The strifes and troubles of this troubled world With the strong eye that sees the promised day Dawn through this night of tempest! All things then Would minister to joy; then should thine heart Be heal'd and harmonized, and thou wouldst feel GOD, always, every where, and all in all.
HARK,.. how the church-bells with redoubling peals Stun the glad ear! Tidings of joy have come, Good tidings of great joy! two gallant ships Met on the element,.. they met, they fought A desperate fight!.. good tidings of great joy! Old England triumph'd! yet another day Of glory for the ruler of the waves!
For those who fell, 'twas in their country's cause, They have their passing paragraphs of praise, And are forgotten.
There was one who died In that day's glory, whose obscurer name No proud historian's page will chronicle. Peace to his honest soul! I read his name, "Twas in the list of slaughter, and thank'd God The sound was not familiar to mine ear. But it was told me after, that this man Was one whom lawful violence had forced From his own home and wife and little ones, Who by his labour liv'd; that he was one Whose uncorrupted heart could keenly feel A husband's love, a father's anxiousness; That from the wages of his toil he fed The distant dear ones, and would talk of them At midnight when he trod the silent deck With him he valued,.. talk of them, of joys Which he had known,.. Oh God! and of the hour When they should meet again, till his full heart, His manly heart, at times would overflow, Even like a child's, with very tenderness. Peace to his honest spirit! suddenly
It came, and merciful the ball of death, That it came suddenly and shatter'd him, Nor left a moment's agonizing thought On those he loved so well.
Now lies at rest. Be Thou her comforter Who art the widow's friend! Man does not know What a cold sickness made her blood run back When first she heard the tidings of the fight! Man does not know with what a dreadful hope She listened to the names of those who died; Man does not know, or knowing will not heed, With what an agony of tenderness She gazed upon her children, and beheld
His image who was gone. O God! be Thou, Who art the widow's friend, her comforter!
THOU chronicle of crimes! I'll read no more; For I am one who willingly would love His fellow-kind. O gentle Poesy, Receive me from the court's polluted scenes, From dungeon horrors, from the fields of war, Receive me to your haunts,.. that I may nurse My nature's better feelings, for my soul Sickens at man's misdeeds!
There stood before me, in her majesty, Clio, the strong-eyed Muse. Upon her brow Sate a calm anger. Go, young man, she cried, Sigh among myrtle bowers, and let thy soul Effuse itself in strains so sorrowful sweet, That love-sick Maids may weep upon thy page, Soothed with delicious sorrow. Ob shame! shame! Was it for this I waken'd thy young mind? Was it for this I made thy swelling heart Throb at the deeds of Greece, and thy boy's eye So kindle when that glorious Spartan died? Boy! boy! deceive me not!... What if the tale Of murder'd millions strike a chilling pang; What if Tiberius in his island stews, And Philip at his beads, alike inspire Strong anger and contempt; hast thou not risen With nobler feelings, . . with a deeper love For freedom? Yes, if righteously thy soul Loathes the black history of human crimes And human misery, let that spirit fill Thy song, and it shall teach thee, boy! to raise Strains such as Cato might have deign'd to hear, As Sidney in his hall of bliss may love. Westbury, 1798.
WRITTEN IMMEDIATELY AFTER READING THE SPEECH OF ROBERT EMMET,
ON HIS TRIAL AND CONVICTION FOR HIGH TREASON, SEPT. 1803.
"LET no man write my epitaph; let my grave Be uninscribed, and let my memory rest Till other times are come, and other men, Who then may do me justice." I
No withering curse hath dried my spirit up, That I should now be silent,.. that my soul
1 These were the words in his speech: "Let there be no inscription upon my tomb. Let no man write my epitaph. No man can write my epitaph. I am here ready to die. I am not allowed to vindicate my character; and when I am prevented from vindicating myself, let no man dare to calumniate me. Let my character and my motives repose in obscurity and peace, till other times and other men can do them justice. Then shall my character be vindicated; then may my epitaph be written. I HAVE DONE."
Should from the stirring inspiration shrink, Now when it shakes her, and withhold her voice, Of that divinest impulse never more Worthy, if impious I withheld it now,
Hardening my heart. Here, here in this free Isle, To which in thy young virtue's erring zeal Thou wert so perilous an enemy,
Here in free England shall an English hand Build thy imperishable monument;
0,.. to thine own misfortune and to ours,
By thine own deadly error so beguiled,
Here in free England shall an English voice
Raise up thy mourning-song. For thou hast paid The bitter penalty of that misdeed;
Justice hath done her unrelenting part, If she in truth be Justice who drives on,
Bloody and blind, the chariot wheels of death.
So young, so glowing for the general good, Oh what a lovely manhood had been thine, When all the violent workings of thy youth Had pass'd away, hadst thou been wisely spared, Left to the slow and certain influences Of silent feeling and maturing thought. How had that heart,.. that noble heart of thine, Which even now had snapt one spell, which beat With such brave indignation at the shame And guilt of France, and of her miscreant Lord, How had it clung to England! With what love, What pure and perfect love, return'd to her, Now worthy of thy love, the champion now For freedom,.. yea, the only champion now, And soon to be the Avenger. But the blow
Hath fallen, the indiscriminating blow, That for its portion to the Grave consign'd
Youth, Genius, generous Virtue. Oh, grief, grief!
Oh, sorrow and reproach! Have ye to learn, Deaf to the past, and to the future blind,
Ye who thus irremissibly exact
The forfeit life, how lightly life is staked, When in distemper'd times the feverish mind To strong delusion yields? Have ye to learn With what a deep and spirit-stirring voice Pity doth call Revenge? Have ye no hearts To feel and understand how Mercy tames The rebel nature, madden'd by old wrongs, And binds it in the gentle bands of love, When steel and adamant were weak to hold That Samson-strength subdued !
Let no man write Thy epitaph! Emmet, nay; thou shalt not go Without thy funeral strain ! O young and good And wise, though erring here, thou shalt not go Unhonour'd nor unsung. And better thus Beneath that indiscriminating stroke, Better to fall, than to have lived to mourn, As sure thou wouldst, in misery and remorse, Thine own disastrous triumph; to have seen, If the Almighty at that aweful hour Had turn'd away his face, wild Ignorance Let loose, and frantic Vengeance, and dark Zeal, And all bad passions tyrannous, and the fires Of Persecution once again ablaze. How had it sunk into thy soul to see, Last curse of all, the ruffian slaves of France In thy dear native country lording it!
My days among the Dead are past; Around me I behold, Where'er these casual eyes are cast The mighty minds of old;
My never-failing friends are they, With whom I converse day by day.
With them I take delight in weal, And seek relief in woe; And while I understand and feel How much to them I owe, My cheeks have often been bedew'd With tears of thoughtful gratitude.
My thoughts are with the Dead, with them I live in long-past years, Their virtues love, their faults condemn, Partake their hopes and fears, And from their lessons seek and find Instruction with an humble mind.
My hopes are with the Dead, anon My place with them will be, And I with them shall travel on
Through all Futurity;
Yet leaving here a name, I trust, That will not perish in the dust. Keswick, 1818.
IMITATED FROM THE PERSIAN.
LORD! who art merciful as well as just, Incline thine ear to me, a child of dust! Not what I would, O Lord! I offer thee, Alas! but what I can.
Father Almighty, who hast made me man, And bade me look to Heaven, for Thou art there, Accept my sacrifice and humble prayer, Four things which are not in thy treasury, I lay before thee, Lord, with this petition: .. My nothingness, my wants, My sins, and my contrition.
Corston is a small village about three miles from Bath, a little to the left of the Bristol road. The manor was parted with by the monks of Bath, about the reign of Henry I., to Sir Roger de St. Lo, in exchange. It con- tinued in his family till the reign of Edward II., when it passed to the family of Inge, who are said to have been domestics to the St. Los for several generations. In pro- cess of time, it came to the Harringtons, and was by them sold to Joseph Langton, whose daughter and heiress brought it in marriage to William Gore Langton, Esq. The church which, in 1292, was valued at 7 marks, 9s. 4d., was appropriated to the prior and convent of Bath; and a vicarage ordained here by Bishop John de Drokensford, Nov. 1. 1321, decreeing that the vicar and his successors in perpetuum should have a hall, with chambers, kitchen, and bakehouse, with a third part of the garden and curtilage, and a pigeon-house, formerly belonging to the parsonage; that he should have one acre of arable land, consisting of three parcels, late part of the demesne of the said parson- age, together with common pasturage for his swine in such places as the rector of the said church used that pri- vilege; that he should receive from the prior and convent
Corston, twelve years in various fortunes fled Have pass'd with restless progress o'er my head, Since in thy vale beneath the master's rule I dwelt an inmate of the village school. Yet still will Memory's busy eye retrace Each little vestige of the well-known place; Each wonted haunt and scene of youthful joy, Where merriment has cheer'd the careless boy; Well-pleased will fancy still the spot survey Where once he triumph'd in the boyish play, Without one care where every morn he rose, Where every evening sunk to calm repose.
Large was the house, though fallen in course of fate From its old grandeur and manorial state. Lord of the manor, here the jovial Squire Once called his tenants round the crackling fire; Here while the glow of joy suffused his face, He told his ancient exploits in the chase, And, proud his rival sportsmen to surpass,
of Bath one quarter of bread-corn yearly, and have all the He lit again the pipe, and fill'd again the glass.
altarage, and all small tithes of beans and other blade growing in the cottage enclosures and cultivated curti. lages throughout the parish; that the religious aforesaid and their successors, as rectors of the said church, should have all the arable land, with a park belonging to the land (the acre above mentioned only excepted), and receive all great tithes, as well of corn as of hay; the said religious to sustain all burdens, ordinary and extraordinary, incumbent on the church as rectors thereof. The prior of Bath had a yearly pension out of the vicarage of 4s."-Collinson's Hist. of Somersetshire, vol. iii. pp. 341–347.
ON as I journey through the vale of By hopes enliven'd, or deprest by fears, Allow me, Memory, in thy treasured store, To view the days that will return no more. And yes! before thine intellectual ray, The clouds of mental darkness melt away! As when, at earliest day's awakening dawn, The hovering mists obscure the dewy lawn, O'er all the landscape spread their influence chill, Hang o'er the vale and wood, and hide the hill, Anon, slow-rising, comes the orb of day, Slow fade the shadowy mists and roll away, The prospect opens on the traveller's sight,
And hills and vales and woods reflect the living light.
O thou, the mistress of my future days, Accept thy minstrel's retrospective lays; To whom the minstrel and the lyre belong, Accept, my EDITH, Memory's pensive song. Of long-past days I sing, ere yet I knew Or thought and grief, or happiness and you; Ere yet my infant heart had learnt to prove The cares of life, the hopes and fears of love.
But now no more was heard at early morn The echoing clangor of the huntsman's horn; No more the eager hounds with deepening cry Leapt round him as they knew their pastime nigh; The Squire no more obey'd the morning call, Nor favourite spaniels fill'd the sportsman's hall; For he, the last descendant of his race, Slept with his fathers, and forgot the chase. There now in petty empire o'er the school The mighty master held despotic rule; Trembling in silence all his deeds we saw, His look a mandate, and his word a law; Severe his voice, severe and stern his mien, And wondrous strict he was, and wondrous wise I ween.
Even now through many a long long year I trace The hour when first with awe I view'd his face; Even now recall my entrance at the dome, . . 'Twas the first day I ever left my home! Years intervening have not worn away The deep remembrance of that wretched day, Nor taught me to forget my earliest fears, A mother's fondness, and a mother's tears; When close she prest me to her sorrowing heart, As loth as even I myself to part; And I, as I beheld her sorrows flow, With painful effort hid my inward woe.
But time to youthful troubles brings relief, And each new object weans the child from grief. Like April showers the tears of youth descend, Suddenly they fall, and suddenly they end, And fresher pleasure cheers the following hour, As brighter shines the sun after the April shower,
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