When first thy sire to send on Earth Virtue, his darling child, design'd, To thee he gave the heavenly birth, And bade to form her infant mind. Stern rugged nurse! thy rigid lore With patience many a year she bore : What sorrow was, thou bad'st her know, Self-pleasing Folly's idle brood, And leave us leisure to be good. Immers'd in rapturous thought profound, With leaden eye, that loves the ground, With Justice, to herself severe, Dread goddess, lay thy chast'ning hand! Not in thy Gorgon terrors clad, Not circled with the vengeful band (As by the impious thou art seen) With thundering voice, and threatening mien, With screaming Horror's funeral cry, Despair, and fell Disease, and ghastly Poverty: 5 VOL. III. Thy form benign, oh goddess ! wear, Thy milder influence impart, Thy philosophic train be there To soften, not to wound my heart. The generous spark extinct revive, Teach me to love, and to forgive, Exact my own defects to scan, What others are to feel, and know myself a man. Gray. THE SUICIDE. BENEATH the beech, whose branches bare, O’erhang the craggy road, Within a solitary grave, Lour'd the grim morn, in murky dies And dimm'd the struggling day; Yon rush-grown moor with sable waves, I mark'd his desultory pace, With many a mutter'd sound; the hand embrued ; He fell, and groaning grasp'd in agony the ground. Full many a melancholy night And sought the powers of sleep, To spread a momentary calm O'er his sad couch, and in the balm Full oft, unknowing and unknown, Amid th' autumnal wood Abrupt the social board to quit, Beckoning the wretch to torments new, A spectre pale, appear’d; Is this,' mistaken Scorn will cry, Could build the genuine rhyme ? Had stor’d with all her ample views, purposes sublime." To strike the deathful blow : (wo. And rous'd to livelier pangs his wakeful sense of Though doom'd hard penury to prove, To griefs congenial prone, More wounds than Nature gave he knew, While Misery's form his fancy drew Then.wish not o'er his earthy tomb To drop its deadly dew: That rudely binds his turf forlorn, {anew. What though no marble-piled bust With speaking sculpture wrought? [brought. What though refus'd each chanted rite? To touch the shadowy shell: [knell. Within an ivied nook : [took : Late the · Forbear, fond bard, thy partial praise ; The wreath of glory twine; In vain with huds of gorgeous glow The tribes of hell-born Wo: Life's fiercest ills, indulgent lends And stay'd the rising storm : Had bade the sun of hope appear To gild his darken’d hemisphere, [form. And give the wonted bloom to nature's blasted Vain man ! 'tis Heaven's prerogative To take, what first it deign'd to give, Thy tributary breath : In awful expectation plac'd, Await thy doom, nor impious haste To pluck from God's right hand his instruments of death.' Thomas Warton. TO FEAR. Thou, to whom the world unknown, 5* VOL 111. |