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Britannia Triumphans:

OR THE EMPIRE Sav`d, AND EUROPE Deliver'd. BY THE Succeſs of her Majeſty's Forces under the Wiſe and Heroick Conduct of his Grace the DUKE of MARLBOROUGH.

A POEM, By Mr. Dennis.

‘Ab Jove Principium Muſae. Virg.

LONDON: Printed for J. Nutt near Stationers-Hall. 1704.

To Her Moſt Sacred Majeſty ANNE, Queen of Great Britain, France and Ireland.

[]

The True Defender of the Proteſtant Faith;

The Great Supporter of the Liberties of Europe;

The Illuſtrious Maintainer of the Honour of the Engliſh Nation; and,

The Victorious Aſſerter of the Empire of the Ocean,

THE FOLLOWING POEM,

That it may live with the Immortality of Her Renown, is with all Humility Dedicated by Her

Moſt Humble, moſt Faithful, and moſt Dutiful Subject and Servant, JOHN DENNIS.

PREFACE.

[]

I Muſt confeſs I cannot in the Beginning of this Preface beſpeak the Reader's good Opinion, by informing him that I was put upon the following Work by the Command of ſome great Man, who has Pow'r and Intereſt. My Friends can bear me witneſs that I wanted no ſuch Incitement: That as ſoon as ever I heard of the Victory I reſolv'd upon writing the Verſes; And though my Intereſt at that time, as all who know me know very well, extreamly requir'd that I ſhould do ſomething elſe, yet it was enough for me that I look'd upon my ſelf to be oblig'd to do this, by the Duty which I owe to the Publick; which I have always preferr'd before my Intereſt. Thus I quickly came to a Reſolution of writing the following Verſes, but as to the Form and the Manner of them I remain'd ſomething doubtful, till I was determined by her Majeſty's Proclamation for a general Thanksgiving. And that joyn'd to the Conſideration of reducing ſome former critical Speculations into Practice, made me reſolve as far I was able to make the following Verſes turn upon Religion. My Deſign, [] when I began them, was to publiſh them upon the 7th of September, but beſides that ill Health intervening caus'd Delay, I ſoon found to my Sorrow that a Poem is not ſo eaſily compos'd as a Prayer.

If the following Poem has any Degree of Force or Elevation in it, the judicious Reader will eaſily diſcern that it owes them in a great meaſure to the Religion which is mingled with it; for Religion, as I have formerly prov'd, is the beſt and moſt ſolid Foundation of a great and lofty Spirit in Poetry.

If any one objects that the Religion is double in the following Poem, he will find upon a more ſtrict Enquiry that he is miſtaken. For tho' I have made the Danube a Perſon, that is not making him a Heathen God. David has done the ſame thing by Jordan, and Deborah by Kiſhon.

I reſolv'd to make the Religion that is mingled with the following Verſes, as Poetical as I could without making it Pagan. Though Fame is call'd a Goddeſs there; I by no means deſign the Goddeſs of the Ancient Poets; but an Angel or Celeſtial Spirit: For which I have the Authority of Milton, who in the ſeventh Book of his Poem, by Urania does not mean the Heathen Muſe, tho' he calls her Goddeſs, but an Angel or Celeſtial Spirit. And he there makes a ſecond Invocation which is addreſt to her, after he has invok'd God himſelf in the Beginning of his Poem. 'Tis true indeed Angels have been always painted Maſculine, but without either any ſufficient Reaſon or divine Authority. If they have Bodies I ſee no Reaſon why they mayn't be of both Sexes. If they have none, I cannot imagine how they can be of [] either. But a Poet who muſt of Neceſſity give them Bodies before they can be proper Machines for him; ſince he gives them the Beauty of Women may very well give them the Sex too.

The following Verſes were written without Rime, which I have a long time believed to be below the Majeſty of the greater Poetry; for which I have the Authority of three eminent Poets, Mr. Milton, my Lord Roſcommon, and Mr. Dryden. The Reader may ſee Mr. Milton's Sentiments in the Preface to his Paradiſe loſt, and Mr. Drydens, and my Lord Roſcommon's before the Beginning and at the End of the Eſſay on tranſlated Verſe.

But only the Humble or the Weak will yield to meet Human Authority. They who are conceited of their own Underſtandings will ſubmit to Reaſon alone; And yet methinks the former Authorities carry Reaſon along with them: For they who beſt underſtand a Controverſy, if they have Sincerity, are fitteſt to decide it. Now the Sincerity of the three forementioned Writers in relation to Rime ought never to be call'd in queſtion; for Mr. Dryden and my Lord Roſcommon are known to have exploded it, at the very time that they wrote in it; and Mr. Milton was very well known to be one who would not deceive either himſelf or his Reader. It therefore follows that thoſe three Gentlemen had leſs Underſtanding of the Efficacy of Poetry, and the Power of Numbers, than our vulgar Readers who are fond of Rime, or that Rime was very juſtly condemned by them.

We ſhall now with as much Brevity as we can, give ſome Reaſons that are independant of Authority, why [] Rime muſt of Neceſſity debaſe the Majeſty and weaken the Spirit of the greater Poetry, which, bceauſe the Arguments are entirely new, may not perhaps be diſagreeable to thoſe who have a taſt of Poetry.

The Sentiments in Poetry ereate the Spirit, or the Paſſion, which are but two Words for the ſame thing; and the Spirit or Paſſion produces the Expreſſion, and begets the Harmony. Now 'tis the Expreſſion which ſhews the Spirit, and 'tis the Harmony which cauſes it to make its utmoſt Impreſſion. And when all theſe things are adjuſted, when the Sentiments are adapted to the Subject, the Spirit or Paſſion in a juſt Degree to the Sentiments, and the Harmony and the Expreſſion to the particular Kind and Degree of Spirit or Paſſion, why then the Reſult of all this is what the Men of Art call Perfection or the Truth of Nature. I know indeed very well, that Expreſſion and Harmony go together, becauſe the Expreſſion includes the Harmony; yet for the better clearing of the Matter we ſhall diſtinctly treat of them.

This then is certain, that ev'ry Sentiment or Thought has a Degree of Spirit, or Paſſion, or Fire, call it what you pleaſe, which is proper to it, and every thing above or below that Degree is utterly wrong. Now this is as certain that there is but juſt one Expreſſion which can convey that Spirit or Paſſion in its true Proportion. And every thing that is not that one Expreſſion is falſe, and weakens the Spirit, and obſcures the Sentiment. Now Nature whoſe Sagacity is moſt admirable, and her Operations of Celerity almoſt infinite, and who goes the ſhorteſt way to her Works, very often dictates that Expreſſion at [] firſt, eſpecially in the greater Poetry, where the Imagination is always warm, and the Thoughts are always flowing.

But this is plain from common Experience, that the Expreſſion, which Nature dictates at firſt, and whieh is powerful, ſounding, ſignificant, and in ſhort the true one, is very often alter'd upon the Account of the Rhime. And a Word or two are chang'd, which deſtroys its Beauty, and the greater part of its Force; makes it leſs ſtrong, leſs ſounding, leſs ſignificant, and weakens the Spirit, and ſets the Sentiment in a falſe Light: From whence it follows that Rime in the greater Poetry running counter to Nature muſt be againſt Art.

But as every Sentiment has but one particular Expreſſion which of Right belongs to it, ſo that Expreſſion has but one particular Harmony which is adapted to that peculiar Degree of Spirit which naturally attends on the Sentiment. Now Nature, who, as we obſerved before, is wonderful in her Operations, very often in the greater Poetry dictates that Harmony together with the Expreſſion. Every Poet muſt know by Experience that the Harmony which we naturally ſlide into in the greater Poetry is that of Blank Verſe, which whenever we are oblig'd to alter to introduce the Rime, we for the moſt part impair the Harmony, infeeble the Expreſſion, debaſe the Spirit, and ſet the Sentiment in a wrong View.

There can be no nearer Relation between any two things in the World, than there is, in writing, between Paſſion and Harmony. Harmony may be ſaid to be both the Father and the Child of Paſſion: 'tis [] produced by it, and begets it; and the more pathetick any Diſcourſe is, the more harmonious it muſt of Neceſſity be. Even of Diſcourſes in Proſe, thoſe are the moſt muſical which are the moſt paſſionate. The Orations of Cicero have more harmonious Periods than his philoſophical Diſcourſes. And therefore Poetry is more harmonious than Proſe becauſe it is more pathetick. And the more pathetick Poetry is, the greater muſt be its Harmony. And therefore the Spirit, the Paſſion, the Fire, or the Flame, being very great in the greater Poetry, and ſometimes very violent, have as it were a natural Tendency to the producing perfect Harmony.

But Rime being utterly falſe in Harmony, as we ſhall ſhew immediately, muſt be contrary to true Paſſion, and to the greater Poetry. Rime is the ſame thing in Relation to Harmony that a Pun is in Relation to Wit; as a Pun is falſe Wit, or a fooliſh Affectation of Wit, Rime is falſe Harmony, or an Affectation of Harmony. Rime may not ſo abſurdly be ſaid to be the Pun of Harmony.

There are in our Engliſh Poetry four things which have been thought to cndouce to Harmony; which are Number, Meaſure, Cadence, and Rime. Of theſe the three firſt conſiſt of ſeveral different Sounds which are dependant one of another.

Rime is wholly independant of the other three; and conſiſts in the greater Poetry but of two Sounds, which are Uniſons. Now I appeal to all the Maſters of Muſick if Uniſons can make any Harmony. Harmony is the Agreement of different Sounds, and the [] Perfection of Harmony is the Agreement of diſcordant Sound by the Mediation of others. And there is a great deal of Chromatick Harmony in Poetry as well as in Muſick. And ſuch particularly is a great deal of Virgil's Harmony. Well then! Rime conſiſting of Uniſons can have no Harmony in it ſelf, and being independant of Numbers, Cadence and Meaſure can never promote the Harmony which they produce. And a Poet's conſtant Application to rime, diverts his Application, in a great Degree, from Numbers, Meaſure, and Cadence, and conſequently is a ſevere Reſtraint upon the three Producers of Harmony. And as it diverts the Application of the Writer, ſo by alluring the Attention of vulgar Readers, it diverts them from the other three.

But beſides that, Rime, by the Conſtraint that it puts upon the Writer, impairs the Beauty and the natural Force of the Expreſſion, and the Power of true Harmony; it has ſomething effeminate in its jingling Nature, and emaſculates our Engliſh Verſe, and conſequently is utterly unſit for the greater Poetry. Engliſh Tragedies that have been writ in Rime moſt of them rowl upon Love. The Soul of a Tragick Poet, who has giv'n himſelf up to Rime, has ſeldom been capable of Terror or Majeſty, or the Inſtruction of the nobleſt Philoſophy, or any thing that is truly great.

Beſides Rime has in its Nature ſomething that is low and comical, and the more of Rime there is in a Verſe, the nearer it comes to the Comick. Double Rimes are more comical than the Single, and Treble Ones than Either. A Rime alone is very often a Jeſt, [] as all who are acquainted with Hudibras very well know; but never any one was extravagant enough to affirm that there was any thing great and noble in Rime alone.

But the laſt Conſideration but one, viz. The Effeminacy of Rime, and the Influence which it had upon Tragedy, brings me to enquire further into the Matter of Fact; and to add the Proof of Experience to thoſe which we have drawn from Authority and Reaſon. For Men of Senſe are too proud to yield to Authority, and Fools are too weak to ſubmit to Reaſon, but Experience, which never deceived any one, carries Conviction both for the one and the other.

The Matter of Fact then is, that moſt of our Plays that have been writ in Rime, have been moſt abominably out of Nature. And where in Rime we have one tolerable Tragedy, in Blank Verſe we have ten. So that thoſe very numerical Perſons who declare for Rime in other kinds of Poetry, are utterly againſt it in Tragedy. But not only the Tragedies in Blank Verſe are the beſt, but the very beſt of our Epick Poems is writ in the ſame Verſe. And that is the Paradiſe loſt of Milton. And though this may in ſome Meaſure be attributed to the admirable and extraordinary Choice of the Subject, yet I am ſatisfied that ſomething of its Excellence is owing to the Blank Verſe. For Mr. Dryden has handled the very ſame Subject in Rime, but has faln ſo infinitely ſhort of the Sublimity, the Majeſty, the Vehemence, and the other great Qualities of Milton, that they are never to be nam'd together.

[] Well! But ſince it is manifeſt from what has been ſaid, that Rime is prejudicial both to Poetry and to true Harmony. The Reader may very naturally enquire how it came at firſt to be introduced into our Engliſh Verſe? Why, Milton has given a very good Account of that; It was, ſays he, the Invention of a barbarous Age, to ſet of wretched Matter and lame Meeter. When Rime was firſt introduced into this Iſland, the Language was without Harmony, and the Writers were without Genius. And Rime after all that has been ſaid againſt it, muſt be allowed to be an admirable Invention to conceal the want of Spirit, and the want of Harmony. Verſe with Rime ſeems to me to be like the Muſick of a Bagpipe, where the Drone, by continually ſtunning your Ears, hinders you from nicely enquiring into the Notes. And what a dexterous Expedient Rime is to conceal the want of Genius, may appear abundantly from moſt of the Riming Plays that were writ and acted in King Charles the Second's Time. In moſt of which it is very plain that Rime made extravagant Simile paſs for Nature, abominable Fuſtan for fine Language, ridiculous Rant for great Spirit, and ſenſeleſs Whining for true Paſſion. Well! But is our Language now without Harmony? So far from that that it is the moſt muſical perhaps of the Weſtern. Are now our Writers without Genius! No certainly; not all of them. But why does Rime continue then? Why is it writ? Why does it pleaſe! Why, in the firſt place, there are Thouſands who read Rime, who never ſo much as heard of Blank Verſe; and when we conſider thoſe who have heard of it, we have little Reaſon [] to wonder that a great many of them can by no means taſt it, if we reflect upon the Prevalence of Prejudice, and the Force of Cuſtom. They who read Poetry, have been us'd to Rime from their Infancy; and what cannot long Habititude render agreeable? Let us inſtance particularly in Sounds. Enquire of the Inhabitants of London Bridge, if the Fall of the Water there is not grown as it were natural to them by long uſe? Ask them if it be not neceſſary either to compoſe their Spirits, or to keep them up? If they do not ſleep with the more Soundneſs for it, and wake with the more Chearfulneſs? Examine a Fellow who has liv'd all his Life in a Paper-mill, and he ſhall aſſure you, that not only the Running round of the Wheels, and the hurrying Noiſe of the Mill, but even the inſupportable Jangling of the Cogs, is a thing that ſooths him, is a thing that pleaſes him; that he is melancholly when he is long out of the Hearing of it; and even weary and ſick of leſs tumultuons Sounds. Nay ask even a Fellow that has been bred to ſawing of Marble, and he ſhall tell you that the Sound which it makes is Muſick to him. And ſawing of Marble, is next to Riming, the moſt impertinent Noiſe in Nature.

After what has been ſaid, no Man will wonder if Readers, who have all their Life Time been uſed to Rime, ſoon grow weary and ſick of true Harmony unleſs in Caſe of a delicate Ear, which is ſo rare a Gift of Nature, that it has been obſerved in every Nation that Harmony has been the very laſt thing that has been improved in Poetry, and as ſoon as in any Nation the Poetical Harmony has grown perfect, there the whole Art of Poetry has been accompliſh'd.

[] But to come from the Readers of Poetry to the Writers: Theſe laſt are of two Sorts; the good and the bad. The bad will certainly endeavour to maintain Rime, becauſe Rime does in ſome meaſure conceal their want of Ear, and their want of Genius, and is perhaps as neceſſary to the giving them a ſort of a dull Mettle, and to the keeping them jogging on with their Burden of Dulneſs, as Bells are requiſite to a Cart-horſe or to a Pack-horſe; which very Bells upon the Courſe at New-Market, would but render the Racer ridiculous, and would but ſtop his Speed. Rime has the laſt of theſe Effects upon a good Writer, and would have the firſt, if it were not for the Force of Cuſtom. And 'tis the Prevalence of Cuſtom alone, that keeps good Writers faſt to it. Some great Men who have writ well in ſpight of it, ſerve to keep them in Countenance: for they little conſider that thoſe great Men would have writ much better, if they had writ without it. Beſides the Buſineſs of moſt even good Writers is to make themſelves popular, there are but few, very few of them who are capable of ſacrificing their Intereſt ro their Reputations, and to the Service which they do to the Publick by improving a noble Art; and they are rather vain than ambitious, and had rather have a preſent general Applauſe, than a Reputation in time to come laſting and univerſal.

The univerſal uſe of Blank Verſe in Tragedy, and be ſpreading Fame of Milton is a ſure Prognoſtick of he decaying Reputation of Rime. A Man may venure to foretell without incurring the Cenſure of being [...] or viſionary; that before this Century is half expir'd [] Rime will be wholly baniſhed from our greater Poetry. A Cuſtom that has been a long time generally received, cannot be broke at once; but nothing that is falſe can remain always. 'Tis true indeed, Prejudice, and Opinion, and Intereſt, and Vanity are frequent Friends to Falſhood; but Time, the moſt ſagacious of all Criticks, will ſurely be a Friend to Truth.

I deſire that the Reader would take notice that it is only in the greater Poetry that I have been condemning Rime. It may do well enough in Amorous Verſes, and it may be neceſſary in ſome ſorts of Satyr. For the following Verſes, I do not pretend that becauſe they are without Rime they are without all Defects; If I had had more time they ſhould have been leſs numerous, and ſome Expreſſions ſhould not have been repeated. Not but that there are ſeveral Repetitions in the following Poem which were ſtudied and ſought for upon the acc ount ofGrace and Ornament, but there is here and there one which ſhould have been omitted.

THE EMPIRE Sav`d, AND EUROPE Deliver`d.

[1]
UP, Rouze your ſelves, ye Nations, praiſe the Lord,
Sing, ye deliver'd Nations, to your God,
A lofty Song of Thankfulneſs and Praiſe;
For his Almighty Arm o'erthrew the Proud,
His be the Triumph, as the Conqueſt his.
And thou, O God, rais'd High above all Gods,
Thou God of great Revenge, true God of War,
Who when the injur'd World to thee appeal'd,
[2] Deſcending bow'd the very Heav'n of Heav'ns,
And with Ten Thouſand Terrors arm'd cam'ſt down
On Bleinheim's dreadful Day, t'avenge the wrong'd,
Upon their mighty and their proud Oppreſſor:
Thou gav'ſt the Victory, do thou inſpire the Praiſe,
If thou in Sacred Harmony delight'ſt;
Or if thou lov'ſt to paſs eternal Day
Pleas'd with the Songs of the triumphing Juſt,
O animate my Breaſt, inſpire my Voice,
Invigorate my Mind, inflame my Song;
No wretehed, low, untun'd, proſaick Song,
But lofty, ſpirited, inſpir'd, divine,
That the admiring World may know 'tis thine.
From none but thee the lofty Thought could ſpring.
From none but thee th' immortal Spirit flow,
Tranſporting, equal to the deathleſs Theme;
O may it laſt whole Ages, laſt as long,
As the Remembrance of the mighty Day,
Which now it Celebrates in ſounding Verſe;
That it be ne'er by Human Wrongs oppreſt,
[3] Or be by Ancientneſs of Days defac'd:
That when our late Poſterity ſhall read,
Our late Poſterity with melting Eyes,
With raviſh'd Hearts, and with aſtoniſh'd Souls,
May proſtrate all adore thy wond'rous Pow'r,
Thy Divine Mercy to their bleſt Forefathers;
And that it may advance, whene're 'tis read,
Thy Glory, and Victorious England's Fame.
Such Moſes and exulting Iſrael ſang,
(Theirs was the Sound, the Inſpiration thine)
When the Red Sea, the Chariots and the Horſe
Of haughty wretched Pharoah overturn'd,
Such the glad Propheteſs Triumphant Sang,
Her Head inviron'd with her Native Palm,
When riſing Kiſhon with victorious Floud
The proud Oppreſſor Jabins Arms o'erwhelm'd,
As Hoary Danube, with indignant Waves,
Swallow'd the Gallick and Bavarian Hoſts,
And at thy Word, O God, reveng'd his ſlaughter'd Sons.
[4]
Begin my Soul, and ſtrike the Living Lyre,
O raiſe thy ſelf, O rouze thy utmoſt Pow'rs.
Contemn the World, and ev'ry thing below,
And ſoaring Tow'r above Mortality,
To meet and welcome thy deſcending God.
'Tis done! O Raptures never felt before!
Tempeſtuous Whirlwind of Tranſporting Flame!
O whither am I caught! O whither rapt,
To what immenſe unutterable Streights?
Begin my Soul, and ſtrike the Living Lyre!
Joyn ye deliver'd Nations in the Song!
Your Voices ye deliver'd Nations joyn!
All your Harmoneous Inſtruments unite,
But ye peculiarly, ye choſen Tribes,
Profeſſors of Reform'd and Spotleſs Faith!
Let for one happy Hour the Church below
Triumph like that above, and ye bleſt Beings,
Ye Hoſts of Saints, ye glorious Hoſts of Martyrs,
Who now in the exulting Realms of Light
[5] Sing your old Triumphs o'er the Griezly King
Of Terrors in the noble Cauſe of Truth;
Ye Harmonious Hoſts of Angels, who your Hours,
Your bliſsful Hours in tuneful Shouts of Joy,
And in eternal Hallelujahs paſs,
Triumphing for old Conqueſts which ye gain'd,
Over th' Infernal Tyrants dreadful Hoſt,
And ſtill the Fall of dire Ambition ſing
In lofty Song with which all Heaven is charm'd;
Let your bright Quires incline their liſt'ning Ears,
And for one Hour rehearſe our numerous Song;
The Sacred Subject is the ſame with yours,
How is Ambition faln, like you we ſing;
We ſing the Wonders of our Maker's Pow'r,
His Glory, and the Triumphs of the Juſt.
Now let thy tuneful Joy, my Soul, grow loud,
So loud, that all the liſt'ning World may hear,
And let th' attending Univerſe reply,
Let Earth and Heav'n rehearſe the lofty Song,
While the bright Church Triumphant in the Sky,
[6] And the bleſt Church Triumphing here below,
Joyn in one Chorus of Immortal Praiſe.
And thou, Great Queen, the Glory of thy Sex,
The Prop and Glory of the Noble Iſle;
On whom ev'n William looks admiring down,
And owns thee a Succeſſor worthy him;
On whom the gazing World looks wond'ring up,
And its Deliverance waits from Heav'n and thee,
Whoſe matchleſs Piety and watchful Care,
Shews all the wond'ring World that thou art ſent
From the bright Church Triumphant in the Sky
To make the warring Church Triumph below;
Vouchſafe to Patronize this Sacred Song,
Great Championeſs of Liberty and Faith,
Great Patroneſs of all the Chriſtian World!
Lo firſt for thee, and thy auſpicious Reign,
Th' exulting Nation's Praiſe to Heav'n return!
Is there a Climate ſo remote on Earth
Where diſtreſs'd Virtue is beyond the Reach
Of thy extenſive Charity? Thy Aid
[7] Thro' all his rapid Courſe old Danube owns,
And proudly curling his Imperial Waves
To diſtant barbarous Armies tranſports thy Fame;
Thy wond'rous Virtue to his gladſome Shores,
Tranſported Tagus wafts o'er Golden Sand;
(A Thouſand Ecchoes from his Shores reply)
Thy Praiſe his Nymphs in tuneful Notes rehearſe,
The Darling Theme of Luſitanian Song.
Thy Fame, Great Queen, the horrid Alps aſcends,
And warms them, cover'd with eternal Snow;
Their Natives amidſt wintry Horrors plac'd,
Warmly thy Goodneſs and thy Pow'r extol;
Thoſe dreadful Fortreſſes by Nature made
The Bounds of dire Ambition, were too weak,
Before thy generous Aid new Strength ſupply'd.
Since then the Chriſtian World repairs to thee
For Patronage and Shelter from their Foes,
Since Right and Truth from thee Protection find
Since pureſt Faith, the Darling Child of Heav'n,
And every thing that's Sacred flies to thee
[8] For Shelter under thy auſpicious Pow'r,
Vouchſafe, Great Queen, to grace this ſacred Song
With thy Majeſtick Pratronage, this Song
Begun at thy Command ſo ſtrictly giv'n,
To celebrate with Pomp of Holy Praiſe
The Memory of Bleinheim's glorious Day,
A Song compos'd expreſly to advance
The Glory of thy Maker in thy Fame.
Now let thy tuneful Joy, my Soul, grow loud,
So loud that all the liſt'ning World may hear;
And let th' attending Univerſe reply,
Let Earth and Heav'n rehearſe the lofty Song,
While the bright Church Triumphant in the Sky,
And the bleſt Church Triumphing here below,
Joyn in one Chorus of Immortal Praiſe.
Ye Nations raiſe your Tuneful Notes on High,
And raiſing to the Stars your mighty Arms,
Your Arms now mighty, now ſecur'd from Bonds
[9] O lift above the Stars your joyful Praiſe,
To him from whom alone Deliverance flows.
But be thy Voice diſtinguiſh'd from the reſt,
Thou ſtately Daughter of Imperial Rome,
Germania! Thou! Canſt thou confine thy Joy?
Canſt thou the Tranſports of thy Praiſe reſtrain?
O no! Thou ſurely wilt grow wild with Joy!
For thou haſt paſt at once beyond all Hope,
To bliſsful Rapture from extream Deſpair;
Thou art deliver'd from a World of Woe.
Now nought but ſtormy Shouts of Joy are heard
From Rhaetian Mountains to the Northern Main,
Where lately nought but doleful Sighs were heard,
And piercing Groans, and Shrieks, and rueful Wails;
Thou ſtately Daughter of Imperial Rome
Wert bound, alas, with moſt opprobrious Bonds,
And baſely threaten'd with impending Rape.
Thy trembling Offspring helpleſs round thee ran,
And ſome ſhriek'd piouſly aloud for Aid,
While others wrung their wretched Arms in vain;
[10] Some frighted into Madneſs wildly ſtar'd,
And ſome look'd on with ſtupid Eyes aghaſt,
Some ſwooning, dying, with their Grief expreſt
By their laſt Groans their vaſt Exceſs of Woe.
One deſperate Villain help'd thy raging Foes,
With execrable Hands his Mother bound,
And for her impious Raviſhers prepar'd.
Thou Danube wert confounded at the Sight,
And troubled, backward to thy Fountain turn'dſt;
Then lifting thy ſonorous Voice on High,
Call'dſt to thy Brother Rhine aloud for Aid.
Thy Brother Rhine ſoon heard thy ſounding Voice,
But ſadly ſhaking his Majeſtick Head,
And caſting a compaſſionating Look,
Strait hid himſelf within his thickeſt Ooze.
What couldſt thou do? But ſhrink thy inglorious Head
Within thy Reeds, and breath forth empty Threats,
The windy Births of melancholy Rage.
When in the dreary Horrors of the Dark,
[11] As oft as Night return'd t' imbrown thy Waves,
Thou like a Bittern through thy doleful Reeds
Complaind'ſt in ſullen and in moody Groans,
Expreſſing Manly Sorrow mixt with Rage;
While thy brown Billows ſounding on thy Shore,
And ſwinging ſlow with hoarſe and ſullen Roar,
Kept murmuring Conſort to thy threatning Moan.
Thou Danube to the Euxin durſt not run,
To which inſulting thou wert wont to fly,
Not to diſcharge the Tribute of thy Waves,
But carry Terrors to th' aſtoniſh'd Main,
And make the Creſcent wear a deadlier Pale.
Now ſwiftly Danube to the Euxin fly,
And in thy rapid Flight thy Maker praiſe:
Sound, ſound his Praiſe at all thy extended Mouths,
And let th' attending Euxin with a Groan,
That may to Conſtantine's proud Tow'rs reſound,
Reflect how Heav'n confounds perſidious Men.
Then turning to the diſtant Rhine thy Voice,
Raiſe it that all th' aſtoniſh'd Rhine may hear:
And lifting up thy Arms, now free from Bonds,
[12] Lifting aloft thy now Victorious Arms;
Let him with Rapture ſee, with Rapture hear,
The Effects of Bleinheim's Field: He hears, he hears,
And rouzing up himſelf with generous Rage,
Prepares to ſhake off his ignoble Bonds,
And reap the Fruit of Bleinheim's glorious Day.
Germania, Raiſe thy tuneful Voice to Heaven;
Let thy fierce Eagle towring to the Skies,
In Thunder bear thy Maker's Praiſe to Heav'n,
Who has for thee perform'd amazing things,
Which but to hope had been Preſumption thought,
And what had look'd like Wildneſs ev'n to wiſh.
Th' unconquer'd Engliſh from the Northern Main
March to thy Aid, O vaſt Surprize of Joy!
Heark! How thy raviſh'd Offspring ſhout for Joy!
Heark! How they fiercely cry Revenge, Revenge,
O welcome, welcome to our longing Souls,
For whoſe dear Sake a thouſand times we'll die.
See, ſee thy Sons in firm Battalions ſtand,
Dejected now, deſponding now no more;
[13] See great Revenge inflame their Martial Eyes,
And round their Temples ſpread its warlike Die?
But whence this Spirit? Whence this wond'rous Change?
The unconquer'd Engliſh from the Northern Main
March to thy Aid; O vaſt Surpriſe of Joy!
They whom thy wond'ring Eyes ne'er ſaw before,
Nor them, nor their Forefathers ſince the Time
Thy rugged Saxons left their horrid Clime,
For Britain's gentle Shore, at laſt are come,
Are unexpected and unhop'd for come;
See to their ancient wretched Mother's Aid
The Pious Nation march impetuous on.
Germania raiſe thy tuneful Voice to Heav'n,
And praiſe return to Heav'n, and gracious Ann,
Who ſends them to thy Aid; ſhe Day and Night
Breaks her own Reſt to give the World Repoſe,
To give it Liberty and laſting Peace.
For only Gracious Ann can under Heav'n
Give Freedom to the World, and laſting Peace;
For only ſhe o'er willing Nations reigns,
O'er free-born Souls, whoſe Glory, and whoſe Pride
[14] Is to infranchize all the Chriſtian World.
And ſhe can give the lab'ring Nations Peace.
For as the Dove that from the Deluge fled
Brought her mild Olive to the ſhelt'ring Ark,
Fram'd by great Heav'ns Command to ſave Mankind,
And found Protection there; ſo gentle Peace,
Now Slaughter deluges the Nations round,
To Anna's ſacred Breaſt for Shelter flies,
And finds ſure Refuge there, and will from thence
Send its bleſt Influence out to glad the World.
But the French Tyrant's Breaſt had never Peace,
There endleſs Strife, there dire Ambition reigns,
He what he never had can ne'er beſtow.
Peace without Freedom is an empty Name,
But he calls miſerable Bondage Peace,
As Plunder, Murder, Rape he Empire calls.
Germania, Praiſe return to Heav'n and Ann,
'Tis Heav'n and ſhe that from the Northern Main
Have ſent the nobleſt Nation to thy Aid,
Which the wide Ocean from the World divides;
[15] A Nation round the which wiſe Nature caſts
The ſtormy Main ſubjected to her Sway,
That no uſurping Tyrant might invade
The ſacred Refuge of fair Liberty,
And the World's Champion People might annoy,
For whereſoever faithleſs Gallia ſends
Her Grim Deſtroyers, there Britannia ſends
Her glad Deliverers to preſerve Mankind;
A Nation which the lovely Fame enjoys
Still to have fought for Liberty, for Truth,
For all the injur'd Nations common Rights,
Which ſpeaks to dire Ambition in the Tone,
The thund'ring Tone that Heav'n reproves the Main,
Here know thy Bounds, here ſtop thy aſpiring Waves.)
Her's are the ſhining Squadrons that deſcend
Aiong thy Shore in terrible Array,
Their Forms not wholly like, nor yet unlike thy Sons,
Reſembling juſt as far as Brethren ſhould,
As they who from the ſame brave Sires deſcend
[16] How thou art raviſh'd with their lofty Meens,
The Joy that in their Looks ſeverely ſhines,
And all the dreadful Spirit in their Eyes
Dauntleſs, unparalell'd, invincible,
Secure of Victory, ſecure of Fame!
Such Spirit never did thy Eyes behold;
No, never, thy Heroick Eugene cries,
Such mighty Eugene never ſaw before;
No, wond'rous Prince, thou ſuch couldſt never ſee,
Tho' thou haſt long Triumphant Armies led,
Tho' thou haſt conquer'd Foes of every kind,
Humbling the Pride of the perfidious Eaſt,
And the more faithleſs Tyrant of the Weſt;
Tho' thou haſt been victorious in more Lands
Than wand'ring Travellers have ſeen, yet thou
Couldſt ne'er before this Hour ſuch Spirit ſee,
Becauſe thou ne'er before this Hour beheldſt
An Army from a free-born People choſe:
For only Briton's of the Race of Men
Their Liberties entirely have maintain'd,
Nobly maintain'd againſt the joint Aſſaults
[17] Of Homebred Treaſon, and external Rage,
The Pride of Foreign Tyrants, and their own.
Know 'tis from Liberty, thou wond'rous Man,
Maſter of daring Councils yet of wiſe,
From Godlike Liberty this noble Fire,
This dauntleſs, this immortal Spirit flows.
Germania, raiſe thy tuneful Voice on high,
This is the Nation preordain'd by Fate
To ſave thee Daughter of Imperial Rome,
Juſt ſinking in the vaſt Abyſs of Time,
Like thy great Mother under barb'rous Rage.
Hear this, y' aſpiring Rulers of the Earth,
Ye who for empty Noiſe or tranſient Pow'r
Oppreſs the weak, and undermine the ſtrong,
Ye Plagues of God to ſcourge a guilty World
By vain Purſuits of Arbitrary Sway!
Who this magnanimous People would deſtroy,
That ſtands between your proud Deſigns and you;
Hear this, and think that nothing's laſting here,
Empires like Men inſenſibly decay,
[18] Think that the time muſt come when you or yours
Muſt taſt the ſad Viciſſitudes of Fate,
And in your Turns by proud Oppreſſion groan;
Then hate ſo brave a People, if you can.
A People the ſure Hope of the diſtreſs'd,
The brave Defenders of the Rights of Kings,
And the juſt Guardians of fair Liberty,
Europe's immortal Body of Reſerve
Againſt the Squadrons of Tyrannick Pow'r.
Oh Auſtria, Auſtria, had thy Philip known
That time e'en then was harneſſing the Years,
When this brave People, Object of his Rage
And of his Hate, ſhould prove thy nobleſt Friends'
Should reſcue both thy bright Imperial Crowns,
Deliver Germany, recover Spain.
Raiſe up thy drooping Eagle from the Duſt,
And fix new Thunder on his ſoaring Wings;
Then deep Reflection on the juſt Returns
Of Fate had daſh'd his proud aſpiring Thoughts.
The chief Ambition of his Soul had been
[19] To be allied to ſuch a generous Race.
He great Eliza would have courted then
For Friendſhip, as Maria for Deſire,
That ſtrict inviolable League which joins
Our Int'reſts now, e'en then had been begun.
And Philip then like Leopold or Charles
With great Britannia's awful Queen had joyn'd
To eſtabliſh Right and Peace, and from the Proud
And ſtrong Oppreſſor vindicate Mankind.
Ye Nations, who profeſs the Chriſtian Faith,
Together raiſe your tuneful Notes on High,
So High that all the liſt'ning World may hear
And let th' attending Univerſe reply,
Let Earth and Heav'n repeat the lofty Song,
While the bright Church Triumphant in the Sky,
And the bleſt Church Triumphing here below,
Joyn in one Chorus of Immortal Praiſe.
[20]
But let the Sound of thy aſpiring Song,
Britannia, be diſtinguiſh'd from them all,
As among all thy Offspring Anna's fam'd
For pious Praiſe and Gratitude to Heav'n;
So o'er thy Siſter Nations be thy Song
Renown'd, for Heaven and Nature have beſtow'd
On thee, the Talent of exalted Song.
Britannia, Thou canſt ſing ſuch lofty Strains,
As Heav'n and Nature may rejoice to hear;
And Heav'n ſuperlatively honours thee;
And o'er thy Siſter Nations lifts thy Name;
Thee they all bleſs, and thee they all admire,
Among them like the Morning Star thou ſhin'ſt;
But to Oppreſſors like the Fiery
(Mars)
Star,
Or like a Comet that with ſanguine Blaze
Denounces War and Revolutions dire,
To purple Tyrants a portentous Light.
Such new unheard of Fame thou haſt acquir'd,
As never old, nor modern Nations knew,
Grecians indeed, and Romans, Perſians, Medes,
[21] And modern Spaniards too, and modern Gauls
Have conquering fought for univerſal Sway;
For univerſal Freedom only thou,
By ſo much more illuſtrious than them all,
As 'tis more truly glorious to redeem
Than 'tis to damn the wretched Race of Men.
Then ſtretch thy lofty Voice to Heav'n, and ſing
Thy Maker's Praiſe, that Earth and Heav'n may hear.
By him thou freed'ſt the World at Bleinheim's Field;
'Twas he ſupplied thee with the Godlike Will,
His Terrors and his Thunders arm'd thy Pow'rs;
He thy Great Queen with ſovereign Wiſdom bleſt,
Inſtructing her to chooſe the glorious Chief,
Deſerving to command her daring Troops,
Embattel'd for the Freedom of the World.
A general Worthy of Heroick Times,
For Marlborough now fills the Breath of Fame.
Like Grecian, or the Godlike Roman Names,
[22]
But who ſhall paint thee wond'rous Chief, in whom
Repugnant Qualities are reconciled;
Secret thy Soul as is the dead of Night,
Yet chearful as the Smile of opening Day,
That lofty, awful, and commanding Brow
With ſweet atractive Majeſty invites.
Calm are his Thoughts in his profound Deſigns,
Yet ſwift tho' ſure his executing Might,
His Breaſt ſupply'd with all the glorious Fire
That burns with inextinguiſhable Flame
In the aſpiring Minds of thoſe brave Men,
Who by great Actions court eternal Fame.
Yet he by a tranſcendent Force of Mind,
Entirely Maſter of that tow'ring Fire,
Which, like his Slave, he abſolutely ſways
With a Controuling and a Lordly Pow'r.
Calm are his Geſtures, his Majeſtick Brow
Compos'd, ne'er dark with Grief, nor rough with Rage,
[23] But always mild, attractive, bright, ſerene.
In whom deep Foreſight dwells unknown to fear,
And Intrepidity unknown to Rage.
The Love of Fame that urges him away
T' immortal Actions ſtill ſeverely curb'd,
Always obedient to cool Wiſdom's Voice,
And guided like the Chariot of the Sun,
Whoſe animating Fires preſerve the World
Far, far above the Tempeſts ſtormy Rage.
Wiſely he manages the Nerves of War,
Yet a Contemner of the vaſteſt Sums
When Glory and the general Cauſe require,
Tho new to the Command on Danube's Shore
His Eſſay an Heroick Maſter-piece,
Whoſe Brightneſs dazles all Spectators Eyes,
Aſtoniſhes our Friends, confounds our Foes.
Stupendous the Deſign in ev'ry Part
Whether the vaſt Conception we regard,
Or the ſurprizing Secreſy with which
'Twas long conceal'd from penetrating Eyes,
[24] Or the amazing Swiftneſs of his March
When from the Maeſe his wond'ring Troops he led
Or the judicious Boldneſs of his Choice
When he began with dreadful Schellenbourgh,
Which Conqueſt open'd the Bavarian Plains,
And made them to victorious Flames a Prey.
That their perfidious Chief impatient grown
Under his Country's irritating Spoil
Might force the backward French t'engage as ſoon
As Marlborough the bright Occaſion found.
How great is he who in his ample Thought
Could comprehend and afterwards prepare
By the illuſtrious Toils of two Campagns,
(In which a large Extent of Ground he gain'd
A ſtrengthning Barrier for the cautious Dutch)
Th' aſtoniſhing Deſign, which all at once,
Like Magick changes all the Face of War;
Confounds the Gallick Tyrants proud Deſigns,
Daſhes him headlong from his tow'ring Thoughts
The Mountains heap'd on Mountains in his Head,
[25] From which his proud Imagination thought
To drive our Reaſon, God's Vicegerent here,
And rule the Earth with Hells diſpotick Sway.
He like a hoary Wizard cloſe immur'd
In his enchanted Caſtle ſat retir'd,
And there unſeen he mutter'd ſecret Sounds,
And there Infernal Characters he drew
That muſter'd up black Clouds t'obſcure the Day,
And ſcare the Nations with their dreadful Gloom,
And then the Tempeſt rag'd, the Thunder roar'd,
Threatning the World with univerſal Wreck.
At length the time ordain'd by Fate is come,
The Conq'ring Hero's come who breaks the Charm,
And now the old Enchanter looks aghaſt,
Forlorn, forſaken by th' Infernal Pow'rs,
And trembling at th' impending Wrath of Heav'n
But of the Talents of thy mighty Mind
Immortal Marlbro' what we moſt admire
[26] Is that Rapidity by which to Fame
Thro' all the Bars that Art or Nature caſt,
Thro' hardeſt Rocks thou hew'ſt thy wond'rous Way,
Daring yet wiſe thy Conduct, and reſolv'd
With all the Judgment of diſcerning Thought,
For the great Juncture call'd for all thy Speed.
Th' inſulting French were overturning all,
And Liberty in dire Convulſions lay;
The Empire foundring like a vaſt Galloon
That's by the Tempeſt beat on ev'ry ſide,
When raging Ocean in a general Storm
Sends his ſonorous Billows to th' Aſſault:
Savoy was ſinking, and the cruel French,
Climbing the Summits of the horrid Alps,
Embrue'd their murd'ring Hands in guiltleſs Blood,
Ev'n in the dreadful Region of the Thunder.
The Luſitanian grumbled at the Chance
Of adverſe War, and unexpected Rout,
And fondly ſighed for ancient Leagues again.
With Terror more then cold Helvetia ſhook,
[27] Whiter than Ambient Snow her deadly Hue,
And howling o'er her Alpine Rocks ſhe ran,
Tho' fenc'd with Alpine Rocks yet unſecure,
And trembling with pale Fear, her hoary Hair
That hung diſhevel'd, and the Sport of Winds,
She tore, and would have wrung her wretched Arms,
But her own Sons for mercenary Sums
Had bound her wretched Arms with Chains of Gold;
And her Majeſtick Robe had rudely torn,
And naked left her to the killing Cold.
A Gyant o'er the Neighbouring Mountains ſtalk'd,
With mad Deportment and with ſavage Mein.
And cruel Eyes that threaten'd inſtant Fate.
Italia, Ah how faln, how chang'd from her,
Who won the World with her victorious Arms,
With the wide Ocean circumſcrib'd her Sway,
[28] And with the Stars her never dying Fame,
Was baſely into vile Submiſſion brav'd.
Brittain in dreadful Expectation lay
By two contending Daughters to be torn,
Both ſtubborn Foes to Union, and yet both
Unleſs united hopeleſly undone.
England was plagu'd with an unnatural Race,
A Race expecting but the Blow of Fate,
The cutting off one ſlender royal Thread,
That Thread on which the Chriſtian World depends,
And then (but long avert that Hour ye Heavens)
Reſolving infamouſly to betray
Their Country to a Foreign Tyrants Pow'r.
Theſe were the potent Reaſons for Diſpatch,
Beſide th' undaunted Spirit that appear'd
In the brave Squadrons and Batallions joyn'd,
That flaſh'd victorious Lightning from their Eyes;
[29] Which their great Leader ſoon perceiv'd with Joy;
Too wiſe their boyling Ardor to reſtrain,
And check their Fire impatient to be freed.
Rais'd and inflam'd by that ſtupendious March,
Such as their fam'd Forefathers never knew,
And which attracted the admiring Eyes
Of all the gazing World, and ſeem'd to cry
They had not time to cool, but muſt do things
To ſatisfy th' expecting World, ſo great
As ſcarce their great Forefathers e'er perform'd.
Beſides, 'tis not the Valour of their Troops
To which the French their boaſted Conqueſts owe,
'Tis not their Diſcipline which makes them dreadful,
'Tis Treaſon, Subornation, Daggers, Poiſon,
Beſides a thouſand other Arts obſcene.
Could they by Diſcipline or Force prevail,
'Tis manifeſt they bravely would diſdain
[03] To have Recourſe to ſuch inglorious ways.
And wiſely the ſagacious General thought
The ſooner he compell'd them to decide
The Conteſt by the laſt Event of War,
The leſs Occaſion would the Traytors find
To try deteſtable infernal Arts.
Add that th' exhauſted Empire could afford
No long Supply to ſuch a numerous Hoſt.
Laſtly, this War was an Appeal to Heav'n
And this great Cauſe the darling Cauſe of Heav'n,
For 'twas for Truth they appear'd in glorious Arms
For Juſtice, Liberty, Religion, God.
And ſhewing his brave Troops that he repos'd
His Confidence in Heav'n would fire their Souls,
And would ſuſtain them in the dreadful Field
More than a thouſand Bodies of Reſerve.
And what could more convince th' impatient Troops
[31] That he repos'd his Confidence in Heav'n,
Than ſudden and determinate Recourſe
To the deciſive Vengeance of the Field.
Urg'd by theſe pow'rful Motives to Diſpatch,
He his bold Engliſh leads to Schellenbourgh,
Where the Bavarian and the Gallick Troops
Lie with the utmoſt Skill of Art intrench'd,
To guard th' important Paſs of Donawert,
Of Donawert, Bavaria's fatal Key;
Upon poſſeſſing which the great Succeſs,
Of this illuſtrious Enterprize depends:
There he the Orders for the fierce Aſſault
Iſſues, with chearful Majeſty ſerene,
Valour in human Hearts too oft proceeds
From ardent Temper, or from glowing Rage,
Provok'd by mortal Wrongs, or Fear of Shame.
But here remote from Fear or Rage behold
A Valour worthy of the Heroick Chief,
Who leads the Squadrons that appear in Arms
[32] For Liberty at once, and ſpotleſs Faith,
The two great Cauſes of the Earth and Sky.
And here the French their Maxim may recant *
That no Man can with fix'd Regards ſurvey
The dazling Front of Death, or of the Sun.
For as an Eagle with a ſtedfaſt Eye
Stares on th' effulgent Fountain of the Day,
Which ſtreaming with impetuous Floud of Light
Blinds other Gazers with its torrent Fire;
So Marlbro' with a calm conſiderate Soul
Undazle'd view'd the King of Terrors Front,
That cruel Front that with its ghaſtful Glare,
Without his Adamantine Mace can bill
Expos'd to Gallick and Bavarian Fire,
He all his chearful Majeſty maintains,
His Orders to exact Advantage gives,
Commanding all the Movements of his Soul
[33] With independant and with Lordly Pow'r.
He who himſelf thus abſolutely rules,
Seems by wiſe Nature fram'd for martial Sway;
His ſhouting Troops exalt him to the Sky,
Him they all imitate, him all admire.
On pointed Cannon they have run before,
Here they do more, and huſh'd and paſſive ſtand
While their invincible Brigades are form'd,
Awaiting what Commands their wond'rous Chief
Has to impoſe, while all the murd'ing Fire
Of the Bavarian Cannon tears their Ranks,
Troubling whole Squadrons with the Tyrant Rage
Of miſſionary Thunder, they mean while
Who by no Rage, no Fury are ſuſtain'd,
The Frenzy that on Brutal Courage waits,
But by true Valour, by Heroick Minds
Unmov'd, unſhaken keep the dangerous Poſts
Which were aſſign'd them by their dread Commander.
The Friends and dear Companions of their Toyls,
[34] Thoſe whom they cheriſh equal to themſelves
Torn from their Sides without Concern they ſee,
A nobler Care poſſeſſes all their Souls;
Themſelves too torn they from themſelves behold
Their mangled Trunks divided from their Limbs,
Yet all their dauntleſs Spirit they retain,
E'en for themſelves no Grief no Pity ſhew;
They ſee the King of Terrors in their View,
They ſee him ſtalking near with hideous Stride,
They ſee him frowning with a ghaſtful Scowl,
Threatning to graſp their Hearts with Iron Gripe,
Yet ſee it all untroubled, undiſmay'd.
O Greatneſs worthy Greece or Ancient Rome!
O Valour worthy of eternal Fame!
The great Epaminondas thus expir'd
For his dear Thebes, for his great Cauſe concern'd,
Regardleſs of his Blood, regardleſs of his Life.
And they, like him, would think themſelves too bleſt
To ſee their Party Victors e'er they expire;
[35] If any ſhew Concern, 'tis only Fear
Leaſt they ſhould fall before their General's Voice
Allows them to diſcharge th' impetuous Fire,
That now pent inward choaks their generous Hearts;
Thrice happy if permitted, e'en in Death,
To be the Inſtruments imploy'd by Fate
To beſtow Freedom on the Chriſtian World,
And on their Country never dying Fame.
But what are they unable to perform,
Who ſuch Extreams with Godlike Patience bear?
They who appear'd ſo calm, ſo meek before,
Are now all Rage, all ſtorming Fury grown.
Now Fate looks frowning from their wrathful Brows,
Now from their flaming Eyes red Lightning flies,
While in their Arms th' avenging Thunder roars,
And now of dying they can think no more,
Their General's fatal Order is to kill.
His Voice they as the Voice of Fate regard,
And as the Miniſters of Fate themſelves.
[36] Ruſhing like ſounding Waters they aſſault
The ſtrong Retrenchments, ſo with bellowing Sound,
Old Oceans Rage attacks ſome lofty Digue,
Which ſturdy Swains have rais'd t' oppoſe his Pow'r.
He Billows upon Billows ſtorming pours,
Which riſe, and ſwell, and rage, and foam, and roar;
Till the victorious Tenth at laſt comes on,
O'erwhelming all with diſmal Inundation.
In vain the Foe outragiouſly reſiſts,
The Trumpet kindles Mars with fiercer Sounds,
And in their Ears it clangs its martial Roar;
Which to the Engliſh ſounds the Voice of Fame,
That to immortal Glory calls them on.
Now all War's Godhead rages in their Breaſts,
And to themſelves they Demy Gods appear,
Oh the tranſporting Fury! Has the World
An Enemy that can reſiſt them now?
In vain grim Death in his moſt hideous Shape;
With haughty Strides along th' Intrenchments ſtalts,
[37] Whom all his Terrors, all his Plagues ſuſtain.
Th' undaunted Engliſh turn him on the Foe,
He ſees Britannia's Genius in their Eyes,
And in a dreadful Tone cries out my Friends;
Theſe are my Friends, my Benefactors theſe,
Lead on, ye Race of Demy Gods, lead on,
I follow you, and all your Steps attend,
Fortune and Fate are on the Conqueror's Side.
Impetuous now they ruſh conducting Fate,
To their reſiſtleſs Fury all things bow,
For what muſt not ſubmit to Fate or them?
Now ev'ry thing againſt the Foe conſpires,
And Fire and Water to confound them League.
Behind them conqu'ring Death in fiery Cart
Drives on, and urges furiouſly the Chaſe,
Diſcharging Lightnings and the vollied Thunder.
Before them the revenging Danube ſwells,
And then he gaping with a hideous Yawn,
And roaring ſwallows down his impious Prey.
[38]
Britannia, Let thy Joy ſalute the Skies,
And to thy Maker tuneful Praiſe return,
For he the Valour of thy matchleſs Sons,
And thy great General's Conduct he inſpir'd.
Let the whole Earth enquire of Bleinheim's Field,
And that immortal Field will cry aloud
To all enquiring Nations, all enquiring times,
Thy matchleſs Sons no mortal Valour ſhew'd,
And thy great General's Conduct was Divine.
And thou too with thy Maker's Praiſe reſound,
Thou Field of Bleinheim, once obſcure accurſt,
But now great Bleinheim's happy glorious Field!
Thou who wert charm'd with the Tranſporting Sight,
Who ſawſt the Godlike Men, the Godlike Deed,
Who ſawſt them thund'ring in the fierce Purſuit,
While Danube riſing with revenging Floud,
Swallow'd whole Legions with a hideous Roar;
Immortal Bleinheim, preordain'd by Fate
To be the bliſsful Spot that frees the World;
Raiſe to the raviſh'd Skies thy Thund'ring Voice,
And for thy mighty Bliſs thy Maker praiſe,
[39] For thou to all Poſterity art bleſt,
Bleſt above all the beauteous Fields o'er which
The winding Danube curls his amorous Arms,
No Length of Days thy Glory ſhall deface,
Nor ever Darkneſs of the Night obſcure.
All times, all Nations thee ſhall happy call,
By whom all times, all Nations ſhall be bleſt,
Thou lovely Field of happy Bleinheim Hail!
Mayſt thou be ever fortunate as fam'd!
Thy Sons above the Race of Men be bleſt!
May proud Oppreſſion and revenging Care,
As they their executing Circuit go,
Fly from thy bliſsful Borders far away!
O mayſt thou ſtill be happy, ſtill be free,
Thou who haſt made the happy Nations free!
And pour ye Heav'ns into her lovely Lap
Your ſweeteſt and your moſt refreſhing Dews!
That flowing Plenty all her Days may crown,
And golden Slumbers all her bliſsful Nights;
And when from Heav'n the murd'ring Angel comes
To viſit with conſuming Plagues the Earth;
[40] May he behold upon thy bliſsful Soil
The Stains of Gallick and Bavarian Blood,
And paſſing by revere the ſacred Ground!
And thou, O ſacred, O Majeſtick Day,
Who gav'ſt to the great Deed auſpicious Light,
O thou who broughtſt to Light the nobleſt Birth
That ever Fate begat on fertile time;
Still as thy Light revolves O ſacred Day,
Reſounding with thy Maker's Praiſe return!
For highly has thy Maker honoured thee
Above all Days of the revolving Year!
His Praiſe then in a thouſand Tongues reſound,
Let Millions of glad Voices raiſe it high!
So mayſt thou ſtill be charmingly ſerene;
So may thy Halcyon Hours drive ſmoothly on,
Illuſtrious far above the reſt of Days!
On thee may thy bright Sire profuſely pour
A double Portion of his flowing Gold!
O mayſt thou ſtill with ſacred Joy return
With all the Rapture of tranſporting Song!
And let the World forget the ſprightly May,
[41] The Day accompliſhing the Joyful Spring
To celebrate thy lovelier Feſtival.
For Freedom is more joyful than the Spring,
Fairer than Light, and lovelier than the Morn.
Let never any Cloud thy Luſtre ſtain
And never any Grief pollute thy Joy!
May Grief and Care and Pain at thy Approach
As from deſcending Angels diſappear!
Mayſt thou auſpicious prove to ev'ry Deed,
Accompliſh ev'ry Act begun on thee!
Thee may great Minds for mighty Actions chooſe!
By high Foreknowledge, ſure O ſacred Day,
Thou wert ordain'd t' accompliſh wond'rous things,
Thy happy Influence once before preſerv'd
The lab'ring World from univerſal Sway,
At leaſt a while delay'd its diſmal Fate.
'Twas upon thee the Carthaginian Chief,
Making the World's aſpiring Tyrants yield,
Vanquiſh'd proud Rome at Canne's fatal Field.
[42]
But time was teeming with a nobler Birth,
And Bleinheim's Day ſurpaſſes Canne's Field;
At Cannae the contending Rivals ſtrove
Which of them ſhould enſlave the vanquiſh'd World.
The great Contention was at Bleinheim's Field,
On one ſide to oppreſs immortal Liberty,
To make her wing her Flight from Earth to Heav'n,
And there for ever with Aſtrea dwell,
Her divine Siſter, on the other ſide,
Th' Intent was ſolidly to fix her here
In laſting Peace, and make of Earth a Heav'n;
And never two more powerful Armies met,
Than that which ſtrove to drive thee from below,
And that, O Goddeſs, which maintain'd thy Pow'r.
On the Oppreſſors ſide the Hoſtile French
With the Bavarian Squadrons now were joyn'd.
The fierce Bavarians were by Nature fram'd
[43] Hardy and rough, and fit for Bloody Fields,
And Victory had rais'd their Spirits high.
Expert was their perfidious Chief and brave,
And now the Memory of paſt Succeſs,
And Hope of future Empire fir'd his Soul,
And the wild Proſpect of his flaming Tow'rs
Stung him, till frantick with his Rage he roar'd'
And call'd on Heav'n and Hell for dire Revenge.
The French were all of Gallick Troops the Flow'r,
Experienc'd and Victorious were their Chiefs,
Soldiers and Chiefs inur'd to vaſt Succeſs:
And claiming Right to Conqueſt and Renown
From long Poſſeſſion; with their deareſt Blood
Reſolv'd their lofty Title to defend.
By long Succeſs preſumptious grown and vain,
Aſpiring to the Conqueſt of the World;
Believed by all the Nations and themſelves
To be unequall'd and invincible.
Proud of their Junction with Bavarian Pow'rs,
[44] Which they with ſo much Hazard, ſo much Toil,
Inſpight of all great Eugene's Force atchiev'd;
From which the Empire ſure Deſtruction waits,
And all the Chriſtian World perpetual Bonds.
But O how vain are human Hopes and Fears!
How blind is the poor Providence of Man,
And what a Fool to the Deſigns of Fate!
The dreadful Moment comes upon the Wing,
When they who make this Junction now their Boaſt,
Their Pride, their Hope, their Joy, their Extaſy,
When they whole conquer'd Provinces would give
That this accurſed Junction ne'er had been,
When that which now deludes their glorious Minds,
With the vain Hope of Empire and of Fame,
Will prove the gawdy Lure thrown out by Fate
To bring them down from their aſpiring Flight,
And leave them in the Duſt.
[45]
For now the conqu'ring Engliſh are in view,
Inſpiriting the whole Confederate Pow'r;
For what to them can be impoſſible,
After the glorious Rout at Schellenbourgh
A Conqueſt gain'd, when ſcarce their March was o'er;
A March like what great Philip's greater Son,
Or the firſt Caeſar, took to win the World;
A March almoſt incredible to thoſe,
Who ſaw at Schellenbourgh its great Effect;
A March ſo ſwift that it prevented Fame,
For ſuch Diſpatch tranſcends the Germans Thought;
At which their liſtleſs Nations look amaz'd.
They gazing ſeem the Engliſh to regard
As if deſcended to their Aid from Heav'n;
And their illuſtrious Chief on Danube's Shore,
No leſs aſtoniſhes the various Powers.
Whoſe Squadrons the Confederate force compoſe,
Than a Bright Star that all at once appears
With new Effulge in the Hemiſphere,
[46] Amazes all the planatary Worlds,
Who gazing cry 'tis ſent expreſs from Heav'n,
To change the Fortune of the Univerſe.
The Nations in the Britiſh Squadrons Eyes
Divine Preſage of Victory behold.
Full of their Iſlands noble Pride they march,
Full of their fierce Forefathers conqu'ring Fire,
And while they deathleſs Vigour in them feel,
Eſteem themſelves invincible alone;
Believing firmly that to conquer France
Is but their old Hereditary Right,
Which from remote Progenitors deſcends;
Who then were wont to triumph over France,
Ev'n when they were a People fierce and free;
When for their Country and their Friends they fought,
Fought for their dear Relations and themſelves.
How muſt they then diſdain to yield to thoſe,
Who to ſupport a Griezly Tyrants Pride
Againſt their Country and their Friends contend,
Againſt their dear Relations and themſelves?
[47] That for their Parts they fight for Juſtice, Truth,
For God, and for Celeſtial Liberty.
That Fate the firſt Occaſion now preſents,
When they the Foe may in the Field ſurprize
Without oppreſſing Numbers on their Side;
Whom they reſolve like Engliſhmen t' attack,
That is like Men reſolv'd to o'ercome or die.
That now the Eyes of all the Chriſtian World
Are on this great deciſive Action bent;
That all the Chriſtian World expects from them
Deeds worthy of the Champions of Mankind
Againſt oppreſſing Tyrants, Beaſts more wild
Than Africk e're produc'd, and which proceed
To render Europe yet more waſte than her;
That they muſt fight like Heroes who ſupport
The Glory of their conqu'ring Anceſtors,
Who great Britannia's Liberties aſſert,
And thoſe of other ſinking Realms reſtore;
Who vindicate their own undoubted Rights,
And thoſe of all Poſterity defend.
[48] With Godlike Sentiments like theſe inflam'd,
They under their heroick Leader march
T' attack the Foe encamp'd on Bleinheim's Field.
The reſt to deathleſs Lyres ye Angels ſing!
To ſuch a Height no mortal Force can ſoar,
And now the Inſpiration leaves my Soul
Or if I muſt with feeble Wings eſſay
Th' Aetherial Flight, aſſiſt y' Aetherial Pow'rs!
And thou the brighteſt Angel of the Sky,
With whoſe enchanting Beauties all the Hoſt
Of Heav'n above, all Heav'nly Minds below
Are charm'd, with whom the great Creator's charm'd!
Eternal Fame! Thee Goddeſs I invoke,
For nothing without thy Aid was e'er produc'd,
Or great or fair in Earth or Heav'n above,
(So the great Maker will'd, and made it Fate)
Deſcend bright Goddeſs to my Aid, deſcend
T' infuſe a Beam of thy Celeſtial Fire
Into my Soul, and raiſe my adventurous Song.
[49] If with thy Beauties all my Soul is fir'd,
If all that wretched Mortals here call great,
I ſacrifice to Liberty and thee;
Inſtruct me, Goddeſs, for thou only knowſt,
For thou with all thy Hundred Eyes wert by
When ſtooping on thy azure Wings thou leftſt
The Fields of Light for Bleinheim's glorious Field;
Thou Goddeſs with thy own Celeſtial Trump
Didſt ſound the Charge through all th' Aetherial Vault,
When at th' Immortal Blaſt the Pow'rs above,
Look'd wond'ring from the Battlements of Heav'n.
Thou ſaw'ſt how all the Hoſt of Heav'n look'd down,
And ſhouting fill'd the eternal Realms with Joy,
To ſee bold Man the Cauſe of Heav'n maintain;
The Souls of Britiſh Heroes from the Sky
Upon the Glories of that Field look'd down,
Thither their Eyes the Conq'ring Edwards bent,
On that magnanimous Henry wond'ring gaz'd.
All charm'd to ſee their times of Gold return,
[50] All charm'd to ſee bright Victory deſcend.
And perch upon an Engliſh General's Plume.
There the bleſt Patron of Britannick Knights,
The Red Croſs Champion look'd tranſported down
To ſee the Honour of his Order rais'd
And there look'd down the bliſsful Souls of thoſe
Who in the ſame immortal Cauſe expir'd
At Fleury and at Landen's fatal Plain.
And Godlike William look'd with Rapture down
To ſee great Marlborough do what he had done,
Had but the falſe Bavarian been his Foe.
The preexiſting Souls of future Kings
On that important Field look'd down, on which
Their future Right and future Pow'r depends.
Mean while the Sun, the World's great Eye and Soul,
With all his Pow'r ſeren'd th' Aetherial Space,
That no invidious Cloud might intercept
Th' eternal Deeds of Bleinheim's wond'rous Day;
Which ſhew'd a nobler Sight than all the World's,
And all the Space immenſe that with one Kenn
[51] He views, could all afford him, when it ſhew'd
So many Myriads of Heroick Souls
Reſolve to conquer or devove themſelves
In the great Cauſe of Liberty and Truth.
The Nations here below had all their Eyes
Intent upon that Field, on whoſe Event
Depended all their Freedom, all their Peace.
The very Elements attend in Truce
The dreadful Iſſue, ſilent were the Winds,
And huſh'd the Voice of Danube's angry Roar.
All Nature in all others Parts had Peace,
Diſcord had now no Leiſure to attend
Inferiour Strife, for Bleinheim claim'd her all;
For there were all her Stygian Snakes employ'd,
There were the Fates and all the Furies there;
Who ſhap'd like Faulcons waiting for their Prey,
were perch'd on baleful Eughs by Danube's Shore:
So that both Earth, and Heav'n, and Hell below,
Times preſent, paſt, and future, all appear'd
To be concern'd on that important Day.
[52]
But heark! The Goddeſs gives the dreadful Charge,
I hear th' enchanting Sound, I feel its Magick Pow'r,
That Sound can like the laſt Angelick Trump,
From their eternal Manſions rouze the Dead;
That Magick Sound brings future times in view,
And makes the paſt return, that mighty Sound,
Swift as the Movement of quick Thought, tranſports
The Hearer to the World's remoteſt Ends.
I feel, I feel ev'n now that I am rapt
O'er Lands and Seas to Bleinheim's wond'rous Field!
Do you ſee how the tempeſtuous Squadrons move,
Like Clouds with Thunder charg'd along the Plain!
Oh the tranſporting Sight! The noble Sound!
The ſprightly Neighing of the Warlike Steed,
And the impatient Champions eager Shouts.
The Trumpets roar! The Thunder of the Drum!
How Danube rears his hoary Head aghaſt!
[53] Th' adjacent Forreſt frightfully ſurveys,
Th' adjacent Forreſts darts a dreadful Gloom,
And on his Floud with double Horror frowns.
On to th' Attack the thund'ring Squadrons move,
The very Heav'ns above them ſeem to ſmoak,
And the reſounding Earth beneath them ſhakes;
The noble Rage of Battel fires the Plain:
Me too the noble Fury has inſpir'd
Of Regiſtring in Fame's Eternal Roll
Their Actions worthy the recording Muſe,
The Daughter of Celeſtial Memory,
And th' immortal Mother of Renown.
Eternal Fame, thy Summons I obey,
Like them thy Charge, great Goddeſs, I obey.
But while the Verſe which thou inſpir'ſt I ſing,
Do thou, great Goddeſs, thou my numerous Song
Accompany with that Angelick Trump,
Whoſe Sound by all the liſt'ning Globe is heard,
And to the World's remoteſt times deſcends.
[54]
But now the Trumpet's Clangor's heard no more,
No more th' impatient Warriors eager Shouts.
For now the Cannon thunders thro' the Plain,
And drowns all dreadful Noiſes in its own;
The moving Squadrons are no longer ſeen,
The very Earth and Heavens are ſeen no more.
For Earth and Heav'ns ſeem all involv'd in Night,
A Night of Duſt and of tumultuous Smoak;
Or hid in Brightneſs of tempeſtuous Flames,
Too dazling to be pierc'd by mortal Eyes.
But now the Goddeſs with Celeſtial Light
Diſpells the Miſt that veil'd theſe mortal Eyes,
And now thro' Clouds of ſtormy Duſt I ſee
Thro' curling Smoak, thro' dazling Flames I ſee;
Say, Goddeſs, what heroick Forms are thoſe,
Who the bold Britons lead impetuous on;
Who between them and Danger interpoſe,
And ſhield them with their very Breaſts from Fate:
[55] At once in Danger foremoſt and Renown;
Eſteeming Glory cheaply bought with Life,
And frankly off'ring up their noble Hearts
A great unblemiſh'd Sacrifice to thee.
How each looks worthy of his high Command,
Each looks as if on his heroick Deeds
The Fate depended of this dreadful Day.
Ay, now their Shapes diſtinctly I diſcern,
Ay, now I know the herolck Leaders well!
And thou eternal Goddeſs knowſt them well,
And thou with all thy Hundred Tongues wilt ſpread
Their deathleſs Actions, and extend their Praiſe
Wherever thou expand'ſt thy ſounding Wings.
Hail Race of Heroes! Britiſh Worthies Hail!
Hail noble Churchill, Lumley, Villars, Wood!
And thou great Ingolsby, great Orkney thou!
Hail thou, the foremoſt in the dire Aſſault,
Brave Cuts, the Lightning of the Britiſh Thunder
Great Favourites of Deathleſs Fame, All Hail!
Thoſe are th' immortal Heroes whoſe Commands
[56] The freeborn Engliſh joyfully obey,
The Pride and Flow'r of Britain's Godlike Sons.
Upon their Eyes the fierce Batallions gaze,
And from their Beams derive a glorious Fire,
And the Remembrance of great Henry's Days.
Now after them they move impatient on,
Impatient for the horrid Shock they earn;
Now meet the French and we with hideous Noiſe,
In Thunder, Lightning, and in Iron Hail.
Y' Immortal Pow'rs aſſiſt Britannia's Cauſe!
Aſſiſt ye bright Spectators of the Sky!
The Cauſe of Juſtice and of Truth ſupport!
The Cauſe of all the Chriſtian World defend!
Ah miſerable me! Th' immortal Pow'rs
Either againſt their own great Cauſe declare,
Or elſe blind Fortune governs all below.
For ſee th' unconquer'd Engliſh are repell'd,
Bright Honour is repell'd and Virtue loſt,
And falſe Ambition wins, O diſmal Sight!
O dire Calamity! Surprzing Fate! That ſuch
[57] As fought like theſe ſhould ever know repulſe!
Can they from ſuch Heroick Chiefs retire!
O can they poorly yield in ſuch a Cauſe!
No, ſee they Rally with a noble Fire,
And Shame grown Fury to the Charge returns,
But to the Valour of the Foe I hate,
I muſt do Juſtice here, a braver Foe
By Britain's Godlike Sons was never charg'd,
The French undaunted all their Fury meet,
And all with double Fury they repel,
And drive the Engliſh Horſe like Lightning back,
See how once more confounded they retire!
O curſed Fate! O Fortune! O Deſpair!
Aloud methinks I hear all Nature groan,
Aloud methinks I hear th' immortal Pow'rs
Lament the Honour of Britannia loſt,
The wretched Fate of Liberty lament.
O fond Imagination! Vain Conceit!
Immortal is the Date of Liberty,
And Britain's Honour never can be loſt:
For ſee where now Heroick Marlborough comes!
Comes to maintain them, to revenge them comes.
[58] See where the duſty Squadrons he collects
As Homer's Jove convenes the threatning Clouds
That with his dire Artillery are fraught!
With what exalted Air he leads them on,
Terror before him marches, Fame behind,
And Conqueſt like the Auſtrian Eagle ſhap'd,
Over his Head flies tow'ring to the Skies.
With ſuch Majeſtick Air in Ancient Days
Phidias or great Euphranor form'd his Jove;
But warring Jove preparing to diſcharge
Vindictive Thunder on the impious World.
Death his Auguſt Appearance ſees from far,
And ſees him worthy all his direful Rage;
T' attack him mounts upon a fiery Globe,
But as more near the Griezly Monarch draws,
He knows the Hero doom'd t' oercome by Fate;
And then his fiery Thunderbolt he ſhoots
Into the Earth, and all its Entrails tears;
About the Hero caſts a Mount of Clay,
And buries him almoſt alive with Haſt,
To ſhun him ſacred to eternal Fame.!
[59] The Squadrons all with ſhudd'ring Horror ſhake,
And Ruin from that dreadful Moment wait,
He in that dreadful Moment is alone,
Fearleſs and calmly of them all takes Care.
An Intrepidity ſo like their own
Charms all the bright Spectators of the Sky;
The Squadrons now redouble all their Rage,
And catch Heroick Fortitude from him.
Their Flame rekindled rages in their Breaſts,
And ſparkling in their fatal Eyes it rowls,
Unanimous they to the Charge return,
With Reſolution never ſeen before;
Each Champions with the Fate of Nations big,
All, All reſolve to conquer or to die,
Ay now, e'en now, the dreadful Moment comes
On which the Deſtiny of Men depends;
Their raging Blood like fiery Torrents rowls,
Their Hearts e'en burſt with Rage, their noble Hearts
That utterly diſdain, that utterly abhor
[60] Th' inglorious Thoughts of Flight or foul Retreat.
Again with dreadful Shouts rhey rend the Skies,
And now their murd'ring Carabines they ſling,
With matchleſs Rage their flaming Swords they draw;
In miſſionary Death they truſt no more,
But in their Hands they carry hideous Fate.
Now, now, with all their Might, with all their Souls
They ruſh on Death and Wounds, their diſmal Way
With their protended bloody Points they plough,
Or brandiſhing aloft the horrid Edge,
Like ripen'd Corn the adverſe Squadrons mow,
Extending them in Heaps upon the Plain,
The adverſe Squadrons can no longer bear
Their fatal Weapons or their fatal Eyes,
Or their victorious Cries, but Slaughter ſome,
Some Pain and Anguiſh ſeize, Confuſion all.
And now in Heaps they fall, in Crowds they fly;
They fly, fair Europe's proud Oppreſſors fly!
And Godlike Liberty's for ever fix'd,
[61] And to the Stars is England's Glory rais'd.
Victoria the tranſported Britons cry,
With Rapture Bleinheim's bliſsful Plain reſounds,
To Bleinheim's Field the raviſh'd Heav'ns reply;
And with victorious Shouts the Welkin rings,
Both Heav'n and Earth, and Gods, and Men are charm'd,
And Phebus with redoubled Glory ſhines,
And on the bleſt Event all raviſh'd Nature ſmiles.
Danube tranſported drives his rapid Floud
With double Fury by his ecchoing Shores,
And to the Euxin ſends th' enchanting Sound;
Adown his Shores the Acclamation runs,
That Godlike Liberty's for ever fix'd,
And to the Stars is England's Glory rais'd.
Oh Joy! oh Rapture never to be born!
They fly! Fair Europe's proud Oppreſſors fly!
The Victors ruſhing tear their trembling Rear;
Shouting they rage, and raging they purſue;
A diſmal Joy is on their ratling Tongues,
Fate in their Arms and Fury in their Eyes.
[62] Now Diſcord ſtalking with Gigantick Stride
Wades through a Crimſon Stream of torrent Gore,
And hideous is the Face of Slaughter now,
And yet e'en now when all the conq'ring Troops,
Soldiers and Chiefs are all e'en wild with Joy,
All frantick with the Tranſport of their Rage.
Their great Commanders calm, he who before
In his own Danger dauntleſs was alone
Lord of himſelf in univerſal Joy,
Serenely doubts for all; yet his the Praiſe,
The Glory of th' immortal Day is his,
He to a Pitch of human Glory rais'd,
To which no Subject ever roſe before;
And by this great deciding Moment made
Darling of Nations, and Mankinds Delight,
Britannia's ſecond Pride, Batavia's Hope;
The Roman Empires Ornament and Fame,
The everlaſting Bleſſing of the Good,
And conſtant Panegyrick of the Brave:
E'n in this great deciding Moment he
Th' impetuous Movements of his Soul commands,
[63] Commands himſelf with more imperious Sway
Than e'en the meaneſt Warrior of his Troops;
To no unruly Tranſport he gives way,
To all Attacks remains invincible,
And ſtands the noble Conqueror of himſelf;
For now his Genius whiſpers him within
That while the Day is doubtleſs on his Side
Heroick Eugene is ſeverely preſt,
And by the falſe Bavarian's Pow'r diſtreſt,
And wants the Succour of the Conq'ring Wing.
Then as great Virgil's Neptune with his Voice
Tames the wild Horrors of his frantick Waves,
And flattens with a Breath the refluent Main,
So mighty Marlborough with a Word, a Nod
The Fury of his Conq'ring Troops reſtrains,
E'n raging Madneſs hears that awful Voice,
And in a Moment ſinks into a Calm;
That Voice the ſtormy King of Terrors hears,
He hears that Voice, and in mid-way arreſts
His furious Arm deſcending to deſtroy.
And as the Hero with a Breath can calm
[64] The raging Storm in forty thouſand Breaſts,
So with a Breath he reinflames them all.
Again like ſtormy Seas they waving rowl,
And riſe, and foam with far reſounding Roar,
And tenfold Joy, and tenfold Rage ſucceeds.
For on the Spur the bliſsful News arrives,
That happy Eugene no Support requires;
That conqu'ring Eugene making vaſt Efforts,
Efforts which ne'er will be forgot by Fame,
A Third time rallied his diſorder'd Troops,
And turn'd Confuſion back upon the Foe.
Again great Marlborough gives the fatal Word,
Again the Goddeſs gives the dreadful Charge,
And the victorious Squadrons of the left
Again fall on with terrifying Cries.
Conqueſt before, now great Revenge they ſeek,
The French aſtoniſh'd, all Reſiſtance looſe,
All Reſolution, Courage, Order, Thought.
Their Squadrons now confounded, all disband,
Each for himſelf takes ſordid Care alone,
[65] Sure Ruin both to Armies and to States.
The Victors with immortal Rage purſue,
And ſmite th' affected French, like Wrath divine
That ſweeps whole People, and lays Nations waſte.
See this ye proud aſpiring Tyrants, ſee,
And let the Face of Bleinheim's dreadful Field
Teach you to rremble at the Wrath of Heav'n,
And the juſt Judgments of th' avenging God!
Do you ſee that Heap of abject Wretches there,
That fall by Hundreds, and by Thouſands fly.
How is Ambition faln! How in his Turn
The inſolent Oppreſſor faints and dies!
Are theſe the Brave, th' Invincible? Are theſe
The Royal Houſhold of th' immortal King?
Are theſe the Bands ſo proud of Triumphs paſt,
So vain upon the Hopes of thoſe to come?
And with the Spoils of conquer'd Nations big?
Are theſe the Gyants who their Tyrant ſwell'd
With the fond Hope of univerſal Sway?
How they fly! How they fall! How they tremble! How they die!
[66] An Iron Tempeſt galls them in the Flank,
And the fierce Victor with ten thouſand Swords
Inſulting hangs upon their broken Rear.
Before them Danube riſes on their Flight,
And loudly for Revenge, Revenge he roars,
Arreſting their precipitated Flight,
He ſtrikes them backward with his ſtormy Brow,
Or with his angry Voice their guilty Souls he ſcares.
But tenfold Horror drives them headlong on!
Down, down ten thouſand take the fatal Leap,
And plunge among the Waves; the Danube raves,
And calls his ſtormy Billows to the Spoil,
His ſtormy Billows to the mighty Spoil
Drive on, advancing with a hideous Roar.
Ten thouſand Warriors rowling ln the Floud,
Horſes and Men reverſt midſt ſcatter'd Arms,
And floating Enſigns on each other Plunge,
Drive one another drowning to th' Abyſs,
And with tremendous Proſpect ſtrike the Eye.
The very Victors grow with Horror chill,
Shake at the dire Cataſtrophe they cauſe,
And tremble at the Terrors of a Scene,
[67] Such as no no Nation of the World, no Age
Since the great Hebrews wond'rous Paſſage ſaw.
Here Heavenly Goddeſs couldſt thou but impart
To my weak Mind the Force, th' immortal Force,
To paint with lively Strokes the diſmal Scene,
To paint the Cries, the Shrieks, the dying Groans,
The Grief, the Rage, the Fury of their Fear,
And all the Horrors of their baleful Eyes,
And all th' Aſtoniſhment, th' Amazement of their Souls,
With ev'ry dreadful ghaſtful Circumſtance;
NotMilton's wond'rousPiece ſhould mine tranſcend
In which Meſſiah with his Thunders arm'd
Drove down th' infernal Tyrants warring Hoſt
With Terrors and with Furies thro' th' Abyſs,
Not Michael Angelo's ſtupendous Work;
Where the laſt dreadful Doom ſends guilty Souls
Down to eternal Puniſhments in Hell;
Hell ſeizes them, Hell meets them on the Way,
For in their Air and in their Looks is Hell,
And endleſs Torments in their Baleful Eyes.
[68]
Thus fell the French before the Victor's Wrath,
They who had ſtood ſo many Storms of War,
Yet ſtill unſhaken kept their Ground in all.
Thus of tall Oaks I've known a goodly Row,
That grac'd the winding Margin of the Floud,
Defy the Rage of many a wintry Blaſt,
The Tempeſt ſaw their Strength, and ſigh'd, and paſt them by.
But when a Hurrican by Wrath divine
Came lately bellowing o'er the Weſtern Main,
That with immortal Fury on them fell,
That made them tremble at impending Fate;
And rent at once their ſturdy Trunks in twain,
Or twiſted up their Roots, and whirl'd them in the Air.
That tore their lofty Branches down from Heav'n,
And brought to light theirSerpent Roots fromHell.
Down they came ruſhing with a fatal Groan,
And ſtrew'd the River with their ſcatter'd Limbs,
And with their mangled Trunks his Channel pil'd,
Till Devaſtation choak'd the incumber'd Stream.
[69]
O Conqu'ring Death, like Sampſon, blind tho' ſtrong,
Hadſt thou the glorious Hecatombs foreſeen.
Which noble Marlborough was ordain'd by Fate
To offer up to thy inſatiate Pow'r,
Thou ſurely then hadſt ſav'd one Godlike Youth,
And to th' Heroick Father giv'n the Son.
But Blanford in his early Bloom was ſnatch'd
To make the Glory of the Sire compleat;
Had noble Blandford ſtill remain'd below,
He was good, ſo charming and ſo great,
So worthy all the Fathers fond Deſire;
Th' invidious World might have pretended then
That Marlboro' had atchiev'd his Godlike Deeds,
For private Ends to make his Offspring great;
Now clearly for his Country and his Queen,
For Liberty, and for the World he acts.
Thou too great Queen by whoſe auſpicious Care
And Wiſdom theſe aſtoniſhing Events
Were brought to Light, thou for thy Country act'ſt,
And for the World, for Children thou haſt none,
[70] Too rigid Fate has raviſh'd all away.
Oh Royal Glouceſter had but cruel Death
Permitted thee to ſee this wond'rous Day,
How had great Marlbro's Actions rais'd thy Blood,
And rouz'd the Hero in thy Blooming Breaſt!
Till grown impatient thou hadſt call'd to Arms,
Hadſt like young Edward croſt the ambient Main
Attended with the Flow'r of Britiſh Youth,
Diſplay'd thy Enſigns in the Galliek Plains,
While France had trembled at thy conq'ring Arms;
Once more had France an Engliſh Sovereign own'd,
Once more had Spain its rightful Monarch ſeen,
Plac'd by a Britiſh Hero on his Throne.
But thou art gone, Britannia's Hope is gone,
For thee Britannia mourns like Royal Ann;
Thy Fate thy Mother's Happineſs impair'd,
But it has rais'd her Glory to the Stars;
The Wonders which ſhe ev'ry Day performs:
Mov'd by the nobleſt Motives ſhe performs,
Now for her Conntry and the World ſhe acts,
[71] For Liberty the Darling Cauſe of Earth,
For ſpotleſs Faith the darling Cauſe of Heav'n.
Her Children all were ſnatch'd away in thee,
O fond Miſtake! Whate'er the beſt of Queens
Performs, ſhe does it for her Children all,
Her happy People are her Children now.
And oh ſo good, ſo excellent is ſhe
So tender of their Happineſs and Fame,
So watchful o'er their Rights, ſo ſtudious of their Peace,
To all extending her impartial Care;
So grateful and ſo dutiful are they,
Such Honour and ſuch awful Love return,
Such Love as Heav'n of Human Hearts requires;
That Fame is doubtful which ſhe moſt ſhall praiſe,
The Childrens Duty or the Mother's Care.
The Dutiful'ſt of Children ſure are they,
The very Beſt of tender Mothers ſhe.
And not the fancied Mother of the Gods,
Great Queen, could boaſt a more Heroick Race;
And as that fancied Mother of the Gods
Was charm'd at Sight of her immortal Sons.
[72] With all my Pow'r I've rouzed my Genius up,
That thy victorious Subjects thou mightſt ſee
Made like to Gods at Bleinheim's deathleſs Field
What glorious Sight can more delight thy Soul
Than Conqueſt which thy Subjects Bliſs enſures
Thy Glory, and the World's Felicity?
Yes Bleinheim ſtill can ſhew a nobler Sight,
A Sight that for thy Zeal has ſtronger Charms
Than all the World's vain Greatneſs can ſupply
See there thy conq'ring Heroes who before
Were like to Gods, now equal to the Worm,
All low and proſtrate as the vanquiſh'd now;
Humbling themſelves before the God of Hoſts,
Off'ring to him the Glory and the Praiſe,
The Sacrifice moſt worthy of the God,
Th' Almighty God of War, the God of great Revenge.
FINIS.
Notes
*
Le Soleil ny la mortne ſe peuvent Regarder Fixement. Roche. Refl. 30.
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Citation Suggestion for this Object
TextGrid Repository (2020). TEI. 3893 Britannia triumphans or the Empire sav d and Europe deliver d By the success of her Majesty s forces under the wise and heroick conduct of his Grace the Duke of Marlborough A poem by Mr Dennis. University of Oxford Text Archive. . https://hdl.handle.net/21.T11991/0000-001A-5B53-1