Now, smiling o'er her dark distress, Fancy malignant strives to dress Like injury and fraud.
Farewell to virtue's peaceful times: Soon will you stoop to act the crimes Which thus you stoop to fear:
Guilt follows guilt; and where the train Begins with wrongs of such a stain, What horrors form the rear!
'Tis thus to work her baleful power, Suspicion waits the sullen hour Of fretfulness and strife,
When care the infirmer bosom wrings, Or Eurus waves his murky wings
To damp the seats of life.
But come, forsake the scene unbless'd Which first beheld your faithful breast To groundless fears a prey: Come, where with my prevailing lyre The skies, the streams, the groves conspire To charm your doubts away.
Thron'd in the sun's descending car, What power unseen diffuseth far
This tenderness of mind?
What Genius smiles on yonder flood? What God, in whispers from the wood, Bids every thought be kind?
O thou, whate'er thy awful name, Whose wisdom our untoward frame With social love restrains;
Thou, who by fair affection's ties Giv'st us to double all our joys, And half disarm our pains;
* If far from Dyson and from me Suspicion took, by thy decree, Her everlasting flight;
If firm on virtue's ample base Thy parent hand has deign'd to raise.
Our friendship's honour'd height;
Let universal candour still,
Clear as yon heaven-reflecting rill,
Preserve my open mind;
Nor this nor that man's crooked ways One sordid doubt within me raise To injure human kind.
HYMN TO CHEERFULNESS.
How thick the shades of evening close! How pale the sky with weight of snows!
* This stanza was found in a copy presented by Akenside to a friend.
Haste, light the tapers, urge the fire, And bid the joyless day retire. Alas! in vain I try within
To brighten the dejected scene,
While rous'd by grief these fiery pains Tear the frail texture of my veins; While Winter's voice, that storms around, And yon deep death-bell's groaning sound Renew my mind's oppressive gloom, Till starting Horror shakes the room. Is there in nature no kind power To soothe affliction's lonely hour? To blunt the edge of dire disease, And teach these wintry shades to please? Come, Cheerfulness, triumphant fair, Shine through the hovering cloud of care: O sweet of language, mild of mien, O Virtue's friend and Pleasure's queen, Assuage the flames that burn my breast, Compose my jarring thoughts to rest; And while thy gracious gifts I feel, My song shall all thy praise reveal.
As once ('twas in Astræa's reign) The vernal powers renew'd their train, It happen'd that immortal Love
Was ranging through the spheres above, And downward hither cast his eye The year's returning pomp to spy. He saw the radiant god of day Waft in his car the rosy May;
The fragrant Airs and genial Hours
Were shedding round him dews and flowers; Before his wheels Aurora pass'd,
And Hesper's golden lamp was last. But, fairest of the blooming throng, When Health majestic mov'd along, Delighted to survey below
The joys which from her presence flow, While earth enliven'd hears her voice, And swains and flocks and fields rejoice; Then mighty Love her charms confess'd, And soon his vows inclin'd her breast, And, known from that auspicious morn, The pleasing Cheerfulness was born.
Thou, Cheerfulness, by heaven design'd To sway the movements of the mind, Whatever fretful passion springs, Whatever wayward fortune brings To disarrange the power within, And strain the musical machine; Thou Goddess, thy attempering hand Doth each discordant string command, Refines the soft, and swells the strong; And, joining Nature's general song, Through many a varying tone unfolds The harmony of human souls.
Fair guardian of domestic life, Kind banisher of homebred strife, Nor sullen lip nor taunting eye Deforms the scene where thou art by:
No sickening husband damns the hour Which bound his joys to female power; No pining mother weeps the cares Which parents waste on thankless heirs: The officious daughters pleas'd attend; The brother adds the name of friend: By thee with flowers their board is crown'd, With songs from thee their walks resound; And morn with welcome lustre shines, And evening unperceiv'd declines.
Is there a youth, whose anxious heart Labours with love's unpitied smart? Though now he stray by rills and bowers, And weeping waste the lonely hours, Or if the nymph her audience deign, Debase the story of his pain With slavish looks, discolour'd eyes, And accents faltering into sighs; Yet thou, auspicious power, with ease Canst yield him happier arts to please, Inform his mien with manlier charms, Instruct his tongue with nobler arms, With more commanding passion move, And teach the dignity of love.
Friend to the Muse and all her train, For thee I court the Muse again: The Muse for thee may well exert Her pomp, her charms, her fondest art, Who owes to thee that pleasing sway Which earth and peopled heaven obey.
« ՆախորդըՇարունակել » |