AN ACCOUNT OF THE AUTHOR, In a LETTER to a FRIEND.
[]Written in the Year 1730.
I Don't wonder that you ſhould deſire ſo diſtinct an Account, how Stephen Duck came to write Verſes, and how he manag'd in writing them. Philoſophers find as much Subject for their Admiration in the minuteſt Bodies, as in the largeſt; and a Poet from the Barn, tho' not ſo great a Man, is as great a Curioſity, as a Dictator from the Plow. I can be particular enough as to his firſt ſetting out in Poetry; and, ſince you ſeem to deſire it, ſhall give you all the Cir⯑cumſtances I could learn from a Week's Converſation with him in all his Simplicity; without conſidering, that many of them, to a Perſon leſs curi⯑ous, might appear too trifling to be mention'd even in a Letter.
[xii] MY Friend Stephen had originally no other Teaching, than what enabled him to read, and write Engliſh; he had never taken a ſingle Step toward any other Language. As Arithmetic is generally join'd with this Degree of Learning, he had a little Share of that too. About his Fourteenth Year he was taken from School, and was afterwards ſucceſſively engag'd in the ſe⯑veral loweſt Employments of a Country Life. This laſted for ſome Years; ſo long, that he had forgot almoſt all the Arithmetic he had learn'd at School: However he read ſometimes, and thought oftener. He had a cer⯑tain Longing after Knowledge; and when he reflected within himſelf on his want of Education, he began to be particularly uneaſy, that he ſhould have forgot ſomething of what he had learnt, even at the little School he had been at. He thought of this ſo often, that at laſt he reſolv'd to try his own Strength; and, if poſſible, to recover his Arithmetic again.
HIS firſt Attempt of this kind I take to have been about Six Years ago. Conſidering the Difficulties the poor Fellow lay under, this Inclination for Knowledge muſt have been very ſtrong in him. He was then marry'd, and at Service; he had little Time to ſpare; he had no Books, and no Money to get any: But he was reſolv'd to go thro' with it; and accordingly us'd to work more than other Day-labourers, and by that means got ſome little matter added to his Pay. This Overplus was at his own Diſpoſal. With this he bought firſt a Book of Vulgar Arithmetic, then one of Decimal, and a third of Meaſuring of Land; all which by degrees he made himſelf a to⯑lerable Maſter of, in thoſe Hours he could ſteal from his Sleep, after the Labours of the Day.
WHERE there was ſuch a Deſire for Knowledge, there muſt be good Senſe at bottom, and a Soul, at leaſt, ſomewhat above the common Con⯑verſation he muſt meet with in his poor State of Life. I have ask'd him, whom he had that he could talk and converſe with in the Country; and was pleas'd to find him, in this Particular, happier than I expected. He ſaid, he had one dear Friend, that he mention'd with uncommon Affection. They us'd to talk and read together, when they could ſteal a little Time for it. This Friend had been in a Service at London for two or three Years: He had an Inclination to Books; he had purchas'd ſome, and brought 'em down with him into the Country; and Stephen had always the Uſe of his little Library; which by this Time, poſſibly, may be increas'd to two or three dozen of Books. This Friend knew no more out of Engliſh than Stephen; but by talking together they mutually improv'd each other. Ste⯑phen [xiii] is all Simplicity: He ſays, ‘"That his Friend can talk better than he, as having been more us'd to Company; but that he himſelf has been more us'd to Poetry, and in that can do better than his Friend."’
HAD it not been for this, Stephen muſt have been plac'd in the ſame Claſs with Hai Ebn Yokdhan, and the young Hermes in Mr. Ramſay's Cyrus: But the Story of their Improvements without any Aſſiſtance agrees only with Romances; and you know, what I am writing to you is a true Hiſtory. Our retir'd Philoſopher had his Friend; and it ſeems to have been the greateſt Happineſs of his Life, that he had one. They did not only read, but reaſon'd over Points together; and I have ſometimes thought, how agreeable a thing it would have been, to have been conceal'd within hearing of them, when they were in the midſt of ſome of their moſt knotty Debates. We may imagine 'em both to have had good natural Senſe, and a few good Books in common between 'em: Their Minds were their own; neither improv'd, nor ſpoil'd, by laying in a Stock of Learning: They were perhaps equally well inclin'd to learn, both ſtruggling for a little Knowledge; and, like a Couple of Rowers on the ſame Bottom, while they were only ſtriving perhaps, which ſhould out do his Companion, they were really each helping the other, and driving the Boat on the faſter.
PERHAPS you would be willing to know what Books their little Library conſiſted of. I need not mention thoſe of Arithmetic again, nor his Bible: Milton, the Spectators, and Seneca, were his firſt Favourites; Telemachus, with another Piece by the ſame Hand, and Addiſon's Defence of Chriſtia⯑nity, his next. They had an Engliſh Dictionary, and a ſort of Engliſh Grammar, an Ovid of long Standing with them, and a Bysſhe's Art of Po⯑etry of later Acquiſition: Seneca's Morals had made the Name of L'Eſtrange dear to them; and, as I imagine, might occaſion their getting his Joſephus in Folio, which was the largeſt Purchace in their Collection: They had one Volume of Shakeſpear with Seven of his Plays in it. Beſide theſe, Stephen had read Three or Four other Plays; ſome of Epictetus, Waller, Dryden's Virgil, Prior, Hudibras, Tom Brown, and the London Spy. You may ſee I am a faithful Hiſtorian, by my giving you the Bad with the Good.
WITH theſe Helps Stephen is grown ſomething of a Poet, and ſome⯑thing of a Philoſopher. I find by him, that from his Infancy, he has had a Caſt in his Mind toward Poetry. He has delighted, as far back as he can remember, in Verſes, and in Singing. He ſpeaks of ſtrange Emotions, that he has felt on the top Performances of the little Choir of Songſters in [xii] [...] [xiii] [...] [xiv] a Country Chancel; and mentions his firſt hearing of an Organ, as a re⯑markable Epocha of his Life. He ſeems to be a pretty good Judge too of a muſical Line; but I imagine, that he does not hear Verſes in his own Mind, as he repeats them. I don't know whether you underſtand me. I mean, that his Ideas of the Notes in a Verſe, and his Manner of repeating the ſame Verſe, are often different: For he points out an harmonious Line well enough; and yet he generally ſpoils its Harmony by his way of ſpeaking it.
WHAT firſt gave him a higher Taſte of Poetry, than he had been us'd to, was Milton's Paradiſe Loſt. This came oddly enough into his Hands; and when I ſee you, I'll tell you the Hiſtory of it. Stephen read it over twice or thrice with a Dictionary, before he could underſtand the Language of it thoroughly. This, and a ſort of Engliſh Grammar they had, have been of the greateſt Uſe to him of any thing.
INDEED it ſeems plain to me, that he has got Engliſh juſt as we get Latin. He ſtudy'd Paradiſe Loſt, as others ſtudy the Claſſics. The new Beauties in that Poem, that were continually opening upon his Mind, made all his Labour eaſy to him. He work'd all Day for his Maſter; and, after the Labour of the Day, ſet to his Books at Night. The Pains he has taken for the Pleaſure of improving himſelf, are incredible; but it has anſwer'd too beyond what one could have expected; for he ſeems to underſtand ſome of the great and deeper Beauties of that Poem tolerably well; and points out ſeveral particular Beauties in it, which it requires a good nice Eye to diſcover.
'TWAS his Friend that help'd him to the Spectators; they read them often together, and often by themſelves. Stephen tells me, that he has frequently carry'd them with him to his Work. When he did ſo, his Method was to labour harder than any body elſe, that he might get half an Hour to read a Spectator, without injuring his Maſter. By this means he us'd to ſit down all over Sweat and Heat, without regarding his own Health, and often to the Prejudice of it. If this affects you, as it has me, I ought not to paſs it over, that you may not loſe the Pleaſure of ſo ſtrong an Inſtance of Honeſty and Induſtry mix'd together.
THE Spectators improv'd his Underſtanding, he ſays, more than any thing. The Copies of Verſes, ſcatter'd in thoſe Pieces, help'd on his natural Bent that way; and made him willing to try, whether he could not do ſomething like 'em. He ſometimes turn'd his own Thoughts into Verſe, while he [xv] was at Work; and at laſt begun to venture thoſe Thoughts a little on Paper. What he did of this kind, was very inconſiderable; only ſcatter'd Thoughts, and generally not above four or five Lines on the ſame Subject; which, as there was nobody thereabouts that car'd for Verſes, nor any body that could tell him whether they were good or bad, he generally flung into the Fire, as ſoon as he had pleas'd himſelf enough in reading them.
WHATEVER Care he took to burn theſe little Pieces, he found it not ſufficient to conceal them. The Thing took Air; and Stephen, who had before the Name of a Scholar among the Country People, was ſaid now to be able to write Verſes too. This was mention'd accidentally, about a Year ago, before a young Gentleman of Oxford, who ſent for Stephen; and after ſome Talk with him, deſir'd him to write him a Letter in Verſe. That Letter is the Epiſtle which ſtands the laſt in his Poems, but was the firſt whole Copy of Verſes that ever he wrote. This happen'd to fall into the Hands of ſome Clergymen in the Neighbourhood, who were very well pleas'd with it; and upon examining him, found the Man had a good deal of Merit. They gave him ſome Preſents, which, as Things ſtood then, were a great Help to him; and encourag'd him to go on as much as they could.
THIS made him proceed with more Courage: And, as he had wrote ſome ſcatter'd Verſes on Poverty, before this happen'd, he carry'd thoſe Thoughts on, and fill'd it up, as it ſtands at preſent in the printed Collection I ſend you: So that this is his ſecond Copy. I am very careful in ſettling the Chronology of his Poems, that you may ſee how he has gone on Step by Step, if you pleaſe.
THE Compoſition which was next in Order, is that on his own Labours: That Subject was given him by one of thoſe who firſt encourag'd him; and after this was finiſh'd, he was employ'd from the ſame Quarter in his Shunammite. As this exceeded any of the reſt, I think from hence we may date the Aera of his riſing in his Character and Circumſtances. Upon this it was that Per⯑ſons of Diſtinction began to ſend for him different ways. In ſhort, it got him Fame enough to be pretty trouble ſome to him at firſt; tho' it is likely to end in a much happier Settlement of him and his Affairs, than could ever have been dreamt of by him at his firſt ſetting out.
WHEN you have read his Poems, and conſider the Manner he has been bred up in, I doubt not you will think they have their Merit: But I aſſure you, they give an imperfect Idea of the Man; and, to know how much he de⯑ſerves, [xvi] one ſhould converſe with him, and hear on what Reaſons he omitted ſuch a Part, and introduc'd another; why he ſhortens his Style in this Place, and enlarges in that; whence he has ſuch a Word, and whence ſuch an Idea. I'll give you all I can recollect of this kind, in relation to what is generally reckon'd the beſt Thing he has wrote, The Shunammite.
IN the firſt Place, I found upon Inquiry, that he wrote by a Plan; he thought over all the Parts, as he intended to uſe them, before he made the Verſes. For a Poem of any Length, no doubt 'tis as neceſſary to do this, as it is to have a Draught of a Houſe, before you go to building it; and yet I believe, the common Run of our Poets have generally thought themſelves above it, or not thought of it at all. Tho' the Shunammite was written on a Story given to his hand, ſtill ſomething of this kind was convenient enough; becauſe, in forming it anew, he did not make uſe of all the Materials before him, and has brought in ſome of his own. He thought, the Stretching of the Prophet in ſo particular a manner, muſt ſound ſtrange. The Woman introduc'd to tell her Story, is a new Caſt of his own; ſo is her Doubting, and then Confirming herſelf again, by a particular Induction of all Eliſha's Miracles; ſo the Bringing an Audience about her, and their Chorus's, when they join together in congratulating her Happineſs; the laſt of which cloſes the Poem in a good proper manner.
UPON being ask'd, Why he introduc'd a Perſon to tell all the Story in the Shunammite, and why he could not as well tell it himſelf; he ſaid, he had read Prior's Solomon; and that, in reading it, Solomon's ſpeaking every thing touch'd him particularly. He was then ask'd, ſince it was to be ſpoken, why he did not rather chuſe the Prophet, as the Perſon of the greater Dig⯑nity, to ſpeak it. He ſaid to this, That the Woman was to be pity'd; That there ſeem'd to him to be Such as theſe: ‘Ver. 16. And ſhe ſaid; Nay, my Lord, thou Man of God, do not tye unto thy Handmaid.’ ‘Ver. 28. Did I deſire a Son of my Lord? Did I not ſay, Do not deceive me?’ſome Expreſſions of the Woman in the Hiſtory, which, if not omitted, might leſſen our Regard and Compaſſion for her; That, if the Prophet had related the Thing, he could not have omitted a Word; but when the Woman did, ſhe might well be allow'd to ſoften her own Caſe; and to drop, when ſhe was cool, any thing wrong, that ſhe had ſaid in the Violence of her Grief and Paſſion. This is rather fuller in Words than he expreſs'd it; but nothing, I think, is added to his Meaning.
[xvii] AS Milton had been his favourite Poet, you may wonder why none of his Pieces are in blank Verſe. I ask'd him about this too: Upon which he told me, That he had originally written the whole Shunammite in blank Verſe; That, upon reading it over, he found his Language was not ſublime enough for it; and that therefore he was forc'd to write it all over again, and turn it into Rhyme.
UPON reading over the Chapter and his Poem together, you will ſee how juſtly he ſhortens and enlarges ſome of the particular Paſſages, in order to adapt them the more to Poetry. Beſides ſome Things already mention'd, he drops ſeveral little Circumſtances in itSee 2 Kings, Chap. iv. Verſes 10, 12, 14, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 34, and 35.. On the other hand, he enlarges on the Line 33 to 49.Contentedneſs and Charities of the Woman; on the 55, &c.Look and Attitude of the Prophet; on her 76.Thanks for bearing a Son; on 112 to 134.the Death of the Child; on the 152, &c. See 205.Reaſons of her Confidence in the Prophet; in 211.pointing out the Prophet, when ſhe comes to him; and in 219.his Anſwer; in her 232.preſſing the Prophet more earneſtly to aſſiſt her; in 246.pointing out the dead Child; his being 258.freed from Death; and her Thoughts 266.upon receiving him again into her Arms.
'TIS agreeable to ſee what Uſe he has made of the little Reading he can have had, and how he has improv'd the Thing, by obſerving ſome good Strokes in the Books he has met with. Upon my telling him, that I lik'd nothing better in it, than his altering From Line 55 to 63.the Prophet's Countenance as he does; he ſaid, he took that Hint from Telemachus; where the young Prince comes to Idomeneus's Court, while they are ſacrificing. The Prieſt, on ſeeing Telemachus, breaks off from what he was about, aſſumes a more inſpir'd Air, and begins ſpeaking of his future Fortunes. This Alteration of the Prophet's Countenance, Stephen ſays, he took from thence; but that at the ſame time he thought himſelf oblig'd to drop the Wildneſs and Enthuſiaſm of it, in order to adapt it more to the Nature of a true Prophet.
THE Chorus in the Cloſe of the Shunammite, he ſaid, was brought into his Mind by the Paradiſe Loſt, Book 7. Line 565, and 602.general Rejoicing of the Angels in Milton, upon God's [xviii] finiſhing the Creation of the World. The firſt Chorus was not in the Work originally; he inſerted it, when he new-form'd it all into Rhyme.
HE had alſo been very careful as to ſingle Words; and had Authorities to produce in ſeveral little Particulars, where one would not expect it. For The Shunammite, Ver. 210. flow'ry Carmel, he quotes Mr. Pope; and the Prophet's Arbour on the Top of that Mount is cover'd with 212. Vines, on the Authority of Mr. Sandys in his Travels: For the Words 177, and 249. aduſt and ſupernal, he refers to Milton: 56. Fanatic he uſes according to the true, and not the vulgar Senſe of the Word; he had learn'd the proper Meaning of it from his Dictionary: 143. Dilated Heart, as ſpoken of Sorrow, is certainly a Fault; but it is a Fault that Stephen was naturally enough led into by the common Notion and Expreſſions in the Country, of the Heart's ſwelling and being ready to burſt with Grief.
HE owns his Faults very readily; and if he thinks a Line of his better than ordinary, he will ſay ſo without any Reſerve. He ſeems to be exceedingly open and honeſt in every thing he ſays; and 'twould be very difficult for you to be with him a Week, as I have been, without going away very much his Friend.
THO' I have been ſo long in ſhewing you how critically he has proceeded as to his own Works; I ſhall add ſome of his Thoughts on the Works of others, to give you as full an Idea of him as I can.
'TIS not yet three Years ago that he firſt met with Milton; and I believe, that was the firſt Poet of real Value, that he ever ſtudy'd in earneſt. He has aſſur'd me, with all his Innocence and Simplicity, that when he came after⯑wards to read Addiſon's Criticiſms on Milton in the Spectators, 'twas a high Pleaſure to him to find many Things mention'd there, in the Praiſe of Milton, exactly as he had before thought in reading him. Here we muſt depend on his Credit, which I need not tell you with me is very good.
THE Name of Milton, whom he admires and dotes on ſo particularly, has not prevail'd on him enough to make him like his Paradiſe Regain'd. In ſpeaking of theſe two Poems, he ſaid, ‘"he wonder'd how Milton could write ſo incomparably well, where he had ſo little to lead him; and ſo very poorly, where he had more."’
[xix] THE Spectators, you know, he has read with great Pleaſure, and great Improvement. I remember particularly, that on ſomebody's calling them Proſe, he ſaid, ‘"'Twas true, they were Proſe; but there was ſomething in 'em, that pleas'd almoſt like Verſe."’—He mention'd, with more Regard than uſual, the critical Papers on Wit, thoſe on Milton, the Juſtum & tenacem from Horace, Mr. Pope's Meſſiah, and the ſeveral ſcatter'd ones written in the Cauſe of Virtue and Religion.
UPON asking him what Plays he had read, he nam'd particularly Julius Caeſar, Hamlet, Cato, Venice Preſerv'd, and the Orphan. Venice Pre⯑ſerv'd, he ſaid, gave him the moſt Horror; a Word which I took notice he us'd ſometimes for Sorrow, and ſometimes in its proper Senſe: He could not bear the comic Parts in it. Hamlet he lik'd better than Julius Caeſar; and in Hamlet pointed out that celebrated Speech, To be, or not to be, &c. as having been his favourite Part, merely of his own Taſte. He did not admire Shakeſpear's Comedy; and ſaid, ‘"He was too high, and too low."’ I read over to him ſome of Hamlet, and the celebrated Speeches of Antony to the People in Julius Caeſar. He trembled, as I read the Ghoſt's Speech; and admir'd the Speeches and Turns in the Mob round Caeſar's Body, more, he ſaid, than ever he had done before. As I was reading to him, I obſerv'd that his Countenance chang'd often in the moſt moving Parts: His Eye was quick and buſy all the time; and, to ſay the Truth, I never ſaw Applauſe, or the ſhifting of proper Paſſions, appear ſo ſtrongly in any Face as in his.
HE had formerly read Tom Brown's Letters from the Dead, and the London Spy, not without ſome Pleaſure; but, after he had been ſome time converſant with the Spectators, he ſaid, ‘"He did not care much to look into them."’ He ſpoke of Hudibras in another manner; he ſaw a great deal of Wit in it, and was particularly pleas'd with the Conjurer's Part in that Poem: But, after all, 'tis not a Manner of writing that he can ſo ſin⯑cerely delight in, as in the Moral, the Paſſionate, or the Sublime.
INDEED what every body ſeems to admire him for, is, that he ſeems to have an excellent moral Turn in his Thoughts. He is, as I told you before, ſomething of a Philoſopher; and, what is better than a Philoſopher, a good honeſt-hearted Man. He has read, and ſpeaks highly of, the Archbiſhop of Cambray's Demonſtration of the Being of a God, and Mr. Addiſon's Defence of the Chriſtian Religion. He ſaid, ‘"That they touch'd his Mind; and that nothing did ſo well, as when one's Reaſon is mov'd by what is ſaid."’ [xx] He had lik'd the little he had read of Epictetus; but 'twas Seneca that had made him happy in his own Mind. He ſeems as yet not to be hurt at all by any Applauſes that have been given him, and to have been perfectly con⯑tented with his Condition before: When he had only receiv'd ſome Pre⯑ſents from Gentlemen in the Country, he was quite eaſy as to his Circum⯑ſtances. The only Thing then, that he was ſolicitous about, was, how he might ſucceed as to the Poetry he ſhould be employ'd in. This was his chief Concern: But even this ſeem'd to proceed not ſo much from any Deſire of Fame, as from a Principle of Gratitude; or, as he expreſs'd it, his Longing to pleaſe thoſe Friends that had been ſo generous to him. He was not lifted up with the Character ſome People gave him, and talk'd of Fame abſolutely like a Philoſopher. After his beſt Fortune, many of his Friends told him the Danger of being vain; and, if he ſhould once be ſo, that he would be as much deſpis'd as he had been applauded. He ſaid, ‘"That he could not well tell what they meant; That he did not know what it was to be vain: But, ſince ſo many great Men, who knew the World ſo much better than he did, were apprehenſive for him on that head, he began to be terribly alarm'd at his Danger, tho' he had no ſettled Ideas of what it was."’ He was told upon this, That he ſhould never ſpeak too highly in Praiſe of the Poems he had written. He ſaid, ‘"If that was all, he was ſafe; that was a Thing he could never do, for he could not think highly of them: Gentlemen indeed, he ſaid, might like 'em, becauſe they were made by a poor Fellow in a Barn; but that he knew, as well as any body, that they were not really good in themſelves."’
THUS, Sir, I have obey'd your Commands as faithfully as I am able. You deſir'd me not to ſpare Paper; but to ſend you a Book rather than a Letter. You ſee I have taken you at your Word; and that I am reſolv'd, in this, as well as in every thing elſe, to ſhew you how punctually I would ever be,
SIR,
Your moſt Humble Servant, J. SPENCE.
The THRESHER's LABOUR.
[10]To the Revd. Mr. STANLEY.
THE grateful Tribute of theſe rural Lays,
Which to her Patron's Hand the Muſe conveys,
Deign to accept: 'Tis juſt ſhe Tribute bring
To him, whoſe Bounty gives her Life to ſing;
To him, whoſe gen'rous Favours tune her Voice;
And bid her, 'midſt her Poverty, rejoice.
Inſpir'd by theſe, ſhe dares herſelf prepare,
To ſing the Toils of each revolving Year;
Thoſe endleſs Toils, which always grow anew,
And the poor Threſher's deſtin'd to purſue:
Ev'n theſe, with Pleaſure, can the Muſe rehearſe,
When you and Gratitude demand her Verſe.
[11]SOON as the golden Harveſt quits the Plain,
And CERES' Gifts reward the Farmer's Pain;
What Corn each Sheaf will yield, intent to hear,
And gueſs from thence the Profits of the Year,
He calls his Reapers forth: Around we ſtand,
With deep Attention, waiting his Command.
To each our Task he readily divides,
And pointing, to our diff'rent Stations guides.
As he directs, to diſtant Barns we go;
Here two for Wheat, and there for Barley two.
But firſt, to ſhew what he expects to find,
Theſe Words, or Words like theſe, diſcloſe his Mind:
" So dry the Corn was carry'd from the Field,
" So eaſily 'twill threſh, ſo well 'twill yield;
" Sure large Days-works I well may hope for now:
" Come, ſtrip and try; let's ſee what you can do."
[12]DIVESTED of our Cloathes, with Flail in Hand,
At proper Diſtance, Front to Front we ſtand:
And firſt the Threſhal's gently ſwung, to prove
Whether with juſt Exactneſs it will move:
That once ſecure, we ſwiftly whirl them round;
From the ſtrong Planks our Crab-tree Staves rebound,
And echoing Barns return the rattling Sound.
Now in the Air our knotty Weapons fly,
And now with equal Force deſcend from high;
Down one, one up, ſo well they keep the Time,
The CYCLOPS' Hammers could not truer chime;
Nor with more heavy Strokes could Aetna groan,
When VULCAN forg'd the Arms for THETIS' Son.
In briny Streams our Sweat deſcends apace,
Drops from our Locks, or trickles down our Face.
No Intermiſſion in our Work we know;
The noiſy Threſhal muſt for ever go.
[13] Their Maſter abſent, others ſafely play;
The ſleeping Threſhal does itſelf betray.
Nor yet, the tedious Labour to beguile,
And make the paſſing Minutes ſweetly ſmile,
Can we, like Shepherds, tell a merry Tale;
The Voice is loſt, drown'd by the louder Flail.
But we may think—Alas! what pleaſing thing,
Here, to the Mind, can the dull Fancy bring?
Our Eye beholds no pleaſing Object here,
No chearful Sound diverts our liſt'ning Ear.
The Shepherd well may tune his Voice to ſing,
Inſpir'd with all the Beauties of the Spring.
No Fountains murmur here, no Lambkins play,
No Linnets warble, and no Fields look gay;
'Tis all a gloomy, melancholy Scene,
Fit only to provoke the Muſe's Spleen.
When ſooty Peaſe we threſh, you ſcarce can know
Our native Colour, as from Work we go.
[14] The Sweat, the Duſt, and ſuffocating Smoak,
Make us ſo much like Ethiopians look,
We ſcare our Wives, when Ev'ning brings us home;
And frighted Infants think the Bugbear come.
Week after Week, we this dull Task purſue,
Unleſs when winn'wing Days produce a new:
A new, indeed, but frequently a worſe!
The Threſhal yields but to the Maſter's Curſe.
He counts the Buſhels, counts how much a Day;
Then ſwears we've idled half our Time away:
" Why, look ye, Rogues, d'ye think that this will do?
" Your Neighbours threſh as much again as you."
Now in our Hands we wiſh our noiſy Tools,
To drown the hated Names of Rogues and Fools.
But wanting theſe, we juſt like School-boys look,
When angry Maſters view the blotted Book:
They cry, "their Ink was faulty, and their Pen;"
We, "the Corn threſhes bad, 'twas cut too green."
[15]BUT ſoon as Winter hides his hoary Head,
And Nature's Face is with new Beauty ſpread;
The lovely Spring appears, refreſhing Show'rs
New cloath the Field with Graſs, and blooming Flow'rs.
Next her, the rip'ning Summer preſſes on,
And SOL begins his longeſt Race to run.
Before the Door our welcome Maſter ſtands;
Tells us, the ripen'd Graſs requires our Hands.
The grateful Tidings preſently imparts
Life to our Looks, and Spirits to our Hearts.
We wiſh the happy Seaſon may be fair;
And, joyful, long to breathe in op'ner Air.
This Change of Labour ſeems to give ſuch Eaſe,
With Thoughts of Happineſs ourſelves we pleaſe.
But, ah! how rarely's Happineſs complete!
There's always Bitter mingled with the Sweet.
[16] When firſt the Lark ſings Prologue to the Day,
We riſe, admoniſh'd by his early Lay;
This new Employ with eager Haſte to prove,
This new Employ, become ſo much our Love.
Alas! that human Joys ſhould change ſo ſoon!
Our Morning Pleaſure turns to Pain at Noon.
The Birds ſalute us, as to Work we go,
And with new Life our Boſoms ſeem to glow.
On our right Shoulder hangs the crooked Blade,
The Weapon deſtin'd to uncloath the Mead:
Our left ſupports the Whetſtone, Scrip, and Beer;
This for our Scythes, and theſe ourſelves to chear.
And now the Field, deſign'd to try our Might,
At length appears, and meets our longing Sight.
The Graſs and Ground we view with careful Eyes,
To ſee which way the beſt Advantage lies;
And, Hero-like, each claims the foremoſt Place.
At firſt our Labour ſeems a ſportive Race:
[17] With rapid Force our ſharpen'd Blades we drive,
Strain ev'ry Nerve, and Blow for Blow we give.
All ſtrive to vanquiſh, tho' the Victor gains
No other Glory, but the greateſt Pains.
BUT when the ſcorching Sun is mounted high,
And no kind Barns with friendly Shade are nigh;
Our weary Scythes entangle in the Graſs,
While Streams of Sweat run trickling down apace.
Our ſportive Labour we too late lament;
And wiſh that Strength again, we vainly ſpent.
THUS, in the Morn, a Courſer have I ſeen
With headlong Fury ſcour the level Green;
Or mount the Hills, if Hills are in his Way,
As if no Labour could his Fire allay;
Till PHOEBUS, ſhining with meridian Heat,
Has bath'd his panting Sides in briny Sweat:
[18] The lengthen'd Chace ſcarce able to ſuſtain,
He meaſures back the Hills and Dales with Pain.
WITH Heat and Labour tir'd, our Scythes we quit,
Search out a ſhady Tree, and down we ſit:
From Scrip and Bottle hope new Strength to gain;
But Scrip and Bottle too are try'd in vain.
Down our parch'd Throats we ſcarce the Bread can get;
And, quite o'erſpent with Toil, but faintly eat.
Nor can the Bottle only anſwer all;
The Bottle and the Beer are both too ſmall.
Time flows: Again we riſe from off the Graſs;
Again each Mower takes his proper Place;
Not eager now, as late, our Strength to prove;
But all contented regular to move.
We often whet, and often view the Sun;
As often wiſh, his tedious Race was run.
[19] At length he veils his purple Face from Sight,
And bids the weary Labourer Good-night.
Homewards we move, but ſpent ſo much with Toil,
We ſlowly walk, and reſt at ev'ry Stile.
Our good expecting Wives, who think we ſtay,
Got to the Door, ſoon eye us in the Way.
Then from the Pot the Dumplin's catch'd in haſte,
And homely by its Side the Bacon plac'd.
Supper and Sleep by Morn new Strength ſupply;
And out we ſet again, our Work to try;
But not ſo early quite, nor quite ſo faſt,
As, to our Coſt, we did the Morning paſt.
SOON as the riſing Sun has drank the Dew,
Another Scene is open to our View:
Our Maſter comes, and at his Heels a Throng
Of prattling Females, arm'd with Rake and Prong;
[20] Prepar'd, whilſt he is here, to make his Hay;
Or, if he turns his Back, prepar'd to play:
But here, or gone, ſure of this Comfort ſtill;
Here's Company, ſo they may chat their Fill.
Ah! were their Hands ſo active as their Tongues,
How nimbly then would move the Rakes and Prongs?
THE Graſs again is ſpread upon the Ground,
Till not a vacant Place is to be found;
And while the parching Sun-beams on it ſhine,
The Hay-makers have Time allow'd to dine.
That ſoon diſpatch'd, they ſtill ſit on the Ground;
And the brisk Chat, renew'd, afreſh goes round.
All talk at once; but ſeeming all to fear,
That what they ſpeak, the reſt will hardly hear;
Till by degrees ſo high their Notes they ſtrain,
A Stander by can nought diſtinguiſh plain.
[21] So loud's their Speech, and ſo confus'd their Noiſe,
Scarce puzzled ECHO can return the Voice.
Yet, ſpite of this, they bravely all go on;
Each ſcorns to be, or ſeem to be, outdone.
Meanwhile the changing Sky begins to lour,
And hollow Winds proclaim a ſudden Show'r:
The tattling Crowd can ſcarce their Garments gain,
Before deſcends the thick impetuous Rain;
Their noiſy Prattle all at once is done,
And to the Hedge they ſoon for Shelter run.
THUS have I ſeen, on a bright Summer's Day,
On ſome green Brake, a Flock of Sparrows play;
From Twig to Twig, from Buſh to Buſh they fly;
And with continu'd Chirping fill the Sky:
But, on a ſudden, if a Storm appears,
Their chirping Noiſe no longer dins your Ears:
[22] They fly for Shelter to the thickeſt Buſh;
There ſilent ſit, and All at once is huſh.
BUT better Fate ſucceeds this rainy Day,
And little Labour ſerves to make the Hay.
Faſt as 'tis cut, ſo kindly ſhines the Sun,
Turn'd once or twice, the pleaſing Work is done.
Next Day the Cocks appear in equal Rows,
Which the glad Maſter in ſafe Ricks beſtows.
THE ſpacious Fields we now no longer range;
And yet, hard Fate! ſtill Work for Work we change.
Back to the Barns we haſtily are ſent,
Where lately ſo much Time we penſive ſpent:
Not penſive now, we bleſs the friendly Shade;
And to avoid the parching Sun are glad.
Yet little Time we in the Shade remain,
Before our Maſter calls us forth again;
[23] And ſays, "For Harveſt now yourſelves prepare;
" The ripen'd Harvéſt now demands your Care.
" Get all things ready, and be quickly dreſt;
" Early next Morn I ſhall diſturb your Reſt."
Strict to his Word! for ſcarce the Dawn appears,
Before his haſty Summons fills our Ears.
His haſty Summons we obey; and riſe,
While yet the Stars are glimm'ring in the Skies.
With him our Guide we to the Wheat-field go,
He to appoint, and we the Work to do.
YE Reapers, caſt your Eyes around the Field;
And view the various Scenes its Beauties yield:
Then look again, with a more tender Eye,
To think how ſoon it muſt in Ruin lie!
For, once ſet in, where-e'er our Blows we deal,
There's no reſiſting of the well-whet Steel:
[24] But here or there, where-e'er our Courſe we bend,
Sure Deſolation does our Steps attend.
THUS, when Arabia's Sons, in Hopes of Prey,
To ſome more fertile Country take their Way,
How beauteous all Things in the Morn appear!
There rural Cots, and pleaſant Villa's here!
So many grateful Objects meet the Sight,
The raviſh'd Eye could willing gaze till Night.
But long ere then, where-e'er their Troops have paſt,
Theſe pleaſing Proſpects lie a gloomy Waſte.
THE Morning paſt, we ſweat beneath the Sun;
And but uneaſily our Work goes on.
Before us we perplexing Thiſtles find,
And Corn blown adverſe with the ruffling Wind.
Behind our Maſter waits; and if he ſpies
One charitable Ear, he grudging cries,
[25] " Ye ſcatter half your Wages o'er the Land."
Then ſcrapes the Stubble with his greedy Hand.
LET thoſe who feaſt at Eaſe on dainty Fare,
Pity the Reapers, who their Feaſts prepare:
For Toils ſcarce ever ceaſing preſs us now;
Reſt never does, but on the Sabbath, ſhow;
And barely that our Maſters will allow.
Think what a painful Life we daily lead;
Each Morning early riſe, go late to Bed:
Nor, when aſleep, are we ſecure from Pain;
We then perform our Labours o'er again:
Our mimic Fancy ever reſtleſs ſeems;
And what we act awake, ſhe acts in Dreams.
Hard Fate! Our Labours ev'n in Sleep don't ceaſe;
Scarce HERCULES e'er felt ſuch Toils as theſe!
[26]BUT ſoon we riſe the bearded Crop again,
Soon PHOEBUS' Rays well dry the golden Grain.
Pleas'd with the Scene, our Maſter glows with Joy;
Bids us for Carrying all our Force employ;
When ſtrait Confuſion o'er the Field appears,
And ſtunning Clamours fill the Workmens Ears;
The Bells and claſhing Whips alternate ſound,
And rattling Waggons thunder o'er the Ground.
The Wheat, when carry'd, Peaſe, and other Grain,
We ſoon ſecure, and leave a fruitleſs Plain;
In noiſy Triumph the laſt Load moves on,
And loud Huzza's proclaim the Harveſt done.
OUR Maſter, joyful at the pleaſing Sight,
Invites us all to feaſt with him at Night.
A Table plentifully ſpread we find,
And Jugs of humming Ale, to chear the Mind;
[27] Which he, too gen'rous, puſhes round ſo faſt,
We think no Toils to come, nor mind the paſt.
But the next Morning ſoon reveals the Cheat,
When the ſame Toils we muſt again repeat;
To the ſame Barns muſt back again return,
To labour there for Room for next Year's Corn.
THUS, as the Year's revolving Courſe goes round,
No Reſpite from our Labour can be found:
Like SISYPHUS, our Work is never done;
Continually rolls back the reſtleſs Stone.
New-growing Labours ſtill ſucceed the paſt;
And growing always new, muſt always laſt.
The SHUNAMMITE.
[28]To Mrs. STANLEY.
DEIGN, heav'nly Muſes, to aſſiſt my Song:
To heav'nly Muſes heav'nly Themes belong.
But chiefly Thou, O GOD, my Soul inſpire,
And touch my Lips with thy celeſtial Fire:
If Thou delight'ſt in flow'ry Carmel's Shade,
Or Jordan's Stream; from thence I crave thy Aid:
Inſtruct my Tongue, and my low Accents raiſe,
To ſing thy Wonders, and diſplay thy Praiſe:
Thy Praiſe let all the Sons of Judah hear,
And to my Song the diſtant Tribes repair.
[29]So pray'd the Shunammite; Heav'n heard the Dame;
The diſtant Tribes around her liſt'ning came,
To hear th'amazing Tale; while thus her Tongue,
Mov'd by ſome heav'nly Pow'r, began the Song.
ATTEND, ye Seed of ABRAM, and give Ear,
While I JEHOVAH's glorious Acts declare:
How Life from Death, and Joy from Sadneſs ſpring,
If He aſſiſt the Muſe, the Muſe ſhall ſing.
My Lord and I, to whom all-bounteous Heav'n
His Bleſſings with no ſparing Hand had giv'n,
Like faithful Stewards of our wealthy Store,
Still lodg'd the Stranger, and reliev'd the Poor.
And as ELISHA, by divine Command,
Came preaching Virtue to a ſinful Land;
He often deign'd to lodge within our Gate,
And oft receiv'd an hoſpitable Treat:
[30] A decent Chamber for him we prepar'd;
And he, the gen'rous Labour to reward,
Honours in Camp, or Court, to us propos'd;
Which I refus'd, and thus my Mind diſclos'd:
HEAV'N's King has plac'd us in a fertile Land,
Where he ſhow'rs down his Gifts with copious Hand:
Already we enjoy an affluent Store;
Why ſhould we be ſolicitous for more?
Give Martial Camps, and Kingly Courts to them,
Who place their only Bliſs in fleeting Fame:
There let them live in golden Chains of State;
And be unhappy, only to be great.
But let us in our native Soil remain,
Nor barter Happineſs for ſordid Gain.
Here may we feed the Indigent in Peace,
Or cloath the Bare with the ſuperfluous Fleece,
And give the weary fainting Pilgrim Eaſe.
[31] This we prefer to Pomp, and formal Show,
Which only ſerve to varniſh o'er our Woe;
Refulgent Ornaments, which dreſs the Proud,
Objects of Wonder to the gazing Crowd;
Yet ſeldom give Content, or ſolid Reſt,
To the vain Man, by whom they are poſſeſs'd.
ALL Bleſſings, but a Child, had Heav'n ſupply'd;
And only that th'Almighty had deny'd:
Which when the holy preſcient Sage had heard,
He ſaid, and I before him ſtrait appear'd:
And, as my Feet approach'd his awful Room,
I ſaw his Face diviner Looks aſſume;
Not ſuch a Wildneſs, and fanatic Mien,
With which, ſome ſay, the Delphic Prieſts are ſeen;
When they, for Myſteries of Fate, explain
The odd Chimera's of a frantic Brain;
[32] But with a grave majeſtic Air he ſtood,
While more than human in his Aſpect glow'd;
Celeſtial Grace ſat on his radiant Look,
And Pow'r diffuſive ſhone, before he ſpoke.
Then thus: "Hail, gen'rous Soul! Thy pious Cares
" Are not forgot, nor fruitleſs are thy Pray'rs:
" Propitious Heav'n, thy virtuous Deeds to crown,
" Shall make thy barren Womb conceive a Son."
So ſpake the Seer; and, to complete my Joy,
As he had ſpoke, I bore the promis'd Boy.
SOON to my Friends the welcome News was known,
Who crowded in apace to ſee my Son,
Hailing, with kind Salutes, the recent Child;
And, with their pious Hymns, my Pain beguil'd.
When all had ſaid, I mov'd my joyful Tongue;
And thus to Heav'n addreſs'd my grateful Song:
[33]" O GOD, what Eloquence can ſing thy Praiſe?
" Or who can fathom thy ſtupendous Ways?
" All Things obey at thy divine Command;
" Thou mak'ſt a fruitful Field of barren Land:
" Obdurate Rocks a fertile Glebe ſhall be,
" And bring forth copious Crops, if bid by Thee;
" Arabian Deſerts ſhall with Plenty ſmile,
" And curling Vines adorn the ſterile Soil.
As thus ſhe ſpake, her Audience raiſe their Voice;
And interrupt her Song, as they rejoice:
" O GOD, we gladly hear thy mighty Pow'r,
" With joyful Heart thy gracious Name adore:
" All Nature is ſubſervient to thy Word;
" And ſhifts her wonted Courſe, to pleaſe her Lord.
" We, for thy Servant's Joy, our Thanks expreſs;
" As grows the Child, ſo may her Bliſs increaſe:
[32] [...][33] [...][34] " And may the Guardian Angels, who preſide
" Over the Bleſs'd, his future Actions guide;
" Make ſpotleſs Virtue crown his vital Date,
" And hoary Honour end his Life but late;
" Then ſafely bear"—The Dame here wav'd her Hand;
The People ſtraight obey her mute Command:
All ſilent ſtand, and all attentive look,
Waiting her Words, while thus ſhe, mournful, ſpoke:
ALL Pleaſures are imperfect here below;
Our ſweeteſt Joys are mix'd with bitter Woe:
The Draught of Bliſs, when in our Goblet caſt,
Is daſh'd with Grief; or ſpilt, before we taſte.
Ere twice four Years were meaſur'd by my Son,
(So ſoon, alas! the greateſt Bleſſing's gone)
In Harveſt-time he to the Reapers goes,
To view the bearded Sheaves, erect in Rows,
[35] Like an embattled Army in the Field;
A new delightful Proſpect to the Child!
But either there the ſcorching Sun diſplay'd
His Heat intenſe, and on his Vitals prey'd;
Or elſe ſome ſudden apoplectic Pain,
With racking Torture, ſeiz'd his tender Brain;
His Spirits fail'd, he ſtraight began to faint,
And to his Father vainly made Complaint:
The glowing Roſe was quickly ſeen to fade;
At once his Beauty, and his Life, decay'd.
SOON, at my Houſe, the diſmal News I heard;
Soon, at my Houſe, the dying Child appear'd:
T'embrace him I, with fond Affection, run;
And, O! ſaid I, what Pain afflicts my Son?
He try'd to ſpeak; but, fault'ring, gave a Groan;
No perfect Word proceeded from his Tongue;
But on his Lips the broken Accents hung.
[36] All Means I us'd, that might allay his Pain;
All Means I us'd, but us'd them all in vain.
Yet, while he liv'd, my Soul would not deſpair;
Nor, till he ceas'd to breathe, I ceas'd my Pray'r:
Deluding Hope now ſtopt the falling Tears;
Now his increaſing Pains increas'd my Fears:
By Hope and Fear alternate was I toſs'd,
Till Hope, in a ſad Certainty, was loſt:
Short, and more ſhort, he drew his panting Breath,
(Too ſure Preſage of his approaching Death!)
Till ſoon the Blood, congealing, ceas'd to flow;
He dropt his Head with a declining Bow:
Thrice, from my Breaſt, to raiſe himſelf he try'd,
And thrice ſunk down again; then, groaning, dy'd.
THUS, when with Care we've nurs'd a tender Vine,
And taught the docile Branches where to twine;
[37] An Eaſtern Gale, or ſome pernicious Froſt,
Nips the young Tree, and all our Labour's loſt.
WITH Horror chill'd, a-while I ſpeechleſs ſtood,
Viewing the Child, and trembling as I view'd:
My Eyes diſcharg'd their humid Store apace,
And Tears ſucceeded Tears adown my Face:
Scarcely my Heart the Load of Grief ſuſtain'd;
At length, recov'ring Speech, I thus complain'd:
O fleeting Joys! inconſtant as the Wind!
Which only for a Moment pleaſe the Mind;
Then fly, and leave a Weight of Woes behind!
But yet in vain I thus lament and mourn;
The Soul, once fled, ſhall never more return;
And the fair Body now muſt be convey'd
To Earth's dark Boſom, and eternal Shade—
[38] Yet let me not preſcribe a Bound to Heav'n;
'Twas by a Miracle the Child was giv'n;
Nor can I think the Wonder is more great,
Should the departed Soul reſume her Seat.
What if I to Mount Carmel haſte away,
To him who did his myſtic Birth diſplay?
His pow'rful Word the barren fruitful made;
His pow'rful Word, perhaps, may raiſe the Dead.
The famous Tiſhbite rais'd a Widow's Son;
ELISHA has as wond'rous Actions done.
When he to Jordan's rapid Torrent came;
And, with the Mantle, ſmote th'impetuous Stream;
Obſequious to the Stroke, the Waves divide;
And raiſe a liquid Wall on either Side!
At Jericho long had the barren Soil
Deceiv'd the Husbandman, and mock'd his Toil;
Yet, at his Word, it grew a fertile Field,
And pois'nous Springs did wholſome Waters yield.
[39] Nor can he only ſuch great Bleſſings ſend;
But Curſes, if invok'd, his Call attend:
Elſe how at Bethel brought he Vengeance down,
As a juſt Scourge, on that opprobrious Town?
Again, when Moab Peace with Iſrael broke,
And vainly ſtrove to quit the ſervile Yoke;
Our pow'rful Kings led forth th'embattled Hoſt
Thro' Edom's ſultry Wilds, and Air aduſt;
Where the confed'rate Troops no Water found,
Dry were the Springs, and ſterile was the Ground;
The Captains wonted Strength and Courage fail'd,
When Thirſt and Foes at once their Hoſt aſſail'd:
The Kings to him their joint Petitions made,
And fainting Soldiers crav'd his timely Aid;
Nor crav'd in vain: The pow'rful Word he ſpake,
And flowing Waters form'd a ſpacious Lake;
The ſhining Streams advanc'd their humid Train,
Till Edom's Wilds became a liquid Plain:
[40] Not in more Plenty did the Waters run
Out of the Rock, when ſtruck by AMRAM's Son.
And who can that amazing Deed forget,
Which he perform'd to pay the Widow's Debt?
Whoſe Quantity of Oil one Pot contain'd;
Yet num'rous Veſſels fill'd, before 'twas drain'd.
Sure he, who ſuch ſtupendous Acts has done,
If GOD propitious prove, can raiſe my Son.
So ſaying, up I caught the Child with Speed;
And laid him on the ſacred Prophet's Bed;
Then call'd my Servant to prepare the Steed.
Penſive and ſad, my mourning Husband ſaid,
'Tis now in vain to crave ELISHA's Aid:
No God To-day the Prophet does inſpire;
Nor can he anſwer, what thou wouldſt inquire.
[41]RATHER than ſink, ſaid I, attempt to raiſe
My Hopes, nor talk of Ceremonial Days;
His God is preſent ſtill, and hears him when he prays.
Thus ſaid, urging my Steed with eager Haſte,
Swift as a Mountain Roe, the Plains I paſs'd;
O'er Hills and Dales my Journey I purſu'd;
Nor ſlack'd my Pace, till Carmel's Mount I view'd;
On whoſe delightful Brow, in cool Retreat,
Among the curling Vines, the Prophet ſat;
Whoſe twining Arms a verdant Arbour made;
The verdant Arbour form'd a grateful Shade;
The fanning Zephyrs gently play'd around,
And ſhook the trembling Leaves, and ſwept the Ground;
Down humbly at his Feet I proſtrate fell,
Submiſs; and, weeping, told the mournful Tale.
[42]STRIVE to compoſe thy anxious Soul, ſaid he;
Tears can't revoke JEHOVAH's fix'd Decree:
We live and die, and both, as He thinks fit,
Who may command; but Mortals muſt ſubmit.
This Fate the King, as well as Peaſant, finds;
Nor is it evil, but to evil Minds—
Yet if from Heav'n I can my Suit obtain,
Thy lifeleſs Son ſhall yet revive again.
THUS ſaid, with Looks divine, his Staff he views,
As if ſome pow'rful Charm he would infuſe:
Then calls his Servant haſtily, and ſaid,
On the Child's Face let this be quickly laid.
O Thou, ſaid I, on whom my Hopes depend,
Do not this Work to Servants Care commend:
[43] If Thou thyſelf with me refuſe to go,
Here, to the liſt'ning Vines, I'll vent my Woe;
Still proſtrate lie, lamenting for my Son,
Till ev'ry Hill prove vocal to my Moan.
More had I ſaid, but Grief the Words ſuppreſt;
Yet Sighs, and ſilent Tears, explain'd the reſt.
At length he from his verdant Seat aroſe,
And haſtily adown the Mountain goes:
To Shunem we, with Speed, our Way purſue;
The City ſoon appears within our View;
And the obedient Servant, at the Gate,
Returning ſad, without Succeſs, we met:
The beauteous Child by Death ſtill vanquiſh'd lay;
Still Death inſulted o'er the beauteous Prey;
Till to the Houſe the ſacred Seer was come,
And, with ſupernal Pow'r, approach'd the Room.
[44]BY the dead Child, a-while, he penſive ſtood;
Then from the Chamber put the mourning Crowd:
That done, to GOD he made his ardent Pray'r,
And breath'd upon the Child with vital Air:
And now the Soul reſumes her priſtine Seat;
And now the Heart again begins to beat;
Life's purple Current o'er the Body ſpreads,
While Death, repuls'd, ingloriouſly recedes.
THUS, when a prowling Wolf has ſtol'n a Lamb,
He ſternly guards it from the bleating Dam;
But if the Keeper comes, he quits his Prey,
And low'ring, with Reluctance, makes away.
AND now the Prophet, to my longing Arms,
Reſign'd the Child, with more than wonted Charms:
[45] The bluſhing Roſe ſhone freſher in his Face,
And Beauty ſmil'd with a ſuperior Grace.
SO, when Heav'n's Lamp, that rules the genial Day,
Behind the ſable Moon purſues his Way;
Affrighted Mortals, when th'Eclipſe is o'er,
Believe him more illuſtrious than before.
HERE ends the Dame; and the promiſcuous Throng,
With Hallelujahs, thus conclude the Song:
" Holy and good art Thou, Lord God of Hoſt,
" And all thy Works are wonderful and juſt:
" Both Life and Death are in thy pow'rful Hand;
" Both Life and Death obey thy great Command:
" By thy great Pow'r the Heav'ns and Earth are aw'd;
" Then let the Heav'ns and Earth adore their GOD.
" Thou glorious Sun, that meaſur'ſt all our Days,
" Riſing and ſetting, ſtill advance his Praiſe:
[46] " Thou Moon, and ye leſs glitt'ring Orbs, that dance
" Round this terreſtrial Globe, his Praiſe advance:
" Ye Seas, for ever waving to and fro,
" Praiſe, when ye ebb, and praiſe him, when ye flow:
" Ye wand'ring Rivers, and each purling Stream,
" As ye purſue your Courſe, his Praiſe proclaim:
" Ye Dews, and Miſts, and humid Vapours, all,
" Praiſe, when ye riſe; and praiſe him, when ye fall:
" But chiefly Iſrael, who doſt daily view
" His pow'rful Works, his daily Praiſe renew."
GRATITUDE.
A PASTORAL.
[47]MENALCAS, COLIN.
MENALCAS.
FRiend COLIN! well o'ertook. I have of late
Obſerv'd thy chearful Mien, and airy Gait:
Say, what auſpicious Change, ſince t'other Day,
When by thy lonely Cot I took my Way?
Sorrow and Sadneſs then o'erſpread thy Brows,
And ev'ry Look did gloomy Cares diſcloſe:
Now Joys diffuſive in thy Aſpect riſe,
And Mirth and Gladneſs ſparkle in thy Eyes.
COLIN.
[48]WHERE haſt thou liv'd, MENALCAS, not to know,
Whoſe gen'rous Bounty has remov'd my Woe?
I thought, the gracious CAROLINA's Name,
Ere this, had fill'd the ſounding Trump of Fame.
MENALCAS.
THAT gracious Name the World is bound to bleſs;
All grateful Swains her gen'rous Deeds confeſs:
But, COLIN, ſay, has ſhe remov'd thy Care?
I'm happy, when thy Happineſs I hear.
COLIN.
O You, MENALCAS, know my abject Birth,
Born in a Cot, and bred to till the Earth;
On rigid Worldlings always doom'd to wait,
Forc'd at their frugal Hands my Bread to get:
[49] But when my Wants to CAROLINE were known,
She bleſs'd me with a Paſture of my own.
This makes new Pleaſures in my Boſom glow;
Theſe joyful Looks I to her Bounty owe.
MENALCAS.
AND may kind Heav'n reward that gracious QUEEN,
Who to thy Wants has ſo propitious been!
Yet, tho' her Bounty has thy Wants ſupply'd,
Let not her Bounty e'er exalt thy Pride;
But keep an humble Mind, a grateful Heart;
Her Favours far exceed thy own Deſert:
Heav'n mov'd the Goodneſs of the Royal Dame;
And Heav'n and She thy Gratitude muſt claim.
COLIN.
WHEN me ſhe firſt into her Favour took,
I cut this oaken Staff, ('tis now my Crook)
[50] And grav'd her Royal Bounty in the Rind;
But grav'd it deeper in my grateful Mind:
The Letters in the Staff may wear away;
Thoſe written in my Soul ſhall ne'er decay.
MENALCAS.
SO may thy little Flock increaſe their Tale;
So may thy Field of Paſture never fail;
May Heav'n and She, in juſt Proportion, ſtill
Or ſmile, or frown, as thou art good, or ill.
COLIN.
MAY hungry Foxes kill my tender Lambs,
May pois'nous Serpents ſuck their bleating Dams;
And may my Cows diſtended Udders fail,
Elude my Hopes, and never fill the Pail;
In ſhort, (to make my Curſe the more complete,
Tho' 'tis the only Thing I dread and hate)
[51] May Heav'n and Heav'nly CAROLINE remove
Their Smiles, if COLIN e'er ungrateful prove.
MENALCAS.
THY Thanks and Pray'rs her gen'rous Soul will pleaſe;
A Tribute juſtly due, and paid with Eaſe:
Sometimes a Song perhaps ſhe may require;
And thou to ſing but lately didſt aſpire;
When in an abject, low, laborious State,
Sunk deep in Cares, and preſs'd beneath their Weight;
Then (ſo, at leaſt, 'tis ſaid among our Swains)
In Sonnets COLIN charm'd away his Pains:
Much ſooner now thou may'ſt a Song rehearſe,
Whene'er ſhe condeſcends to hear thy Verſe.
COLIN.
O Friend! too well you know, my ſimple Strains
Are far inferior to each rural Swain's:
[52] Yet, ſince Great CAROLINA thinks no Scorn,
To patronize a Shepherd meanly born;
Henceforth I'll ſtrive to raiſe my Voice ſublime,
And with her Royal Name adorn my Rhyme;
I'll on each verdant Mountain ſing her Praiſe,
And vocal Groves ſhall echo to my Lays;
To ev'ry Swain her Godlike Worth proclaim,
Nor ever drop the pleaſing glorious Theme.
MENALCAS.
THEN, ſince we're met, where friendly Branches ſpread,
And trembling Leaves diffuſe a cooling Shade;
Since, on the Sprays, the Thruſh and Finch rejoice,
Invoke thy Muſe, and tune thy rural Voice.
COLIN.
ANOTHER Day my rural Voice I'll raiſe,
Another Day the Muſe ſhall tune her Lays:
[53] But now, alas! ſuch crowding Joys I find,
No Words can ſpeak the Tranſports of my Mind.
Would PHOEBUS warm me with poetic Fire,
Or would the Mantuan Muſe my Tongue inſpire;
As Great ELIZA ſhone in SPENCER's Line,
The Greater CAROLINA ſhould in mine;
Then would I emulate the tuneful Throng,
And with her glorious Name immortalize my Song.
A PASTORAL ELEGY.
[54]AT firſt in Vales obſcure the Lyre I ſtrung;
Vales, where the Muſe her annual Labours ſung:
Now, leaving theſe, ſhe ranges o'er the Plains,
And tunes her Voice to Flocks and Shepherd Swains;
Yet, freſh in Grief, but feebly moves her Wings,
Weeps, while ſhe flies, and trembles, as ſhe ſings.
TWO Country Swains, in Friendſhip firmly join'd,
Lov'd each alike, and were, like Brothers, kind:
Great CAROLINE her Royal Bounty ſhow'd
To one, and rais'd him from the grov'ling Crowd;
When ſtraight his ſmiling Looks, and chearful Mien,
Proclaim'd the Goodneſs of a gracious QUEEN;
[55] But gloomy Sadneſs ſoon his Face poſſeſs'd,
And clouded all the Joys before expreſs'd:
The other gay and pleaſant ſtill appear'd;
Nor griev'd for Evils paſt, nor future fear'd:
One Day they met; MENALCAS firſt began;
And thus the mournful Tale, alternate, ran.
MENALCAS.
WHY, COLIN, doſt thou wear that penſive Look,
And ſighing ſtand, ſupported by thy Crook?
Say, from what Cauſe this Melancholy ſprings;
Or doſt thou verify what DAMON ſings?
" Vain Man can never ſatiate his Deſires;
" The more he has, the more he ſtill requires:
" To-day he's craving, and To-morrow cloy'd;
" New Pleaſures grow inſipid, when enjoy'd."
So, when our Sheep on Hills refuſe to feed,
We ſtraight remove them to the verdant Mead;
[56] Where all, intent, the luſcious Herbage graze;
And, for that Day, their Paſture ſeems to pleaſe:
The next, they range around the flow'ry Space;
And bleating tell, they loath the tainted Graſs.
COLIN.
'TWAS Yeſterday a giddy Sheep I view'd,
Which roſe in CUDDY's Fold, and ſtagg'ring ſtood;
While one, with burly Horns, ſecure from Pain,
Ran, enviouſly, and puſh'd him down again.
So you, vain jeſting Youth! unmov'd with Care,
Inſult the hapleſs Swain, that's in Deſpair.
MENALCAS.
I nor inſulted, nor intended Guile;
And, if I jeſted, 'twas to make thee ſmile:
But tell me, Swain, what wond'rous Turn of Fate
O'erclouds thy Face, that look'd ſerene of late?
[57] What, is thy Harveſt blaſted on the Ground?
Or has the Royal CAROLINA frown'd?
Unveil thy Griefs, and make thy Sorrows known;
You know, my Friend's Misfortunes are my own.
COLIN.
MY Harveſt is not blaſted on the Ground,
Nor has the Royal CAROLINA frown'd:
But lately, when the Sun had gaily dreſt
The lofty Mountains in a purple Veſt,
I early roſe, to tend my fleecy Care;
Wet was the Graſs, and piercing cold the Air.
My lovely SYLVIA, ſtay behind, I ſaid,
Till I have weav'd a Garland for thy Head;
Till I a Bow'r, with ſhady Branches, form,
To ſhun the ſcorching Ray, or rapid Storm;
And, when the Dew's exhal'd, which Night diſtill'd,
Bleſs COLIN with thy Preſence in the Field.
[58] She anſwer'd not; but from her Boſom ſent
A deep preſaging Sigh, before I went.
The Sun had painted ev'ry Object gay,
When to the chearful Field I took my Way;
The Lark with Mattins welcom'd in the Morn;
The Thruſh and Finch ſat chirping on the Thorn;
The Swallows round, in airy Circles, flew;
And, ah! poor COLIN then was joyful too:
But ſuddenly I ſaw the Miſts ariſe,
And dark'ning Clouds o'erſpread the dusky Skies,
Th'Horizon ſeem'd to caſt a gloomy Frown,
While from his airy Height the Lark ſunk down
The tuneful Birds their joyous Songs deny'd;
And boding Owls, and ſooty Ravens, cry'd.
My drooping Heart, which felt unuſual Weight,
Shock'd with ſuch Omens, ceas'd almoſt to beat:
Yet theſe, ſaid I, portend no Evil, while
My Royal Miſtreſs condeſcends to ſmile:
[59] If She's propitious, what can COLIN fear?
Inur'd the leſſer Ills of Life to bear.
Thus ſaid, I took my Way to yonder Grove;
And form'd, with ſpreading Boughs, an arch'd Alcove:
So cloſe I twiſted in each pliant Spray,
As might exclude the Wind, or ſunny Ray.
With ſweeteſt Flow'rs I deck'd the moſſy Ground,
And ſtrew'd the fragrant Woodbinds all around.
Here, when, ſaid I, my SYLVIA comes a-field,
This grateful Bow'r a ſafe Retreat ſhall yield:
If rainy, here ſhe may the Storms evade;
If fair, the Branches will project a Shade:
Here SYLVIA ſhall, with COLIN, take her Reſt;
And COLIN here, with SYLVIA, ſhall be bleſt.
As thus I ſpake, around I caſt my Eye,
And ſaw celeſtial CELIA drawing nigh:
I ſaw; but wonder'd why her heav'nly Mien
Was clouded o'er, that us'd to be ſerene.
[60] CELIA's the Miſtreſs of the flow'ry Plain,
Whoſe Bounty's known to ev'ry worthy Swain
Not Godlike PAN preſided with more Care,
Nor to Arcadian Shepherds was ſo dear.
When CELIA to the rural Shade retires,
She ev'ry Breaſt with riſing Hope inſpires;
Expecting Swains, with joyous Looks, proclaim
The happy Time, and hail the gen'rous Dame:
As languid Plants, which half the Year lie dead,
When Spring approaches, raiſe their drooping Head.
She croſs'd the Plains with a dejected Air;
Her penſive Aſpect ſhew'd her pious Care;
And, loath th'unwelcome Tidings to reveal,
She ſighing ſpoke, and left th'unfiniſh'd Tale:
" Ah poor unhappy Swain! return, return;
" The ſable Clouds foretel a rainy Morn:
" Nor only is the Day o'ercaſt with Gloom;
" Thy pleaſing Hopes are blaſted all at home;
[61] " Thy SYLVIA, O!" She ſaid, and dropt the reſt;
But my preſaging Heart too rightly gueſs'd:
I ſilent ſtood, and ſpoke my Grief with Tears;
You know, my Heart was firmly link'd to hers.
MENALCAS.
I know, your Hearts are link'd in Friendſhip faſt;
Long may that mutual Bond of Friendſhip laſt:
May HYMEN to you both propitious prove,
And Death but late untie the Knot of Love.
COLIN.
O! ſtop, MENALCAS, and my Loſs deplore;
The good, the faithful SYLVIA is no more:
That gloomy Morn ſhe, in my Abſence, dy'd;
And rigid Death the laſt Farewel deny'd.
Another Loſs I could content have born;
But muſt the Loſs of SYLVIA always mourn.
[62] My lovely SYLVIA was my ſofteſt Theme,
My Song by Day, by Night my pleaſing Dream:
But now in Sighs I ſpend the ling'ring Day;
And, weeping, paſs the tardy Night away:
Nor does thy Friend indulge a needleſs Care;
My Loſs is great, and juſt is my Deſpair.
MENALCAS.
THY Loſs and Sorrows equally are great;
But Death's the Law of Nature, fix'd by Fate:
Our Flocks, our Herds, our All precarious ſtands;
And fall we muſt, when Heav'n our Fall commands.
COLIN.
YET Flocks and Herds are with Reluctance ſpar'd;
And what are Flocks and Herds, with her compar'd?
A hungry Fox ſtole ten of CUDDY's Lambs,
A lurching Mongrel kill'd their bleating Dams:
[63] Say, did not CUDDY for his Loſs repine?
But, ah! what Loſs was his, compar'd with mine?
MENALCAS.
I have a Flute, which DAMON lately made;
No Shepherd on a ſweeter ever play'd:
I tun'd it Yeſterday, and ſtraight a Throng
Of Nymphs and Swains ran crowding to my Song;
My liſt'ning Ewes, a-while, forſook their Meat;
My tender Lambs, tho' hungry, ceas'd to bleat:
I'll tune again the ſoft harmonious Lay;
Muſic, perhaps, may chaſe thy Cares away.
COLIN.
MENALCAS, Muſic's for a lighter Ill;
Such Woes as mine would baffle all thy Skill.
Upon his Flute ALEXIS often plays,
And ſtrives to charm my Sorrows with his Lays;
[64] Upon his Flute ALEXIS plays in vain;
His Lays, tho' charming, cannot charm my Pain.
The tuneful Birds rejoice on ev'ry Spray,
My wanton Lambkins in their Paſture play;
In vain the tuneful Birds rejoice, in vain
My wanton Lambkins ſport upon the Plain.
WITH chearful Green the ſpacious Fields are crown'd,
And beauteous Flow'rs adorn the painted Ground;
The ſnowy Bloſſoms on the Branches ſhine,
A pleaſing Scene to ev'ry Eye, but mine!
For neither chearful Green, that crowns the Field,
Nor ſnowy Bloſſoms, which the Branches yield,
Nor Flow'rs, that ſpread the painted Meadows o'er,
Delight my Eyes, now SYLVIA is no more.
MENALCAS.
[65]'TIS more than Time thy mournful Dirge to end;
For, ſee, the whiſtling Ploughmen homeward tend;
Our fleecy Flocks ſtand waiting round the Fold;
Damp feel the Dews, the ruffling Breezes cold;
The ſetting Sun forſakes the bluſhing Skies,
And hazy Fogs from marſhy Grounds ariſe:
Then fold thy Sheep, thy anxious Cares remove;
Nor weep on Earth, for her who ſings above.
On RICHMOND PARK, and ROYAL GARDENS.
[72]OF bliſsful Groves I ſing, and flow'ry Plains:
Ye Sylvan Nymphs, aſſiſt my rural Strains.
Shall Windſor Foreſt gain a deathleſs Fame,
And grow immortal, as the Poet's Name;
While not a Bard, of all the tuneful Throng,
With theſe delightful Fields adorns his
This was writ in the Year 1731; ſince when, great Alterations and Improve⯑ments have been made in the Gardens, and ſeveral Poems publiſh'd on the ſame Subject.
Song?
Thy Gardens, Richmond, boaſt an equal Theme,
And only ask an equal Muſe's Flame.
What, tho' no Virgin Nymphs, of CYNTHIA's Train,
With Belt and Quiver grace the verdant Plain?
[73] What, tho' no fabled conſecrated Floods
Flow o'er thy Fields, or murmur thro' thy Woods?
My Song thy real Beauties ſhall purſue,
And paint the lovely Scenes, and paint 'em true;
A pleaſing Task! Nor ſlight ſhall be the Praiſe,
If Royal CAROLINE accept the Lays.
DELIGHTED, often thro' the mazy Groves,
The Muſe, in penſive Contemplation, roves;
Or climbs the ſlow aſcending
Richmond Hill.
Hill, whoſe Brow
Hangs o'er the ſilver Stream, which rolls below;
Where all around me ſhining Proſpects riſe,
And various Scenes invite my gazing Eyes;
And, while I view one Object with Delight,
New pleaſing Wonders charm the feaſted Sight:
Now this allures, now that attracts it moſt;
And the firſt Beauty's in the ſecond loſt.
[74]THUS, in a grateful Concert, may we hear
The Sounds at once ſurprize, and charm our Ear;
The trembling Notes, in haſty Fugues, ariſe;
And this advances, ere the former flies;
All ſeem to be confus'd, yet all agree,
To perfect the melodious Harmony.
BENEATH the Mount, with what Majeſtic Pride
The Sire of Rivers rolls his ſilver Tide!
Let Poets ſing of Hermus' golden Shore,
His amber Foam, and Sands of ſhining Ore:
Nor Tagus envy we, nor fruitful Nile,
Whoſe fatt'ning Floods enrich the thirſty Soil:
Happy BRITANNIA boaſts as fair a Stream,
As great in Bounties, and as great in Fame;
Since DENHAM's deathleſs Muſe has ſung his Tide,
And India's Riches o'er his Surface glide.
[75]OBSEQUIOUS River, when my Eyes ſurvey
Thy Waves, or Eaſt, or Weſt, purſue their Way;
Now ſwiftly roll, to meet the briny Main,
At ſtated Periods, now return again;
How vain the Schemes of Infidels appear!
How weak their Reas'nings, and the GOD how clear!
Say, Atheiſts, ſince you own, by Nature's Laws,
There's no Effect produc'd without a Cauſe;
Why ſhould the reſtleſs Stream run to and fro,
And, with alternate Motion, ebb and flow;
Did not ſome Being, of ſuperior Force,
Rule the wild Waves, and regulate their Courſe?
HENCE lofty Windſor to the Sight appears;
And, high in Air, her pompous Turrets rears:
Wide, round her Domes, the ſpacious Foreſt ſhines.
Tho' brighter much in POPE's harmonious Lines:
[76] O! would his tuneful Muſe my Breaſt inſpire,
With equal Warmth, with her ſublimer Fire;
Then Richmond Hill renown'd in Verſe ſhould grow,
And Thames reecho to the Song below;
A ſecond Eden in my Page ſhould ſhine,
And MILTON's Paradiſe ſubmit to mine.
OFT, loſt in Thought, forgetful of my Way,
I, o'er the Park, thro' Wilds of Beauty, ſtray;
Where ſportive Nature wantons at her Will,
And laviſhes her Bloom, uncheck'd by Skill.
Old venerable Trees, majeſtic, riſe,
Sublime in Air, and brave the vaulted Skies;
Which, free from cruel Steel, or Lab'rer's Hand,
In peaceful Age, and hoary Honour, ſtand.
Here, when AURORA firſt begins to dawn,
The wakeful Larks ſpring mounting from the Lawn;
[77] Pois'd by their Plumes, in lofty Flights they play;
With joyful Warblings hail th'approaching Day:
But, when the Sun diſplays a purple Scene,
And drinks the pearly Dew, that deck'd the Green;
A thouſand tuneful Birds in Concert meet,
A thouſand tuneful Notes the Groves repeat;
And, when their Muſic ceaſes with the Day,
Sweet PHILOMELA chants her penſive Lay.
BUT, hark! I hear a louder Muſic ſound;
From Woods and Vales the various Notes rebound:
'Tis Albion's KING purſues the Royal Chace;
The nimble Stag skims o'er th'unbending Graſs:
The Way which Fear directs, he trembling tries;
Nor knows, where Fear directs, or where he flies:
A hundred diff'rent Sounds aſſail his Ears;
A Death, in ev'ry diff'rent Sound, he fears:
[78] And now he faintly moves a ſlower Pace,
And cloſer now the Hounds purſue the Chace;
Till, in Deſpair, back on his Foes he turns;
Makes feeble Efforts with his branchy Horns;
Short is the Combat, ſoon he yields his Breath,
And gaſping falls, and trembling pants in Death.
Now to a ſofter Theme deſcends my Muſe;
Thro' artful Walks her pleaſing Path purſues;
Where lofty Elms, and conic Lindens riſe,
Or where th'extenſive Terras charms her Eyes;
Where Elegance and noble Grandeur meet,
As the Ideas of its Miſtreſs, great,
Magnificently fair, majeſtically ſweet.
See, on its Margin, Fields of waving Corn;
Theſe bearded Crops, and Flow'rets this, adorn;
CERES and FLORA lovingly embrace,
And gay Varieties the Landſcape grace.
[79]HENCE lead me, Muſes, thro' yon arched Grove,
Adorn'd with Sand below, and Leaves above;
Or let me o'er the ſpacious Oval trace,
Where verdant Carpets ſpread the lovely Place;
Where Trees in regular Confuſion ſtand,
And ſylvan Beauties riſe on ev'ry Hand:
Or bear me, Nymphs, to the ſequeſter'd Cell,
Where BOYLE and NEWTON, mighty Sages! dwell;
Whoſe Fame ſhall live, altho' the Grot decay,
Long as thoſe ſacred Truths their Works diſplay.
HOW ſweetly pleaſing is this cool Retreat,
When PHOEBUS blazes with meridian Heat!
In vain the fervid Beams around it play;
The rocky Roof repels the ſcorching Ray;
Securely guarded with a ſylvan Scene,
In Nature's Liv'ry dreſt, for ever green.
[80]TO viſit this, the curious Stranger roves,
With grateful Travel, thro' a Wild of Groves;
And, tho' directed, oft miſtakes his Way,
Unknowing where the winding Mazes ſtray;
Yet ſtill his Feet the magic Paths purſue,
Charm'd, tho' bewilder'd, with the pleaſing View.
NOT ſo attractive lately ſhone the Plain,
A gloomy Waſte, not worth the Muſes Strain;
Where thorny Brakes the Traveller repell'd,
And Weeds and Thiſtles overſpread the Field;
Till Royal GEORGE, and Heav'nly CAROLINE,
Bid Nature in harmonious Luſtre ſhine;
The ſacred Fiat thro' the Chaos rung,
And Symmetry from wild Diſorder ſprung.
SO, once, confus'd, the barb'rous Nations ſtood;
Unpoliſh'd were their Minds, their Manners rude;
[81] Till Rome her conqu'ring Eagles wide diſplay'd,
And bid the World reform—The World obey'd.
HOW bleſs'd the Man in theſe delightful Fields!
New Pleaſures each indulgent Moment yields.
Let gayer Minds in Town purſue their Joys,
Exchanging Quietneſs for Crowds and Noiſe;
Conſume the Night at Maſquerade or Play;
Or waſte, in buſy Idleneſs, the Day:
I envy not Auguſta's pompous Piles,
Since rural Solitude more pleaſing ſmiles.
O Solitude! the Sage's chief Delight!
What Numbers can thy lovely Charms recite!
Hail, peaceful Nymph! thou eldeſt Thing on Earth!
Nay, like Eternity, thou hadſt no Birth:
The Heav'ns alone can thy Commencement tell,
Ere MICHAEL fought, or peccant Angels fell;
[82] Before the Skies with radiant Light were clad,
In awful Gloom, and venerable Shade,
The FATHER thee his ſole Companion made.
When to Creation firſt his Thoughts inclin'd,
And future Worlds were riſing in his Mind;
He ſat with thee, and plann'd the mighty Scheme;
With thee adjuſted the ſtupendous Frame;
Contriv'd how Globes, ſelf-balanc'd in the Air,
With reſtleſs Rounds ſhould rule the circling Year;
How Orbs o'er Orbs in myſtic Dance ſhould roll,
What Laws ſupport, and regulate the Whole:
Nor art thou yet impair'd, celeſtial Dame;
Thy Charms are ſtill attractive, ſtill the ſame;
With thee the Mind, abſtracted from the Crew,
May ſtudy Nature, and her Ends purſue;
With thee I hear the feather'd Warblers ſing;
With thee ſurvey the Beauties of the Spring,
When Bloſſoms, Leaves, and Fruits the Branches yield,
And Eden's Glory crowns the happy Field.
[83]HERE firſt the Muſe (auſpicious was the Place!)
Rejoic'd to ſee her Royal Guardian's Face:
How mild, yet how majeſtic, was her Look!
How ſweetly condeſcending all ſhe ſpoke!
On ev'ry pleaſing Accent Wiſdom hung,
And Truth and Virtue dwelt upon her Tongue.
O! were I equal to the glorious Theme,
Then ſhould my Lays immortalize her Fame;
Or paint Great GEORGE in peaceful Laurels dreſt,
With Albion's Safety lab'ring in his Breaſt;
Who (while contending Nations round him jar,
And Subjects Wealth ſupports their Monarchs War)
Guards happy Britain, with his floating Tow'rs,
From purple Slaughter, and invading Pow'rs;
No plund'ring Armies rob our fruitful Plain;
But, bleſs'd with Peace and Plenty, ſmiles the Swain.
[84]NOT ſo he ſmiles upon the foreign Shores;
But ſtarving walks thro' Nature's laviſh Stores;
Poor Peaſants with their rigid Burdens groan,
And Till the Glebe for Harveſts not their own.
What, tho' their more propitious PHOEBUS ſhines
With warmer Rays, and chears the curling Vines?
What, tho' rich Olives grace the fertile Soil,
And the hot Climate teems with fatt'ning Oil?
The hungry Farmer views his Crops in vain,
In vain the Vineyard tempts the thirſty Swain;
While their ſtern Tyrant's arbitrary Pow'r
Rifles the Plains, and ravages their Store:
Thy Sons, BRITANNIA, from ſuch Evils free,
Enjoy the Sweets of Peace and Liberty;
A gracious Sov'reign ſmiles upon the Throne,
And Heav'n confirms the happy Realm his own.
TRUTH and FALSHOOD.
A FABLE.
[149]SOON as the Iron Age on Earth began,
And Vice found eaſy Entrance into Man;
Forth from her Cave infernal FALSHOOD came;
FALSHOOD, the Hate of Gods, of Men the Shame:
A ſilken Robe ſhe wore, of various Hue,
Its Colour changing with each diff'rent View:
Studious to cheat, and eager to beguile,
She mimic'd TRUTH, and ap'd her heav'nly Smile;
But mimic'd TRUTH in vain; the varying Veſt,
To ev'ry ſearching Eye, the Fiend confeſt.
[150]AT length ſhe ſaw celeſtial TRUTH appear:
Serene her Brow, and chearful was her Air;
Her ſilver Locks with ſhining Fillets bound,
With Laurel Wreaths her peaceful Temples crown'd:
A Lily Robe was girded round her Waiſt;
And, o'er her Arms, a radiant Mantle caſt:
With decent Negligence, it hung behind;
And, looſely flowing, wanton'd in the Wind.
Thus TRUTH advanc'd, unknowing of Deceit;
And FALSHOOD, bowing low, began the Cheat:
HAIL, charming Maid, bright as the Morning Star,
Daughter of JOVE, and Heav'n's peculiar Care!
'Tis thine to weigh the World in equal Scales,
And chide the conſcious Soul, when Vice prevails,
Diſpenſing Juſtice with impartial Hand,
The mightieſt Pow'rs ſubmit to thy Command:
[151] Ev'n Gods themſelves, tho' in their Actions free,
Conſult, reſolve, and act, as you decree:
Great Sov'reign JOVE, the firſt Ethereal Name,
Advis'd with thee to form the heav'nly Frame:
As TRUTH approv'd, he bad the Fabric riſe,
And ſpread the azure Mantle of the Skies;
Plac'd ev'ry Planet in its proper Sphere,
Nor rolls this Orb too wide, nor that too near—
But why thus walk we, mindleſs of our Eaſe,
Expos'd beneath the Sun's meridian Blaze?
Better retire, and ſhun the ſcorching Ray,
Till fanning Zephyrs cool our Ev'ning Way.
Hear how yon limpid Streams run murm'ring by,
And tuneful Birds their ſylvan Notes apply;
See fragrant Shrubs along the Borders grow,
And waving Shades beneath the Poplar Bough;
All theſe invite us to the River's Side,
To bathe our Limbs, and ſport within the Tide:
[152] So cool the Stream, the flow'ry Banks ſo ſweet,
DIANA's Self might covet the Retreat:
Nor can a ſhort Diverſion check your Haſte;
Freſh Strength will ſoon ſucceed ſuch welcome Reſt:
As rapid Currents, held a-while at Bay,
With ſwifter Force purſue their liquid Way.
So ſpake the Phantom; and, with friendly Look
Supporting what ſhe ſaid, approach'd the Brook:
TRUTH follow'd, artleſs, unſuſpicious Maid!
And, in an evil Hour, the Voice obey'd.
Both, at the cryſtal Stream arriv'd, unbound
Their diff'rent Robes; both caſt them to the Ground:
The Fiend, upon the Margin, ling'ring ſtood;
The naked Goddeſs leapt into the Flood:
Sporting, ſhe ſwims the liquid Surface o'er,
Unmindful of the matchleſs Robe ſhe wore.
[153] Not FALSHOOD ſo—She haſty ſeiz'd the Veſt,
And with the beauteous Spoils herſelf ſhe dreſt:
Then, wing'd with Joy, outflew the ſwifteſt Wind,
Her own infernal Robe far left behind.
Straight ſhe aſpires above her former State,
And gains Admittance to the Rich and Great:
Nay, ſuch her daring Pride, that ſome report,
When thus equipp'd, ſhe boldly went to Court:
There ſpake and look'd with ſuch a graceful Air,
Miſtaken FAME pronounc'd her Wiſe and Fair.
She fill'd the Wanton's Tongue with ſpecious Names,
To deal in Wounds, and Deaths, in Darts, and Flames;
He prefac'd all his leud Attempts with Love;
And Fraud prevail'd, where Reaſon could not move.
At length ſhe mingled with the learned Throng,
And tun'd the Muſe's mercenary Song.
In all the Labyrinths of Logic skill'd,
She taught the ſubtle Reas'ner not to yield;
[154] Inſtructed how to puzzle each Diſpute,
And boldly baffle Men, tho' not confute.
Now, at the Bar, ſhe play'd the Lawyer's Part;
And ſhap'd out Right and Wrong by Rules of Art:
Now, in the Senate, rais'd her pompous Tone;
Talk'd much of Public Good, but meant her Own.
Oft to th' Olympian Field ſhe turn'd her Eyes,
And taught the Racers how to gain the Prize.
In Schools and Temples too ſhe claim'd a Share,
While FALSHOOD's Self admir'd her Influence there.
DELUDED TRUTH obſerv'd the Fraud too late,
Nor knew ſhe to repair a Loſs ſo great:
In vain her heav'nly Robes ſhe, ſighing, ſeeks;
In vain the humid Pearls bedew her Cheeks;
In vain ſhe tears the Laurel from her Hair,
While Nature ſeems to ſympathize her Care:
[155] The glowing Flow'rs, that crown th'enamel'd Meads,
Weep fragrant Dews, and hang their drooping Heads;
The ſylvan Choirs, as conſcious of her Pains,
Deplore her Loſs in melancholy Strains.
Thus, penſive and uncloath'd, upon the Shore
She ſtands; and ſees the Robe, which FALSHOOD wore:
Deteſted Sight! Nor longer now ſhe mourns;
But, Grief to Rage transform'd, with Anger burns:
Into the Stream, the helliſh Robe ſhe toſt;
And ſcorn'd a Habit, ſo unlike the loſt.
HENCE TRUTH now naked roves, as in Diſgrace;
None, but the Wiſe and Virtuous, ſee her Face:
From Cities far ſhe modeſtly retreats,
From buſy Scenes of Life, to peaceful Seats;
Is chiefly found in lonely Fields and Cells,
Where Silence reigns, and Contemplation dwells.
[156] Hence FALSHOOD cheats us in the fair Diſguiſe,
And ſeems TRUTH's Self to all unwary Eyes;
Triumphs and thrives, in Pow'r, and Wealth, and Fame;
And builds her Glory on her Rival's Name;
With Safety dares to flatter, fawn, and ſooth;
For who knows FALSHOOD, when array'd like TRUTH?
On the Marriage of his Serene Highneſs the Prince of Orange.
[177]ILLUSTRIOUS Prince! forgive the feeble Lay,
That now aſpires to hail your Nuptial Day;
Nor ſcorn a Muſe, the meaneſt of the Nine,
Who brings her humble Off'ring to your Shrine.
And you, Imperial Nymph! whoſe lovely Face
Invites the Hero to your chaſte Embrace,
Vouchſafe a Spark of your celeſtial Fire;
Harmonious Words, and pleaſing Thoughts inſpire,
Soft, as your Love, and tuneful, as your Lyre:
So ſhall my Numbers charm the liſt'ning Ear,
And ev'n the glad NASSAU delighted hear.
[178] NASSAU has long enrich'd the Book of Fame,
And ANNA now adorns the noble Name.
Nations, who ſaw the Light of ORANGE riſe,
With awful Splendor, in the Belgian Skies;
Shall ſoon behold it with new Luſtre ſhine,
Join'd to a glorious Star, of BRUNSWIC's Line.
SO, where the flowing Sambre gently glides,
The Swain delights to view the beauteous Tides:
But, when his more extended Eye ſurveys
The ſhining Torrent join the ſpacious Maeſe;
Both Rivers, thus, with friendly Union flow,
And to the Sight ſuperior Beauty ſhow.
WHENE'ER the Gods a noble Race intend,
They ſuit the Cauſes to the deſtin'd End,
Nor yoke unequal Hearts in Nuptial Love:
JOVE's valiant Bird diſdains the fearful Dove;
[179] Great Minds, by native Sympathy, combine,
As golden Particles the cloſeſt join.
Paternal Virtues in their Boſom roll,
Ally'd in Love by Nobleneſs of Soul:
Hence Thrones and Sceptres ſhine neglected Things,
Hence Royal ANNE prefers NASSAU to Kings;
While Britons with united Hearts rejoice,
And willing Senators applaud the Choice,
To ſee their KING (to Honour ever true)
Diſcharge the Debt to ſacred WILLIAM due;
Immortal WILLIAM! by whoſe prudent Cares
We yet enjoy the Fruits of all our Wars;
Our Laws, Religion, Liberty, and Peace,
And ev'n the Bleſſings of the BRUNSWIC Race.
NOR Thou, Illuſtrious ORANGE! bluſh to own,
Thy Honour, thus ally'd to Albion's Crown;
[180] Bleſt with a Princeſs, in whoſe Form we trace
Her Father's Majeſty, and Mother's Grace;
Bright Orbs of Pow'r, that, with propitious Ray,
Diſpel our Clouds, and beautify our Day:
Not as the Comet, raging thro' the Air,
Infects the World with Peſtilence and War;
But, like the Sun, their Beams of Goodneſs glow,
Inſpiring Life, and chearing all below.
Such are the glorious SIRE, and gracious DAME,
From whence the beauteous Bride of ORANGE came.
And ſhall unerring Nature change her Kind?
What Lion e'er produc'd a tim'rous Hind?
The Royal Eagles Royal Eagles breed,
And Heroes from heroic Sires proceed:
Rome's Founder, thus, confeſs'd his Race Divine;
Thus NASSAU copies the NASSOVIAN Line;
Thus ANNA's noble Stream of Virtue flows,
High, as the Regal Spring, from whence it roſe.
[181] Thrice happy Nymph, with ev'ry Grace ſupply'd!
Thrice happy Prince, with ſuch a heav'nly Bride!
In whom ſuperior Senſe with Judgment joins,
Her Beauty much, but more her Merit ſhines.
How glorious! When ſuch Worth adorns the Great,
We hear, we ſee, admire, and imitate:
Virtue, in Them, attracts remoteſt Eyes;
But, in the vulgar Soul, unheeded lies.
As radiant PHOEBUS darts ſuperior Light,
While ſmaller Planets ſhun the watchful Sight.
ACCOMPLISH'D thus, let her Example fire
The drooping Muſe, and wake the ſounding Lyre:
To aid Religion, be her chiefeſt Care,
(Heav'n juſtly claims the Soul, it made ſo fair)
To ſtem the Torrent of licentious Rage,
And prop the Virtues of a ſinking Age;
[182] Exalting Science to her ancient Height,
To raiſe declining Arts, and make the Rude polite:
While great NASSAU, whom native Glory warms,
Whene'er his Country calls him forth to Arms,
May fire the Belgians in the Field of MARS,
Conſult their Peace, or animate their Wars;
Paint his Forefathers to their wond'ring Eye,
And teach 'em how to conquer, or to die;
Like him, who bravely dar'd to break their Chain,
Tho' held by all the Force and Fraud of Spain:
For injur'd Liberty the Sword he draws,
Reſolv'd to gain, or periſh in the Cauſe;
And having long the doubtful Combat try'd,
Like CAESAR vanquiſh'd, and like CAESAR
King WILLIAM's Great-Grandfather, the Firſt great Aſſertor of the Belgian Liberties, aſſaſſinated at Delph.
dy'd;
Tho' diff'rent far the Motives of their Mind;
That fought to conquer, this to ſave Mankind;
[183] Till prais'd, lamented, envy'd, and admir'd,
The Hero, Patriot, and the Prince expir'd.
O! where did then the Guardian Angels hide?
Nor watch'd to turn the guilty Ball aſide;
When he, whom armed Hoſts could not withſtand,
Now falls a Victim to one Villain's Hand!
BUT riſe, ye Muſes, quit the penſive Lay:
Nor damp the Joys of this auſpicious Day.
Since yet the glorious Name of ORANGE ſtands,
Since Royal ANNA ſeals the Nuptial Bands;
Soon may Imperial ADOLPHS riſe again,
Again new FRED'RICS thunder on the Main,
Rouzing the Martial Youth to War's Alarms,
(If proud Iberians ſhine again in Arms)
To guard their Country from tyrannic Pow'r,
And be, what glorious WILLIAM was before.
[184]NOR ſhall the States invading Forces fear,
Ere pregnant Time the promis'd Heroes bear;
Nor want Allies their Freedom to defend,
Since BRUNSWIC reigns, and ALBION is their Friend.
As branching Oaks protect the rural Swain,
Secure from Summer Heat, and Winter Rain;
So ſhall our Monarch, with paternal Aid,
His Regal Shelter o'er Batavia ſpread:
Long as the Sceptre fills his Royal Hand,
A true Palladium ſhall inſure the Land.
AND if the preſcient Muſes guide my Lay,
Or future Secrets PHOEBUS can diſplay;
The Day ſhall ſhine diſtinguiſh'd from the reſt,
That ANNA dignify'd, and HYMEN bleſt;
In which AUGUSTUS fortifies his Throne,
And plans a Scheme of Union for his Son;
[185] Beſpeaks Allies for Princes yet to come,
New Friends to Britain, and new Foes to Rome.
PROCEED, Great MONARCH! new Allies to gain,
And with new Nuptial Leagues our Peace maintain:
So ſhall thy beauteous Nymphs ſecure with Charms
That Safety, other Kings defend with Arms;
They, VENUS like, could MARS himſelf ſurprize,
And awe ſtern Tyrants with their conqu'ring Eyes.
A Deſcription of a Journey To Marlborough, Bath, Portſmouth, &c.
[205]To the Right Honourable the Lord Viſcount PALMERSTON.
WHILE ſome, my Lord, the Roman Coaſt explore,
Survey the Fanes, and trace their Beauties o'er,
Studious of Arts, by which ingenious BOYLE
Now draws the Plan, or now erects the Pile;
More bounded in my Fancy, and my Purſe,
I, o'er domeſtic Plains, purſue my Courſe;
And ev'ry pleaſing Object in the Way,
The Muſe ſhall ſing, if you accept her Lay.
[206]WHEN CANCER fiercely glow'd with PHOEBUS' Heat,
And Clouds of Duſt flew ev'n in Brentford-ſtreet;
O'er Hounſlow-heath my early Courſe I ſteer,
For Robbers fam'd; but I no Robbers fear:
Let Gold, like Guilt, increaſe the Miſer's Grief;
A Poet's Purſe, like Virtue, dares a Thief.
Colebrook I quickly paſs, and ſoon my Eyes
Survey the Royal Tow'rs of Windſor riſe:
Charm'd with the Theme of POPE's harmonious Song,
I check my Steed, and ſlowly move along;
As ling'ring Mariners contract their Sails,
To feaſt on Odours of Arabian Gales.
But leſt, my Lord, your Patience ſhould accuſe
The dull Narration of a tedious Muſe,
I will not ſing each Trifle that occurr'd,
How much I eat, and drank, and whipp'd, and ſpurr'd:
[207] How oft my Palfry ſtumbled in the Way,
Till
* Hatford ends the Travel of the Day;
Where kind
†MENALCAS, Partner of my Soul,
Revives me with his friendly, flowing Bowl;
Yet forces no intemp'rate Bumpers round,
Except when DELIA's Health the Glaſſes crown'd.
A thouſand Labours paſt, we now run o'er,
What Scenes we acted, and what Toils we bore:
No Party Feuds, nor Politics we name;
The Joys of Friendſhip moſtly were our Theme.
Warn'd by the Clock, we now retire to Reſt,
Till riſing PHOEBUS ſtreak'd the purple Eaſt.
Breakfaſt ſoon o'er, we trace the verdant Field,
Where ſharpen'd Scythes the lab'ring Mowers wield:
Straight Emulation glows in ev'ry Vein;
I long to try the curvous Blade again.
[208]AS when, at Hockley-hole, old Gameſters view
Young Combatants their Martial Sports renew,
A youthful Vigour fires their ancient Soul,
Nor former Wounds their Courage can controul;
Again they mount the Stage, again they play,
Again they bear the noble Prize away:
So with Ambition burns my daring Breaſt;
I ſnatch the Scythe, and with the Swains conteſt;
Behind 'em cloſe, I ruſh the ſweeping Steel;
The vanquiſh'd Mowers ſoon confeſs my Skill.
NOT long at this laborious Sport I ſtay;
But, with my Friend, to
* Charlton take my Way:
'Twas there, my Lord, induc'd by potent Ale,
Swains leave their Ploughs, and Threſhers quit their Flail:
[209] Your
*Bounty ſoon provokes the Bells to ring;
Clowns dance, Boys hollow, and hoarſe Coblers ſing.
Not greater was the Joy in ancient Greece,
When AESON's Son produc'd the Golden Fleece,
Than now appear'd in ev'ry Threſher's Breaſt,
Soon as your Gold ſung Prologue to the Feaſt.
WHY ſhould the Muſe recite our Bill of Fare,
And with a long Deſcription tire your Ear?
None can your gen'rous Treat with Want reproach;
All eat enough, and many drank too much:
Full twenty Threſhers quaff around the Board;
All name their Toaſt, and ev'ry one, my Lord.
No Cares, no Toils, no Troubles now appear;
For Troubles, Toils, and Cares are drown'd in Beer;
Till ſoon the chol'ric Fumes of Liquor riſe,
Fluſh in their Face, and ſparkle in their Eyes:
[210] They now the ruſtic Feats of Manhood boaſt,
Who beſt could reap, or mow, or threſh the moſt:
Contention doubtful! All with Anger burn,
While each appears a Hero in his Turn:
Hard Words ſucceed; ſo far can Beer prevail,
That Blows are menac'd, ev'n without the Flail;
Till thus our Landlord, riſing from his Chair,
Like prudent NESTOR, ſtops impending War:
" WHAT Madneſs, Friends, what Madneſs can engage
" Your Minds to burn with this unſeemly Rage?
" For Shame, ſtain not with Blood our grateful Chear;
" Deſiſt from Blood—or elſe deſiſt from Beer.
" Are theſe the only Thanks you give my Lord?
" And is it thus his Favours you reward?
" If no Reſpect you pay this chearful Feaſt,
" Yet pay the noble Founder ſome, at leaſt—"
[211]HE ſaid: Abaſh'd the conſcious Heroes ſtood,
Shook Hands, and thirſted more for Beer—than Blood:
Another Glaſs to TEMPLE's Health they pour;
And praiſe their Liquor much, his Bounty more.
OFT as this
* Day returns, ſhall
Threſhers claim
Some Hours of Reſt ſacred to TEMPLE's Name;
Oft as this Day returns, ſhall TEMPLE chear
The Threſhers Hearts with Mutton, Beef, and Beer:
Hence, when their Childrens Children ſhall admire
This Holiday, and, whence deriv'd, inquire;
Some grateful Father, partial to my Fame,
Shall thus deſcribe from whence, and how it came.
" HERE, Child, a Threſher liv'd in ancient Days;
" Quaint Songs he ſung, and pleaſing Roundelays;
[212] " A gracious QUEEN his Sonnets did commend;
" And ſome great Lord, one TEMPLE, was his Friend:
" That Lord was pleas'd this Holiday to make,
" And feaſt the Threſhers, for that Threſher's ſake."
THUS ſhall Tradition keep my Fame alive;
The Bard may die, the Threſher ſtill ſurvive.
NEXT, over Pewſey's fertile Fields I haſte,
Fields with the bearded Crops of CERES grac'd!
While pleaſing Hopes my grateful Boſom chear;
But ſoon they vaniſh'd—
*STANLEY was not here.
FROM hence the Muſe to ſilver Kennet flies,
On whoſe green Margin Hertford's Turrets riſe.
Here often round the verdant Plain I ſtray,
Where
†THOMSON ſung his bold, unfetter'd Lay;
[213] Or climb the winding, mazy
*Mountain's Brow;
And, tho' I ſwiftly walk, aſcend but ſlow.
The ſpiral Paths in gradual Circles lead,
Increaſe my Journey, and elude my Speed:
Yet, when at length I reach the lofty Height,
Towns, Vallies, Rivers, Meadows meet my Sight;
A thouſand grateful Objects round me ſmile,
Whoſe various Beauties overpay my Toil.
So may you often ſee the ſtudious Youth
Begin the long, laborious Search for TRUTH;
How ſlow his Progreſs, but how great his Pain!
How many mazy Problems vex his Brain!
Before he o'er the Hills of Science riſe,
Where, far from vulgar Sight, the Goddeſs lies:
Yet, there arriv'd, he ends the happy Chace;
Reflects, with Pleaſure, on his glorious Race;
[214] Sees the bright Nymph ſo many Charms diſplay,
As crown the Labours of the lengthen'd Way.
WITHIN the Baſis of the verdant Hill,
A beauteous Grot confeſſes HERTFORD's Skill;
Who, with her lovely Nymphs, adorns the Place;
Gives ev'ry poliſh'd Stone its proper Grace;
Now varies ruſtic Moſs about the Cell;
Now fits the ſhining Pearl, or purple Shell:
CALYPSO thus, attended with her Train,
With rural Palaces adorns the Plain;
Nor with more Elegance her Grots appear,
Nor with more Beauty ſhines th' Immortal Fair.
THE Muſe her Journey, next, to Bath purſues;
Bath, fix'd by Nature to delight the Muſe!
Where flow'ry Shrubs, and curling Vines unite;
Hills, Vales, and waving Woods attract the Sight;
[215] A vary'd Scene! For Nature here diſplays
A thouſand lovely Charms, a thouſand Ways:
ALLEN attends, to dreſs her beauteous Face,
With Handmaid Art improving ev'ry Grace;
Now forms the verdant Walk, or ſunny Glade,
Or pours the Waters o'er the ſteep Caſcade;
Or now contracts 'em with judicious Skill,
And leads 'em, gently murm'ring, down the Hill.
A Son of AESCULAPIUS here I meet;
Polite his Manners, and his Temper ſweet:
His ſage Diſcourſe, with ſoft, perſuaſive Art,
Charm'd the pleas'd Ear, till it improv'd the Heart:
Bright Truth, and Virtue, were his lovely Theme;
Which ſeem'd more lovely, when deſcrib'd by him.
VARIOUS Diverſions here employ the Fair;
To Dancing ſome, and ſome to Play repair:
[216] Not
*MUSIDORA ſo conſumes her Days,
The Dame who bad me ſing JEHOVAH's Praiſe:
Uncharm'd with all the flutt'ring Pomp of Pride,
Heav'n, and domeſtic Care her Time divide:
In her own Breaſt ſhe ſeeks a calm Repoſe,
And ſhuns the crowded Rooms of Belles and Beaux;
Where COQUETILLA oft her Eyes has roll'd,
Oft won a worthleſs Heart, and loſt her Gold.
FROM Bath, I travel thro' the ſultry Vale,
Till Sal'sb'ry Plains afford a cooling Gale:
Arcadian Plains, where PAN delights to dwell,
In verdant Beauties cannot theſe excel:
Theſe too, like them, might gain immortal Fame,
Reſound with CORYDON and THYRSIS' Flame;
If, to his Mouth, the Shepherd would apply
His mellow Pipe, or vocal Muſic try:
[217] But, to his Mouth, the Shepherd ne'er applies
His mellow Pipe, nor vocal Muſic tries:
Propt on his Staff, he indolently ſtands;
His Hands ſupport his Head, his Staff his Hands;
Or, idly basking in the ſunny Ray,
Supinely lazy, loiters Life away.
Here, as I paſs'd the Plains, (a lovely Scene,
Array'd in Nature's Liv'ry, gaily green!)
On ev'ry Side the wanton Lambkins play'd,
Whoſe artleſs Bleatings rural Muſic made;
Too harſh perhaps to pleaſe politer Ears,
Yet much the ſweeteſt Tune the Farmer hears.
SOON as the Plains are raviſh'd from my Sight,
New diff'rent Proſpects equally delight;
Where
*PEMBROKE's Turrets charm my gazing Eyes,
And awful Statues ſolemnly ſurprize:
[218] Bards, Sages, Heroes, Patriots, Princes ſtand,
A mixt, majeſtic, venerable Band!
Here mighty HOMER, PHOEBUS' eldeſt Son,
Or ſings, or ſeems to ſing, in breathing Stone.
See Martial PHOCION ſilently perſuade,
And ſmooth tongu'd CICERO, in Marble, plead:
Here ſhines great POMPEY, greater JULIUS there,
With daring BRUTUS, honeſtly ſevere:
Friendſhip, and Freedom in his Soul contend;
Forgive him, CAESAR, if he wrong'd his Friend!
Tho' BRUTUS' Dagger pierc'd thy Boſom thro',
'Twas Liberty, not Malice, ſtruck the Blow.
Unhappy BRUTUS, deſtin'd to withſtand
Thy Friend's Ambition with a fatal Hand!
Unhappy CAESAR, whoſe Ambition mov'd
That fatal Hand, to murder whom it lov'd!
Hadſt thou, like Britain's MONARCH, ſtrove to ſave
Expiring Nations, not the World enſlave;
[219] Thy Laurels then had ſtill unblaſted ſtood,
Nor BRUTUS e'er been ſtain'd with CAESAR's Blood.
NOT far from hence, old Sarum's Ruins ſtand,
High on a bleak and barren Tract of Land;
A Mount, which once ſuſtain'd a City's Weight,
And lofty Tow'rs adorn'd its awful Height;
Till Want of Water forc'd the thirſty Crowd
To ſeek the Vale, where cryſtal Rivers flow'd.
There
*POORE the firſt auſpicious Work began;
Firſt, for a Temple, drew the glorious Plan;
Then quickly makes the ſacred Columns riſe,
And bids the lofty Spire invade the Skies.
The prudent People too, with equal Haſte,
New Dwellings built, which far their old ſurpaſt:
Cautious of Thirſt, they make the docile Tide,
In winding Currents, thro' the City glide:
[220] In ev'ry Street the wanton NAIADS play,
To ev'ry Door their liquid Urns convey;
In which the lately thirſty Peaſant ſpies
At once the cooling Draught, and ſcaly Fries;
Scenes, which, before, the lofty Mount deny'd!
Hence let Ambition learn to check its Pride:
High Stations often bring a Weight of Cares;
True Happineſs is found in humble Spheres:
This uſeful Truth let Sarum's Glory ſhow,
Which faded when on high, but flouriſhes below.
I next to BATHURST's
*rural Seat aſcend,
BATHURST, my infant Muſe's gen'rous Friend!
And, as around his ſpacious Park I ſtray'd,
Charm'd with the Proſpect, which the Fields diſplay'd,
Muſing on Verſe, the willing Numbers came,
My Song began, and Clarendon my Theme.
[221] What ſweeter Subject could I wiſh to chuſe?
What Scenes more lovely can delight a Muſe?
See, FLORA paints the Ground with vary'd Dyes,
And fragrant Shrubs with Odours fill the Skies!
Here curling Vines their luſcious Sweets diſcloſe,
There fair POMONA loads the bluſhing Boughs:
See, fruitful CERES crowns the Vales with Corn,
And fleecy Flocks the verdant Hills adorn!
Here waving Trees project a cooling Shade,
Where BATHURST oft converſes with the Dead;
Reads over what the ancient Sages wrote;
Nor only reads, but acts as Sages taught;
Improves the preſent Hour, that Fortune gives;
Nor truſts To-morrow, but To-day he lives.
As thus my careleſs Lay, unlabour'd, flows,
Before my Eyes a
*Pile of Ruins roſe;
[222] Whoſe rugged Walls, like native Rock-work, ſhone;
For Time had turn'd the Cement into Stone.
Our Second HENRY here, if Fame be true,
Meaſur'd the Prince's Right, and People's Due;
Made Laws to bound the Prieſts and Barons Claim—
Nor ev'n thoſe Laws did haughty BECKET blame;
BECKET! true Tyrant of the Roman State,
Curs'd with Religion juſt enough to hate;
Whoſe ſtern, ambitious Zeal his King defy'd,
And damn'd all thoſe, who dar'd oppoſe his Pride.
O Thou Supreme! whoſe Mercy ever ſhone
The beſt, the brighteſt Jewel in thy Crown!
Never let me ſuch cruel Faith approve,
Which bids me hate, whom Heav'n commands to love!
Let Chriſtian Charity incline my Mind
To wiſh the Happineſs of all Mankind!
[223] In ſocial Friendſhip always let me live,
Slow to be angry, eaſy to forgive!
PAULTONS affords me next a kind Retreat,
Where crowding Joys my grateful Heart dilate;
To ſee the Friend, who firſt my Lays approv'd,
Who loves the Muſe, and by her is belov'd;
Who taught her tender Pinions how to fly,
Told when ſhe crept too low, or ſoar'd too high.
O STANLEY! if, forgetful of thy Love,
I e'er to Gratitude rebellious prove;
Still may I want a Friend, but never find;
May FORTUNE, PHOEBUS, STANLEY, prove unkind!
HERE often thro' the gloomy Woods I rove,
Pleas'd with the ſilent Horror of the Grove.
And now the Lawn, and winding Walks delight;
And now the Memphian Turret charms my Sight:
[224] Here conic Firs in graceful Order ſtand;
Tall Cedars there, the Growth of Syrian Land.
Lead me, ye ſacred DRYADS! leads me thro'
Your ſylvan Scenes, where future Navies grow;
Where lofty Oaks their branching Arms extend,
And tow'ring Pines to kiſs the Clouds aſcend;
Where op'ning Glades admit the ſunny Ray,
Or venerable Groves exclude the Day.
There let me Knaves, and Fools, and Fops deſpiſe,
And think of Actions worthy of the Wiſe.
MY Friend and me, Southampton next receives;
Southampton, waſh'd with THETIS' ſilver Waves:
Upon whoſe ſandy Margin
* Bevis rears
His Head, on which a ſtately Dome appears;
Where Britiſh SCIPIO, crown'd with Martial Bays,
In Solitude enjoys his ancient Days:
[225] Yet, ſtill inclin'd to conquer, wages here,
With ſtubborn Woods and Wilds, innoxious War;
Subdues the native Rudeneſs of the Soil,
And makes the barren Sand with Verdure ſmile;
Bends the young Plant obedient to his Will,
Or thro' the Vally leads the cryſtal Rill;
Sublimes the Mount, or bids the Mole ſubſide,
To ſtretch the Proſpect o'er the lucid Tide:
The Foils of Art illuſtrate his Deſign;
And make the Di'mond NATURE brighter ſhine.
CHARM'D with the Beauties of the ſilver Sea,
We board a Ship, and skim the watry Way:
Blown with propitious Gales, we quickly view
BRITANNIA's Strength, her Guard, and Glory too;
Where
*GEORGE's dreadful Eagles waiting ſtood,
To bear his fatal Thunder o'er the Flood.
[226] The wondrous Scene delights my gazing Eyes,
At once imparting Pleaſure and Surprize:
Intrepid Sailers, ſwarming in the Sky,
Intent on Bus'neſs, diff'rent Labours try:
Some ſtride the Yard, or tow'ring Maſt aſcend;
Some on the Ropes, in airy Crowds, depend;
Thick as the Inſects, round the Poplar, play,
When PHOEBUS gilds 'em with a Weſtern Ray.
BUT unexpected Dangers oft deceive
The daring Man, who tempts the foamy Wave:
While on the Fleet we all delighted gaze,
The ſudden Winds ariſe, and ſweep the Seas;
With rapid Force they fly, and from the Ship
Disjoin the Boat, and drive it o'er the Deep:
Our cautious Pilot quickly ſhifts the Sails,
Reverts his Courſe againſt the furious Gales.
[227] O CHLOE! then what ruthleſs Pains diſtreſt
Thy dizzy Head, and rack'd thy tender Breaſt!
How often did the Bard thy Fate bemoan!
How often did he wiſh thy Pains his own!
How did the TRITONS, mov'd with Pity, gaze
On thy fair Face, diſtorted twenty Ways!
Yet, tho' diſtorted, ſtill thy Features ſhow
Bright in Diſtreſs, and innocent in Woe.
So VENUS oft her ſilver Light diſplays,
Thro' Ev'ning Miſts, that riſe to cloud her Rays.
BUT NEPTUNE now, who pity'd CHLOE's Pain,
Returns the Boat; we ſteer our Courſe again,
At Six, we ſafely land at Port ſmouth Key,
And ſoon forget the Dangers of the Sea.
Straight to ſome hoſpitable Inn we haſte,
Revive our Spirits with a ſweet Repaſt:
[228] The ſmiling Glaſs, with roſy Liquor crown'd,
Sacred to friendly Healths, goes chearful round;
While Time, in mirthful Converſe, ſweetly flows,
Till gentle Sleep invites us to Repoſe.
THE Morning come, we to the Wharfs repair,
Survey the mighty Magazines of War:
Tremendous Rows of Cannon meet our Eyes;
And Iron Deaths, in maſſy Mountains, riſe:
Store-houſe of MARS! where, rang'd in Order, lay
Ten thouſand Thunders for ſome fatal Day.
DEPARTING hence, the Dock we travel round,
Where lab'ring Shipwrights rattling Axes ſound:
Some bend the ſtubborn Planks, while others rear
The lofty Maſt, or crooked Timber ſquare;
Some ply their Engines, ſome direct the Toil,
And carefully inſpect the mighty Pile;
[229] See ev'ry Chink ſecurely ſtopt, before
The winged Caſtle ventures from the Shore.
So, when the youthful Crane intends to fly
Her firſt long Journey thro' the ſpacious Sky;
Before ſhe rears herſelf ſublime in Air,
She ranges ev'ry Plume with prudent Care;
Tries if her Pinions can her Flight ſuſtain;
Then ſprings away, and ſoars above the Main.
BUT ſee! the ſmoking firy Forge appears;
Vulcanian Sounds ſurprize our liſt'ning Ears:
See! buſy Smiths around their Anvils ſweat;
Their brawny Arms the glowing Anchor beat;
Alternately the chiming Hammers fall,
And loud Notes echo thro' the ſooty Hall.
Such, haply, on the ſounding Anvil rung,
When firſt the Harp melodious TUBAL ſtrung:
[230] As TUBAL-CAIN the ductile Metal wrought,
And VULCAN's heav'nly Art to Mortals taught;
The Brother, pleas'd to hear his Hammers chime,
Soon harmoniz'd their Notes to proper Time:
Man's Boſom then ſonorous Organs warm'd,
The ſofter Lyre his gloomy Sorrows charm'd;
While Tyrants Hearts unuſual Pity found,
And ſavage Tempers ſoften'd with the Sound.
'TWAS now the Time, when PHOEBUS' piercing Ray
Shot down direct, and meaſur'd half the Day:
A bold
*Commander luckily we meet,
Who courteouſly invites us to the Fleet:
A Table elegantly ſpread we found,
And loyal Healths the Captain puſhes round;
AUGUSTUS firſt, and all the Royal Line,
Give ſweeter Flavour to the ſparkling Wine;
[231] WAGER, and NORRIS, next, who boldly reign,
In floating Caſtles, Monarchs of the Main.
BUT now again our winged Sails we ſpread,
Again we viſit Paulton's ſylvan Shade;
Where, parting from my Friend, I mount my Steed,
And, o'er the Wilds of Wellow, urge his Speed:
Wilds, which were lately ſterile, as the Coaſt,
Where patient CATO march'd his fainting Hoſt!
Nor could the Swain explore a cooling Shade,
When fervid PHOEBUS burnt his glowing Head;
Till CHANDOS bad the dreary Deſert ſmile
With verdant Groves, and beautify'd the Soil:
He ſaid; ten thouſand Trees adorn'd the Plain,
Ten thouſand Shades, delightful to the Swain.
HENCE, o'er the Plains, and fruitful Fields I paſs,
Full forty Miles, till Witney ends my Race.
[232] I viſit here an elegant
*Divine,
In whom the Scholar, Friend, and Critic join;
Who freely judges of an Author's Thoughts,
Improves his Beauties, and corrects his Faults;
Severely kind, and candidly ſevere;
Polite, as Courtiers; and, as Truth, ſincere;
Who, in MINERVA's Temple, taught our Youth
The Path to Wiſdom, Virtue, Honour, Truth;
Till having, with a gen'rous Mind, beſtow'd
The Flow'r of all his Years in doing Good;
Fatigu'd with Labours, and with Age decay'd,
Retires, with Honour, to the rural Shade.
SO, when the Prince of Rivers, fruitful Nile,
Has flow'd, and fatten'd all the Memphian Soil,
Spent all the Richneſs, that his Waves contain,
Back to his Banks, he draws his humid Train.
[233]I pay my Off'rings next at PHOEBUS' Shrine,
Oxford, the Seat of all the tuneful Nine.
Forgive me, God of Verſe, who daring greet
Thy ſacred Temples with unhallow'd Feet!
As pious Muſſulmen to Mecca roam,
Zealous to worſhip at their Prophet's Tomb;
So comes the Poet to thy rev'rend Fanes,
Invoking thee to aid his humble Strains.
O! might a Spark of thy celeſtial Flame
But raiſe my Numbers equal to my Theme,
ALFRED immortal in my Page ſhould ſhine;
ALFRED, the Monarch, Hero, and Divine!
Who, having bravely all his Foes o'erthrown,
Advanc'd thy Kingdom, and confirm'd his own;
Water'd his Realm with the Pierian Spring,
Recall'd the baniſh'd Arts, and bad the Muſes ſing.
[234] Then ſhould my Numbers ſound with
*WICKHAM's Praiſe;
Nor leſs ſhould
†FOXE's Fame adorn my Lays,
Whoſe pious Care the decent Fabric rear'd,
Which kindly ſhelter'd the unworthy Bard;
Nor the unworthy Bard ſhould leave unpaid
The grateful Debt, contracted while he ſtay'd:
Thy Favours, chiefly, WINDER, ſhould be known,
In laſting Numbers, tuneful as thy own.
Thee, BODLEY, would I ſing; who can refuſe
A Verſe to BODLEY, Patron of the Muſe?
Whoſe letter'd Bounty to the World declares
The treaſur'd Wiſdom of three thouſand Years.
Nor ſhould the Muſe forget the
§Prelate's Fame,
Who grac'd the River with a ſtately Frame,
[235] Known by the flow'ry Meads, which round it lie,
And beauteous Walks, that charm the Student's Eye;
Where courtly ADDISON attun'd his Lays,
And rais'd his own, by ſinging DRYDEN's Praiſe.
Hail, happy Bard! whoſe Genius ſtill could ſhine
In ev'ry Art; for ev'ry Art was thine:
Whether thou didſt the Critic's Pen engage,
The Critic's Pen improv'd the Poet's Rage;
Whether thou didſt the Hero's Deeds rehearſe,
The Hero's Deeds ſhone brighter in thy Verſe:
Or did thy tragic Muſe ſublimely tell,
How ſtubborn CATO for his Country fell;
Parties no more retain'd their factious Hate;
All pity'd CAESAR's, honour'd CATO's Fate:
Nor leſs thy ſoft diurnal Eſſays pleaſe,
That Glaſs, where ev'ry Fool his Folly ſees;
Where Virtue ſhines with ſuch attractive Grace,
She tempts the Vicious to her chaſte Embrace.
[236] O! may thy Labours be a Star to guide
My Thoughts and Actions o'er Life's devious Tide!
If Pride, or Paſſion check my doubtful Sail,
Let thy Inſtructions lend a friendly Gale,
To waft me to the peaceful, happy Shore,
Where thou, immortal Bard! art gone before:
Then thoſe who grant me not a Poet's Name,
Shall own I left behind a better Fame.
PENELOPE to ULYSSES.
Paraphras'd from OVID.
[237]THESE Lines I ſend, impatient of your Stay,
To you, my Lord, who kill me with Delay;
Yet crave not any Anſwer back, beſide
Yourſelf, the beſt of Anſwers to your Bride.
Sure Troy, ſo hateful to the Grecian Dames,
Is ruin'd now, with dire, conſuming Flames;
Tho' ſcarcely Troy, nor all her King could boaſt,
Was worth the Trouble, which her Ruin coſt.
O! had lewd PARIS ſunk beneath the Tide,
When, o'er the Seas, he ſought the Spartan Bride;
I had not then accus'd the ling'ring Day,
Nor weav'd, to charm the tedious Night away;
[238] Nor in the Bed, deſerted and forlorn,
Lain weeping, cold and comfortleſs, till Morn.
WHENE'ER of Dangers in your Camp I heard,
Thoſe Dangers threaten'd you, I always fear'd:
For Love, like mine, no cold Indiff'rence bears;
It feeds on tim'rous Thoughts, and anxious Cares.
I fanſy'd, furious Trojans round thee came;
And trembling, ever dreaded HECTOR's Name:
If any ſaid, ANTILOCHUS was ſlain,
ANTILOCHUS was he who caus'd my Pain:
Or, if in borrow'd Arms PATROCLUS bled,
I wept, becauſe his Craft no better ſped:
When Rhodian Blood had bath'd the Lycian Spear,
The
Rhodian *Youth again renew'd my Care:
In fine, whatever Grecian Chief was kill'd,
My fearful Heart, like ſrigid Ice, was chill'd;
[239] Leſt flatt'ring Fame my doubtful Ears ſhould cheat,
And, for my Lord's, proclaim another's Fate:
But Heav'n, propitious to my chaſte Deſire,
Preſerv'd you ſafe, and Troy conſum'd with Fire.
BUT now the other Grecian Chiefs return,
And on their ſmoking Altars Off'rings burn;
Their uſeleſs Arms they conſecrate to Peace,
And Trojan Spoils the Grecian Temples grace:
Each youthful Bride ſome pleaſing Gift affords,
To welcome home their ſafe-returning Lords;
Their ſafe-returning Lords, in Songs of Joy,
Reſound the vanquiſh'd Fates of ruin'd Troy:
The wond'ring Sages crowd around to hear,
The trembling Girls admire the Tales of War:
The Wives ſtand liſt'ning, while their Husbands tell,
How Greece had conquer'd, and how Ilion fell:
[240] One ſtains a Table with the purple Draught,
And ſhews the furious Battles, which you fought;
Paints, with the Wine, which from the Glaſs he pours,
Camps, Rivers, Hills, and all the Trojan Tow'rs:
And, This, ſays he, is the Sigean Plain;
And here the ſilver Simois rolls his Train;
There ſtood old PRIAM's ſtately Palace, here
ACHILLES pitch'd his Tent, ULYSSES there:
Here mangled HECTOR, dreadful in his Fall,
Affrights the Steeds, that drag him round the Wall.
Your Son, who ſent by me to NESTOR's Court,
To ſeek his Father, brought me this Report
From NESTOR's Mouth, and how the Thracian Lord,
In Sleep, became a Victim to your Sword;
How DOLON fell into your crafty Snare—
But, O! ULYSSES, you too boldly dare;
Too fearleſs, thro' the Camp of Foes you rove,
Mindful of Wiles, forgetful of your Love;
[241] Slaying ſo many in the gloomy Night,
One Friend alone, to aid you in the Fight.
It was not thus you raſhly us'd to go
Among the midnight Terrors of the Foe;
Fondly of me you formerly have thought,
With Prudence acted, and with Caution fought.
Heav'n knows, with Fear my trembling Boſom beat,
To hear my Son your daring Deeds relate;
Till told how you victoriouſly return'd,
Safe, to your Camp, with Thracian Spoils adorn'd.
BUT what avails it me, your Arms have thrown
Troy's ſtately Walls, and lofty Turrets down?
As when they ſtood, if I am robb'd of thee,
Troy's fall'n to others, ſtanding ſtill to me;
To others, who, with captive Oxen, toil
To turn the Glebe, and till the Trojan Soil;
[242] And while, with crooked Ploughs, they diſcompoſe
Th'ill-bury'd Aſhes of their ſlaughter'd Foes;
While Phrygian Fields, grown fat with native Blood,
Bear fruitful Crops, where ſtately Ilion ſtood;
While verdant Harveſts hide their ruin'd Wall,
I mourn my abſent Lord, who wrought its Fall;
Nor can I know the Land, where you reſide,
Nor who, nor what detains you from your Bride.
WHATEVER Sailers on our Coaſt appear,
(Hopeful to find ſome Tidings of my Dear)
I fly to them, and ask 'em o'er and o'er,
If e'er they ſaw you on ſome foreign Shore?
Then to their Hands a Letter I impart,
To give it you, the Partner of my Heart;
If Chance, or Deſtiny ſhould ever prove
So kind to lead them to my abſent Love.
[243]WE ſought for you at ancient NESTOR's Court;
But ſought in vain, we heard no true Report:
We ſent to ask the Spartans too; but they
Knew not the Climate, where you, ling'ring, ſtay.
O! had APOLLO ſav'd his ſacred Town—
Ye Gods! why did I ever wiſh it down?
If that were ſtanding, and ULYSSES there,
I nothing, but the Chance of War, ſhould fear:
I ſhould not then be ſingly curſt to cry;
Others would fear the War, no leſs than I.
But now a thouſand Whimſies feed my Care,
Nor know I what to hope, or what to fear;
Yet fearing all, that Fancy can ſuggeſt,
Unnumber'd Troubles rack my anxious Breaſt:
Upon the Land whatever Dangers reign,
I fear thoſe Dangers make you there remain;
[244] Upon the Seas whatever Storms increaſe,
I fear thoſe Storms detain you on the Seas.
While thus my fooliſh Thoughts uncertain rove,
Perhaps you revel with a foreign Love;
Perhaps you ridicule your Bride at home,
Tell how ſhe ſpins, or drudges in the Loom:
Suſpicious Thoughts! that vex my jealous Mind,
Begone, and vaniſh into empty Wind!
If cruel Fate did not obſtruct the Way,
My Lord would never make ſo long Delay.
Your long Delay my Father often blames,
And often chides me for my conſtant Flames:
My conſtant Flames ſhall ever true remain;
Let Fathers chide, and Suiters court in vain.
At length my Sire, who finds he can't remove
My Faith from you, nor ſhake my ſettled Love,
Remits his Anger, ſoften'd with my Pray'rs;
Yet ſtill a Crowd of Suiters teaze my Ears;
[245] From various Realms they come to ſeek your Crown,
And feaſt, and reign ſecurely in your Throne:
'Twould tire me ev'n to count their Number o'er,
MEDON, PISANDER, and a hundred more!
All bent on Love, and Robbers of the State,
And All, by your pernicious Abſence, great!
To crown your Shame, the Beggar IRUS preys
Upon your Sheep, and all the fatteſt ſlays:
And ev'n your Shepherd, faithleſs to his Lord,
Slaughters your Lambs, to grace the Suiter's Board:
Nor have we Strength, their Rapine to oppoſe;
For how can Three reſiſt ſo many Foes?
Your feeble Wife, your Father worn with Age,
Your tender Son, too weak to check their Rage;
For whom they lately crafty Ambuſh laid,
And menac'd Death on his devoted Head;
When, mocking all their Stratagems, he croſt
The Seas, to ſeek you on the Pylian Coaſt.
[246] O! may the Gods extend his vital Date,
And guard his Life, till ours ſubmit to Fate:
So may he cloſe our Eyes with decent Care;
Such is your Servant's, ſuch his Nurſe's Pray'r.
SINCE then your aged Father, feeble grown,
Amidſt your Foes, cannot defend your Crown;
Your Wife, too weak to chaſe the Foes away,
Your Son, too young to bear the Regal Sway;
Haſte, haſte, ULYSSES, to your Royal Seat;
For you alone can cure our troubled State:
Think of your Son, who wants you to inſpire
His Soul with all the Virtues of his Sire:
Think, on the Brink of Fate your Father lies:
Return, my Lord, return and cloſe his Eyes:
Think of your faithful Wife, whoſe youthful Face,
At your Departure, bluſh'd with blooming Grace:
[247] But now I bluſh with blooming Grace no more;
Tears, for your Abſence, cloud my Beauty o'er.
O! may you ſoon return, before I prove
An ancient Dame, unworthy of your Love.
FELIX and CONSTANCE.
A POEM, taken from BOCCACE.
[253]To the Right Honourable the Counteſs of POMFRET.
BLOWN on the rolling Surface of the Deep,
The mourning Maid at length reclines to Sleep;
While conſcious Viſions labour in her Breaſt,
And airy Spectres diſcompoſe her Reſt.
Sometimes ſhe ſeems upon her native Shore,
Bleſs'd with the beauteous Youth, as heretofore;
Hears him converſe, while from his tuneful Tongue
Melodious Senſe, in melting Muſic, rung:
[254] Sometimes ſhe finds, or ſeems at leaſt to find,
His ſhatter'd Veſſel forc'd before the Wind,
With foaming Waves, and furious Tempeſts toſt,
The Maſt, and broken Sails, and Sailers loſt:
Sometimes her Dream, in frightful Forms, diſplay'd
A Crowd of Martyrs, cruel Love had made;
Lamenting THISBE's Shade before her ſtands,
Shews her capacious Wound, and purple Hands;
Now Lyric SAPPHO in the Tide expires,
Now faithful PORCIA eats the living Fires.
At length, awaking from her Dream, ſhe hears
A Latian Voice, which thus ſalutes her Ears:
UNHAPPY Chriſtian Maid! (for ſuch, at leaſt,
You, by your decent Habit, ſeem expreſt)
Say whence you came, and hither how convey'd,
Expos'd to Sea, without the Seaman's Aid?
[255]SOON as the Nymph her native Language hears,
Her frighted Soul was fill'd with Doubts and Fears:
She thought, the adverſe Wind, or refluent Main,
Had forc'd her back to Liparis again;
Till, ſtarting up, a ſpacious Land ſhe ſpies;
Barbarian Caves and Cots her Sight ſurprize:
She ſees a Matron on the neighb'ring Strand;
Nor knows the Matron, nor the neighb'ring Land.
O! whither, whither am I blown? ſhe cries;
What Dens and Caves appear before my Eyes?
And who inhabit 'em? or Beaſts of Prey,
Or Men, leſs kind, and crueller than they?
To whom the Matron: Fly, nor dare to truſt.
The faithleſs People of this hated Coaſt:
Here Sailers oft their hapleſs Fate deplore;
Who ſcape the Seas, are wreck'd upon the Shore:
[256] For, when the forceful Wind, and foaming Deep,
To this inhuman Coaſt impel the Ship;
Around the Beach the rude Barbarians ſtray,
Deſtroy the Mariners, and ſeize their Prey;
By others Death, they keep themſelves alive,
Subſiſt by Rapine, and by Ruin thrive.
UNHAPPY Fate! the mourning Nymph reply'd;
O! had I periſh'd in the ſafer Tide!
For much I fear, the Land I now ſurvey,
Dooms me to greater Evils, than the Sea:
And yet what greater Ills can Fate provide,
Than thus to ſeek for Death, and be deny'd?
Not ſo my FELIX ſcap'd the raging Waves;
Him NEPTUNE ſunk, and me unkindly ſaves;
Saves, only to increaſe my former Woes;
To fall, perhaps, by more ungen'rous Foes;
[257] Or to indulge ſome luſtful Tyrant's Will:
But, O ye Heav'ns! avert the fatal Ill;
Protect my Honour in this foreign Coaſt,
The only Bleſſing which I have not loſt!
THE liſt'ning Matron wonders with Surprize;
Nor hears, unmov'd, the weeping Damſel's Cries:
But leads her to her neighb'ring Cottage, where
She chears her fainting Soul with homely Fare;
Condoles her Grief, and begs her to diſcloſe
Her Country, Cares, and Cauſe of all her Woes.
Excited by her Words, the penſive Maid
Preludes with Sighs, and thus, reluctant, ſaid:
O hoſpitable Dame! why would you move
A Wretch to tell a Tale of hapleſs Love?
Which, in relating, muſt renew my Grief;
Nor can I hope, nor you beſtow, Relief:
[258] Yet, ſince you ſeem a Partner of my Care,
'Tis juſt a Partner know the Weight I bear.
NOT far from Aetna's flaming Mount I came,
From Liparis, and CONSTANCE is my Name:
Great Honours and Eſtates my Sire poſſeſs'd,
And, O! too much to make his Daughter bleſs'd.
I once with Fame and Fortune was ſupply'd,
Nor envy'd Empreſſes their Pomp and Pride;
Now, like a Meteor, fallen from its Height,
My Glory's vaniſh'd, and extinct my Light—
Full twenty Years in Happineſs I paſs'd,
And ev'ry Year was happier than the laſt.
Young FELIX then his Love began to ſhow;
(Young FELIX was the Cauſe of all my Woe)
A beauteous Youth, endow'd with manly Grace;
But far his noble Soul excell'd his Face:
[259] And, tho' his niggard Fate had Wealth deny'd,
The Want of Wealth by Virtue was ſupply'd.
Two Years to win my doubtful Heart he ſtrove,
Two Years my doubtful Heart declin'd his Love:
Yet ſtill he preſs'd me with his am'rous Tale,
Nor found at length, 'twas fruitleſs to aſſail:
For, by degrees, inſenſibly I came
To firſt approve, and then indulge, his Flame;
Nor could his Suit, nor would his Vows reprove;
I heard with Joy, nor thought it Sin to love;
Till in my Breaſt imperious CUPID reign'd:
Alas! how eaſy Love a Conqueſt gain'd!
And now my Reaſon check'd my Will no more;
But fed the Flame, it ſtrove to quench before:
Yet durſt not an immodeſt Thought approve;
Love rul'd my Heart, but Honour rul'd my Love:
I ſcorn'd to ſtain my Virtue with a King;
As much my Lover ſcorn'd ſo mean a thing.
[260] What could we do? What cannot Love inſpire?
The Youth reveals his Paſſion to my Sire;
And in ſuch melting Accents made it known,
As might have mov'd all Fathers, but my own:
But proudly he my Lover's Suit repell'd;
And, frowning, thus our mutual Ruin ſeal'd:
No more, preſumptuous Youth! thy Paſſion name;
Suppreſs the Sparks, before they riſe to Flame.
How dar'ſt thou, vulgar Wretch, ignobly born,
My Daughter's Scandal, and her Father's Scorn!
Aſpire to wed ſo far above thy Fate?
He ſternly ſaid, and forc'd him from his Gate.
O Avarice! what Evils doſt thou cauſe,
Breaking the Bands of Love, and Nature's Laws?
Go, hungry God! and rule the Narrow-ſoul'd;
Collect, and guard their curſt, bewitching Gold;
[261] Fit Province for thy Reign! too mean to prove
The Charms of Nuptial Life, and Joys of Love!
Ah! what avails to gain a pompous Name,
With boaſted Titles of paternal Fame,
Deriv'd from Anceſtors of noble Blood?
Things common to the Vicious, and the Proud!
Refulgent Equipage, and gaudy Shows,
Fictitious Ornaments of real Woes!
If Love be abſent, Pomp and worldly Gain
But gild our Cares, and varniſh o'er our Pain.
O! had my cruel Father thought like me,
I ne'er had prov'd the Dangers of the Sea,
Nor ever wander'd here a baniſh'd Maid;
And, O dear FELIX! thou hadſt not been dead!—
So ſpeaks the trembling Nymph; and, while ſhe ſpeaks,
The pearly Torrents ſtream adown her Cheeks;
[262] Cold clammy Sweats, and throbbing Sighs ariſe,
Slow moves the Blood, and dizzy roll her Eyes;
So much affected with her Lover's Fate,
She ſtruggled, groan'd, and fainted from her Seat.
Her Hoſteſs ſtraight a grateful Cordial ſought,
And to her Lips applies the chearful Draught,
Waſhing her Temples with reviving Oil;
The vital Spirits anſwer to her Toil;
The purple Tide begins to roll again,
Again diffuſes Life thro' ev'ry Vein:
And now ſhe ſighing, rais'd her drooping Head;
And, Is my Death, ſhe cries, again delay'd?
Why did you check me on the Brink of Fate?
Better the Soul had fled her loathſome Seat.
Death is the only Good I wiſh to know,
End of my Pain, and Period of my Woe.
[263]To whom replies the Dame: Unhappy Fair!
Rely on Heav'n, nor let your Soul deſpair:
Teach me to give your troubled Heart Relief;
Or teach me how, at leaſt, to ſhare your Grief:
Your mournful Story much affects my Mind;
Yet ſomething ſeems remaining ſtill behind.
O! much, CONSTANTIA ſays, remains to come,
The fatal Part, that finiſhes my Doom:
For, when my FELIX, (FELIX now no more!)
Was baniſh'd from my haughty Father's Door,
Not able to obtain me for his Bride,
Nor willing to reſign me, tho' deny'd;
Hope, from Deſpair, his daring Soul conceives;
A Bark he builds, to plough the briny Waves:
Then call'd a few Domeſtics to his Aid,
Embrac'd me in his Arms, and ſighing, ſaid:
[264]O Thou, for ever dear, for ever bleſt,
At once the Joy, and Trouble of my Breaſt!
Since Poverty expels me from thy Arms,
Since Wealth alone is worthy of thy Charms;
I ſwear by all the mighty Pow'rs above,
(Sad Fate, that drives me from the Nymph I love!)
To try my Fortune on remoter Shores,
And ſeek the Gold, thy Sire ſo much adores.
Perhaps the Planets, unpropitious here,
In other Climes may kinder Aſpects wear;
May lead me where the rocky Di'monds lie,
Or where the golden Mines may Wealth ſupply;
If not, the laſt ſad Pleaſure is to die.
SUCH was the fatal Vow he raſhly made;
O fatal Vow, and fatally obey'd!
[265] Struck dumb, my Tears the want of Words ſupply'd;
His, mixt with mine, increas'd the pearly Tide:
Yet, leſt I ſhould his Reſolution ſhake,
He ruſh'd away, and mounted on the Deck:
His haſty Crew expand the ſwelling Sails,
Strong rolls the Sea before impulſive Gales;
The crooked Keel the frothy Flood divides,
Swift flies the Ship, and ruſhes thro' the Tides.
MY Lover long my gazing Eyes purſue;
As long my Lover kept me in his View:
Reluctant ſo, departing Souls prepare
To wing their doubtful Flight, they know not where;
Reluctant ſo, expiring Bodies lie,
Nor willing theſe to ſtay, nor thoſe to fly.
TWICE twenty Days I ſpent in fruitleſs Tears,
Before the fatal Tidings reach'd my Ears;
[266] How FELIX, ſailing o'er the watry Way,
Was wreck'd on Rocks, and periſh'd in the Sea.
O! then what Trouble, Grief, and anxious Care,
Confus'd my Soul, and bent it to Deſpair!
I curs'd the Cauſe, that forc'd him to expire;
O Heav'n! forgive me, if I curs'd my Sire:
I fled his Houſe, and ſought the lonely Grove,
(The gloomy Witneſs of my former Love!)
Where, once reſolv'd to ſeek the Shades below,
I drew the Knife, to ſtrike the mortal Blow;
Till Piety the cruel Thought ſuppreſt,
And check'd the Roman Courage of my Breaſt:
I trembling ſaw two doubtful Paths; nor knew,
Which Path was beſt to ſhun, or which purſue;
Oppoſing Paſſions in my Boſom ſtrove,
And Conſcience now prevail'd, and now my Love.
[267]As when the Wind and Tide a Conteſt make,
The Sailer, trembling, ſees his Veſſel ſhake;
This way, and that, and both, by turns reclin'd,
As ſwells the Surge, or blows the furious Wind:
So was my Soul with diff'rent Notions ſway'd,
Of this, of that, of both, and all, afraid.
Ah! why ſhould Mortals of their Reaſon boaſt,
Which moſt deſerts 'em, when they want it moſt?
For, when the troubled Mind's confus'd with Pain,
'Tis but an Ignis-fatuus of the Brain;
Which, if our wand'ring Souls from Virtue ſtray,
But leads us more and more from Virtue's Way:
So led it me to ſtem the devious Tide,
And ſeek for Death, where wretched FELIX dy'd.
NOT diſtant far, a fiſhing Veſſel ſtood,
Nor wholly on the Land, nor in the Flood:
[268] Arriv'd to this, I row'd it from the Shore;
And, bent on Death, the Tide I now explore;
Expecting, ſoon, the friendly-furious Wave
Would give my Troubles and myſelf a Grave.
But, when I ſaw the Billows round me flow,
The boundleſs Skies above, and Seas below;
Scar'd with the Terrors of the watry Space,
I wrapt my Mantle round my tim'rous Face:
Then lay me down, to all the Dangers blind;
Chance was my Compaſs, and my Pilot, Wind.
Blown here and there, I floated on the Deep,
Which rock'd my Eyes, but not my Fears, aſleep:
For now my dreaming Soul, in Fancy's Maze,
A thouſand tragic airy Ghoſts ſurveys;
Which flutter'd round me, and reproaching, ſaid;
Die, Coward! follow FELIX to the Shade:
Why wouldſt thou wiſh to live, now he is dead?
[269] But when, at length, your friendly Voice I heard,
My Viſion ceas'd, the Spectres diſappear'd.
Thus have I told, but can't diſpel my Care;
For who can conquer Love, or cure Deſpair?
THUS ſhe; and thus CAPRESA ſpake again:
(So was ſhe call'd, who wak'd her on the Main)
Unhappy Nymph! compoſe your troubled Mind,
Nor doubt the gracious Guide of human Kind:
That GOD, who ſav'd you from the foamy Wave,
Will doubtleſs guard the Life, he deign'd to ſave.
Vouchſafe to take the Counſel I can lend:
At Suſa Heav'n has bleſt me with a Friend,
Much fam'd for Wealth, for pious Actions more;
No Husband, and no Children, but the Poor:
Let me conduct you to her friendly Gate;
(Too ſmall my Cottage for a Gueſt ſo great)
[270] She will protect you from Barbarian Foes,
With prudent Counſel mitigate your Woes,
And charm your ruffled Soul to ſoft Repoſe.
BLEST Partner of my Grief! the Damſel ſaid,
Some Angel ſurely ſent you to my Aid;
For now ſome dawning Rays of Hope appear,
That chaſe away the Clouds of dark Deſpair.
This Pauſe of Pain, and Interval of Grace,
Shall be employ'd in Search of future Peace.
Then guide, and guard me to your noble Friend;
So may you never want this Aid you lend!
And, as we travel, deign to let me know,
To whom ſo many Thanks I juſtly owe;
What hapleſs Fortune caſt you on this Land,
What Occupation here employs your Hand.
Sweet Converſation may ſuſpend my Care,
Diſpel my Grief, or make it leſs ſevere:
[271] So ſhall I eaſier reach the neighb'ring Town;
And, liſt'ning to your Fate, forget my own.
THUS ſhe; and thus the penſive Dame replies:
(With briny Drops diſtilling from her Eyes)
Fain would I, lovely Nymph! ſuſpend your Care,
Diſpel your Grief, or make it leſs ſevere:
But, were I all my Fortune to explain,
'Twould not alleviate, but increaſe your Pain;
For in your Soul ſuch Sparks of Nature glow,
As make you ſhare your Neighbour's Joy or Woe.
The Chriſtian Faith I ſecretly embrace,
Tho' doom'd to dwell among a Pagan Race:
Trepanum waſted all my Bloom of Life,
Where long I liv'd, a Farmer's happy Wife:
My careful, loving Husband till'd the Soil,
Nor was the Field ungrateful to his Toil:
[272] For, ev'ry Summer, CERES crown'd the Plain;
Each Autumn, fill'd the Barn with golden Grain:
So thick the verdant Harveſt yearly ſtood,
The Meadows ſeem'd to groan beneath their Load.
Our fleecy Flocks were fruitful of their Young,
Hail were our Oxen, and our Horſes ſtrong;
Nor did our Kine of milky Produce fail,
But with diſtended Udders fill'd the Pail.
'Twas then, alas! how often have I cry'd,
I would not wiſh to be a Monarch's Bride!
When all around my little Infants came,
Hung on my Knees, and liſp'd their Mama's Name;
Or met their Father with the Ev'ning Ray,
Embrac'd his Neck, and kiſs'd his Cares away.
Soon as their riper Age could Labour bear,
We ſent 'em forth to feed the fleecy Care;
Where often have we ſpent the Summer's Day,
Charm'd to behold the wanton Cattle's Play.
[273] What Pleaſure 'twas to ſee the skipping Lambs?
What Muſic, when they bleated for their Dams?
We thought our Joys could never be increas'd;
Love, Peace, and Plenty join'd to make us bleſs'd.
But ſee how Fortune holds her fickle Reign!
She raiſes up, to tumble down again:
For now our Thread of Happineſs was ſpun;
The Gains of twenty Years were loſt in one.
'Twas in the Seaſon, when the verdant Mead
Begins to ask the Mower's crooked Blade;
Before the Wheat receives the yellow Stain,
Or milky Juice is harden'd into Grain;
A Gale of Poiſon baleful EURUS caſt;
The vernal Product ſicken'd with the Blaſt;
Our Meadows ſtraight a ſaffron Scene diſcloſe,
Our infant Apples quit the blighted Boughs;
Peaſe, Wheat, and Barley, wither'd in the Fields,
And Nature one abortive Harveſt yields:
[274] Nor ſtopt it here; the flying Plague began
To ſpread the Bane in Beaſts, and thence to Man:
Firſt dy'd our Sheep upon the ruſſet Plain,
Next ſwell'd our Oxen with a fatal Blain;
Here tumbles, o'er her Meat, the moping Cow;
There drops the panting Horſe before the Plough:
At length the dire Contagion ſpread ſo wide,
My Virgin Children made the Tomb their Bride.
This Nature bore—But when our Landlord ſent
His Officers, to ſeize my Lord for Rent;
And he, to ſhun the Priſon, flies the Shore;
Liſts on the Sea, to tug the lab'ring Oar;
I wept, I rav'd, I curs'd the baleful Air;
And fled my native Land, but not my Care.
Thus, baniſh'd here, a Widow, and a Wife,
Condemn'd to ſuffer, not enjoy a Life,
I toil for thoſe, who catch the finny Prey;
The Toils are great, but very ſmall the Pay!
[275] Their ſcaly Fry to Market oft I bear,
Oft in the Ocean waſh their thready Snare;
And then was waſhing, when, with great Surprize,
You, and your floating Veſſel, met my Eyes.
NOW Heav'n defend us both! the Nymph reply'd;
And can ſuch Rage in Chriſtian Minds reſide?
What, could the curſt, inhuman Tyrant wreſt
Thy tender Husband from thy loving Breaſt,
When all thy Wealth was loſt, thy Children dead?
O Virtue! Virtue! whither art thou fled?
Why muſt ſuch Evils on the Guiltleſs flow?
Ye Heav'ns! is Innocence rewarded ſo?
SO ſpake the Nymph; her Friend no more replies;
For now PRISCILLA's Dome attracts their Eyes:
Approaching to her friendly Gate, they found
The gen'rous Lady dealing Alms around
[276] To needy Souls, a hapleſs, helpleſs Crowd,
Who daily bleſs'd her Hand for daily Food!
When thus CAPRESA: Hail, for ever bleſs'd!
'Tis Godlike thus to ſuccour the Diſtreſs'd:
Yet none of theſe, who claim your Chriſtian Aid,
Deſerves it more than this unhappy Maid;
Who once was bleſs'd with Fame and Riches too,
Tho' fickle Fortune now is turn'd her Foe;
Unlike the Mendicants, who daily ſhare
Your friendly Bounty, and maternal Care.
TO whom the Lady, with a gracious Look,
That ſeem'd to breathe Compaſſion, while ſhe ſpoke:
Sure Decency forbids, a Gueſt ſo great
Should, undiſtinguiſh'd, with the Vulgar eat.
No; deck my Table with the choiceſt Fare;
The Nymph, with me, a kind Repaſt ſhall ſhare;
[277] For, by her Looks if Truth may be divin'd,
That lovely Body cloaths a lovely Mind.
SHE ſaid, and CONSTANCE low Obeiſance made;
Then gladly follow'd, where PRISCILLA led.
Within the Gate a ſpacious Room ſhe found,
Whoſe Walls were beautify'd with Tap'ſtry round;
Where pious Tales appear'd, ſo lively wrought,
The Work ſeem'd vital, and the Figures Thought:
Here, in the Shade, the Jewiſh Patriarch ſtood,
Feaſting the Sons of Heav'n with earthly Food;
While, there, the good Samaritan confeſt
His Kindneſs, and reproach'd the cruel Prieſt;
With many more, a charitable Band,
The skilful Labour of PRISCILLA's Hand.
HITHER the Dame convey'd a ſweet Repaſt;
Rich Meats, and roſy Wines the Table grac'd:
[278] They eat, they drank, in pleaſing Converſe join'd;
And chear'd at once the Body and the Mind.
The Call of Nature being ſoon ſuppreſt,
Thus ſpake the Lady to her youthful Gueſt:
SAY, lovely Stranger! (for I long to know;
So may propitious Heav'n remove thy Woe!)
Whence thus reduc'd? By Famine, Sword, or Fire?
What Sire thy Beauty boaſts, what Land thy Sire?
Perhaps ſome Princeſs, baniſh'd from her Home,
Thus condeſcends to grace my ruſtic Dome:
If ſo, I greatly fear, my homely Feaſt
Has been unworthy of my Royal Gueſt.
SHE ſaid, the Nymph unfolds her Tale again;
The prudent Dame attempts to ſooth her Pain,
And thus reply'd: Tho' weighty are your Woes,
The weightieſt Ill, with Patience, lighter grows:
[279] Then bear with Patience all that Heav'n deſign'd,
Whoſe Ways are juſt, tho' difficult to find,
Plann'd for the gen'ral Good of Human Kind.
God's Paths in winding Mazes often lie,
Too intricate for feeble Reaſon's Eye;
Moſt regular, when in Confuſion loſt;
Moſt conſtant, when they ſeem to vary moſt.
Perhaps his Mercy forc'd you thus to roam,
To ſhun a more unhappy Fate at home;
For with one Evil he removes a worſe,
And bleſſes oft with what we think a Curſe.
Then let your Soul at Fortune not repine;
But truſt in Heav'n's Protection, next, in mine:
In me you ſtill ſhall find a faithful Friend,
With whom, in time, your Troubles all may end:
But, ſince you now are haraſs'd out with Woes,
Refreſh your weary Soul with ſweet Repoſe;
[280] And when you wake, at Morning, may you find
Heav'n's balmy Comfort heal your wounded Mind!
THUS chear'd, the Nymph obſequiouſly withdrew,
And bath'd her Cares in Sleep's refreſhing Dew;
Till PHOEBUS, riſing from the Shades of Night,
With roſy Keys unlock'd the Gates of Light:
Bright as his Beams, aroſe the beauteous Maid;
And, to her Patroneſs returning, ſaid:
WHAT Thanks, propitious Lady! ſhall I give
For all the Godlike Bounties I receive?
O! let my Silence thank you; for I know,
Words can't expreſs the Gratitude I owe.
To whom replies the venerable Dame:
No other Thanks, but Gratitude, I claim:
[281] The Terms of Charity are never hard,
Love and Compaſſion are their own Reward:
A Soul, that ſuccours Virtue, when diſtreſt,
Can with Reflection make a noble Feaſt;
Which nouriſhes the Mind, and overpays
A gen'rous Deed with ſelf-approving Praiſe.
SUCH was their Converſe, till domeſtic Care
Invites PRISCILLA from the youthful Fair;
Who ſat in penſive Solitude, and ſtrove
To ſoften, or ſuſpend the Pains of Love.
At length the Linen on her Knee ſhe ſpread,
And with her Needle work'd the docile Thread.
Young THISBE's Fate ſhe firſt began to frame;
But ſoon commits her Labour to the Flame:
Next drew ſhe HERO ſinking in the Main;
Then raz'd the finiſh'd Image out again:
[282] Both theſe diſpleas'd her, tho' judicious Art,
And Rays of Nature ſhone in ev'ry Part.
At length her own unhappy Tale ſhe choſe,
And lively paints the Scene of all her Woes:
Her charming FELIX firſt the Linen grac'd;
By whom her Father, frowning ſtern, ſhe plac'd:
Her Lover's Parting next to theſe appears;
(But, weeping here, ſhe ſoil'd her Work with Tears)
Next, on the Seas, ſhe drew her floating Ship;
Next, her own Boat, ſlow-wand'ring o'er the Deep:
By theſe ſhe fix'd CAPRESA on the Strand,
Who wak'd her firſt, and welcom'd her to Land:
The good PRISCILLA laſt employ'd her Art,
Whoſe Aſpect ſpoke the Bounty of her Heart;
Her friendly Roof, a Refuge for the Poor,
The Horn of Plenty, pendent o'er the Door,
Diffuſing Bleſſings ſtill, and ſtill increaſing more.
[283] All theſe confeſt ſuch Beauty, Skill, and Care,
Not HELEN better wove the Trojan War,
While HECTOR, PARIS, and their Martial Train,
With Grecian Heroes battled on the Plain.
HERE let us leave the lovely Nymph a-while,
To paſs her tedious Hours in pleaſing Toil:
Her abſent Lover now my Song purſues,
Whoſe valiant Deeds require a nobler Muſe.
SWIFT-PINION'D FAME, which often babbling flies,
To bear unwelcome Truths, and oft'ner Lyes,
Had ſpread the ductile Error far and wide,
How wand'ring FELIX periſh'd in the Tide.
But FELIX ſafely reach'd the Thunic Port,
And ſoon arriv'd to Honours in the Court:
His Wiſdom there the wiſeſt Peers excell'd;
His Valour more ſurpaſs'd 'em in the Field.
[284] When firſt he to the Royal Palace came,
An Accident occurr'd to raiſe his Fame:
A noble Lord there was, of great Renown,
Rebell'd againſt the King, and claim'd his Crown:
Great Preparations made he for the Fight;
Nor leſs the Monarch, to defend his Right;
But ſummon'd all, to meet the daring Foe,
Whoſe Strength could wield a Sword, or bend a Bow;
And promis'd to reward their Martial Care,
With Honours equal to their Deeds in War.
Now rings the Region with the Foe's Alarms,
Terrific ſhines the Field with burniſh'd Arms;
The Martial Trumpet, ſounding from afar,
With dreadful Notes, proclaims approaching War.
The Royal Army valiant FELIX join'd;
Intrepid Courage animates his Mind:
[285] Fix'd in the Front, the Foe he bravely dares,
Like PALLAS prudent, and as bold as MARS.
Say, Muſe, What Goddeſs, that tremendous Hour,
Aided the Youth with ſuch unuſual Pow'r?
Bright VENUS, conſcious of the Lover's Smart,
Sharpen'd his Sword, and pointed ev'ry Dart:
Fierce, as a Lion, thro' the Lines he ſprung;
And forc'd his Foes, like trembling Stags, along.
As when reſiſtleſs Winds ruſh o'er the Deep,
And from its Anchor force the driving Ship,
Or furiouſly againſt the Woodland roar;
The leafy Harveſt, tumbling, flies before:
So ruſh'd the Hero on the adverſe Band,
So fled the Legions from his pow'rful Hand;
Till ſoon the rebel Lord he Pris'ner made,
And to the King his captive Prize convey'd
[286]Now reaps the Youth the Glory of his Toil;
To him the Monarch gives the Martial Spoil,
Rewards his Valour with a noble Poſt,
And makes him Firſt Commander of his Hoſt.
Thus, quickly FELIX gain'd a deathleſs Name;
Thus, was his Labour crown'd with Wealth and Fame:
But Wealth and Fame inſipid Things appear;
To give them Taſte, he wants the lovely Fair;
The lovely Fair, oppreſt with equal Grief,
To make her happy, wants the glorious Chief.
HIS Fame, which ſoon at Suſa was reveal'd,
(Heroic Actions ſeldom lie conceal'd)
With pleaſing Wonder ſtruck CONSTANTIA's Ears,
And fill'd her doubtful Soul with Hopes and Fears:
For, tho' the wiſe PRISCILLA often ſtrove
With prudent Counſel to ſuppreſs her Love;
[287] Her Love was only leſſen'd, not ſuppreſt;
But glows again, again diſtracts her Breaſt.
AS when, in rural Cots, the Flames aſpire,
And lab'ring Peaſants quench the mounting Fire:
If chance a latent Spark remain behind,
In heapy Aſhes, fann'd with ambient Wind;
The Fires again, with former Fury, riſe,
Flame thro' the Roof, and flaſh into the Skies:
So in her Boſom glows the am'rous Fire,
And fills her tender Soul with ſoft Deſire.
And is my FELIX yet alive? ſhe ſays;
And is he crown'd with Wealth, and deathleſs Praiſe?
No, no; I fear the flatt'ring Tale deceives;
Methinks I ſee him plunging in the Waves.
Ah! why, ye Heav'ns, are feeble Mortals curſt,
In Things uncertain, to believe the worſt?
[288] No; rather let me ſeek the Thunic Court;
There, with my Eyes, confirm the bleſt Report:
Hope flies before, and points the pleaſing Way;
Love urges on, and Love I muſt obey.
SO ſaying, to PRISCILLA ſtraight ſhe came,
And with her Thoughts acquaints the pious Dame;
The pious Dame, with tender Pity ſway'd,
Approves the Paſſion of the loving Maid;
And, with CAPRESA, guards her to the Place,
Reſolv'd herſelf to view the Hero's Face.
The Hero meets 'em at the Regal Gate,
Array'd in Armour, formidably great;
For on that Morning, by the King's Command,
The Chief was to review the Martial Band:
His ſtudded Chariot darted Splendor round,
His ſtately Courſers, neighing, paw'd the Ground;
[289] The nodding Plumes around his Temples wave,
With awful Grace, and beautifully brave.
He knew th'approaching Nymph; but, in Surprize,
The joyous Stream deſcended from his Eyes:
The Nymph beheld the weeping Chief; nor knew,
For what he wept, nor whom ſhe came to view:
His Martial Dreſs, beſpangled o'er with Gold,
The dreadful Warrior, not the Lover, told:
But, when he caſt the Helmet from his Head,
And thro' the Gates the bluſhing Damſel led;
She knew her Lover, claſp'd him to her Breaſt,
While ſilent Eloquence her Joy confeſt:
The conſcious Pains an abſent Lover bears,
Deſpair, fallacious Hope, and anxious Fears,
For want of Words, were painted with their Tears.
And when, at length, their cryſtal Sluices ceas'd,
The joyful Hero thus the Nymph addreſs'd:
[290]YE Gods! and have I then my Charmer found?
And are my Labours thus completely crown'd!
Yes! let me claſp thee to my longing Arms,
Drink in thy Breath, and feed upon thy Charms.
As widow'd Turtles, roving round the Fields,
Thro' all the fruitful Stores, which Nature yields,
Curſt in the midſt of Plenty, cannot eat;
But ſtarve, lamenting for their abſent Mate:
Thus have I been with Fame and Riches grac'd;
Yet wanted thee, to give my Riches Taſte.
But ſay, how came this Wealth I wanted moſt?
What brought my Love to this Barbarian Coaſt?
HE ſaid; and now the joyful Damſel ſpake
The Dangers which ſhe ſuffer'd for his ſake;
Shews him the Dame, who found her on the Tide;
PRISCILLA too, who all her Wants ſupply'd:
[291] Then, proſtrate, on her Knees before him bends,
And begs him to reward her faithful Friends.
The grateful Chief, by native Goodneſs ſway'd,
Embrac'd 'em both, and ſoon the Nymph obey'd;
But firſt before his Royal Maſter came,
And begs he may reſign his Poſt of Fame:
At which the Monarch frowns with awful Eyes,
Till FELIX ſtraight, who ſaw his Paſſion riſe,
Falls on the Ground, and to his Maſter ſhows
The various Scene of all his am'rous Woes.
This heard, the King reſumes his former Grace;
Love tun'd his Soul, and ſmooth'd his ruffled Face:
He rais'd the Hero, bids the Nymph appear;
The Nymph approach'd him with a modeſt Fear;
Before his awful Throne, ſubmiſs, ſhe fell,
And to him ſtraight unfolds th'amazing Tale.
Mute, on the Ground a-while he fix'd his Eyes;
Then, Is the Force of Love ſo great? he cries:
[292] We falſely Man the World's Commander call;
Thou, mightier Monarch, Love! commandeſt All:
Young AMMON's Self could not thy Pow'r confine;
The World his Subject was, but He was thine.
THEN, ſmiling, thus he chear'd the trembling Fair:
Henceforward, lovely Nymph, diſmiſs thy Care;
For, ſince thy Love has conquer'd Wind and Sea,
Curſt be the King, that's crueller than they!
Let HYMEN ſtraight confirm the Marriage Ties;
Thou juſtly haſt deſerv'd the Nuptial Prize.
THUS ſaid, he crown'd the Hero's Martial Care,
With Riches far ſuperior to the Fair:
Due Thanks return'd, they to PRISCILLA came,
Beſtowing Gifts and Honours on the Dame:
CAPRESA next, with Age and Labour worn,
In comely Robes the grateful Pair adorn;
[293] With ample Wealth her former Bliſs reſtor'd,
And from the Seas redeem'd her Nuptial Lord;
Her Nuptial Lord again enjoys his Wife,
Again delightful Freedom crowns his Life;
Till Nature calls him to reſign his Breath,
In honourable Age, and peaceful Death.
THIS done, the loving Couple quit the Shore,
And joyfully the deſtin'd Port explore;
While ſportive NEREIDS round their Veſſel play,
And wanton CUPIDS hail 'em on their Way;
Rough THETIS' Self aſſumes a pleaſing Smile,
Glad to return 'em to their native Soil;
Where ſacred HYMEN join'd their mutual Hands,
And Heav'n, indulgent, bleſs'd their Nuptial Bands.
Of FRIENDSHIP. To CELIA.
[316]OCELIA! You, whoſe Rays of friendly Fire,
Conſtant as thoſe of Nature, ne'er expire;
If in your Breaſt no weighty Cares you find,
Nor better Thoughts employ your gen'rous Mind;
Vouchſafe an Ear: Theſe Numbers are your Due;
I ſing of Friendſhip, and I ſing to You:
Friendſhip! a Theme, which all Mankind profeſs,
No Virtue more admire, none practiſe leſs;
For moſt have learn'd the
Grecian *Sage's Text,
"To love one Day, as if to hate the next."
[317] They change, forſake, as ſerves their ſelfiſh Ends,
Nor are their Dreſſes vary'd more than Friends.
YOU therefore, who are worthy Friendſhip's Name,
And cheriſh in your Breaſt the genuine Flame,
Attend to what a faithful Muſe imparts,
A Muſe unpractis'd in fallacious Arts:
Tho' young in Life, that Life has made her know,
A friendly Aſpect oft conceals a Foe;
That, tho' ſo many ſeeming Friends abound,
For one that's true, a thouſand falſe are found.
WHEN firſt you ſtrive a faithful Friend to find,
Explore the ſecret Motives of his Mind;
Nor, raſhly credulous, his Friendſhip truſt,
Before you know, what Paſſion rules him moſt:
But, as a Horſeman checks the Courſer's Speed,
Till he has try'd the Temper of his Steed;
[318] So check the Reins of Friendſhip, till you prove,
What ſways the Perſon, Intereſt, or Love.
AVOID the Fop impertinently vain,
And ſhun the Slave, who flatters you for Gain;
Beware of him, who ſells you for a Jeſt;
But, moſt of all, beware the leaky Breaſt:
(Who hopes to keep his Wine the Seaſon round,
Muſt firſt be ſure his Cask is ſweet and ſound)
Nor ſhould a formal Fool your Friendſhip claim,
Tho' Wealth and Honours dignify his Name.
Let Knaves and Fools in kindred Vices join;
Chuſe you a Friend, where Senſe and Virtue ſhine;
Whoſe Paſſions move by Reaſon's Rule alone,
Much better, if agreeing with your own.
The Hart and Lion at a Diſtance keep;
Wolves company with Wolves, and Sheep with Sheep:
[319] So we, by Nature's ſympathetic Pow'rs,
Moſt love thoſe Tempers, that reſemble ours.
YET, if it be too difficult to find
A Friend ſo juſtly moulded to your Mind,
Among the virtuous Few ſelect the beſt;
And ſuch is he, whoſe Failings are the leaſt:
Let him a modeſt Freedom always claim,
To praiſe your Virtues, or your Vices blame;
Nor be diſpleas'd his mild Reproof to hear;
For Friends may often kindly be ſevere;
The Beſt ſometimes each other may controul,
Yet not deſtroy the Harmony of Soul.
Rough Notes in Muſic never ſhould be found,
Except adapted to improve the Sound.
WHEN mutual Faith the friendly Knot has ty'd,
And when that mutual Faith is truly try'd,
[320] Prey not upon yourſelf; nor be oppreſt
With conſcious Pains, that ſtruggle in your Breaſt:
For, as the Flames, in Aetna cloſely pent,
Convulſe the Mountain, lab'ring for a Vent;
Thus in the Soul uneaſy Thoughts confin'd,
For want of Paſſage, rack the ſuff'ring Mind.
Unveil your Boſom to your other Part;
Your Friend ſhall ſhare the Burden of your Heart,
Alleviate ev'ry Ill your Soul ſuſtains,
Double your Pleaſures, and divide your Pains.
BE zealous for your Friends, whene'er you know
Their Reputation cenſur'd by a Foe;
Nor with a faint Excuſe degrade your Friends;
The Man, who coldly praiſes, diſcommends.
Or are they juſtly cenſur'd for a Crime?
Reprove them mildly at ſome proper Time:
[321] In private chide all Failings which you find,
In public praiſe the Beauties of their Mind;
Place all their Virtues in the cleareſt Light,
Omit their Faults, or touch them very ſlight;
As Painters, when they draw a beauteous Face,
Contract a Blemiſh, heighten ev'ry Grace.
NEITHER let Paſſion, Pride, or private Ends,
Or changing Fortune, make you change your Friends.
Who varies oft, a faithleſs Temper ſhows,
Or, at the beſt, ill Judgment, when he choſe.
Some Perſons with themſelves ſo diſagree,
They're fix'd to nothing but Inconſtancy;
With each new Day, new Reſolutions come,
Expel the former, and uſurp their Room:
Succeeding Billows thus the foremoſt throng,
Tides roll on Tides, and Waves urge Waves along.
[322] Not but we may with a new Friend engage,
Before we ſee an old one quit the Stage;
Yet ſhould not think the new our old exceeds,
As
*Jockeys value moſt their youngeſt Steeds.
One Maxim will in Wine and Friendſhip hold,
Alike the better both for being old.
BUT muſt we then be bound in deathleſs Bands,
And ſtill obey whate'er a Friend commands?
Aid him to gain what he unjuſtly craves?
No—Leave the Man, who Truth and Virtue leaves.
Should furious CATILINE ſome Plot deviſe,
To ruin Thouſands, that himſelf might riſe;
The Laws of Honour, Truth, and Conſcience ſhow,
'Tis Friendſhip to the World to be his Foe.
Or, ſhould a Friend baſely betray his Truſt,
To pardon him were to yourſelf unjuſt:
[323] For,
*as the Wool, with Crimſon colour'd o'er,
Never acquires its native Whiteneſs more;
So he who breaks his Faith, will ne'er obtain
Your Credit, nor his Innocence again.
If otherwiſe he diſoblige his Friends,
(For where's the perfect Man, who ne'er offends?)
Try if his Ear will kind Reproof endure;
And, if the Balm of Counſel work a Cure,
O'erlook the Failure: All offend, that live;
Let Foes reſent a Treſpaſs, Friends forgive.
Yet let the pardon'd Friend not, many times,
Proceed in Folly, and repeat his Crimes.
Tho' pureſt Gold a vaſt Extent will bear,
Yet pureſt Gold will break, if ſtretch'd too far:
And Friends may bear ſome Slips from Wiſdom's Rule;
But who can pardon the perſiſting Fool?
[324]*AMONG the various Cauſes, that conſpire
To cool our Love, and quench the friendly Fire,
Vile Avarice aſſumes the greateſt Pow'r,
A God which baſe ignoble Souls adore:
To pleaſure him, a Tide of broken Vows
(Needful Libations!) on his Altar flows:
Yet, never ſatisfy'd, he craves for more;
And keeps his Votaries, in Plenty, poor:
Who worſhips him, will break the friendly Bands,
Whene'er the ſordid, ſelfiſh God commands.
OTHERS there are, induc'd by Thirſt of Praiſe,
(And ev'n the greateſt Men this Paſſion ſways)
Who quit their Friends for Honours of the State,
And turn their Love into the rankeſt Hate.
[325] Nor is it wonder theſe deſert their Friends,
Since all are Foes, who will not ſerve their Ends:
For wild Ambition like a Torrent roars,
Which, when obſtructed, climbs th'oppoſing Shores;
Till to the Top the lab'ring Flood attains,
Swells o'er the Banks, and foams along the Plains.
Not but we may an honeſt Fame embrace;
Nay, Friends ſhould aid us in the glorious Chace.
Man has ſome Principle of heav'nly Fire,
That warms his Breaſt, and prompts him to aſpire;
Wakes him to Actions of ſuperior Kind,
And keeps alive the Faculties of Mind;
For Sloth begets a Lethargy of Soul,
As want of Motion taints the cleareſt Pool:
Yet, if, too fond and covetous of Fame,
We blow that native Spark into a Flame,
It quickly riſes to a firy Storm,
And burns the Fabric 'twas deſign'd to warm.
[326] What Bands of Nature can reſtrain its Courſe?
What friendly Offices ſuppreſs its Force?
See how its Rage the young
* Numidian fires,
The worſt of Children to the beſt of Sires!
Deep, thro' his Brothers Blood, he wades his Way,
And leaps o'er Gratitude to Regal Sway.
Young CAESAR's Tutor by his Pupil dies,
While TULLY falls by him he help'd to riſe;
Friends, Fathers, Brothers, Uncles, yield to Fate,
To make three Tyrants infamouſly great!
O! grant me, gracious Heav'n, where-e'er I go,
To be a faithful Friend, or gen'rous Foe;
Nor let me pant ſo much for empty Praiſe,
As to obtain it by diſhoneſt Ways;
Nor wrong my Friend, tho' 'twere to gain a Throne;
Nor ruin others Fame, to raiſe my own.
[327]HE who is only learn'd in Books, will find
A harder Leſſon, when he learns Mankind;
A Volume gilded o'er with ſmiling Art,
Where few can read the Meaning of the Heart.
We often take our Flatterers for Friends;
One would ſuſpect the Man who ſtill commends,
Who, like the Sharper in the Roman Play,
Or right or wrong, aſſents to all you ſay;
Bends here or there, which way his Lord's inclin'd,
As Reeds ſubmit to ev'ry diff'rent Wind.
Nor is it ſtrange ſuch Paraſites prevail,
When greedy Ears devour their flatt'ring Tale:
While THRASO loves to hear his Praiſes told,
GNATHO will give him Praiſe, and take his Gold.
But you, who walk by Wiſdom's ſafer Rules,
(For 'twere but Labour loſt to counſel Fools)
[328] Deteſt the Wretch, who ne'er can Courage find
To ſpeak the genuine Dictates of his Mind;
But, like the Syrens ſweet, pernicious Song,
At once would charm and ruin with his Tongue.
YET ſome there are, in ſocial Bands ally'd,
Who, with blunt Truths, err on the other Side;
Void of Good-nature, and Good-breeding too,
They ſourly cenſure ev'ry thing you do.
O! never flatter ev'n a Monarch's Pride,
Nor, with the Sternneſs of a Cynic, chide;
But, when you would an erring Friend reprove,
Let gentle Cautions ſhew, the Motive's Love:
Do not begin with Raſhneſs to exclaim;
But rather hint the Fault, before you blame.
'Tis not enough your Admonition's juſt;
Prudence muſt guide it, or the Labour's loſt:
[329] Friends ſhould allure, and charm us into Senſe;
Harſh Counſels not reform, but give Offence.
Nature, impatient of ſevere Reproof,
Loves mild Inſtruction, but abhors the rough:
As Fruits and Flow'rs improve with gentle Rain;
But fade, if rapid Storms o'erflow the Plain.
SOME Men are Friends, when Fortune fills the Sails,
And wafts you on with favourable Gales;
But quit the tott'ring Ship, and make to Shore,
When Storms deſcend, and adverſe Surges roar.
Long as in Credit, Pow'r, or Place you ſtand,
Their fawning, formal Friendſhip you command:
With twenty Squeezes, and a hundred Bows,
As many Compliments, as many Vows,
They ſwear your Intereſt ſhall be their own,
And wiſh the Time to make it better known;
[330] Like falſe hot Courſers, waiting for the Chace,
Which foam, and neigh, and proudly ſpurn the Graſs,
Intent to run; but droop their jaded Creſt,
And fail you moſt, when moſt you want their Haſte.
WE make a Proſtitute of Friendſhip's Name,
If only Complaiſance ſupports our Claim.
And yet there are, of this polite Degree,
Who treat you ſtill with forc'd Civility;
In each obliging Art ſo well refin'd,
Tho' ever falſe, they never ſeem unkind.
Not that my Muſe would Decency offend;
For 'tis Good-breeding poliſhes a Friend:
Nor ſhines it leſs, with Truth and Virtue join'd,
Than comely Features with a noble Mind:
But thoſe, whoſe Friendſhips moſt in Speeches dwell,
Neglect the Fruit, and trifle with the Shell.
[331] True Friendſhip more intrinſic Worth affords,
Defin'd by Actions better than by Words;
A warm Affection, that can never cool,
Concord of Mind, and Muſic of the Soul;
Which tunes the jarring Strings of Life to Love,
Shews Men below, how Angels live above.
There are in Friendſhip ſuch attractive Charms,
It draws Eſteem from thoſe it never warms.
See how
*PACUVIUS' tragic Scenes could move
The People's Praiſes with fictitious Love!
When on the Stage two doubtful Princes ſtrive,
Each ſeeking Death, to keep his Friend alive:
Now PYLADES deceives the Monarch's Eye;
Faithful, yet fraudulent, reſolves to die:
ORESTES now diſplays the friendly Cheat,
Invites the threat'ning Sword, and courts his Fate.
[332] Mov'd with their gen'rous Love, the Audience roſe;
With ſocial Flame each changing Boſom glows;
All feel the ſacred Pow'r of Friendſhip's Laws,
And the Stage rocks, and thunders with Applauſe.
I know the Muſe may give to ſome Offence,
(Tho' rather Men of Wit, than Men of Senſe)
Whoſe Counſel is; "Be not engag'd too far;
" The greateſt Friendſhip brings the greateſt Care:
" Our own Concerns have Plagues enough in Store;
" Who joins in Friendſhip, only makes 'em more:
" The Cares and Troubles, which your Friend endures,
" Are all by Sympathy adopted yours."
WHAT baſe, ungen'rous, ſelfiſh Souls are theſe?
Mere Quacks, who turn ev'n Health into Diſeaſe;
And but the darkeſt Side of Friendſhip find,
To all its radiant Beams and Beauties blind.
[333] Two faithful Friends, in any State, may gain
Comfort to heighten Joy, or leſſen Pain:
If weighty Cares the penſive Mind invade,
They make the Burden light with mutual Aid;
If Profit, or if Pleaſure chears the Soul,
The Bleſſing's common, each enjoys the whole:
If Bus'neſs calls them to ſome diſtant Place,
Swift-pinion'd Love contracts the lengthen'd Space;
Each keeps the other's Image in his Breaſt,
As Wax preſerves the Form a Seal impreſt.
HAIL, ſacred Friendſhip! by whoſe chearing Ray
All Joys increaſe, without it fade away:
Ev'n HYMEN's Torch, tho' burning e'er ſo bright,
Aided by Friendſhip, ſhines with double Light.
This you, OCELIA! by Experience find,
Whoſe nuptial Friend lives always in your Mind:
[334] No Length of Time, no Diſtance, ever ras'd
His lov'd Idea from your tender Breaſt:
Your friendly Flame admits of no Decays;
But glows, unclouded, with augmented Rays,
And makes your bridal Lamp much brighter blaze.
That faint, pale, languid Lamp, in Age, expires,
Except 'tis fed with Friendſhip's conſtant Fires:
Theſe to the Winter of our Years extend;
And, when the Lover cools, they warm the Friend.
When all the tranſient Joys of Youth are o'er,
When all the Charms of Beauty charm no more;
Surviving Friendſhip gives us freſh Supplies
Of laſting Bliſs, and more ſubſtantial Joys;
Which ſweeten all the Troubles Age has brought,
And make the Dregs of Life a cordial Draught.
FINIS.