+Faint gleams the evening radiance thro' the sky,
+ The sober twilight dimly darkens round;
+In short quick circles the shrill bat flits by,
+ And the slow vapour curls along the ground.
+
+Now the pleas'd eye from yon lone cottage sees
+ On the green mead the smoke long-shadowing play;
+ The Red-breast on the blossom'd spray
+ Warbles wild her latest lay,
+And sleeps along the dale the silent breeze.
+Calm CONTEMPLATION,'tis thy favorite hour!
+Come fill my bosom, tranquillizing Power.
+
+Meek Power! I view thee on the calmy shore
+ When Ocean stills his waves to rest;
+ Or when slow-moving on the surge's hoar
+ Meet with deep hollow roar
+ And whiten o'er his breast;
+ For lo! the Moon with softer radiance gleams,
+ And lovelier heave the billows in her beams.
+
+ When the low gales of evening moan along,
+ I love with thee to feel the calm cool breeze,
+ And roam the pathless forest wilds among,
+ Listening the mellow murmur of the trees
+ Full-foliaged as they lift their arms on high
+And wave their shadowy heads in wildest melody.
+
+Or lead me where amid the tranquil vale
+ The broken stream flows on in silver light,
+And I will linger where the gale
+ O'er the bank of violets sighs,
+Listening to hear its soften'd sounds arise;
+ And hearken the dull beetle's drowsy flight,
+ And watch the horn-eyed snail
+ Creep o'er his long moon-glittering trail,
+ And mark where radiant thro' the night
+Moves in the grass-green hedge the glow-worms living light.
+
+ Thee meekest Power! I love to meet,
+ As oft with even solitary pace
+ The scatter'd Abbeys hallowed rounds I trace
+And listen to the echoings of my feet.
+ Or on the half demolished tomb,
+ Whole warning texts anticipate my doom:
+ Mark the clear orb of night
+Cast thro' the storying glass a faintly-varied light.
+
+Nor will I not in some more gloomy hour
+Invoke with fearless awe thine holier power,
+Wandering beneath the sainted pile
+When the blast moans along the darksome aisle,
+And clattering patters all around
+The midnight shower with dreary sound.
+
+ But sweeter 'tis to wander wild
+ By melancholy dreams beguil'd,
+ While the summer moon's pale ray
+ Faintly guides me on my way
+ To the lone romantic glen
+ Far from all the haunts of men,
+ Where no noise of uproar rude
+ Breaks the calm of solitude.
+ But soothing Silence sleeps in all
+ Save the neighbouring waterfall,
+ Whose hoarse waters falling near
+ Load with hollow sounds the ear,
+ And with down-dasht torrent white
+ Gleam hoary thro' the shades of night.
+
+Thus wandering silent on and slow
+I'll nurse Reflection's sacred woe,
+And muse upon the perish'd day
+When Hope would weave her visions gay,
+Ere FANCY chill'd by adverse fate
+Left sad REALITY my mate.
+
+O CONTEMPLATION! when to Memory's eyes
+The visions of the long-past days arise,
+Thy holy power imparts the best relief,
+And the calm'd Spirit loves the joy of grief.
+
+
+
+
+
+To HORROR.
+
+
+[GREEK (transliterated):
+ Tin gar potaeisomai
+ tan chai schuliches tromeonti
+ Erchomenan nechuon ana t'aeria, chai melan aima.
+ Theocritos]
+
+
+Dark HORROR, hear my call!
+ Stern Genius hear from thy retreat
+ On some old sepulchre's moss-cankered seat,
+Beneath the Abbey's ivied wall
+ That trembles o'er its shade;
+Where wrapt in midnight gloom, alone,
+ Thou lovest to lie and hear
+ The roar of waters near,
+And listen to the deep dull groan
+ Of some perturbed sprite
+Borne fitful on the heavy gales of night.
+
+Or whether o'er some wide waste hill
+ Thou mark'st the traveller stray,
+ Bewilder'd on his lonely way,
+When, loud and keen and chill,
+The evening winds of winter blow
+Drifting deep the dismal snow.
+
+Or if thou followest now on Greenland's shore,
+ With all thy terrors, on the lonely way
+Of some wrecked mariner, when to the roar
+ Of herded bears the floating ice-hills round
+ Pour their deep echoing sound,
+ And by the dim drear Boreal light
+Givest half his dangers to the wretches sight.
+
+ Or if thy fury form,
+ When o'er the midnight deep
+ The dark-wing'd tempests sweep
+ Watches from some high cliff the encreasing storm,
+ Listening with strange delight
+ As the black billows to the thunder rave
+ When by the lightnings light
+ Thou seest the tall ship sink beneath the wave.
+
+ Dark HORROR! bear me where the field of fight
+ Scatters contagion on the tainted gale,
+ When to the Moon's faint beam,
+ On many a carcase shine the dews of night
+ And a dead silence stills the vale
+Save when at times is heard the glutted Raven's scream.
+
+Where some wreck'd army from the Conquerors might
+Speed their disastrous flight,
+ With thee fierce Genius! let me trace their way,
+And hear at times the deep heart-groan
+Of some poor sufferer left to die alone,
+ His sore wounds smarting with the winds of night;
+And we will pause, where, on the wild,
+ The [1] Mother to her frozen breast,
+On the heap'd snows reclining clasps her child
+ And with him sleeps, chill'd to eternal rest!
+
+Black HORROR! speed we to the bed of Death,
+ Where he whose murderous power afar
+ Blasts with the myriad plagues of war,
+Struggles with his last breath,
+ Then to his wildly-starting eyes
+ The phantoms of the murder'd rise,
+ Then on his frenzied ear
+Their groans for vengeance and the Demon's yell
+In one heart-maddening chorus swell.
+Cold on his brow convulsing stands the dew,
+And night eternal darkens on his view.
+
+HORROR! I call thee yet once more!
+Bear me to that accursed shore
+Where round the stake the impaled Negro writhes.
+Assume thy sacred terrors then! dispense
+The blasting gales of Pestilence!
+Arouse the race of Afric! holy Power,
+Lead them to vengeance! and in that dread hour
+When Ruin rages wide
+I will behold and smile by MERCY'S side.
+
+
+
+[Footnote 1: I extract the following picture of consummate horror, from
+the notes to a Poem written in twelve syllable verse upon the campaign
+of 1794 and 1795; it was during the retreat to Deventer.
+"We could not proceed a hundred yards without perceiving the dead bodies
+of men, women, children and horses in every direction. One scene made an
+impression upon my memory which time will never be able to efface. Near
+another cart we perceived a stout looking man, and a beautiful young
+woman with an infant, about seven months old, at the breast, all three
+frozen and dead. The mother had most certainly expired in the act of
+suckling her child, as with one breast exposed, she lay upon the drifted
+snow, the milk to all appearance in a stream drawn from the nipple by
+the babe, and instantly congealed. The infant seemed as if its lips had
+but just then been disengaged, and it reposed its little head upon the
+mother's bosom, with, an overflow of milk, frozen as it trickled from
+the mouth; their countenances were perfectly composed and fresh,
+resembling those of persons in a sound and tranquil slumber."]
+
+
+
+
+The SOLDIER'S WIFE.
+
+
+DACTYLICS.
+
+Weary way-wanderer languid and sick at heart
+Travelling painfully over the rugged road,
+Wild-visag'd Wanderer! ah for thy heavy chance!
+
+Sorely thy little one drags by thee bare-footed,
+Cold is the baby that hangs at thy bending back
+Meagre and livid and screaming its wretchedness.
+
+[1] Woe-begone mother, half anger, half agony,
+As over thy shoulder thou lookest to hush the babe,
+Bleakly the blinding snow beats in thy hagged face.
+
+Thy husband will never return from the war again,
+Cold is thy hopeless heart even as Charity--
+Cold are thy famish'd babes--God help thee, widow'd One!
+
+
+
+[Footnote 1: This stanza was supplied by S.T. COLERIDGE.]
+
+
+
+
+The WIDOW.
+
+SAPPHICs.
+
+Cold was the night wind, drifting fast the snows fell,
+Wide were the downs and shelterless and naked,
+When a poor Wanderer struggled on her journey
+ Weary and way-sore.
+
+Drear were the downs, more dreary her reflexions;
+Cold was the night wind, colder was her bosom!
+She had no home, the world was all before her,
+ She had no shelter.
+
+Fast o'er the bleak heath rattling drove a chariot,
+"Pity me!" feebly cried the poor night wanderer.
+"Pity me Strangers! lest with cold and hunger
+ Here I should perish.
+
+"Once I had friends,--but they have all forsook me!
+"Once I had parents,--they are now in Heaven!
+"I had a home once--I had once a husband--
+ "Pity me Strangers!
+
+"I had a home once--I had once a husband--
+"I am a Widow poor and broken-hearted!"
+Loud blew the wind, unheard was her complaining.
+ On drove the chariot.
+
+On the cold snows she laid her down to rest her;
+She heard a horseman, "pity me!" she groan'd out;
+Loud blew the wind, unheard was her complaining,
+ On went the horseman.
+
+Worn out with anguish, toil and cold and hunger,
+Down sunk the Wanderer, sleep had seiz'd her senses;
+There, did the Traveller find her in the morning,
+ GOD had releast her.
+
+
+
+
+To the CHAPEL BELL.
+
+ "Lo I, the man who erst the Muse did ask
+ Her deepest notes to swell the Patriot's meeds,
+ Am now enforst a far unfitter task
+ For cap and gown to leave my minstrel weeds,"
+ For yon dull noise that tinkles on the air
+Bids me lay by the lyre and go to morning prayer.
+
+ Oh how I hate the sound! it is the Knell,
+ That still a requiem tolls to Comfort's hour;
+ And loth am I, at Superstition's bell,
+ To quit or Morpheus or the Muses bower.
+ Better to lie and dose, than gape amain,
+Hearing still mumbled o'er, the same eternal strain.
+
+ Thou tedious herald of more tedious prayers
+ Say hast thou ever summoned from his rest,
+ One being awakening to religious awe?
+ Or rous'd one pious transport in the breast?
+ Or rather, do not all reluctant creep
+To linger out the hour, in listlessness or sleep?
+
+ I love the bell, that calls the poor to pray
+ Chiming from village church its chearful sound,
+ When the sun smiles on Labour's holy day,
+ And all the rustic train are gathered round,
+ Each deftly dizen'd in his Sunday's best
+And pleas'd to hail the day of piety and rest.
+
+ Or when, dim-shadowing o'er the face of day,
+ The mantling mists of even-tide rise slow,
+ As thro' the forest gloom I wend my way,
+ The minster curfew's sullen roar I know;
+ I pause and love its solemn toll to hear,
+As made by distance soft, it dies upon the ear.
+
+ Nor not to me the unfrequent midnight knell
+ Tolls sternly harmonizing; on mine ear
+ As the deep death-fraught sounds long lingering dwell
+ Sick to the heart of Love and Hope and Fear
+ Soul-jaundiced, I do loathe Life's upland steep
+And with strange envy muse the dead man's dreamless sleep.
+
+ But thou, memorial of monastic gall!
+ What Fancy sad or lightsome hast thou given?
+ Thy vision-scaring sounds alone recall
+ The prayer that trembles on a yawn to heaven;
+ And this Dean's gape, and that Dean's nosal tone,
+And Roman rites retain'd, tho' Roman faith be flown.
+
+
+
+
+
+The RACE of BANQUO.
+
+Fly, son of Banquo! Fleance, fly!
+Leave thy guilty sire to die.
+O'er the heath the stripling fled,
+The wild storm howling round his head.
+Fear mightier thro' the shades of night
+Urged his feet, and wing'd his flight;
+And still he heard his father cry
+Fly, son of Banquo! Fleance, fly.
+
+Fly, son of Banquo! Fleance, fly
+Leave thy guilty sire to die.
+On every blast was heard the moan
+The anguish'd shriek, the death-fraught groan;
+Loathly night-hags join the yell
+And see--the midnight rites of Hell.
+
+Forms of magic! spare my life!
+Shield me from the murderer's knife!
+Before me dim in lurid light
+Float the phantoms of the night--
+Behind I hear my Father cry,
+Fly, son of Banquo--Fleance, fly!
+
+Parent of the sceptred race,
+Fearless tread the circled space:
+Fearless Fleance venture near--
+Sire of monarchs--spurn at fear.
+
+Sisters with prophetic breath
+Pour we now the dirge of Death!
+
+
+
+
+MUSINGS on a LANDSCAPE
+
+of
+
+GASPAR POUSSIN.
+
+Poussin! most pleasantly thy pictur'd scenes
+Beguile the lonely hour; I sit and gaze
+With lingering eye, till charmed FANCY makes
+The lovely landscape live, and the rapt soul
+From the foul haunts of herded humankind
+Flies far away with spirit speed, and tastes
+The untainted air, that with the lively hue
+Of health and happiness illumes the cheek
+Of mountain LIBERTY. My willing soul
+All eager follows on thy faery flights
+FANCY! best friend; whose blessed witcheries
+With loveliest prospects cheat the traveller
+O'er the long wearying desart of the world.
+Nor dost thou FANCY with such magic mock
+My heart, as, demon-born, old Merlin knew,
+Or Alquif, or Zarzafiel's sister sage,
+Whose vengeful anguish for so many a year
+Held in the jacinth sepulchre entranced
+Lisvart and Perion, pride of chivalry.
+Friend of my lonely hours! thou leadest me
+To such calm joys as Nature wise and good
+Proffers in vain to all her wretched sons;
+Her wretched sons who pine with want amid
+The abundant earth, and blindly bow them down
+Before the Moloch shrines of WEALTH and POWER,
+AUTHORS of EVIL. Oh it is most sweet
+To medicine with thy wiles the wearied heart,
+Sick of reality. The little pile
+That tops the summit of that craggy hill
+Shall be my dwelling; craggy is the hill
+And steep, yet thro' yon hazels upward leads
+The easy path, along whose winding way
+Now close embowered I hear the unseen stream
+Dash down, anon behold its sparkling foam
+Gleam thro' the thicket; and ascending on
+Now pause me to survey the goodly vale
+That opens on my vision. Half way up
+Pleasant it were upon some broad smooth rock
+To sit and sun me, and look down below
+And watch the goatherd down that high-bank'd path
+Urging his flock grotesque; and bidding now
+His lean rough dog from some near cliff to drive
+The straggler; while his barkings loud and quick
+Amid their trembling bleat arising oft,
+Fainter and fainter from the hollow road
+Send their far echoes, till the waterfall,
+Hoarse bursting from the cavern'd cliff beneath,
+Their dying murmurs drown. A little yet
+Onward, and I have gain'd the upmost height.
+Fair spreads the vale below: I see the stream
+Stream radiant on beneath the noontide sky.
+Where the town-spires behind the castle towers
+Rise graceful; brown the mountain in its shade,
+Whose circling grandeur, part by mists conceal'd,
+Part with white rocks resplendant in the sun,
+Should bound mine eyes; aye and my wishes too,
+For I would have no hope or fear beyond.
+The empty turmoil of the worthless world,
+Its vanities and vices would not vex
+My quiet heart. The traveller, who beheld
+The low tower of the little pile, might deem
+It were the house of GOD: nor would he err
+So deeming, for that home would be the home
+Of PEACE and LOVE, and they would hallow it
+To HIM. Oh life of blessedness! to reap
+The fruit of honorable toil, and bound
+Our wishes with our wants! delightful Thoughts
+That sooth the solitude of maniac HOPE,
+Ye leave her to reality awak'd,
+Like the poor captive, from some fleeting dream
+Of friends and liberty and home restor'd,
+Startled, and listening as the midnight storm
+Beats hard and heavy thro' his dungeon bars.
+
+
+
+
+
+Mary.
+
+The story of the following ballad was related to me, when a school boy,
+as a fact which had really happened in the North of England. I have
+adopted the metre of Mr. Lewis's Alonzo and Imogene--a poem deservedly
+popular.
+
+
+MARY.
+
+I.
+
+Who is she, the poor Maniac, whose wildly-fix'd eyes
+ Seem a heart overcharged to express?
+She weeps not, yet often and deeply she sighs,
+She never complains, but her silence implies
+ The composure of settled distress.
+
+
+II.
+
+No aid, no compassion the Maniac will seek,
+ Cold and hunger awake not her care:
+Thro' her rags do the winds of the winter blow bleak
+On her poor withered bosom half bare, and her cheek
+ Has the deathy pale hue of despair.
+
+
+III.
+
+Yet chearful and happy, nor distant the day,
+ Poor Mary the Maniac has been;
+The Traveller remembers who journeyed this way
+No damsel so lovely, no damsel so gay
+ As Mary the Maid of the Inn.
+
+
+IV.
+
+Her chearful address fill'd the guests with delight
+ As she welcomed them in with a smile:
+Her heart was a stranger to childish affright,
+And Mary would walk by the Abbey at night
+ When the wind whistled down the dark aisle.
+
+
+V.
+
+She loved, and young Richard had settled the day,
+ And she hoped to be happy for life;
+But Richard was idle and worthless, and they
+Who knew him would pity poor Mary and say
+ That she was too good for his wife.
+
+
+VI.
+
+'Twas in autumn, and stormy and dark was the night,
+ And fast were the windows and door;
+Two guests sat enjoying the fire that burnt bright,
+And smoking in silence with tranquil delight
+ They listen'd to hear the wind roar.
+
+
+VII.
+
+"Tis pleasant," cried one, "seated by the fire side
+ "To hear the wind whistle without."
+"A fine night for the Abbey!" his comrade replied,
+"Methinks a man's courage would now be well tried
+ "Who should wander the ruins about.
+
+
+VIII.
+
+"I myself, like a school-boy, should tremble to hear
+ "The hoarse ivy shake over my head;
+"And could fancy I saw, half persuaded by fear,
+"Some ugly old Abbot's white spirit appear,
+ "For this wind might awaken the dead!"
+
+
+IX.
+
+"I'll wager a dinner," the other one cried,
+ "That Mary would venture there now."
+"Then wager and lose!" with a sneer he replied,
+"I'll warrant she'd fancy a ghost by her side,
+ "And faint if she saw a white cow."
+
+
+X.
+
+"Will Mary this charge on her courage allow?"
+ His companion exclaim'd with a smile;
+"I shall win, for I know she will venture there now,
+"And earn a new bonnet by bringing a bough
+ "From the elder that grows in the aisle."
+
+
+XI.
+
+With fearless good humour did Mary comply,
+ And her way to the Abbey she bent;
+The night it was dark, and the wind it was high
+And as hollowly howling it swept thro' the sky
+ She shiver'd with cold as she went.
+
+
+XII.
+
+O'er the path so well known still proceeded the Maid
+ Where the Abbey rose dim on the sight,
+Thro' the gate-way she entered, she felt not afraid
+Yet the ruins were lonely and wild, and their shade
+ Seem'd to deepen the gloom of the night.
+
+
+XIII.
+
+All around her was silent, save when the rude blast
+ Howl'd dismally round the old pile;
+Over weed-cover'd fragments still fearless she past,
+And arrived in the innermost ruin at last
+ Where the elder tree grew in the aisle.
+
+
+XIV.
+
+Well-pleas'd did she reach it, and quickly drew near
+ And hastily gather'd the bough:
+When the sound of a voice seem'd to rise on her ear,
+She paus'd, and she listen'd, all eager to hear,
+ Aud her heart panted fearfully now.
+
+
+XV.
+
+The wind blew, the hoarse ivy shook over her head,
+ She listen'd,--nought else could she hear.
+The wind ceas'd, her heart sunk in her bosom with dread
+For she heard in the ruins distinctly the tread
+ Of footsteps approaching her near.
+
+
+XVI.
+
+Behind a wide column half breathless with fear
+ She crept to conceal herself there:
+That instant the moon o'er a dark cloud shone clear,
+And she saw in the moon-light two ruffians appear
+ And between them a corpse did they bear.
+
+
+XVII.
+
+Then Mary could feel her heart-blood curdle cold!
+ Again the rough wind hurried by,--
+It blew off the hat of the one, and behold
+Even close to the feet of poor Mary it roll'd,--
+ She felt, and expected to die.
+
+
+XVIII.
+
+"Curse the hat!" he exclaims. "Nay come on and first hide
+ "The dead body," his comrade replies.
+She beheld them in safety pass on by her side,
+She seizes the hat, fear her courage supplied,
+ And fast thro' the Abbey she flies.
+
+
+XIX.
+
+She ran with wild speed, she rush'd in at the door,
+ She gazed horribly eager around,
+Then her limbs could support their faint burthen no more,
+And exhausted and breathless she sunk on the floor
+ Unable to utter a sound.
+
+
+XX.
+
+Ere yet her pale lips could the story impart,
+ For a moment the hat met her view;--
+Her eyes from that object convulsively start,
+For--oh God what cold horror then thrill'd thro' her heart,
+ When the name of her Richard she knew!
+
+
+XXI.
+
+Where the old Abbey stands, on the common hard by
+ His gibbet is now to be seen.
+Not far from the road it engages the eye,
+The Traveller beholds it, and thinks with a sigh
+ Of poor Mary the Maid of the Inn.
+
+
+
+
+
+Donica.
+
+
+In Finland there is a Castle which is called the New Rock, moated about
+with a river of unfounded depth, the water black and the fish therein
+very distateful to the palate. In this are spectres often seen, which
+foreshew either the death of the Governor, or some prime officer
+belonging to the place; and most commonly it appeareth in the shape of
+an harper, sweetly singing and dallying and playing under the water.
+
+It is reported of one Donica, that after she was dead, the Devil walked
+in her body for the space of two years, so that none suspected but that
+she was still alive; for she did both speak and eat, though very
+sparingly; only she had a deep paleness on her countenance, which was
+the only sign of death. At length a Magician coming by where she was
+then in the company of many other virgins, as soon as he beheld her he
+said, "fair Maids, why keep you company with the dead Virgin whom you
+suppose to be alive?" when taking away the magic charm which was tied
+under her arm, the body fell down lifeless and without motion.
+
+The following Ballad is founded on these stories. They are to be found
+in the notes to The Hierarchies of the blessed Angels; a Poem by Thomas
+Heywood, printed in folio by Adam Islip, 1635.
+
+
+DONICA.
+
+High on a rock, whose castled shade
+ Darken'd the lake below,
+In ancient strength majestic stood
+ The towers of Arlinkow.
+
+The fisher in the lake below
+ Durst never cast his net,
+Nor ever swallow in its waves
+ Her passing wings would wet.
+
+The cattle from its ominous banks
+ In wild alarm would run,
+Tho' parched with thirst and faint beneath
+ The summer's scorching sun.
+
+For sometimes when no passing breeze
+ The long lank sedges waved,
+All white with foam and heaving high
+ Its deafening billows raved;
+
+And when the tempest from its base
+ The rooted pine would shake,
+The powerless storm unruffling swept
+ Across the calm dead lake.
+
+And ever then when Death drew near
+ The house of Arlinkow,
+Its dark unfathom'd depths did send
+ Strange music from below.
+
+The Lord of Arlinkow was old,
+ One only child had he,
+Donica was the Maiden's name
+ As fair as fair might be.
+
+A bloom as bright as opening morn
+ Flush'd o'er her clear white cheek,
+The music of her voice was mild,
+ Her full dark eyes were meek.
+
+Far was her beauty known, for none
+ So fair could Finland boast,
+Her parents loved the Maiden much,
+ Young EBERHARD loved her most.
+
+Together did they hope to tread
+ The pleasant path of life,
+For now the day drew near to make
+ Donica Eberhard's wife.
+
+The eve was fair and mild the air,
+ Along the lake they stray;
+The eastern hill reflected bright
+ The fading tints of day.
+
+And brightly o'er the water stream'd
+ The liquid radiance wide;
+Donica's little dog ran on
+ And gambol'd at her side.
+
+Youth, Health, and Love bloom'd on her cheek,
+ Her full dark eyes express
+In many a glance to Eberhard
+ Her soul's meek tenderness.
+
+Nor sound was heard, nor passing gale
+ Sigh'd thro' the long lank sedge,
+The air was hushed, no little wave
+ Dimpled the water's edge.
+
+Sudden the unfathom'd lake sent forth
+ Strange music from beneath,
+And slowly o'er the waters sail'd
+ The solemn sounds of Death.
+
+As the deep sounds of Death arose,
+ Donica's cheek grew pale,
+And in the arms of Eberhard
+ The senseless Maiden fell.
+
+Loudly the youth in terror shriek'd,
+ And loud he call'd for aid,
+And with a wild and eager look
+ Gaz'd on the death-pale Maid.
+
+But soon again did better thoughts
+ In Eberhard arise,
+And he with trembling hope beheld
+ The Maiden raise her eyes.
+
+And on his arm reclin'd she moved
+ With feeble pace and slow,
+And soon with strength recover'd reach'd
+
+Yet never to Donica's cheek
+ Return'd the lively hue,
+Her cheeks were deathy, white, and wan,
+ Her lips a livid blue.
+
+Her eyes so bright and black of yore
+ Were now more black and bright,
+And beam'd strange lustre in her face
+ So deadly wan and white.
+
+The dog that gambol'd by her side,
+ And lov'd with her to stray,
+Now at his alter'd mistress howl'd
+ And fled in fear away.
+
+Yet did the faithful Eberhard
+ Not love the Maid the less;
+He gaz'd with sorrow, but he gaz'd
+ With deeper tenderness.
+
+And when he found her health unharm'd
+ He would not brook delay,
+But press'd the not unwilling Maid
+ To fix the bridal day.
+
+And when at length it came, with joy
+ They hail'd the bridal day,
+And onward to the house of God
+ They went their willing way.
+
+And as they at the altar stood
+ And heard the sacred rite,
+The hallowed tapers dimly stream'd
+ A pale sulphureous light.
+
+And as the Youth with holy warmth
+ Her hand in his did hold,
+Sudden he felt Donica's hand
+ Grow deadly damp and cold.
+
+And loudly did he shriek, for lo!
+ A Spirit met his view,
+And Eberhard in the angel form
+ His own Donica knew.
+
+That instant from her earthly frame
+ Howling the Daemon fled,
+And at the side of Eberhard
+ The livid form fell dead.
+
+
+
+
+Rudiger.
+
+Divers Princes and Noblemen being assembled in a beautiful and fair
+Palace, which was situate upon the river Rhine, they beheld a boat or
+small barge make toward the shore, drawn by a Swan in a silver chain,
+the one end fastened about her neck, the other to the vessel; and in it
+an unknown soldier, a man of a comely personage and graceful presence,
+who stept upon the shore; which done, the boat guided by the Swan left
+him, and floated down the river. This man fell afterward in league with
+a fair gentlewoman, married her, and by her had many children. After
+some years, the same Swan came with the same barge into the same place;
+the soldier entering into it, was carried thence the way he came, left
+wife, children and family, and was never seen amongst them after.
+
+Now who can judge this to be other than one of those spirits that are
+named Incubi? says Thomas Heywood. I have adopted his story, but not his
+solution, making the unknown soldier not an evil spirit, but one who had
+purchased happiness of a malevolent being, by the promised sacrifice of
+his first-born child.
+
+
+RUDIGER.
+
+Bright on the mountain's heathy slope
+ The day's last splendors shine
+And rich with many a radiant hue
+ Gleam gayly on the Rhine.
+
+And many a one from Waldhurst's walls
+ Along the river stroll'd,
+As ruffling o'er the pleasant stream
+ The evening gales came cold.
+
+So as they stray'd a swan they saw
+ Sail stately up and strong,
+And by a silver chain she drew
+ A little boat along,
+
+Whose streamer to the gentle breeze
+ Long floating fluttered light,
+Beneath whose crimson canopy
+ There lay reclin'd a knight.
+
+With arching crest and swelling breast
+ On sail'd the stately swan
+And lightly up the parting tide
+ The little boat came on.
+
+And onward to the shore they drew
+ And leapt to land the knight,
+And down the stream the swan-drawn boat
+ Fell soon beyond the sight.
+
+Was never a Maid in Waldhurst's walls
+ Might match with Margaret,
+Her cheek was fair, her eyes were dark,
+ Her silken locks like jet.
+
+And many a rich and noble youth
+ Had strove to win the fair,
+But never a rich or noble youth
+ Could rival Rudiger.
+
+At every tilt and turney he
+ Still bore away the prize,
+For knightly feats superior still
+ And knightly courtesies.
+
+His gallant feats, his looks, his love,
+ Soon won the willing fair,
+And soon did Margaret become
+ The wife of Rudiger.
+
+Like morning dreams of happiness
+ Fast roll'd the months away,
+For he was kind and she was kind
+ And who so blest as they?
+
+Yet Rudiger would sometimes sit
+ Absorb'd in silent thought
+And his dark downward eye would seem
+ With anxious meaning fraught;
+
+But soon he rais'd his looks again
+ And smil'd his cares eway,
+And mid the hall of gaiety
+ Was none like him so gay.
+
+And onward roll'd the waining months,
+ The hour appointed came,
+And Margaret her Rudiger
+ Hail'd with a father's name.
+
+But silently did Rudiger
+ The little infant see,
+And darkly on the babe he gaz'd
+ And very sad was he.
+
+And when to bless the little babe
+ The holy Father came,
+To cleanse the stains of sin away
+ In Christ's redeeming name,
+
+Then did the cheek of Rudiger
+ Assume a death-pale hue,
+And on his clammy forehead stood
+ The cold convulsive dew;
+
+And faltering in his speech he bade
+ The Priest the rites delay,
+Till he could, to right health restor'd,
+ Enjoy the festive day.
+
+When o'er the many-tinted sky
+ He saw the day decline,
+He called upon his Margaret
+ To walk beside the Rhine.
+
+"And we will take the little babe,
+ "For soft the breeze that blows,
+"And the wild murmurs of the stream
+ "Will lull him to repose."
+
+So forth together did they go,
+ The evening breeze was mild,
+And Rudiger upon his arm
+ Did pillow the sweet child.
+
+And many a one from Waldhurst's walls
+ Along the banks did roam,
+But soon the evening wind came cold,
+ And all betook them home.
+
+Yet Rudiger in silent mood
+ Along the banks would roam,
+Nor aught could Margaret prevail
+ To turn his footsteps home.
+
+"Oh turn thee--turn thee Rudiger,
+ "The rising mists behold,
+"The evening wind is damp and chill,
+ "The little babe is cold!"
+
+"Now hush thee--hush thee Margaret,
+ "The mists will do no harm,
+"And from the wind the little babe
+ "Lies sheltered on my arm."
+
+"Oh turn thee--turn thee Rudiger,
+ "Why onward wilt thou roam?
+"The moon is up, the night is cold,
+ "And we are far from home."
+
+He answered not, for now he saw
+ A Swan come sailing strong,
+And by a silver chain she drew
+ A little boat along.
+
+To shore they came, and to the boat
+ Fast leapt he with the child,
+And in leapt Margaret--breathless now
+ And pale with fear and wild.
+
+With arching crest and swelling breast
+ On sail'd the stately swan,
+And lightly down the rapid tide
+ The little boat went on.
+
+The full-orb'd moon that beam'd around
+ Pale splendor thro' the night,
+Cast through the crimson canopy
+ A dim-discoloured light.
+
+And swiftly down the hurrying stream
+ In silence still they sail,
+And the long streamer fluttering fast
+ Flapp'd to the heavy gale.
+
+And he was mute in sullen thought
+ And she was mute with fear,
+Nor sound but of the parting tide
+ Broke on the listening ear.
+
+The little babe began to cry
+ And waked his mother's care,
+"Now give to me the little babe
+ "For God's sake, Rudiger!"
+
+"Now hush thee, hush thee Margaret!
+ "Nor my poor heart distress--
+"I do but pay perforce the price
+ "Of former happiness.
+
+"And hush thee too my little babe,
+ "Thy cries so feeble cease:
+"Lie still, lie still;--a little while
+ "And thou shalt be at peace."
+
+So as he spake to land they drew,
+ And swift he stept on shore,
+And him behind did Margaret
+ Close follow evermore.
+
+It was a place all desolate,
+ Nor house nor tree was there,
+And there a rocky mountain rose
+ Barren, and bleak, and bare.
+
+And at its base a cavern yawn'd,
+ No eye its depth might view,
+For in the moon-beam shining round
+ That darkness darker grew.
+
+Cold Horror crept thro' Margaret's blood,
+ Her heart it paus'd with fear,
+When Rudiger approach'd the cave
+ And cried, "lo I am here!"
+
+A deep sepulchral sound the cave
+ Return'd "lo I am here!"
+And black from out the cavern gloom
+ Two giant arms appear.
+
+And Rudiger approach'd and held
+ The little infant nigh;
+Then Margaret shriek'd, and gather'd then
+ New powers from agony.
+
+And round the baby fast and firm
+ Her trembling arms she folds,
+And with a strong convulsive grasp
+ The little infant holds.
+
+"Now help me, Jesus!" loud she cries.
+ And loud on God she calls;
+Then from the grasp of Rudiger
+ The little infant falls.
+
+And now he shriek'd, for now his frame
+ The huge black arms clasp'd round,
+And dragg'd the wretched Rudiger
+ Adown the dark profound.
+
+
+
+
+
+Hymn
+
+TO THE
+
+Penates.
+
+Remove far from me vanity and lies; give me neither poverty nor riches;
+feed me with food convenient for me.
+
+The words of Agur.
+
+
+
+The Title of the following Poem will probably remind the Reader of
+Akenside's Hymn to the Naiads, but the manner in which I have treated
+the subject fortunately precludes comparison.
+
+
+HYMN to the PENATES.
+
+Yet one Song more! one high and solemn strain
+Ere PAEAN! on thy temple's ruined wall
+I hang the silent harp: there may its strings,
+When the rude tempest shakes the aged pile,
+Make melancholy music. One Song more!
+PENATES! hear me! for to you I hymn
+The votive lay. Whether, as sages deem,
+Ye dwell in the [1]inmost Heaven, the [2]COUNSELLORS
+Of JOVE; or if, SUPREME OF DEITIES,
+All things are yours, and in your holy train
+JOVE proudly ranks, and JUNO, white arm'd Queen.
+
+And wisest of Immortals, aweful Maid
+ATHENIAN PALLAS. Venerable Powers!
+Hearken your hymn of praise! tho' from your rites
+Estranged, and exiled from your altars long,
+I have not ceased to love you, HOUSEHOLD GODS!
+In many a long and melancholy hour
+Of solitude and sorrow, has my heart
+With earnest longings prayed to rest at length
+Beside your hallowed hearth--for PEACE is there!
+
+Yes I have loved you long. I call on you
+Yourselves to witness with what holy joy,
+Shunning the polished mob of human kind,
+I have retired to watch your lonely fires
+And commune with myself. Delightful hours
+That gave mysterious pleasure, made me know
+All the recesses of my wayward heart,
+Taught me to cherish with devoutest care
+Its strange unworldly feelings, taught me too
+The best of lessons--to respect myself!
+
+Nor have I ever ceas'd to reverence you
+DOMESTIC DEITIES! from the first dawn
+Of reason, thro' the adventurous paths of youth
+Even to this better day, when on mine ear
+The uproar of contending nations sounds,
+But like the passing wind--and wakes no pulse
+To tumult. When a child--(for still I love
+To dwell with fondness on my childish years,
+Even as that Persian favorite would retire
+From the court's dangerous pageantry and pomp,
+To gaze upon his shepherd garb, and weep,
+Rememb'ring humble happiness.) When first
+A little one, I left my father's home,
+I can remember the first grief I felt,
+And the first painful smile that cloathed my front
+With feelings not its own: sadly at night
+I sat me down beside a stranger's hearth;
+And when the lingering hour of rest was come,
+First wet with tears my pillow. As I grew
+In years and knowledge, and the course of Time
+Developed the young feelings of my heart,
+When most I loved in solitude to rove
+Amid the woodland gloom; or where the rocks
+Darken'd old Avon's stream, in the ivied cave
+Recluse to sit and brood the future song,
+Yet not the less, PENATES, loved I then
+Your altars, not the less at evening hour
+Delighted by the well-trimm'd fire to sit,
+Absorbed in many a dear deceitful dream
+Of visionary joys: deceitful dreams--
+Not wholly vain--for painting purest joys,
+They form'd to Fancy's mould her votary's heart.
+
+By Cherwell's sedgey side, and in the meads
+Where Isis in her calm clear stream reflects
+The willow's bending boughs, at earliest dawn
+In the noon-tide hour, and when the night-mists rose,
+I have remembered you: and when the noise
+Of loud intemperance on my lonely ear
+Burst with loud tumult, as recluse I sat,
+Pondering on loftiest themes of man redeemed
+From servitude, and vice, and wretchedness,
+I blest you, HOUSEHOLD GODS! because I loved
+Your peaceful altars and serener rites.
+Nor did I cease to reverence you, when driven
+Amid the jarring crowd, an unfit man
+To mingle with the world; still, still my heart
+Sighed for your sanctuary, and inly pined;
+And loathing human converse, I have strayed
+Where o'er the sea-beach chilly howl'd the blast,
+And gaz'd upon the world of waves, and wished
+That I were far beyond the Atlantic deep,
+In woodland haunts--a sojourner with PEACE.
+
+Not idly fabled they the Bards inspired,
+Who peopled Earth with Deities. They trod
+The wood with reverence where the DRYADS dwelt;
+At day's dim dawn or evening's misty hour
+They saw the OREADS on their mountain haunts.
+And felt their holy influence, nor impure
+Of thought--or ever with polluted hands
+Touched they without a prayer the NAIAD'S spring;
+Yet was their influence transient; such brief awe
+Inspiring as the thunder's long loud peal
+Strikes to the feeble spirit. HOUSEHOLD GODS,
+Not such your empire! in your votaries' breasts
+No momentary impulse ye awake--
+Nor fleeting like their local energies,
+The deep devotion that your fanes impart.
+O ye whom YOUTH has wilder'd on your way,
+Or VICE with fair-mask'd foulness, or the lure
+Of FAME that calls ye to her crowded paths
+With FOLLY's rattle, to your HOUSEHOLD GODS
+Return! for not in VICE's gay abodes,
+Not in the unquiet unsafe halls of FAME
+Does HAPPINESS abide! O ye who weep
+Much for the many miseries of Mankind,
+More for their vices, ye whose honest eyes
+Frown on OPPRESSION,--ye whose honest hearts
+Beat high when FREEDOM sounds her dread tocsin;--
+O ye who quit the path of peaceful life
+Crusading for mankind--a spaniel race
+That lick the hand that beats them, or tear all
+Alike in frenzy--to your HOUSEHOLD GODS
+Return, for by their altars VIRTUE dwells
+And HAPPINESS with her; for by their fires
+TRANQUILLITY in no unsocial mood
+Sits silent, listening to the pattering shower;
+For, so [3]SUSPICION sleep not at the gate
+Of WISDOM,--FALSEHOOD shall not enter there.
+
+As on the height of some huge eminence,
+Reach'd with long labour, the way-faring man
+Pauses awhile, and gazing o'er the plain
+With many a sore step travelled, turns him then
+Serious to contemplate the onward road,
+And calls to mind the comforts of his home,
+And sighs that he has left them, and resolves
+To stray no more: I on my way of life
+Muse thus PENATES, and with firmest faith
+Devote myself to you. I will not quit
+To mingle with the mob your calm abodes,
+Where, by the evening hearth CONTENTMENT sits
+And hears the cricket chirp; where LOVE delights
+To dwell, and on your altars lays his torch
+That burns with no extinguishable flame.
+
+Hear me ye POWERS benignant! there is one
+Must be mine inmate--for I may not chuse
+But love him. He is one whom many wrongs
+Have sicken'd of the world. There was a time
+When he would weep to hear of wickedness
+And wonder at the tale; when for the opprest
+He felt a brother's pity, to the oppressor
+A good man's honest anger. His quick eye
+Betray'd each rising feeling, every thought
+Leapt to his tongue. When first among mankind
+He mingled, by himself he judged of them,
+And loved and trusted them, to Wisdom deaf,
+And took them to his bosom. FALSEHOOD met
+Her unsuspecting victim, fair of front,
+And lovely as [4]Apega's sculptured form,
+Like that false image caught his warm embrace
+And gored his open breast. The reptile race
+Clung round his bosom, and with viper folds
+Encircling, stung the fool who fostered them.
+His mother was SIMPLICITY, his sire
+BENEVOLENCE; in earlier days he bore
+His father's name; the world who injured him
+Call him MISANTHROPY. I may not chuse
+But love him, HOUSEHOLD GODS! for we were nurst
+In the same school.
+
+ PENATES! some there are
+Who say, that not in the inmost heaven ye dwell,
+Gazing with eye remote on all the ways
+Of man, his GUARDIAN GODS; wiselier they deem
+A dearer interest to the human race
+Links you, yourselves the SPIRITS OF THE DEAD.
+No mortal eye may pierce the invisible world,
+No light of human reason penetrate
+That depth where Truth lies hid. Yet to this faith
+My heart with instant sympathy assents;
+And I would judge all systems and all faiths
+By that best touchstone, from whose test DECEIT
+Shrinks like the Arch-Fiend at Ithuriel's spear,
+And SOPHISTRY'S gay glittering bubble bursts,
+As at the spousals of the Nereid's son,
+When that false [5] Florimel, by her prototype
+Display'd in rivalry, with all her charms
+Dissolved away.
+
+ Nor can the halls of Heaven
+Give to the human soul such kindred joy,
+As hovering o'er its earthly haunts it feels,
+When with the breeze it wantons round the brow
+Of one beloved on earth; or when at night
+In dreams it comes, and brings with it the DAYS
+And JOYS that are no more, Or when, perchance
+With power permitted to alleviate ill
+And fit the sufferer for the coming woe,
+Some strange presage the SPIRIT breathes, and fills
+The breast with ominous fear, and disciplines
+For sorrow, pours into the afflicted heart
+The balm of resignation, and inspires
+With heavenly hope. Even as a Child delights
+To visit day by day the favorite plant
+His hand has sown, to mark its gradual growth,
+And watch all anxious for the promised flower;
+Thus to the blessed spirit, in innocence
+And pure affections like a little child,
+Sweet will it be to hover o'er the friends
+Beloved; then sweetest if, as Duty prompts,
+With earthly care we in their breasts have sown
+The seeds of Truth and Virtue, holy flowers
+Whose odour reacheth Heaven.
+
+ When my sick Heart,
+(Sick [6] with hope long delayed, than, which no care
+Presses the crush'd heart heavier;) from itself
+Seeks the best comfort, often have I deemed
+That thou didst witness every inmost thought
+SEWARD! my dear dead friend! for not in vain,
+Oh early summon'd in thy heavenly course!
+Was thy brief sojourn here: me didst thou leave
+With strengthen'd step to follow the right path
+Till we shall meet again. Meantime I soothe
+The deep regret of Nature, with belief,
+My EDMUND! that thine eye's celestial ken
+Pervades me now, marking no mean joy
+The movements of the heart that loved thee well!
+
+Such feelings Nature prompts, and hence your rites
+DOMESTIC GODS! arose. When for his son
+With ceaseless grief Syrophanes bewail'd,
+Mourning his age left childless, and his wealth
+Heapt for an alien, he with fixed eye
+Still on the imaged marble of the dead
+Dwelt, pampering sorrow. Thither from his wrath
+A safe asylum, fled the offending slave,
+And garlanded the statue and implored
+His young lost Lord to save: Remembrance then
+Softened the father, and he loved to see
+The votive wreath renewed, and the rich smoke
+Curl from the costly censer slow and sweet.
+From Egypt soon the sorrow-soothing rites
+Divulging spread; before your [7] idol forms
+By every hearth the blinded Pagan knelt,
+Pouring his prayers to these, and offering there
+Vain sacrifice or impious, and sometimes
+With human blood your sanctuary defil'd:
+Till the first BRUTUS, tyrant-conquering chief,
+Arose; he first the impious rites put down,
+He fitliest, who for FREEDOM lived and died,
+The friend of humankind. Then did your feasts
+Frequent recur and blameless; and when came
+The solemn [8] festival, whose happiest rites
+Emblem'd EQUALITY, the holiest truth!
+Crown'd with gay garlands were your statues seen,
+To you the fragrant censer smok'd, to you
+The rich libation flow'd: vain sacrifice!
+For nor the poppy wreath nor fruits nor wine.
+Ye ask, PENATES! nor the altar cleans'd
+With many a mystic form; ye ask the heart
+Made pure, and by domestic Peace and Love
+Hallowed to you.
+
+ Hearken your hymn of praise,
+PENATES! to your shrines I come for rest,
+There only to be found. Often at eve,
+Amid my wanderings I have seen far off
+The lonely light that spake of comfort there,
+It told my heart of many a joy of home,
+And my poor heart was sad. When I have gazed
+From some high eminence on goodly vales
+And cots and villages embower'd below,
+The thought would rise that all to me was strange
+Amid the scene so fair, nor one small spot
+Where my tir'd mind might rest and call it home,
+There is a magic in that little word;
+It is a mystic circle that surrounds
+Comforts and Virtues never known beyond
+The hallowed limit. Often has my heart
+Ached for that quiet haven; haven'd now,
+I think of those in this world's wilderness
+Who wander on and find no home of rest
+Till to the grave they go! them POVERTY
+Hollow-eyed fiend, the child of WEALTH and POWER,
+Bad offspring of worse parents, aye afflicts,
+Cankering with her foul mildews the chill'd heart--
+Them WANT with scorpion scourge drives to the den
+Of GUILT--them SLAUGHTER with the price of death
+Buys for her raven brood. Oh not on them
+GOD OF ETERNAL JUSTICE! not on them
+Let fall thy thunder!
+
+ HOUSEHOLD DEITIES!
+Then only shall be Happiness on earth
+When Man shall feel your sacred power, and love
+Your tranquil joys; then shall the city stand
+A huge void sepulchre, and rising fair
+Amid the ruins of the palace pile
+The Olive grow, there shall the TREE OF PEACE
+Strike its roots deep and flourish. This the state
+Shall bless the race redeemed of Man, when WEALTH
+And POWER and all their hideous progeny
+Shall sink annihilate, and all mankind
+Live in the equal brotherhood of LOVE.
+Heart-calming hope and sure! for hitherward
+Tend all the tumults of the troubled world,
+Its woes, its wisdom, and its wickedness
+Alike: so he hath will'd whose will is just.
+
+Meantime, all hoping and expecting all
+In patient faith, to you, DOMESTIC GODS!
+I come, studious of other lore than song,
+Of my past years the solace and support:
+Yet shall my Heart remember the past years
+With honest pride, trusting that not in vain
+Lives the pure song of LIBERTY and TRUTH.
+
+
+
+
+[Footnote 1: Hence one explanation of the name Penates, because they
+were supposed to reign in the inmost Heavens.]
+
+[Footnote 2:
+This was the belief of the ancient Hetrusci, who called them Consentes
+and Complicces]
+
+[Footnote 3:
+
+ Oft, tho' Wisdom wake, Suspicion sleeps
+At Wisdom's gate, and to Simplicity
+Resigns her charge, while Goodness thinks no ill
+Where no ill seems.
+ MILTON.]
+
+[Footnote 4: One of the Ways and Means of the Tyrant Nabis. If one of
+his Subjects refused to lend him money, he commanded him to embrace his
+Apega; the statue of a beautiful Woman so formed as to clasp the victim
+to her breast, in which a pointed dagger was concealed.]
+
+[Footnote 5:
+
+ Then did he set her by that snowy one,
+ Like the true saint beside the image set,
+ Of both their beauties to make paragone
+ And trial whether should the honour get:
+ Streightway so soone as both together met,
+ The enchaunted damzell vanish'd into nought;
+ Her snowy substance melted as with heat,
+ Ne of that goodly hew remayned ought
+But the emptie girdle which about her wast was wrought.
+ SPENCER.]
+
+[Footnote 6: Hope deferred maketh the heart sick. PROVERBS.
+
+Qua non gravior mortalibus addita cura,
+SPES ubi longa venit.
+ STATIUS.]
+
+[Footnote 7: It is not certainly known under what form the Penates were
+worshipped. Some assert, as wooden or brazen rods shaped like trumpets:
+others, that they were represented as young men.]
+
+[Footnote 8: The Saturnalia.]
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Poems, by Robert Southey
+
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