THE JUDGMENT OF HERCULES.
WHILE blooming Spring deſcends from genial ſkies,
By whoſe mild influence inſtant wonders riſe,
From whoſe ſoft breath Elyſian beauties flow,
The ſweets of Hagley, or the pride of Stowe,
Will Lyttleton the rural landſcape range,
Leave noiſy fame, and not regret the change?
Pleas'd will he tread the garden's early ſcenes,
And learn a moral from the riſing greens?
There, warm'd alike by Sol's enliv'ning pow'r,
The weed, aſpiring, emulates the flow'r;
The drooping flow'r, its fairer charms diſplay'd,
Invites from grateful hands their gen'rous aid:
Soon, if none check th' invaſive foe's deſigns,
The lively luſtre of theſe ſcenes declines!
'Tis thus the ſpring of youth, the morn of life,
Rears in our minds the rival ſeeds of ſtrife:
Then paſſion riots, reaſon then contends,
And on the conqueſt ev'ry bliſs depends:
Life from the nice deciſion takes its hue,
And bleſs'd thoſe judges who decide like you!
On worth like theirs ſhall ev'ry bliſs attend,
The world their fav'rite, and the world their friend.
There are who, blind to Thought's fatiguing ray,
As Fortune gives examples urge their way;
[82] Not Virtue's foes, tho' they her paths decline,
And ſcarce her friends, tho' with her friends they join;
In her's or Vice's caſual road advance,
Thoughtleſs, the ſinners or the ſaints of Chance!
Yet ſome more nobly ſcorn the vulgar voice,
With judgment fix, with zeal purſue their choice,
When ripen'd thought, when reaſon born to reign,
Checks the wild tumults of the youthful vein;
While paſſion's lawleſs tides, at their command,
Glide thro' more uſeful tracts, and bleſs the land.
Happieſt of theſe is he whoſe matchleſs mind,
By learning ſtrengthen'd and by taſte refin'd,
In Virtue's cauſe eſſay'd its earlieſt pow'rs,
Choſe Virtue's paths, and ſtrewed her paths with flow'rs.
The firſt alarm'd, if Freedom waves her wings,
The fitteſt to adorn each art ſhe brings;
Lov'd by that prince whom ev'ry virtue fires,
Prais'd by that bard whom ev'ry Muſe inſpires;
Bleſs'd in the tuneful art, the ſocial flame;
In all that wins, in all that merits, fame!
'Twas youth's perplexing ſtage his doubts inſpir'd,
When great Alcides to a grove retir'd:
Thro' the lone windings of a devious glade,
Reſign'd to thought, with ling'ring ſteps he ſtray'd,
Bleſt with a mind to taſte ſincerer joys,
Arm'd with a heart each falſe one to deſpiſe.
Dubious he ſtray'd, with wav'ring thoughts poſſeſt,
Alternate paſſions ſtruggling ſhar'd his breaſt;
[83] The various arts which human cares divide,
In deep attention all his mind employ'd;
Anxious, if Fame an equal bliſs ſecur'd,
Or ſilent Eaſe with ſofter charms allur'd.
The ſylvan choir, whoſe numbers ſweetly flow'd,
The fount that murmur'd, and the flow'rs that blow'd;
The ſilver flood that in meanders led
His glitt'ring ſtreams along th' enliven'd mead;
The ſoothing breeze, and all thoſe beauties join'd,
Which, whilſt they pleaſe, effeminate the mind;
In vain! while diſtant, on a ſummit rais'd,
Th' imperial tow'rs of Fame attractive blaz'd.
While thus he trac'd thro' Fancy's puzzling maze
The ſep'rate ſweets of pleaſure and of praiſe,
Sudden the wind a fragrant gale convey'd,
And a new luſtre gain'd upon the ſhade:
At once before his wond'ring eyes were ſeen
Two female forms, of more than mortal mien:
Various their charms; and in their dreſs and face
Each ſeem'd to vie with ſome peculiar grace.
This, whoſe attire leſs clogg'd with art appear'd,
The ſimple ſweets of innocence endear'd:
Her ſprightly bloom, her quick ſagacious eye,
Shew'd native merit mix'd with modeſty:
Her air diffus'd a mild yet awful ray,
Severely ſweet, and innocently gay.
Such the chaſte image of the martial maid,
In artleſs folds of virgin white array'd.
[84] She let no borrow'd roſe her cheeks adorn,
Her bluſhing cheeks, that ſham'd the purple morn:
Her charms nor had nor wanted artful foils,
Or ſtudy'd geſtures, or well-practis'd ſmiles:
She ſcorn'd the toys which render beauty leſs;
She prov'd th' engaging chaſtity of dreſs;
And while ſhe choſe in native charms to ſhine,
Ev'n thus ſhe ſeem'd, nay, more than ſeem'd, divine.
One modeſt em'rald claſp'd the robe ſhe wore,
And in her hand th' imperial ſword ſhe bore.
Sublime her height, majeſtic was her pace,
And match'd the awful honours of her face.
The ſhrubs, the flow'rs, that deck'd the verdant ground,
Seem'd, where ſhe trod, with riſing luſtre crown'd.
Still her approach with ſtronger influence warm'd;
She pleas'd while diſtant, but when near ſhe charm'd.
So ſtrikes the gazer's eye the ſilver gleam
That, glitt'ring, quivers o'er a diſtant ſtream;
But from its banks we ſee new beauties riſe,
And in its cryſtal boſom trace the ſkies.
With other charms the rival viſion glow'd,
And from her dreſs her tinſel beauties flow'd.
A flutt'ring robe her pamper'd ſhape conceal'd,
And ſeem'd to ſhade the charms it beſt reveal'd:
Its form contriv'd her faulty ſize to grace,
Its hue to give freſh luſtre to her face.
Her plaited hair, diſguis'd, with brilliants glar'd;
Her cheeks the ruby's neighb'ring luſtre ſhar'd;
[85] The gaudy topaz lent its gay ſupplies,
And ev'ry gem that ſtrikes leſs curious eyes;
Expos'd her breaſt, with foreign ſweets perfum'd,
And round her brow a roſeate garland bloom'd.
Soft ſmiling, bluſhing, lips conceal'd her wiles,
Yet, ah! the bluſhes artful as the ſmiles.
Oft' gazing on her ſhade, th' enraptur'd fair
Decreed the ſubſtance well deſerv'd her care;
Her thoughts, to others' charms malignly blind,
Centred in that, and were to that confin'd;
And if on others' eyes a glance were thrown,
'Twas but to watch the influence of her own:
Much like her guardian, fair Cythera's queen,
When for her warrior ſhe refines her mien;
Or when, to bleſs her Delian fav'rite's arms,
The radiant fair invigorates her charms:
Much like her pupil, Egypt's ſportive dame,
Her dreſs expreſſive, and her air the ſame,
When her gay bark o'er ſilver Cydnos roll'd,
And all th' emblazon'd ſtreamers wav'd in gold.
Such ſhone the viſion, nor forebore to move
The fond contagious airs of lawleſs love;
Each wanton eye deluding glances fir'd,
And am'rous dimples on each cheek conſpir'd.
Lifeleſs her gait, and ſlow; with ſeeming pain,
She dragg'd her loit'ring limbs along the plain,
Yet made ſome faint efforts, and firſt approach'd the ſwain.
[86] So glaring draughts, with tawdry luſtre bright,
Spring to the view, and ruſh upon the ſight;
More ſlowly charms a Raphael's chaſter air,
Waits the calm ſearch, and pays the ſearcher's care.
Wrapp'd in a pleas'd ſuſpenſe, the youth ſurvey'd
The various charms of each attractive maid:
Alternate each he view'd, and each admir'd,
And found, alternate, varying flames inſpir'd:
Quick o'er their forms his eyes with pleaſure ran,
When ſhe, who firſt approach'd him, firſt began.
" Hither, dear Boy! direct thy wand'ring eyes;
" 'Tis here the lovely Vale of Pleaſure lies:
" Debate no more, to me thy life reſign;
" Each ſweet which Nature can diffuſe is mine:
" For me the nymph diverſifies her pow'r,
" Springs in a tree, or bloſſoms in a flow'r;
" To pleaſe my ear ſhe tunes the linnet's ſtrains;
" To pleaſe my eye with lilies paints the plains;
" To form my couch in moſſy beds ſhe grows;
" To gratify my ſmell perfumes the roſe;
" Reveals the fair, the fertile, ſcene you ſee,
" And ſwells the vegetable world for me.
" Let the gull'd fool the toils of war purſue,
" Where bleed the many to enrich the few;
" Where Chance from Courage claims the boaſted prize;
" Where, tho' ſhe give, your country oft' denies.
" Induſtrious thou ſhalt Cupid's wars maintain,
" And ever gently fight his ſoft campaign;
[87] " His darts alone ſhalt wield, his wounds endure,
" Yet only ſuffer to enjoy the cure.
" Yield but to me—a choir of nymphs ſhall riſe
" And fire thy breaſt, and bleſs thy raviſh'd eyes:
" Their beauteous cheeks a fairer roſe ſhall wear,
" A brighter lily on their necks appear;
" Where fondly thou thy favour'd head ſhalt reſt,
" Soft as the down that ſwells the eygnet's neſt;
" While Philomel in each ſoft voice complains,
" And gently lulls thee with mellifluous ſtrains;
" Whilſt with each accent ſweeteſt odours flow,
" And ſpicy gums round ev'ry boſom glow.
" Not the fam'd bird Arabian climes admire
" Shall in ſuch luxury of ſweets expire.
" At Sloth let War's victorious ſons exclaim,
" In vain! for Pleaſure is my real name:
" Nor envy thou the head with bays o'ergrown;
" No, ſeek thou roſes to adorn thy own;
" For well each op'ning ſcene that claims my care
" Suits and deſerves the beauteous crown I wear.
" Let others prune the vine; the genial bowl
" Shall crown thy table and enlarge thy ſoul.
" Let vulgar hands explore the brilliant mine,
" So the gay produce glitter ſtill on thine.
" Indulgent Bacchus loads his lab'ring tree,
" And, guarding, gives its cluſt'ring ſweets to me.
" For my lov'd train Apollo's piercing beam
" Darts thro' the paſſive glebe, and frames the gem.
[88] " See in my cauſe conſenting gods employ'd,
" Nor ſlight theſe gods, their bleſſings unenjoy'd.
" For thee the poplar ſhall its amber drain;
" For thee, in clouded beauty, ſpring the cane;
" Some coſtly tribute ev'ry clime ſhall pay,
" Some charming treaſure ev'ry wind convey;
" Each object round ſome pleaſing ſcene ſhall vield,
" Art build thy dome, while Nature decks thy field:
" Of Corinth's Order ſhall the ſtructure riſe,
" The ſpiring turrets glitter thro' the ſkies;
" Thy coſtly robe ſhall glow with Tyrian rays,
" Thy vaſe ſhall ſparkle, and thy car ſhall blaze;
" Yet thou, whatever pomp the ſun diſplay,
" Shalt own the am'rous night exceeds the day.
" When melting flutes and ſweetly-ſounding lyres
" Wake the gay Loves, and cite the young Deſires;
" Or in th' Ionian dance ſome fav'rite maid
" Improves the flame her ſparkling eyes convey'd;
" Think, can'ſt thou quit a glowing Delia's arms,
" To feed on Virtue's viſionary charms?
" Or ſlight the joys which wit and youth engage,
" For the faint honour of a frozen ſage?
" To find dull envy ev'n that hope deface,
" And, where you toil'd for glory, reap diſgrace?
" O! think that beauty waits on thy decree,
" And thy lov'd lovelieſt charmer pleads with me,
" She whoſe ſoft ſmile or gentler glance to move,
" You vow'd the wild extremities of love;
[89] " In whoſe endearments years like moments flew;
" For whoſe endearments millions ſeem'd too few;
" She, ſhe implores; ſhe bids thee ſeize the prime
" And tread with her the flow'ry tracts of time,
" Nor thus her lovely bloom of life beſtow
" On ſome cold lover or inſulting foe.
" Think, if againſt that tongue thou canſt rebel,
" Where love yet dwelt, and reaſon ſeem'd to dwell,
" What ſtrong perſuaſion arms her ſofter ſighs!
" What full conviction ſparkles in her eyes!
" See Nature ſmiles, and birds ſalute the ſhade,
" Where breathing jaſmine ſcreens the ſleeping maid,
" And ſuch her charms, as to the vain may prove
" Ambition ſeeks more humble joys than Love!
" There buſy toil ſhall ne'er invade thy reign,
" Nor ſciences perplex thy lab'ring brain,
" Or none but what with equal ſweets invite,
" Nor other arts but to prolong delight.
" Sometimes thy fancy prune her tender wing,
" To praiſe a pendant, or to grace a ring;
" To fix the dreſs that ſuits each varying mien;
" To ſhew where beſt the cluſt'ring gems are ſeen;
" To ſigh ſoft ſtrains along the vocal grove,
" And tell the charms, the ſweet effects, of love!
" Nor fear to find a coy diſdainful Muſe,
" Nor think the Siſters will their aid refuſe:
" Cool grots, and tinkling rills, or ſilent ſhades,
" Soft ſcenes of leiſure, ſuit th' harmonious maids;
[90] " And all the wiſe and all the grave decree
" Some of that ſacred train ally'd to me.
" But if more ſpecious eaſe thy wiſhes claim,
" And thy breaſt glow with faint deſire of fame,
" Some ſofter ſcience ſhall thy thoughts amuſe,
" And learning's name a ſolemn ſound diffuſe.
" To thee all Nature's curious ſtores I'll bring,
" Explain the beauties of an inſect's wing;
" The plant which Nature leſs diffuſely kind,
" Has to few climes with partial care confin'd;
" The ſhell ſhe ſcatters with more careleſs air,
" And in her frolics ſeems ſupremely fair;
" The worth that dazzles in the tulip's ſtains,
" Or lurks beneath a pebble's various veins.
" Sleep's downy god averſe to war's alarms,
" Shall o'er thy head diffuſe his ſofteſt charms,
" Ere anxious thought thy dear repoſe aſſail,
" Or care, my moſt deſtructive foe, prevail.
" The wat'ry nymphs ſhall tune the vocal vales,
" And gentle zephyrs harmonize their gales,
" For thy repoſe inform, with rival joy,
" Their ſtreams to murmur, and their winds to ſigh.
" Thus ſhalt thou ſpend the ſweetly-flowing day,
" Till, loſt in bliſs, thou breathe thy ſoul away;
" Till ſhe t' Elyſian bow'rs of joy repair,
" Nor find my charming ſcenes exceeded there."
She ceas'd; and on a lily'd bank reclin'd,
Her flowing robe wav'd wanton with the wind;
[91] One tender hand her drooping head ſuſtains,
One points, expreſſive, to the flow'ry plains.
Soon the fond youth perceiv'd her influence roll
Deep in his breaſt, to melt his manly ſoul;
As when Favonius joins the ſolar blaze,
And each fair fabric of the froſt decays.
Soon to his breaſt the ſoft harangue convey'd
Reſolves too partial to the ſpecious maid.
He ſigh'd, he gaz'd, ſo ſweetly ſmil'd the dame,
Yet ſighing, gazing, ſeem'd to ſcorn his flame,
And oft' as Virtue caught his wand'ring eye,
A crimſon bluſh condemn'd the riſing ſigh.
'Twas ſuch the ling'ring Trojan's ſhame betray'd,
When Maia's ſon the frown of Jove diſplay'd;
When wealth, fame, empire, could no balance prove
For the ſoft reign of Dido and of love.
Thus ill with arduous glory love conſpires,
Soft tender flames with bold impetuous fires!
Some hov'ring doubts his anxious boſom mov'd,
And Virtue, zealous fair! thoſe doubts improv'd.
" Fly, fly, fond Youth! the too indulgent maid,
" Nor err, by ſuch fantaſtic ſcenes betray'd.
" Tho' in my path the rugged thorn be ſeen,
" And the dry turf diſcloſe a fainter green;
" Tho' no gay roſe or flow'ry product ſhine,
" The barren ſurface ſtill conceals the mine.
" Each thorn that threatens, ev'n the weed that grows
" In Virtue's path, ſuperior ſweets beſtows—
[92] " Yet ſhould thoſe boaſted ſpecious toys allure,
" Whence could fond Sloth the flatt'ring gifts procure?
" The various wealth that tempts thy fond deſire,
" 'Tis I alone, her greateſt foe, acquire.
" I from old Ocean rob the treaſur'd ſtore;
" I thro' each region latent gems explore:
" 'Twas I the rugged brilliant firſt reveal'd,
" By num'rous ſtrata deep in earth conceal'd;
" 'Tis I the ſurface yet refine, and ſhow
" The modeſt gem's intrinſic charms to glow;
" Nor ſwells the grape, nor ſpires its feeble tree,
" Without the firm ſupports of induſtry.
" But grant we Sloth the ſcene herſelf has drawn,
" The moſſy grotto and the flow'ry lawn;
" Let Philomela tune th' harmonious gale,
" And with each breeze eternal ſweets exhale;
" Let gay Pomona ſlight the plains around,
" And chuſe, for faireſt fruits, the favour'd ground;
" To bleſs the fertile vale ſhould Virtue ceaſe,
" Nor moſſy grots nor flow'ry lawns could pleaſe,
" Nor gay Pomona's luſcious gifts avail,
" The ſound harmonious, or the ſpicy gale.
" Seeſt thou yon' rocks in dreadful pomp ariſe,
" Whoſe rugged cliffs deform th' encircling ſkies?
" Thoſe fields, whence Phoebus all their moiſture drains,
" And, too profuſely fond, diſrobes the plains?
" When I vouchſafe to tread the barren ſoil,
" Thoſe rocks ſeem lovely, and thoſe deſerts ſmile;
[93] " The form thou view'ſt to ev'ry ſcene with eaſe
" Transfers its charms, and ev'ry ſcene can pleaſe.
" When I have on thoſe pathleſs wilds appear'd,
" And the lone wand'rerwith my preſence cheer'd,
" Thoſe cliffs the exile has with pleaſure view'd,
" And call'd that deſert Bliſsful Solitude!
" Nor I alone to ſuch extend my care,
" Fair-blooming Health ſurveys her altars there;
" Brown Exerciſe will lead thee where ſhe reigns,
" And with reflected luſtre gild the plains:
" With her, in flow'r of youth and beauty's pride,
" Her offspring, calm Content and Peace, reſide;
" One ready off'ring ſuits each neighb'ring ſhrine,
" And all obey their laws who practiſe mine.
" But Health averſe, from Sloth's ſmooth region flies,
" And in her abſence Pleaſure droops and dies;
" Her bright companions, Mirth, Delight, Repoſe,
" Smile where ſhe ſmiles, and ſicken when ſhe goes:
" A galaxy of pow'rs! whoſe forms appear
" For ever beauteous, and for ever near.
" Nor will ſoft Sleep to Sloth's requeſt incline,
" He from her couches flies unbid to mine.
" Vain is the ſparkling bowl, the warbling ſtrain,
" Th' incentive ſong, the labour'd viand vain!
" Where ſhe, relentleſs, reigns without control,
" And checks each gay excurſion of the ſoul;
" Unmov'd tho' Beauty, deck'd in all its charms,
" Grace the rich couch, and ſpread the ſofteſt arms;
[94] " Till joyleſs indolence ſuggeſts deſires,
" Or drugs are ſought to furniſh languid fires;
" Such languid fires as on the vitals prey,
" Barren of bliſs, but fertile of decay:
" As artful heats, apply'd to thirſty lands,
" Produce no flow'rs, and but debaſe the ſands.
" But let fair Health her cheering ſmiles impart;
" How ſweet is Nature, how ſuperfluous Art!
" 'Tis ſhe the fountain's ready draught commends,
" And ſmooths the flinty couch which Fortune lends;
" And when my hero from his toils retires,
" Fills his gay boſom with unuſual fires,
" And while no checks th' unbounded joy reprove,
" Aids and refines the genuine ſweets of love.
" His faireſt proſpect riſing trophies frame,
" His ſweeteſt muſic is the voice of Fame;
" Pleaſures to Sloth unknown! ſhe never found
" How fair the proſpect, or how ſweet the ſound.
" See Fame's gay ſtructure from yon'ſummit charms,
" And fires the manly breaſt to arts or arms;
" Nor dread the ſteep aſcent by which you riſe
" From grov'lling vales to tow'rs which reach theſkies.
" Love, fame, eſteem, 'tis labour muſt acquire,
" The ſmiling offspring of a rigid ſire!
" To fix the friend your ſervice muſt be ſhown;
" All ere they lov'd your merit lov'd their own.
" That wond'ring Greece your portrait may admire,
" That tuneful bards may ſtring for you their lyre,
[95] " That books may praiſe, or coins record your name,
" Such, ſuch rewards 'tis toil alone can claim!
" And the ſame column which diſplays to view
" The conqu'ror's name, diſplays the conqueſt too.
" 'Twas ſlow Experience, tedious miſtreſs! taught
" All that e'er nobly ſpoke or bravely fought:
" 'Twas ſhe the patriot, ſhe the bard, refin'd
" In arts that ſerve, protect, or pleaſe, mankind.
" Not the vain viſions of inactive ſchools,
" Not Fancy's maxims, not Opinion's rules,
" E'er form'd the man whoſe gen'rous warmth extends
" T' enrich his country or to ſerve his friends.
" On active worth the laurel War beſtows;
" Peace rears her olive for induſtrious brows;
" Nor earth, uncultur'd, yields its kind ſupplies,
" Nor heav'n its ſhow'rs, without a ſacrifice.
" See, far below ſuch grov'lling ſcenes of ſhame
" As lull to reſt Ignavia's ſlumb'ring dame;
" Her friends, from all the toils of Fame ſecure,
" Alas! inglorious, greater toils endure;
" Doom'd all to mourn who in her cauſe engage,
" A youth enervate, and a painful age;
" A ſickly ſapleſs maſs if Reaſon flies,
" And if ſhe linger impotently wiſe!
" A thoughtleſs train, who, pamper'd, ſleek, and gay,
" Invite old age, and revel youth away;
" From life's freſh vigour move the load of care,
" And idly place it where they leaſt can bear:
[96] " When to the mind, diſeas'd, for aid they fly,
" What kind reflection ſhall the mind ſupply?
" When with loſt health, what ſhould the loſs allay,
" Peace, peace is loſt, a comfortleſs decay!
" But to my friends, when youth, when pleaſure, flies,
" And earth's dim beauties fade before their eyes,
" Thro' death's dark viſta flow'ry tracts are ſeen,
" Elyſian plains, and groves for ever green:
" If o'er their lives a refluent glance they caſt,
" Their's is the preſent who can praiſe the paſt:
" Life has its bliſs for theſe when paſt its bloom,
" As wither'd roſes yield a late perfume.
" Serene, and ſafe from paſſion's ſtormy rage,
" How calm they glide into the port of Age!
" Of the rude voyage leſs depriv'd than eas'd;
" More tir'd than pain'd, and weaken'd than diſeas'd:
" For health on age 'tis temp'rance muſt beſtow,
" And peace from piety alone can flow;
" And all the incenſe bounteous Jove requires
" Has ſweets for him who feeds the ſacred fires.
" Sloth views the tow'rs of Fame with envious eyes,
" Deſirous ſtill, ſtill impotent to riſe.
" Oft', when reſolv'd to gain thoſe bliſsful tow'rs,
" The penſive queen the dir [...] aſcent explores,
" Comes onward, wafted by the balmy trees,
" Some ſylvan muſic, or ſome ſcented breeze;
" She turns her head, her own gay realm ſhe ſpies,
" And all the ſhort-liv'd reſolution dies.
[97] " Thus ſome ſond inſect's falt'ring pinions wave,
" Claſp'd in its fav'rite ſweets, a laſting ſlave;
" And thus in vain theſe charming viſions pleaſe
" The wretch of glory and the ſlave of eaſe,
" Doom'd ever in ignoble ſtate to pine,
" Boaſt her own ſcenes, and languiſh after mine.
" But ſhun her ſnares; nor let the world exclaim
" Thy birth, which was thy glory, prov'd thy ſhame.
" With early hope thine infant actions fir'd,
" Let manhood crown what infancy inſpir'd;
" Let gen'rous toils reward with health thy days,
" Prolong thy prime, and eternize thy praiſe.
" The bold exploit that charms th' atteſting age,
" To lateſt times ſhall gen'rous hearts engage;
" And with that myrtle ſhall thy ſhrine be crown'd,
" With which, alive, thy graceful brows were bound,
" Till Time ſhall bid thy virtues freely bloom,
" And raiſe a temple where it found a tomb.
" Then in their feaſts thy name ſhall Grecians join,
" Shall pour the ſparkling juice to Jove's and thine:
" Thine, us'd in war, ſhall raiſe their native fire;
" Thine, us'd in peace, their mutual faith inſpire.
" Dulneſs, perhaps, thro' want of ſight, may blame,
" And Spleen, with odious induſtry, defame;
" And that the honours giv'n with wonder view,
" And this in ſecret ſadneſs own them due.
" Contempt and Envy were by Fate deſign'd
" The rival tyrants which divide mankind;
[98] " Contempt, which none but who deſerve can bear,
" While Envy's wounds the ſmiles of Fame repair:
" For know, the gen'rous thine exploits ſhall fire,
" Thine ev'ry friend it ſuits thee to require;
" Lov'd by the gods, and, till their ſeats I ſhow,
" Lov'd by the good, their images below."
" Ceaſe, lovely Maid! fair daughter of the Skies!
" My guide! my queen!" th' ecſtatic youth replies:
" In thee I trace a form deſign'd for ſway,
" Which chiefs may court, and kings with pride obey;
" And by thy bright immortal friends I ſwear,
" Thy fair idea ſhall no toils impair.
" Lead me, O lead me! where whole hoſts of foes
" Thy form depreciate, and thy friends oppoſe.
" Welcome all toils th' inequal Fates decree,
" While toils endear thy faithful charge to thee.
" Such be my cares, to bind th' oppreſſive hand,
" And cruſh the fetters of an injur'd land;
" To ſee the monſter's noxious life reſign'd,
" And tyrants quell'd, the monſters of mankind!
" Nature ſhall ſmile to view the vanquiſh'd brood,
" And none but Envy riot unſubdu'd.
" In cloiſter'd ſtate let ſelfiſh ſages dwell,
" Proud that their heart is narrow as their cell!
" And boaſt their mazy labyrinth of rules,
" Far leſs the friends of Virtue than the fools;
" Yet ſuch in vain thy fav'ring ſmiles pretend,
" For he is thine who proves his country's friend.
[99] " Thus when my life, well-ſpent, the good enjoy,
" And the mean envious labour to deſtroy;
" When, ſtrongly lur'd by Fame's contiguous ſhrine,
" I yet devote my choicer vows to thine;
" If all my toils thy promis'd favour claim,
" O lead thy fav'rite thro' the gates of Fame!"
He ceas'd his vows, and, with diſdainful air,
He turn'd to blaſt the late exulting fair:
But vaniſh'd, fled to ſome more friendly ſhore,
The conſcious phantom's beauty pleas'd no more;
Convinc'd her ſpurious charms of dreſs and face
Claim'd a quick conqueſt or a ſure diſgrace.
Fantaſtic Pow'r! whoſe tranſient charms allur'd,
While Error's miſt the reas'ning mind obſcur'd;
Not ſuch the vict'reſs, Virtue's conſtant queen,
Endur'd the teſt of truth, and dar'd be ſeen;
Her bright'ning form and features ſeem'd to own
'Twas all her wiſh, her int'reſt, to be known;
And when his longing view the fair declin'd,
Left a full image of her charms behind.
Thus reigns the moon, with furtive ſplendour crown'd,
While glooms oppreſs us, and thick ſhades ſurround;
But let the ſource of light its beams diſplay,
Languid and faint the mimic flames decay,
And all the ſick'ning ſplendour fades away.
THE RUIN'D ABBEY: OR, THE EFFECTS OF SUPERSTITION.
[147]AT length fair Peace, with olive crown'd, regains
Her lawful throne, and to the ſacred haunts
Of wood or fount the frighted Muſe returns.
Happy the bard who, from his native hills,
Soft muſing on a ſummer's eve, ſurveys
His azure ſtream, with penſile woods enclos'd,
Or o'er the glaſſy ſurface with his friend,
Or faithful fair, thro' bord'ring willows green
Waſts his ſmall frigate. Fearleſs he of ſhouts
Or taunts, the rhet'ric of the wat'ry crew,
That ape confuſion from the realms they rule;
Fearleſs of theſe; who ſhares the gentler voice
Of peace and muſic; birds of ſweeteſt ſong
Attune from native boughs their various lay,
And cheer the foreſt; birds of brighter plume
With buſy pinion ſkim the glitt'ring wave,
And tempt the ſun, ambitious to diſplay
Their ſeveral merit, while the vocal flute
Or number'd verſe, by female voice endear'd,
Crowns his delight, and mollifies the ſcene.
If ſolitude his wand'ring ſteps invite
To ſome more deep receſs, (for hours there are
When gay, when ſocial, minds to Friendſhip's voice
Or Beauty's charm her wild abodes prefer)
[148] How pleas'd he treads her venerable ſhades,
Her ſolemn courts! the centre of the grove!
The root-built cave, by far extended rocks
Around emboſom'd, how it ſooths the ſoul!
If ſcoop'd at firſt by ſuperſtitious hands
The rugged cell receiv'd alone the ſhoals
Of bigot minds, Religion dwells not here,
Yet Virtue pleas'd, at intervals, retires:
Yet here may Wiſdom, as ſhe walks the maze,
Some ſerious truths collect, the rules of life,
And ſerious truths of mightier weight than gold!
I aſk not wealth; but let me hoard with care,
With frugal cunning, with a niggard's art,
A few fix'd principles, in early life,
Ere indolence impede the ſearch, explor'd;
Then like old Latimer, when age impairs
My judgment's eye, when quibbling ſchools attack
My grounded hope, or ſubtler wits deride,
Will I not bluſh to ſhun the vain debate,
And this mine anſwer; "Thus, 'twas thus I thought,
" My mind yet vigorous, and my ſoul entire;
" Thus will I think, averſe to liſten more
" To intricate diſcuſſion, prone to ſtray.
" Perhaps my reaſon may but ill defend
" My ſettled faith; my mind, with age impair'd,
" Too ſure its own infirmities declare.
" But I am arm'd by caution, ſtudious youth,
" And early foreſight: now the winds may riſe,
[149] " The tempeſt whiſtle, and the billows roar;
" My pinnace rides in port, deſpoil'd and worn,
" Shatter'd by time and ſtorms, but while it ſhuns
" Th' inequal conflict, and declines the deep,
" Sees the ſtrong veſſel fluctuate, leſs ſecure."
Thus while he ſtrays, a thouſand rural ſcenes
Suggeſt inſtruction, and inſtructing pleaſe.
And ſee betwixt the grove's extended arms
An Abbey's rude remains attract thy view,
Gilt by the mid-day ſun: with ling'ring ſtep
Produce thine axe, (for, aiming to deſtroy
Tree, branch, or ſhade, for never ſhall thy breaſt
Too long deliberate) with tim'rous hand
Remove th' obſtructive bough; nor yet refuſe,
Tho' ſighing, to deſtroy that fav'rite pine,
Rais'd by thine hand, in its luxuriant prime
Of beauty fair, that ſcreens the vaſt remains.
Aggriev'd, but conſtant as the Roman ſire,
The rigid Manlius, when his conqu'ring ſon
Bled by a parent's voice, the cruel meed
Of virtuous ardour timeleſsly diſplay'd;
Nor ceaſe till, thro' the gloomy road, the pile
Gleam unobſtructed: thither oft' thine eye
Shall ſweetly wander; thence returning, ſooth
With penſive ſcenes thy philoſophic mind.
Theſe were thy haunts, thy opulent abodes,
O Superſtition! hence the dire diſeaſe
(Balanc'd with which the fam'd Athenian peſt
[150] Were a ſhort headach, were the trivial pain
Of tranſient indigeſtion) ſeiz'd mankind.
Long time ſhe rag'd, and ſcarce a ſouthern gale
Warm'd our chill air, unloaded with the threats
Of tyrant Rome; but futile all, till ſhe,
Rome's abler legate, magnify'd their pow'r,
And in a thouſand horrid forms attir'd.
Where then was truth to ſanctify the page
Of Britiſh annals? if a foe expir'd,
The perjur'd monk ſuborn'd infernal ſhrieks
And fiends to ſnatch at the departing ſoul
With helliſh emulation: if a friend,
High o'er his roof exultant angels tune
Their golden lyres, and waft him to the ſkies.
What then were vows, were oaths, were plighted faith?
The ſovereign's juſt, the ſubject's loyal pact,
To cheriſh mutual good, annull'd and vain,
By Roman magic, grew an idle ſcroll
Ere the frail ſanction of the wax was cold.
With thee, Plantagenet
*! from civil broils
The land a while reſpir'd, and all was peace.
Then Becket roſe, and, impotent of mind,
From regal courts with lawleſs fury march'd
The church's blood-ſtain'd convicts, and forgave,
Bid murd'rous prieſts the ſov'reign frown contemn,
And with unhallow'd croſier bruis'd the crown.
Yet yielded not ſupinely tame a prince
[151] Of Henry's virtues; learn'd, courageous, wiſe,
Of fair ambition. Long his regal ſoul,
Firm and erect, the peeviſh prieſt exil'd,
And brav'd the fury of revengeful Rome.
In vain! let one faint malady diffuſe
The penſive gloom which Superſtition loves,
And ſee him, dwindled to a recreant groom,
Rein the proud palfrey while the prieſt aſcends!
Was Coeur-de-Lion
* bleſs'd with whiter days?
Here the cowl'd zealots with united cries
Urg'd the cruſade; and ſee! of half his ſtores
Deſpoil'd the wretch whoſe wiſer boſom choſe
To bleſs his friends, his race, his native land:
Of ten fair ſuns that roll'd their annual race,
Not one beheld him on his vacant throne;
While haughty Longchamp
†, 'mid his liv'ry'd files
Of wanton vaſſals, ſpoil'd his faithful realm,
Battling in foreign fields; collecting wide
A laurel harveſt for a pillag'd land.
Oh! dear-bought trophies! when a prince deſerts
His drooping realm to pluck the barren ſprays!
When faithleſs John uſurp'd the ſully'd crown,
What ample tyranny! the groaning land
Deem'd earth, deem'd heav'n, its ſoe! Six tedious years
Our helpleſs fathers in deſpair obey'd
The papal interdict; and who obey'd
The ſov'reign plunder'd. O inglorious days!
When the French tyrant, by the futile grant
[152] Of papal reſcript, claim'd Britannia's throne,
And durſt invade: be ſuch inglorious days
Or hence forgot, or not recall'd in vain!
Scarce had the tortur'd ear, dejected, heard
Rome's loud anathema but heartleſs, dead
To ev'ry purpoſe, men nor wiſh'd to live
Nor dar'd to die. The poor laborious hind
Heard the dire curſe, and from his trembling hand
Fell the neglected crook that rul'd the plain;
Thence journeying home, in ev'ry cloud he ſees
A vengeful angel, in whoſe waving ſcroll
He reads damnation: ſees its ſable train
Of grim attendants pencil'd by Deſpair!
The weary pilgrim from remoter climes
By painful ſteps arriv'd, his home, his friends,
His offspring left, to laviſh on the ſhrine
Of ſome far-honour'd ſaint his coſtly ſtores,
Inverts his footſtep, ſickens at the ſight
Of the barr'd fane, and ſilent ſheds his tear.
The wretch, whoſe hope by ſtern Oppreſſion chas'd
From ev'ry earthly bliſs, ſtill as it ſaw
Triumphant wrong, took wing and flew to heav'n,
And reſted there, now mourn'd his refuge loſt
And wonted peace. The ſacred fane was barr'd,
And the lone altar, where the mourners throng'd
To ſupplicate remiſſion, ſmok'd no more;
While the green weed, luxuriant round uproſe.
Some from their deathbed, whoſe delirious faith
[153] Thro' ev'ry ſtage of life to Rome's decrees
Obſequious, humbly hop'd to die in peace,
Now ſaw the ghaſtly king approach, begirt
In tenfold terrors; now expiring heard
The laſt loud clarion ſound, and Heav'n's decree
With unremitting vengeance bar the ſkies.
Nor light the grief, by Superſtition weigh'd,
That their diſhonour'd corſe, ſhut from the verge
Of hallow'd earth, or tutelary fane,
Muſt ſleep with brutes, their vaſſals, on the field,
Unneath ſome path, in marle unexorcis'd!
No ſolemn bell extort a neighbour's tear!
No tongue of prieſt pronounce their ſoul ſecure,
Nor fondeſt friend aſſure their peace obtain'd!
The prieſt, alas! ſo boundleſs was the ill!
He, like the flock he pillag'd, pin'd forlorn;
The vivid vermeil fled his fady cheek,
And his big paunch, diſtended with the ſpoils
Of half his flock, emaciate, groan'd beneath
Superior pride and mightier luſt of pow'r!
'Twas now Rome's fondeſt friend, whoſe meagre hand
Told to the midnight lamp his holy beads
With nice preciſion, felt the deeper wound,
As his gull'd ſoul rever'd the conclave more.
Whom did the ruin ſpare? for wealth, for pow'r,
Birth, honour, virtue, enemy, and friend,
Sunk helpleſs, in the dreary gulf involv'd,
And one capricious curſe envelop'd all!
[154]Were kings ſecure: in tow'ring ſtations born,
In flatt'ry nurs'd, inur'd to ſcorn mankind,
Or view diminiſh'd from their ſite ſublime;
As when a ſhepherd, from the lofty brow
Of ſome proud cliff ſurveys his leſs'ning flock
In ſnowy groups diffuſive ſcud the vale.
A while the furious menace John return'd,
And breath'd defiance loud. Alas! too ſoon
Allegiance, ſick'ning, ſaw its ſov'reign yield
An angry prey to ſcruples not his own.
The loyal ſoldier, girt around with ſtrength,
Who ſtole from mirth and wine his blooming years,
And ſeiz'd the fauchion, reſolute to guard
His ſovereign's right, impalſy'd at the news,
Finds the firm bias of his ſoul revers'd
For foul deſertion, drops the lifted ſteel,
And quits Fame's noble harveſt, to expire
The death of monks, of ſurfeit and of ſloth!
At length, fatigu'd with wrongs, the ſervile king
Drain'd from his land its ſmall remaining ſtores
To buy remiſſion. But could theſe obtain?
No! reſolute in wrongs the prieſt obdur'd,
Till crawling baſe to Rome's deputed ſlave
His fame, his people, and his crown, he gave.
Mean monarch! ſlighted, brav'd, abhorr'd, before!
And now, appeas'd by delegated ſway,
The wily pontiff ſcorns not to recall
His interdictions. Now the ſacred doors
[155] Admit repentant multitudes, prepar'd
To buy deceit; admit obſequious tribes
Of ſatraps! princes! crawling to the ſhrine
Of ſainted villany! the pompous tomb
Dazzling with gems and gold, or in a cloud
Of incenſe wreath'd, amidſt a drooping land
That ſigh'd for bread! 'Tis thus the Indian clove
Diſplays its verdant leaf, its crimſon flow'r,
And ſheds its odours, while the flocks around,
Hungry and faint, the barren ſands explore
In vain! nor plant nor herb endears the ſoil,
Drain'd and exhauſt to ſwell its thirſty pores,
And furniſh luxury—Yet, yet in vain
Britannia ſtrove: and whether artful Rome
Careſs'd or curs'd her, Superſtition rag'd,
And blinded, fetter'd, and deſpoil'd, the land.
At length ſome murd'rous monk, with pois'nous
Expell'd the life his brethren robb'd of peace.
Nor yet ſurceas'd with John's diſaſtrous fate art,
Pontific fury: Engliſh wealth exhauſt,
The ſequent reign
* beheld the beggar'd ſhore
Grim with Italian uſurers, prepar'd
To lend, for griping unexampled hire,
To lend—what Rome might pillage uncontroll'd.
For now with more extenſive havoc rag'd
Relentleſs Greg'ry, with a thouſand arts,
And each rapacious, born to drain the world!
Nor ſhall the Muſe repeat how oft' he blew
[156] The croiſe's trumpet; then for ſums of gold
Annull'd the vow, and bade the falſe alarm
Swell the groſs hoards of Henry or his own:
Nor ſhall ſhe tell how pontiffs dar'd repeal
The beſt of charters! dar'd abſolve the tie
If Britiſh kings, by legal oath reſtrain'd:
Nor can ſhe dwell on argoſies of gold
From Albion's realm to ſervile ſhores convey'd,
Wrung from her ſons, and ſpeeded by her kings!
Oh, irkſome days! when wicked thrones combine
With papal craft to gull their native land!
Such was our fate while Rome's director, taught
Of ſubjects born to be their monarch's prey,
To toil for monks, for gluttony to toil,
For vacant gluttony; extortion, fraud,
For av'rice, envy, pride, revenge, and ſhame!
O doctrine breath'd from Stygian caves! exhal'd
From inmoſt Erebus!—Such Henry's reign!
Urging his loyal realm's reluctant hand
To wield the peaceful ſword, by John erewhile
Forc'd from its ſcabbard, and with burniſh'd lance
Eſſay the ſavage cure, domeſtic war!
And now ſome nobler ſpirits chas'd the miſt
Of gen'ral darkneſs. Groſted
* now adorn'd
The mitred wreath he wore, with Reaſon's ſword
Stagg'ring Deluſion's frauds; at length beneath
Rome's interdict expiring calm, reſign'd
[157] No vulgar ſoul, that dar'd to Heav'n appeal!
But, ah! this fertile glebe, this fair domain,
Had well nigh ceded to the ſlothful hands
Of monks libidinous, ere Edward's care
The laviſh hand of deathbed Fear reſtrain'd.
Yet was he clear of Superſtition's taint?
He, too, miſdeemful of his wholeſome law,
Ev'n he, expiring, gave his treaſur'd gold
To fatten monks on Salem's diſtant ſoil!
Yes, the Third Edward's breaſt, to papal ſway
So little prone, and fierce in honour's cauſe,
Could Superſtition quell! before the tow'rs
Of haggard Paris, at the thunder's voice
He drops the ſword, and ſigns ignoble peace!
But ſtill the Night, by Romiſh art diffus'd,
Collects her clouds, and with ſlow pace recedes;
When, by ſoft Bourdeau's braver queen approv'd,
Bold Wickliff roſe; and while the bigot pow'r
Amidſt her native darkneſs ſkulk'd ſecure,
The demon vaniſh'd as he ſpread the day.
So from his boſom Cacus breath'd of old
The pitchy cloud, and in a night of ſmoke
Secure, a while his recreant life ſuſtain'd,
Till fam'd Alcides, o'er his ſubtleſt wiles
Victorious, cheer'd the ravag'd nations round.
Hail, honour'd Wickliff! enterpriſing age!
An Epicurus in the cauſe of truth!
For 'tis not radiant ſuns, the jovial hours
[158] Of youthful ſpring, an ether all ſerene,
Nor all the verdure of Campania's vales,
Can chaſe religious gloom! 'Tis reaſon, thought,
The light, the radiance, that pervades the ſoul,
And ſheds its beams on heav'n's myſterious way!
As yet this light but glimmer'd, and again
Error prevail'd; while kings, by force uprais'd,
Let looſe the rage of bigots on their foes,
And ſeek affection by the dreadful boon
Of licens'd murder. Ev'n the kindeſt prince,
The moſt extended breaſt, the royal Hal!
All unrelenting heard the Lollards' cry
Burſt from the centre of remorſeleſs flames;
Their ſhrieks endur'd! O ſtain to martial praiſe!
When Cobham, gen'rous as the noble peer
That wears his honours, paid the fatal price
Of virtue blooming ere the ſtorms were laid!
'Twas thus, alternate, truth's precarious flame
Decay'd or flouriſh'd. With malignant eye
The pontiff ſaw Britannia's golden fleece,
Once all his own, inveſt her worthier ſons!
Her verdant vallies and her fertile plains,
Yellow with grain, abjure his hateful ſway!
Eſſay'd his utmoſt art, and inly own'd
No labours bore proportion to the prize.
So when the tempter view'd, with envious eye,
The firſt fair pattern of the female frame,
All Nature's beauties in one form diſplay'd,
[159] And centring there, in wild amaze he ſtood;
Then only envying Heav'n's creative hand,
Wiſh'd to his gloomy reign his envious arts
Might win this prize, and doubled ev'ry ſnare.
And vain were reaſon, courage, learning, all,
Till pow'r accede; till Tudor's wild caprice
Smile on their cauſe; Tudor! whoſe tyrant reign
With mental freedom crown'd, the beſt of kings
Might envious view, and ill prefer their own!
Then Wolſey roſe, by Nature form'd to ſeek
Ambition's trophies, by addreſs to win,
By temper to enjoy—whoſe humbler birth
Taught the gay ſcenes of pomp to dazzle more.
Then from its tow'ring height with horrid ſound
Ruſh'd the proud Abbey: then the vaulted roofs,
Torn from their walls, diſclos'd the wanton ſcene
Of monkiſh chaſtity! Each angry friar
Crawl'd from his bedded ſtrumpet, mutt'ring low
An ineffectual curſe. The pervious nooks
That, ages paſt, convey'd the guileful prieſt
To play ſome image on the gaping crowd
Imbibe the novel day-light, and expoſe,
Obvious, the fraudful engin'ry of Rome.
As tho' this op'ning earth to nether realms
Should flaſh meridian day, the hooded race
Shudder, abaſh'd to find their cheats diſplay'd,
And, conſcious of their guilt, and pleas'd to wave
Its fearful meed, reſign'd their fair domain.
[160]Nor yet ſupine, nor void of rage, retir'd
The peſt gigantic, whoſe revengeful ſtroke
Ting'd the red annals of Maria's reign,
When from the tend'reſt breaſt each wayward prieſt
Could baniſh mercy and implant a fiend!
When Cruelty the fun'ral pyre uprear'd,
And bound Religion there, and fir'd the baſe!
When the ſame blaze, which on each tortur'd limb
Fed with luxuriant rage, in ev'ry face
Triumphant faith appear'd, and ſmiling hope.
O bleſs'd Eliza! from thy piercing beam
Forth flew this hated fiend, the child of Rome;
Driv'n to the verge of Albion, linger'd there,
Then with her James receding, caſt behind
One angry frown, and ſought more ſervile climes.
Henceforth they ply'd the long-continued taſk
Of righteous havoc, cov'ring diſtant fields
With the wrought remnants of the ſhatter'd pile,
While thro' the land the muſing pilgrim ſees
A tract of brighter green, and in the midſt
Appears a mould'ring wall, with ivy crown'd,
Or Gothic turret, pride of ancient days!
Now but of uſe to grace a rural ſcene,
To bound our viſtas, and to glad the ſons
Of George's reign, reſerv'd for fairer times!
LOVE AND HONOUR.
[161]Sed neque Medorum ſilvae, ditiſſima terra
Nec pulcher Ganges, atque auro turbidus Haemus,
Laudibus Angligenum certent; non Bactra, nec Indi,
Totaque turriferis Panchaia pinguis arenis.
IMITATION.
Yet let not Median woods (abundant tract!)
Nor Ganges
* fair, nor Haemus
†, miſer-like,
Proud of his hoarded gold, preſume to vye
With Britain's boaſt and praiſe; nor Perſian Bactra
§,
Nor India's coaſts, nor all Panchaia's
‖ ſands,
Rich, and exulting in their lofty towers.
LET the green olive glad Heſperian ſhores;
Her tawny citron and her orange groves,
Theſe let Iberia boaſt; but if in vain
To win the ſtranger plant's diffuſive ſmile
The Briton labours, yet our native minds,
Our conſtant boſoms, theſe the dazzled world
May view with envy; theſe Iberian dames
Survey with fix'd eſteem and fond deſire.
Hapleſs Elvira! thy diſaſtrous fate
May well this truth explain, nor ill adorn
[162] The Britiſh lyre; then chiefly, if the Muſe,
Nor vain nor partial, from the ſimple guiſe
Of ancient record catch the penſive lay,
And in leſs grov'lling accents give to fame.
Elvira! lovelieſt maid! th' Iberian realm
Could boaſt no purer breaſt, no ſprightlier mind,
No race more ſplendent, and no form ſo fair.
Such was the chance of war, this peerleſs maid,
In life's luxuriant bloom, enrich'd the ſpoil
Of Britiſh victors, vict'ry's nobleſt pride!
She, ſhe alone, amid the wailful train
Of captive maids, aſſign'd to Henry's care,
Lord of her life, her fortune, and her fame!
He, gen'rous youth! with no penurious hand
The tedious moments that unjoyous roll
Where Freedom's cheerful radiance ſhines no more
Eſſay'd to ſoften; conſcious of the pang
That Beauty feels, to waſte its fleeting hours
In ſome dim fort, by foreign rule reſtrain'd,
Far from the haunts of men or eye of day!
Sometimes, to cheat her boſom of its cares,
Her kind protector number'd o'er the toils
Himſelf had worn; the frowns of angry ſeas,
Or hoſtile rage, or faithleſs friend, more fell
Than ſtorm or foe; if haply ſhe might find
Her cares diminiſh'd; fruitleſs, fond eſſay!
Now to her lovely hand, with modeſt awe,
The tender lute he gave; ſhe, not averſe,
[163] Nor deſtitute of ſkill, with willing hand
Call'd forth angelic ſtrains; the ſacred debt
Of gratitude, ſhe ſaid, whoſe juſt commands
Still might her hand with equal pride obey!
Nor to the melting ſounds the nymph refus'd
Her vocal art; harmonious as the ſtrain
Of ſome impriſon'd lark, who, daily cheer'd
By guardian cares, repays them with a ſong,
Nor droops, nor deems ſweet liberty reſign'd.
The ſong, not artleſs, had ſhe fram'd to paint
Diſaſtrous paſſion; how, by tyrant laws
Of idiot cuſtom ſway'd, ſome ſoft-ey'd fair
Lov'd only one, nor dar'd that love reveal!
How the ſoft anguiſh baniſh'd from her cheek
The damaſk roſe full-blown; a fever came,
And from her boſom forc'd the plaintive tale;
Then, ſwift as light, he ſought the love-lorn maid,
But vainly ſought her, torn by ſwifter fate
To join the tenants of the myrtle ſhade,
Love's mournful victims on the plains below.
Sometimes, as Fancy ſpoke the pleaſing taſk,
She taught her artful needle to diſplay
The various pride of ſpring; then ſwift upſprung
Thickets of myrtle, eglantine, and roſe:
There might you ſee, on gentle toils intent,
A train of buſy Loves; ſome pluck the flow'r,
Some twine the garland, ſome with grave grimace
Around a vacant warrior caſt the wreath.
[164] 'Twas paint, 'twas life! and ſure to piercing eyes
The warrior's face depictur'd Henry's mien.
Now had the gen'rous chief with joy perus'd
The royal ſcroll, which to their native home,
Their ancient rights, uninjur'd, unredeem'd,
Reſtor'd the captives. Forth with rapid haſte
To glad his fair Elvira's ear he ſprung,
Fir'd by the bliſs he panted to convey;
But fir'd in vain! Ah! what was his amaze,
His fond diſtreſs, when o'er her pallid face
Dejection reign'd, and from her lifeleſs hand
Down dropt the myrtle's fair unfiniſh'd flow'r!
Speechleſs ſhe ſtood; at length with accents faint,
" Well may my native ſhore," ſhe ſaid, "reſound
" Thy monarch's praiſe; and ere Elvira prove
" Of thine forgetful, flow'rs ſhall ceaſe to feel
" The foſt'ring breeze, and Nature change her laws!"
And now the grateful edict wide alarm'd
The Britiſh hoſt. Around the ſmiling youths,
Call'd to their native ſcenes, with willing haſte
Their fleet unmoor, impatient of the love
That weds each boſom to its native ſoil.
The patriot paſſion! ſtrong in ev'ry clime,
How juſtly their who find no foreign ſweets
To diſſipate their loves or match their own.
Not ſo Elvira! ſhe, diſaſtrous maid!
Was doubly captive; pow'r nor chance could looſe
The ſubtle bands; ſhe lov'd her gen'rous foe;
[165] She, where her Henry dwelt, her Henry ſmil'd,
Could term her native ſhore; her native ſhore
By him deſerted, ſome unfriendly ſtrand,
Strange, bleak, forlorn! a deſert waſte and wild.
The fleet careen'd, the wind propitious fill'd
The ſwelling ſails, the glitt'ring tranſports wav'd
Their pennants gay, and halcyons' azure wing,
With flight auſpicious, ſkimm'd the placid main.
On her lone couch in tears Elvira lay,
And chid th' officious wind, the tempting ſea,
And wiſh'd a ſtorm as mercileſs as tore
Her lab'ring boſom. Fondly now ſhe ſtrove
To baniſh paſſion; now the vaſſal days,
The captive moments, that ſo ſmoothly paſt,
By many an art recall'd; now from her lute
With trembling fingers call'd the fav'rite ſounds
Which Henry deign'd to praiſe; and now eſſay'd,
With mimic chains of ſilken fillets wove,
To paint her captive ſtate; if any fraud
Might to her love the pleaſing ſcenes prolong,
And with the dear idea feaſt the ſoul.
But now the chief return'd, prepar'd to launch
On Ocean's willing breaſt, and bid adieu
To his fair pris'ner. She, ſoon as ſhe heard
His hated errand, now no more conceal'd
The raging flame, but with a ſpreading bluſh
And riſing ſigh the latent pang diſclos'd.
" Yes, gen'rous youth! I ſee thy boſom glow
[166] " With virtuous tranſport, that the taſk is thine
" To ſolve my chains, and to my weeping friends,
" And ev'ry longing relative, reſtore
" A ſoft-ey'd maid, a mild offenceleſs prey!
" But know, my Soldier! never youthful mind,
" Torn from the laviſh joys of wild expenſe
" By him he loath'd, and in a dungeon bound
" To languiſh out his bloom, could match the pains
" This ill-ſtarr'd freedom gives my tortur'd mind.
" What call I freedom? is it that theſe limbs,
" From rigid bolts ſecure, may wander far
" From him I love? Alas! ere I may boaſt
" That ſacred bleſſing, ſome ſuperior pow'r
" To mortal kings, to ſublunary thrones,
" Muſt looſe my paſſion, muſt unchain my ſoul:
" Ev'n that I loathe; all liberty I loathe!
" But moſt the joyleſs privilege to gaze
" With cold indiff'rence where deſert is love.
" True, I was born an alien to thoſe eyes
" I aſk alone to pleaſe; my fortune's crime!
" And, ah! this flatter'd form, by dreſs endear'd
" To Spaniſh eyes, by dreſs may thine offend,
" Whilſt I, ill-fated maid! ordain'd to ſtrive
" With cuſtom's load beneath its weight expire.
" Yet Henry's beauties knew in foreign garb
" To vanquiſh me; his form, howe'er diſguis'd,
" To me were fatal! no fantaſtic robe
" That e'er Caprice invented, Cuſtom wore,
" Or Folly ſmil'd on, could eclipſe thy charms.
[167]" Perhaps by birth decreed, by Fortune plac'd
" Thy country's foe, Elvira's warmeſt plea
" Seems but the ſubtler accent fraud inſpires;
" My tend'reſt glances but the ſpecious flow'rs,
" That ſhade the viper while ſhe plots her wound.
" And can the trembling candidate of love
" Awake thy fears? and can a female breaſt,
" By ties of grateful duty bound, enſnare?
" Is there no brighter mien, no ſofter ſmile
" For Love to wear, to dark Deceit unknown?
" Heav'n ſearch my ſoul! and if thro' all its cells
" Lurk the pernicious drop of pois'nous guile,
" Full on my ſenceleſs head its phial'd wrath
" May Fate exhauſt, and for my happieſt hour
" Exalt the vengeance I prepare for thee!
" Ah me! nor Henry's nor his country's foe,
" On thee I gaz'd, and Reaſon ſoon diſpell'd
" Dim Error's gloom, and to thy favour'd iſle
" Aſſign'd its total merit, unreſtrain'd.
" Oh! lovely region to the candid eye!
" 'Twas there my fancy ſaw the Virtues dwell,
" The Loves, the Graces, play, and bleſs'd the ſoil
" That nurtur'd thee! for ſure the Virtues form'd
" Thy gen'rous breaſt, the Loves, the Graces, plann'd
" Thy ſhapely limbs. Relation, birth, eſſay'd
" Their partial pow'r in vain; again I gaz'd,
" And Albion's iſle appear'd, amidſt a tract
[168] " Of ſavage waſtes, the darling of the ſkies!
" And thou by Nature form'd, by Fate aſſign'd,
" To paint the genius of thy native ſhore.
" 'Tis true, with flow'rs, with many a dazzling ſcene
" Of burniſh'd plants, to lure a female eye,
" Iberia glows; but, ah! the genial ſun
" That gilds the lemon's fruit, or ſcents the flow'r,
" On Spaniſh minds, a nation's nobler boaſt!
" Beams forth ungentle influences. There
" Sits Jealouſy enthron'd, and at each ray
" Exultant lights his ſlow-conſuming fires.
" Not ſuch thy charming region; long before
" My ſweet experience taught me to decide
" Of Engliſh worth, the ſound had pleas'd mine ear.
" Is there that ſavage coaſt, that rude ſojourn,
" Stranger to Britiſh worth? the worth which forms
" The kindeſt friends; the moſt tremendous foes;
" Firſt, beſt ſupports of liberty and love!
" No, let ſubjected India, while ſhe throws
" O'er Spaniſh deeds the veil, your praiſe reſound.
" Long as I heard, or ere in ſtory read
" Of Engliſh fame, my bias'd partial breaſt
" Wiſh'd them ſucceſs; and happieſt ſhe, I cry'd,
" Of women happieſt ſhe, who ſhares the love,
" The fame, the virtues, of an Engliſh lord.
" And now, what ſhall I ſay? Bleſs'd be the hour
" Your fair-built veſſels touch'd th' Iberian ſhores:
" Bleſs'd, did I ſay, the time? if I may bleſs
[169] " That lov'd event, let Henry's ſmiles declare.
" Our hearts and cities won, will Henry's youth
" Forego its nobler conqueſt? will he ſlight
" The ſoft endearments of the lovelier ſpoil?
" And yet Iberia's ſons, with ev'ry vow
" Of laſting faith, have ſworn theſe humble charms
" Were not excell'd; the ſource of all their pains,
" And love her juſt deſert, who ſues for love,
" But ſues to thee, while natives ſigh in vain.
" Perhaps in Henry's eye (for vulgar minds
" Diſſent from his) it ſpreads an hateful ſtain
" On honeſt Fame amid his train to bear
" A female friend. Then learn, my gentle youth!
" Not Love himſelf, with all the pointed pains
" That ſtore his quiver, ſhall ſeduce my ſoul
" From honour's laws. Elvira once deny'd
" A conſort's name, more ſwift than lightning flies
" When elements diſcordant vex the ſky,
" Shall, bluſhing, from the form ſhe loves retire.
" Yet if the ſpecious wiſh the vulgar voice
" Has titled Prudence, ſways a ſoul like thine,
" In gems or gold what proud Iberian dame
" Eclipſes me? Nor paint the dreary ſtorms
" Or hair-breadth 'ſcapes that haunt the boundleſs
" And force from tender eyes the ſilent tear;
" When Mem'ry to the penſive maid ſuggeſts deep,
" In full contraſt the ſafe domeſtic ſcene
" For theſe reſign'd. Beyond the frantic rage
[170] " Of conqu'ring heroes brave, the female mind,
" When ſteel'd by love, in Love's moſt horrid way
" Beholds not danger, or, beholding, ſcorns.
" Heav'n take my life, but let it crown my love!"
She ceas'd, and ere his words her fate decreed,
Impatient, watch'd the language of his eye:
There Pity dwelt, and from its tender ſphere
Sent looks of love, and faithleſs hopes inſpir'd.
" Forgive me, gen'rous maid!" the youth return'd,
" If by thy accents charm'd, thus long I bore
" To let ſuch ſweetneſs plead, alas! in vain!
" Thy virtue merits more than crowns can yield
" Of ſolid bliſs, or happieſt love beſtow:
" But ere from native ſhores I plough'd the main,
" To one dear maid, by virtue and by charms
" Alone endear'd, my plighted vows I gave,
" To guard my faith, whatever chance ſhould wait
" My warring ſword: if conqueſt, fame, and ſpoil,
" Grac'd my return, before her feet to pour
" The glitt'ring treaſure, and the laurel wreath,
" Enjoying conqueſt then, and fame and ſpoil:
" If Fortune frown'd adverſe, and Death forbade
" The bliſsful union, with my lateſt breath
" To dwell on Medway's and Maria's name.
" This ardent vow deep-rooted, from my ſoul
" No dangers tore; this vow my boſom fir'd
" To conquer danger, and the ſpoil enjoy.
" Her ſhall I leave, with fair events elate,
[171] " Who crown'd mine humbleſt fortune with her love?
" Her ſhall I leave, who now, perchance, alone
" Climbs the proud cliff, and chides my ſlow return?
" And ſhall that veſſel, whoſe approaching ſails
" Shall ſwell her breaſt with ecſtaſies, convey
" Death to her hopes, and anguiſh to her ſoul?
" No! may the deep my villain corſe devour,
" If all the wealth Iberian mines conceal,
" If all the charms Iberian maids diſcloſe,
" If thine, Elvira, thine, uniting all!
" Thus far prevail—nor can thy virtuous breaſt
" Demand what honour, faith, and love, denies."
" Oh! happy ſhe," rejoin'd the penſive maid,
" Who ſhares thy fame, thy virtue, and thy love!
" And be ſhe happy! thy diſtinguiſh'd choice
" Declares her worth, and vindicates her claim.
" Farewell my luckleſs hopes! my flatt'ring dreams
" Of rapt'rous days! my guilty ſuit, farewell!
" Yet fond howe'er my plea, or deep the wound
" That waits my fame, let not the random ſhaft
" Of Cenſure pieree with me th' Iberian dames;
" They love with caution, and with happier ſtars.
" And, oh! by pity mov'd, reſtrain the taunts
" Of levity, nor brand Elvira's flame;
" By merit rais'd, by gratitude approv'd,
" By hope confirm'd, with artleſs truth reveal'd,
" Let, let me ſay, but for one matchle [...]s maid
" Of happier birth, with mutual ardour crown'd
[172]" Theſe radiant gems, which burniſh Happineſs,
" But mock Misfortune, to thy fav'rite's hand
" With care convey; and well may ſuch adorn
" Her cheerful front, who finds in thee alone
" The ſource of ev'ry tranſport, but diſgrace
" My penſive breaſt, which, doom'd to laſting woe,
" In thee the ſource of ev'ry bliſs reſign.
" And now, farewell, thou darling youth! the gem
" Of Engliſh merit! Peace, content, and joy,
" And tender hopes, and young deſires, farewell!
" Attend, ye ſmiling Train! this gallant mind
" Back to his native ſhores; there ſweetly ſmooth
" His ev'ning pillow, dance around his groves,
" And where he treads with vi'lets paint his way:
" But leave Elvira! leave her, now no more
" Your frail companion! in the ſacred cells
" Of ſome lone cloiſter let me ſhroud my ſhame;
" There to the matin bell, obſequious, pour
" My conſtant oriſons. The wanton Loves
" And gay Deſires ſhall ſpy the glimm'ring tow'rs,
" And wing their flight aloof: but reſt confirm'd,
" That never ſhall Elvira's tongue conclude
" Her ſhorteſt pray'r ere Henry's dear ſucceſs
" The warmeſt accent of her zeal employ."
Thus ſpoke the weeping fair, whoſe artleſs mind,
Impartial, ſcorn'd to model her eſteem
By native cuſtoms, dreſs, and face, and air,
And manners, leſs; nor yet reſolv'd in vain.
[173] He, bound by prior love, the ſolemn vow
Giv'n and receiv'd, to ſoft compaſſion gave
A tender tear; then with that kind adieu
Eſteem could warrant, weary'd Heav'n with pray'rs
To ſhield that tender breaſt he left forlorn.
He ceas'd, and to the cloiſter's penſive ſcene
Elvira ſhap'd her ſolitary way.
THE SCHOOLMISTRESS. IN IMITATION OF SPENSER.
[174]Auditae voces, vagitus et ingens,
Infantumque animae flentes in limine primo.
VIRG.
IMITATION.
And mingled ſounds and infant plaints we hear,
That pierce the entrance ſhrill, and wound the tender ear.
Advertiſement. What particulars in Spenſer were imagined moſt proper for the Author's imitation on this occaſion are his language, his ſimplicity, his manner of deſcription, and a peculiar tenderneſs of ſentiment remarkable throughout his works.
I.
AH me! full ſorely is my heart forlorn,
To think how modeſt worth neglected lies,
While partial Fame doth with her blaſts adorn
Such deeds alone as pride and pomp diſguiſe,
Deeds of ill ſort, and miſchievous emprize:
Lend me thy clarion, Goddeſs! let me try
To ſound the praiſe of Merit ere it dies,
Such as I oft' have chaunced to eſpy
Loſt in the dreary ſhades of dull obſcurity.
[175]II.
In ev'ry village mark'd with little ſpire,
Embow'r'd in trees, and hardly known to fame,
There dwells, in lowly ſhed and mean attire,
A matron old, whom we Schoolmiſtreſs name,
Who boaſts unruly brats with birch to tame;
They grieven ſore, in piteous durance pent,
Aw'd by the pow'r of this relentleſs dame,
And oft-times, on vagaries idly bent,
For unkempt hair, or taſk unconn'd, are ſorely ſhent.
III.
And all in ſight doth riſe a birchen tree,
Which Learning near her little dome did ſtowe,
Whilom a twig of ſmall regard to ſee,
Tho' now ſo wide its waving branches flow,
And work the ſimple vaſſals mickle woe;
For not a wind might curl the leaves that blew,
But their limbs ſhudder'd, and their pulſe beat low,
And as they look'd they found their horror grew,
And ſhap'd it into rods, and tingled at the view.
IV.
So have I ſeen (who has not may conceive)
A lifeleſs phantom near a garden plac'd,
So doth it wanton birds of peace bereave
Of ſport, of ſong, of pleaſure, of repaſt;
They ſtart, they ſtare, they wheel, they look aghaſt;
Sad ſervitude! ſuch comfortleſs annoy
May no bold Briton's riper age e'er taſte!
N [...] ſuperſtition clog his dance of joy,
N [...] viſion empty, vain, his native bliſs deſtroy.
[176]V.
Near to this dome is found a patch ſo green,
On which the tribe their gambols do diſplay,
And at the door impris'ning board is ſeen,
Leſt weakly wights of ſmaller ſize ſhould ſtray,
Eager, perdie, to baſk in ſunny day!
The noiſes intermix'd, which thence reſound,
Do Learning's little tenement betray,
Where ſits the dame, diſguis'd in look profound,
And eyes her Fairy throng, and turns her wheel around.
VI.
Her cap, far whiter than the driven ſnowe,
Emblem right meet of decency does yield;
Her apron dy'd in grain, as blue, I trowe,
As is the harebell that adorns the field;
And in her hand, for ſcepter, ſhe does wield
Tway birchen ſprays, with anxious fear entwin'd,
With dark diſtruſt, and ſad repentance fill'd,
And ſtedfaſt hate, and ſharp affliction join'd,
And fury uncontroul'd, and chaſtiſement unkind.
VII.
Few but have kenn'd, in ſemblance meet pourtray'd,
The childiſh faces of old Aeol's train,
Libs, Notus, Auſter
*: theſe in frowns array'd,
How then would fare or earth, or ſky, or main,
Were the ſtern god to give his ſlaves the rein?
And were not ſhe rebellious breaſts to quell,
And were not ſhe her ſtatutes to maintain,
The cot no more, I ween, were deem'd the cell
Where comely Peace of Mind, and decent Order dwell.
[177]VIII.
A ruſſet ſtole was o'er her ſhoulders thrown,
A ruſſet kirtle fenc'd the nipping air;
'Twas ſimple ruſſet, but it was her own;
'Twas her own country bred the flock ſo fair;
'Twas her own labour did the fleece prepare;
And, ſooth to ſay, her pupils, rang'd around,
Thro' pious awe did term it paſſing rare,
For they in gaping wonderment abound,
And think, no doubt, ſhe been the greateſt wight on ground.
IX.
Albeit ne flatt'ry did corrupt her truth,
Ne pompous title did debauch her ear,
Goody, good-woman, goſſip, n'aunt, forſooth,
Or dame, the ſole additions ſhe did hear;
Yet theſe ſhe challeng'd, theſe ſhe held right dear;
Ne would eſteem him act as mought behove
Who ſhould not honour'd eld with theſe revere;
For never title yet ſo mean could prove,
But there was eke a mind which did that title love.
X.
One ancient hen ſhe took delight to feed,
The plodding pattern of the buſy dame,
Which ever and anon, impell'd by need,
Into her ſchool, begirt with chickens, came,
Such favour did her paſt deportment claim;
And if neglect had laviſh'd on the ground
Fragment of bread, ſhe would collect the ſame;
For well ſhe knew, and quaintly could expound,
What ſin it were to waſte the ſmalleſt crumb ſhe found.
[178]XI.
Herbs, too, ſhe knew, and well of each could ſpeak,
That in her garden ſipp'd the ſilv'ry dew,
Where no vain flow'r diſclos'd a gaudy ſtreak,
But herbs for uſe, and phyſic, not a few,
Of gray renown, within thoſe borders grew;
The tufted baſil, pun-provoking thyme,
Freſh baum, and marygold of cheerful hue,
The lowly gill, that never dares to climb,
And more I fain would ſing, diſdaining here to rhyme.
XII.
Yet euphraſy may not be left unſung,
That gives dim eyes to wander leagues around,
And pungent radiſh, biting infant's tongue,
And plantain ribb'd, that heals the reaper's wound,
And marj'ram ſweet, in ſhepherd's poſie found,
And lavender, whoſe ſpikes of azure bloom
Shall be, erewhile, in arid bundles bound,
To lurk amidſt the labours of her loom,
And crown her kerchiefs clean with mickle rare perfume.
XIII.
And here tri [...] roſemarine, that whilom crown'd
The daintieſt garden of the proudeſt peer,
Ere, driv'n from its envy'd ſite, it found
A ſacred ſhelter for its branches here,
Where edg'd with gold its glitt'ring ſkirts appear.
Oh waſſel days! O cuſtoms meet and well!
Ere this was baniſh'd from its lofty ſphere;
Simplicity then ſought this humble cell,
Nor ever would ſhe more with thane and lordling dwell.
[179]XIV.
Here oft' the dame, on Sabbath's decent eve,
Hymned ſuch pſalms as Sternhold forth did mete;
If winter 'twere, ſhe to her hearth did cleave,
But in her garden found a ſummer-ſeat:
Sweet melody! to hear her then repeat
How Iſrael's ſons, beneath a foreign king,
While taunting foe-men did a ſong entreat,
All for the nonce untuning ev'ry ſtring,
Uphung their uſeleſs lyres—ſmall heart had they to ſing.
XV.
For ſhe was juſt, and friend to virtuous lore,
And paſs'd much time in truly virtuous deed;
And in thoſe elfins' ears would oft' deplore
The times when Truth by Popiſh rage did bleed,
And tortious death was true Devotion's meed;
And ſimple Faith in iron chains did mourn,
That nould on wooden image place her creed;
And lawny ſaints in ſmould'ring flames did burn:
Ah! deareſt Lord! forefend thilk days ſhould e'er return.
XVI.
In elbow chair, like that of Scottiſh ſtem,
By the ſharp tooth of cank'ring Eld defac'd,
In which, when he receives his diadem,
Our ſov'reign prince and liefeſt liege is plac'd,
The matron ſate, and ſome with rank ſhe grac'd,
(The ſource of children's and of courtier's pride!)
Redreſs'd affronts, for vile affronts there paſs'd,
And warn'd them not the fretful to deride,
But love each other dear, whatever them betide.
[180]XVII.
Right well ſhe knew each temper to deſcry,
To thwart the proud, and the ſubmiſs to raiſe,
Some with vile copper prize exalt on high,
And ſome entice with pittance ſmall of praiſe,
And other ſome with baleful ſprig ſhe 'frays:
Ev'n abſent, ſhe the reins of pow'r doth hold,
While with quaint arts the giddy crowd ſhe ſways;
Forewarn'd, if little bird their pranks behold,
'Twill whiſper in her ear, and all the ſcene unfold.
XVIII.
Lo now with ſtate ſhe utters the command!
Eftſoons the urchins to their taſks repair,
Their books, of ſtature ſmall, they take in hand,
Which with pellucid horn ſecured are,
To ſave from finger wet the letters fair;
The work ſo gay, that on their back is ſeen
St. George's high atchievements does declare,
On which thilk wight that has y-gazing been
Kens the forthcoming rod, unpleaſing ſight, I ween!
XIX.
Ah! luckleſs he, and born beneath the beam
Of evil ſtar! it irks me whilſt I write!
As erſt the bard
* by Mulla's ſilver ſtream,
Oft' as he told of deadly dolorous plight,
Sigh'd as he ſung, and did in tears indite;
For brandiſhing the rod, ſhe doth begin
To looſe the brogues, the ſtripling's late delight!
And down they drop, appears his dainty ſkin,
Fair as the furry coat of whiteſt ermilin.
[181]XX.
O ruthful ſcene! when from a nook obſcure
His little ſiſter doth his peril ſee;
All playful as ſhe ſate ſhe grows demure,
She finds full ſoon her wonted ſpirits flee;
She meditates a pray'r to ſet him free:
Nor gentle pardon could this dame deny,
(If gentle pardon could with dames agree)
To her ſad grief that ſwells in either eye,
And wrings her ſo that all for pity ſhe could die.
XXI.
No longer can ſhe now her ſhrieks command,
And hardly ſhe forbears, thro' awful fear,
To ruſhen forth, and, with preſumptuous hand,
To ſtay harſh juſtice in its mid career.
On thee ſhe calls, on thee, her parent dear!
(Ah! too remote to ward the ſhameful blow!)
She ſees no kind domeſtic viſage near,
And ſoon a flood of tears begins to flow,
And gives a looſe at laſt to unavailing woe.
XXII.
But, ah! what pen his piteous plight may trace?
Or what device his loud laments explain?
The form uncouth of his diſguiſed face?
The pallid hue that dyes his looks amain?
The plenteous ſhow'r that does his cheek diſtain?
When he in abject wiſe implores the dame,
Ne hopeth aught of ſweet reprieve to gain,
Or when from high ſhe levels well her aim,
And thro' the thatch his cries each falling ſtroke proclaim.
[182]XXIII.
The other tribe, aghaſt, with ſore diſmay
Attend, and conn their taſks with mickle care;
By turns, aſtony'd, ev'ry twig ſurvey,
And from their fellows' hateful wounds beware,
Knowing, I wiſt, how each the ſame may ſhare;
Till fear has taught them a performance meet,
And to the well-known cheſt the dame repair,
Whence oft' with ſugar'd cates ſhe doth 'em greet,
And gingerbread y-rare, now, certes, doubly ſweet!
XXIV.
See to their ſeats they hye with merry glee,
And in beſeemly order ſitten there,
All but the wight of bum y-galled, he
Abhorreth bench, and ſtool, and fourm, and chair,
(This hand in mouth y-fix'd, that rends his hair)
And eke with ſnubs proſound, and heaving breaſt,
Convulſions intermitting! does declare
His grievous wrong, his dame's unjuſt beheſt,
And ſcorns her offer'd love, and ſhuns to be careſs'd.
XXV.
His face beſprent, with liquid cryſtal ſhines,
His blooming face, that ſeems a purple flow'r,
Which low to earth its drooping head declines,
All ſmear'd and ſully'd by a vernal ſhow'r.
O the hard boſoms of deſpotic Pow'r!
All, all, but ſhe, the author of his ſhame,
All, all, but ſhe, regret this mournful hour;
Yet hence the youth, and hence the flow'r ſhall claim,
If ſo I deem aright, tranſcending worth and fame
[183]XXVI.
Behind ſome door, in melancholy thought,
Mindleſs of food, he, dreary caitiff! pines,
Ne for his fellows' joyaunce careth aught,
But to the wind all merriment reſigns,
And deems it ſhame if he to peace inclines;
And many a ſullen look aſkaunce is ſent,
Which for his dame's annoyance he deſigns;
And ſtill the more to pleaſure him ſhe's bent,
The more doth he, perverſe, her 'haviour paſt reſent.
XXVII.
Ah me! how much I fear leſt pride it be!
But if that pride it be, which thus inſpires,
Beware, ye dames! with nice diſcernment ſee
Ye quench not, too, the ſparks of nobler fires:
Ah! better far than all the Muſes' lyres,
All coward arts, is valour's gen'rous heat;
The firm fixt breaſt which fit and right requires,
Like Vernon's patriot ſoul; more juſtly great
Than craft that pimps for ill, or flow'ry falſe deceit.
XXVIII.
Yet nurs'd with ſkill, what dazzling fruits appear!
Ev'n now ſagacious foreſight points to ſhow
A little bench of heedleſs biſhops here,
And there a chancellour in embryo,
Or bard ſublime, if bard may e'er be ſo,
As Milton, Shakeſpeare, names that ne'er ſhall die!
Tho' now he crawl along the ground ſo low,
Nor weeting how the Muſe ſhould ſoar on high,
Wiſheth, poor ſtarv'lling elf! his paper kite may fly.
[184]XXIX.
And this perhaps, who cens'ring the deſign,
Low lays the houſe which that of cards doth build,
Shall Dennis be! if rigid Fates incline,
And many an epic to his rage ſhall yield,
And many a poet quit th'Aonian field;
And, ſour'd by age, profound he ſhall appear,
As he who now with 'ſdainful fury thrill'd
Surveys mine work, and levels many a ſneer,
And furls his wrinkly front, and cries, "What ſtuff is here?"
XXX.
But now Dan Phoebus gains the middle ſkie,
And Liberty unbars her priſon-door,
And like a ruſhing torrent out they fly,
And now the graſſy cirque han cover'd o'er
With boiſt'rous revel-rout and wild uproar;
A thouſand ways in wanton rings they run,
Heav'n ſhield their ſhort-liv'd paſtimes, I implore!
For well may freedom, erſt ſo dearly won,
Appear to Britiſh elf more gladſome than the ſun.
XXXI.
Enjoy, poor imps! enjoy your ſportive trade,
And chaſe gay flies, and cull the faireſt flow'rs,
For when my bones in graſs-green ſods are laid,
For never may ye taſte more careleſs hours
In knightly caſtles or in ladies bow'rs.
O vain to ſeek delight in earthly thing!
But moſt in courts, where proud Ambition tow'rs;
Deluded wight! who weens fair peace can ſpring
Beneath the pompous dome of keſar or of king.
[185]XXXII.
See in each ſprite ſome various bent appear!
Theſe rudely carol moſt incondite lay;
Thoſe ſaunt'ring on the green, with jocund leer
Salute the ſtranger paſſing on his way;
Some builden fragile tenements of clay,
Some to the ſtanding lake their courſes bend,
With pebbles ſmooth at duck and drake to play;
Thilk to the huxter's ſav'ry cottage tend,
In paſtry kings and queens th' allotted mite to ſpend.
XXXIII.
Here, as each ſeaſon yields a different ſtore,
Each ſeaſon's ſtores in order ranged been,
Apples with cabbage-net y-cover'd o'er,
Galling full ſore th' unmoney'd wight, are ſeen,
And gooſeb'rie, clad in liv'ry red or green;
And here of lovely dye the Cath'rine pear,
Fine pear! as lovely for thy juice I ween;
O may no wight e'er pennyleſs come there,
Leſt ſmit with ardent love he pine with hopeleſs care!
XXXIV.
See! cherries here, ere cherries yet abound,
With thread ſo white in tempting poſies ty'd,
Scatt'ring like blooming maid their glances round,
With pamper'd look draw little eyes aſide,
And muſt be bought, tho' penury betide;
The plum all azure, and the nut all brown,
And here, each ſeaſon, do thoſe cakes abide
Whoſe honour'd names th' inventive city own,
Rend'ring thro' Britain's iſle Salopia's praiſes known
*.
[186]XXXV.
Admir'd Salopia! that with venial pride
Eyes her bright form in Severn's ambient wave,
Fam'd for her loyal cares in perils try'd,
Her daughters lovely, and her ſtriplings brave:
Ah! midſt the reſt, may flowers adorn his grave
Whoſe art did firſt theſe dulcet cates diſplay!
A motive fair to Learning's imps he gave,
Who cheerleſs o'er her darkling region ſtray,
Till Reaſon's morn ariſe, and light them on their way.