I PR 4099 .B27 D6 11834 Copy 1 ^H ■II' I i l>«l\>S4V4l*l H ■It: ffiEHfcmm IP i : -0j PH mc^ LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. I! f_ i? 34- if UNITED STATES OP AMERICA.! — ±sz qfe cic: «3s3 ■» Who dare the deeds, would hell itself degrade. Some of an age twelve summer's suns scarce count, Of either sex, alas ! drink deep perdition's fount. Hark ! What midnight beau is't coughs so weak, Blabbing a tale, his tongue would quake to speak ? Nay, tremble not, ye dotard limbs, with fright : I'll bring no torch to pierce these shades of night, PROSPECT AND REFLECTION. 37 Lest its beams thy grandchild shew, what a feast Thy wanton palate sates on, like a beast, When girls may grace the board. Go, go to bed, Possetless. Time thy wild pulse, and cool that head With hellebore : — no avarice so diseas'd or dread ! Was this thy vesper oraison? Dost think At such idolatry the stars will wink, Or to the tomb thy soul can, like thy body, shrink? If thou must act what nature ne'er design'd, Go, play the hermit; many a simple find; Diet thy rebel blood in mossy cave; Penance thy days, no more to sin the slave ; Lift up thy thonghts; and court — a reputable grave. But soft! Why chills the tepid zephyr? Why, Born of his sweet breath, thus languishingly Droop in orphinage this fruit and flow r ? Their parent is no more. The murth'rous pow r Of Boreas usurps the thicken'd sky, And all spring's promise, withering looks to die. This wind's drear whistle, its alternate howl, — Now too this harsh, this hideous hoot of owl, Sad omen'd,— ah ! sure conspire tVerwhelm The gifts and joyfulness of nature's realm! My half-planted footstep back shrinks aghast 38 DONJON. Unnerv'd ; and the panic heart-shock past, A faint and faltering pulse seems left to count its last. Here eddying dusts, hurl'd high, deface and tear, And all is wildness, whirlwind and despair, As start the fluttering songsters to retreats, Far from the danger'd nest. Now clattering beats The hurtling hail ; its stones now sudden cease, As if exhaust of wrath, — portent of short liv'd peace ! Man's stricken nerve distrusts the solemn pause ; And from its covert not a bird withdraws, Spell bound and mute. And hark ! that hoarse, low sound, Rolling from the far south ! again ! the ground Sure quakes — or seems — and that horizon flash ! Fleet and dread herald of the thunder's crash I Oh ! see on volume of the huge, potent storm, Fn murky grandeur, in magnific form Array 'd, the minister of rueful ire Sublimely comes, and deals resistless fire ! What voice tremendous every valley fills ! How roars its compass round these trembling hills ! Omnipotent the shock, and swept its aery prey Qf shrieking eaglets from the face of day ! I PROSPECT AND REFLECTION. 39 Jove's fabled servant yields his native height, — — His pow'r imperial ! — yet half but quench'd, still bright, His eye darts back on death — his own electric light! Nor thou Dodona, sav'st thy sacred oak ! Launch'd is the bolt; and, at the single stroke, Trillions of splinters, all thy wreck'd remains, Scattered and prostrate lie. And much it pains Presumptuous man, his lot it should betide To read this humbling epitaph on earthly pride. " By talon furiate, and by piercing eye/' ■ li With wing'd celerity was rul'd the sky/' " How many a blast this sturdy oak withstood," -" As spread his giant arm and sceptre o'er the wood ?" ■" But did not providence such glories scan," " Where the fit lesson for the pride of man?" The plant, the brute, and every miser mine, Must all their vaunted properties resign, When time shall speed no more : but thou blest spark Immortal, no lightnings and no time shall mark For comfortless extinction ! — Yet this life's dear ; And who so bold, as not to quail with fear In such an hour as this ? the welkin's rent, And sulphurous globes of flame successive sent, 40 DOS JON, Seem hissing at my feet. Big sheets of water In deluge fall ; winds rage from every quarter, To mock and mingle with the deafening peal Of thunder. That fait 'ring tongue would fain reveal All, his compunction makes th'afFected atheist feel. Tis now the' sons of revelry have met At various haunts, and ruin spreads her net, Unseen by midnight lamp. The gamester fumes. Frets; — now bites the lip, — and now assumes A ghastly smile. Now need his wits be clear : For he has stak'd his last! — a stake begetting fear! — And fear confuses all the frenzied brain Of husband and of father, — ties alas, how vain ! The thoughts, which on his game ought keenly fix, With beggary, suicide and ruin mix. Full many a wretch too strolls the nightly round ; Here songs obscene ; there vengeful oaths resound ! Then come, — let's fly this Lazaretto crew, Nor more the unavailing theme pursue. Lo ! Donjon's mount invites us to the skies — A heav'nly banquet, it to none denies ! — Points to the beauteous harmony above, PROSPECT AND REFLECTION. 41 And asks of man the tribute of his lov£ ; Excites each latent quality of mind, The unseen mechanist of all to find. We tread the heav'ns ; our low-born passions crush ; And all our feelings for their meanness blush. — — Ah, now ! how light's my heart ! care's left below, All that I view is peace : I see no foe, Feel no resentments, envy, hopeless grief : All the poor, wounded spirit meets relief. Here too my petty pride decays. — none see- No pride celestial dwells with general charity ! No pigmy plumage torn from new fledged breast Floats half so light ; nor sat e'er halcyon nest Less pond'roits ; nor May could breeze impart Less ruffl'd, — than this now buoyant, placid heart. Oh, by thy side, blest contemplative maid, Be every thought as thine, bright, pure and staid, Urania ! — Let's sing some classic story, May lift the mortal to oetherial glory. And, thou Alcides, each marv'llous labour done, — How just the recompense thy wisdom won, Illustrious constellation ! on earth How oft to fortune, favour, or to birth We owe our proud distinctions ; but thee 5 e2 42 DONJON The high Thunderer's vaunted progeny, Invests no birthright from a sire divine, For all the toilsome acquisition's thine, — Thine the dauntless, albeit an infant, clasp, Could squeeze the reptiles in thy deadly grasp, The jealous Juno to thy cradle sent : Whence twin-born Iphiclus, loud shrieking, rent The house with agonizing fear ; but thou Couldst dash them on th'ensanguin'd floor with brow Smiling contempt upon the forked tongue, That out of poisonous jaws then helpless hung, Lolling in its own gore ! to heav n submiss, Thine was the choice of virtue, guide to bliss Eterne. And many a god was pleased to lend Some armory, might fortitude befriend Like thine. Not that Minerva's coat of arms design'd To ward her sex's beauty from thy mind ; Nor Vulcan's brazen club and gold cuirass, No, nor Jove's thunderbolts could hope surpass The shafts of Love, triumphant from his birth O'er all, — co-born with chaos and with earth. And tho' the current coin may thousands cheat, True love's no less divine, for human counterfeit. Pure love is loyal to his honour'd post. PROSPECT AND REFLECTION. 43 Spurning the contraband from foreign coast. Do time or fortune ere his temple harm ? Tiie ling 'ring ruin sheds a double charm. The just, and modest fair's the lover's crown, Elysium her smile, discomfiture her frown. Does honour consecrate the wedded home ? Then beauty shall command the thoughts might roam; That gifted charm attract within its sphere Domestic sanctity, surpassing dear, And fitting to the soul. The powers above, — Nay e'en the bad below, admire this pious love. But there's a guilty and a modest blush ! Urge the young culprit what the burning flush Betrays, she'll own, and too well knows. Now ask The buoyant, bounding nymph, unused to mask, Why there are moments, that suffuse the cheek With new-blown roseate dye ? They oft not speak The motive to a guileless heart, she fain Would know herself, but asks that heart in vain. Thus if wing'd Iris, on some autumn eve, Her bow with variegated colour weave, As Sol 'mid partial clouds and mist descend, — In mingled hues the distance oft will lend That light- ting'd crimson to some cloud afloat, 44 DONJON, Where silent beauty blush — what lovely nature wrote, But hold ! — methinks Nemoea's woods resound With his cave's last bellowing, where fast bound In iron grasp the lion chokes. His roar Subdued sinks like retiring thunders o'er The main ; and with a last hoarse murmuring tone, Mingles the gasping interval and dying groan. — — All's mute ! — the glorious struggle's done. At length Thy nerve prevails. He tried,— he found and felt thy strength , Supine, convuls'd ! His eyeballs flaming rage, On's conqu'ror fix'd, quickens death's ghastly gaze, And Lerna'-s frightful monster thou canst dare, Whom, half but seen, the bolden'd heart might scare ; Him dare with brazen, massy club assail In conflict close, since arrows nought avail To pierce his trebly dense, impenetrable mail. High mount his hundred crests on bulky spires, Black poisons issue with his hissing fires ; His numerous blood-stain'd eyes their threatnings shoot, Proscribe and mark as sure the victim of the brute. PROSPECT AND REFLECTION. 45 On high thou wield'st thy brass of cumb'rous weight; Down falls the pond'rous crush on th' hostile pate. The smash 'd brain vivifies in reeking gore, And multiplies these heads a hundred more* " Ho ! Iolas ! Assist with ready hand : " Our hero cries. " Hie to yon furnace ; an iron brand Snatch thence, and place it to the bleeding head, When next I bruise this hot-blood hydra dead." Thus strength alone not alway will suffice : Inviting art, the formidable dies. Such and much more ! Brave, wise and good we find The warfare of thy life, — to serve the human kind. Pluto and Cerberus — Earth, Heaven and Hell — In admiration rapt,— thy toils prodigious tell. What reminiscence do these orbs awake ? Is't pity only grants thee to partake Of heav'n's light, Cassiope ? Oh ! say, Say what it boots, when vain-fed pride shall sway The mortal heart. How does the mournful fate Of Niobe, Arachne,— -spirits that hate Humility, — vex th' aspiring plans and gait Of mortified ambition ! — anguish double, Do this pride entail on children trouble ! 46 DONJOX. Could not the homage paid a consort queen Ambition sate ? wert so presumptuous seen, That no atonement but a daughter serv'd ? One, who from unstained virtue never swerv'd , Yet naked was t 'endure a chain must bind To the cold rock, till her th' astonish'd hero find, Expos'd to that monster of the main ? Thou, Gallant Theseus, possess'd the heart should bow To beauty, sympathy and love ! Twas thine The task to win and wear —Andromeda divine, And Orion, — or for heroic deed ! Or suffering penitence for crime decreed, Compassion asking of the Gods, — tho' fame We know shall sully deep the noblest name, When coward oportunity present, — Now shares, 'tis sure, the glorious firmament, Whence too, we see, yon brilliant patriot rays Proclaim thy daughter's in immortal praise With them the noblest impulse of the breast Beat high to rescue, and their country blest, Where blasting pestilence assail'd. Hear this, Calumnious devotee of sensual bliss : Know she, who lives to charm and bless the brave, Herself can die, her native land to save, PROSPECT AND REFLECTION. 47 Vain and unmanly wretches, void of shame, Who'd meanly filch a female's treasur'd name, Can history not fix the roving eye ; Nor point where Portia, Artemisia die,— And Lucrece — Honor's ready sacrifice ? Mark o'er each corse the bard, the willow sighs What fame shall pleas'd record, — and unborn ages prize ! And tho' thy neighbour's maid should heedless roam, Is't thou wilt guide th' incautious wanderer home ? Is it for thee to judge, to cast the stone, As though th'unerring virtues were alone Thy sum and substance all ? — who tracks and strews The devious path with flowers ; yet never shews The latent thorn, the lurking flint beneath ; Or herbs, that their seductive perfumes breathe To blight the bloom of innocence? Is it for thee, Unfeeling, to brand with tainted infamy The honor and the worth, thou fain would'st lure From the fond embrace of relative and sure Friend? — ungrateful, too ! Her very sex alone, Its offices, its cares have claims. Canst disown The virtuous charm and cheer? Canst rate at naught Thy natal debt; and all the mother taught 48 DOKJON, Thy lisping accents once, till hope's warm tear To rapture swell 'd, and trill'd alternate fear? Upon a couch of awful sickness lain, Shuun'd too by those, should most assuage thy pain, What antidote ? what ministered relief ? Woman ! — neglected, or too little prized ! Woman ! she, who thy patience best advis'd, Herself the heavenly type. Should fancy give Alarm of the last hour thou hast to live, Is it some clown's rude hands, which thou'dst desire To close thine eyes ; to decently attire Thy helpless corpse ?- Helpless as thou, at first, For pity and the lacteous fount didst thirst, When the blest light of woman with sweet nature's burst. Of all those wretches who disgrace their birth, Sure woman least deserves ill season'd mirth. Give penitence thy praise ; destitution alms ; But fly corruption for unsullied charms. Each rock-girt isle of Siren see thou shun ; Do thou take heed where thy proud vessel run, Lest virtue's slanderer by its counterfeit's undone. Tho' loves and graces may surround the fair, Has virtue, piety and learning's care PROSPECT AND REFLECTION. 49 Been ever aliens to the sex ? not yet, Cornelia, shall Clio thee forget ; Nor many a nation cease of worth to sing, Such as Eliza could to Britain bring ; And such hereafter as that empire own, Should Kent's descendant grace the lineal throne : And such the hope, to ease our mourning strain, Should he who reigns to please — by death alone give pain. But say, Urania, — midst all these happy spheres Is space reserv'd for Calumny, who feeds on tears ? Where 'mongst th' Empyrium and forgiving host Has slander penitent assign'd its post ? The viprous brute's confin'd on earth to dwell, Till justice can invent unheard of pangs in Hell. And lo ! — the Hyades still weep a brother lost ; Seas still are swoll'n with tears ; —ships still are grievous tost. O for fit terms to sing a sister's love, With numbers pleasing to the choirs above ; And inspiration tune the praises due To softer notes than ever angel knew ! From Hyas' grave may odorous dews arise 50 DONJON. And mix th' accepted incense with the skies ! Wide o'er the globe may Atlas' Daughters shed Their influence, and every Brother tread The path, where kindred fondness strews its flowers' Rich sweet, grateful to earth, — and lov'd by heav'nly pow'rs. Such love th' Heliades their ill-starr'd Brother bore, Too well, by poplar grac'd and amber-weeping shore, Eridanus, thou shew'st. Surely such tree, In Woman's mild, majestic symmetry, — Bowing beauteously devote to heav'n's wind, — Like others of the tender fair ought find Distinguish'd rank above ! ought sure— but hold ! Rash muse, forbear ! — how oft has reason bold Dealt ail deficient her imbecile blow, With misjudg'd distance, she presum'd to know ! Say, boasted Reason, can thy prying sight Count all the wonders of this brilliant night ? Can thy false balance half the causes weigh, That works its system, or the wheels of day ? Yon milk-white road seems pav'd with pearls thick sown, Has myriad glories with a cause unknown. To know so much and be denied the rest, > PROSPECT AND REFLECTION. $\ Is Heaven's providence to its invited guest. What wretch art thou, call'd Atheist, say who ? What ingrate's false to God, — yet to himself is true ? Say why should miracles, reveal'd by writ Religious, startle thy faith ? thy wit Misplac'd excite ? in miracle we're born, Are suckled and expire. As gloom awakes to morn, Blind ign'rance discovers light, and by degree A labyrinth's unwound on mystery Here on earth. Things impossible, once thought, Age after age display. Who was't sought And found, a double century now gone, What was reserved for ages then unborn, — To court the vivid lightning of the skies, And guide the wing, terrific as it flies, Adown the magic line of slender wire, Themselves unsear'd, and cag'd the heav'nly fire ? Ask Ethiopia's providential rain Whence Egypt slakes her sands ? her plain Whence fructifies, beyond the world's compare ? Nor corn, nor pulse adust ! — and why ? her air So perfum'd and so pure ? her blossom'd health ; Her joyous herd and flock ; her pasture's wealth ? Or, wouldst the varied miracle discern ? 52 DONJON. To Paloestina's vales and hills reflection turn. No flood of Nile, but marv'llous rains bethink, The herb and seed, that twice of Heav'n's cup drink I Where were the path could faith and hope have trod 7 Had man been wise and perfect as his god ? What slight intelligence his brain may scan, Should tend to bless by humbling haughty manv What the connection canst thou, worm, relate 'Twixt past, existing and a future state ? As little serves to ask of human sense God's nature, attributes or existence. What the mode ? his meanest boon from whence' ? Swifter than ruin from war's tube when shot, The light's velocity thy vision not Impairs ; but sped in mystery 'twill cheer Like charity, whose quick and secret alms endear The more. Yet given to gaze so much, so free ?j How little of the wondrous whole we see. Note this canopy of studded light, This solemn silence, tho' so busy night ; The generous dew re- visiting the corn, To act its function 'till return of morn. With true precision rolls the guiding star, And the gold fleece is borne from Colchis far. PROSPECT AND REFLECTION. 53 From Colchis, where yon affection'd and brave Twins, in Jason's Argos having dar'd the wave, Together shone in arms. Not life more dear, They shar'd each hard-fought honour, hope, or fear. Nor Chiron's pupil, nor his gallant crew, Shew'd half so noble, — no! — nor half so true. But tho' your birth and love were one, another Kindness glow'd — that made mankind your brother. The barbarous robbers on the traffic main Your tutelary arms have slain, And sunk perdition-deep, — never to rise again. The twins of Leda yet auspicious smile Benign regard on Ocean's sons, — the while They tempt the awful perils of the deep, — Sooth the rough winds, the thunders lull to sleep. The wife, solicitous and fond, to you will raise Her altar, and consecrate its blaze With vows. Thither she leads her lamb snow-white, Weeps for her mate's return, — and executes the rite : Attracted Pity deprecates the storm, And no huge clouds unchain'd the azure vault deform. What stream of hoary light thus veils the east, As bidding earthlings to enchantment's feast ? f 2 54 DONJON. This thm, — yet solid-like, — this gear which night Now wears, i'faith's the frolic of some elfin sprite, Sporting on goss'mer wings — a visionary flight. Soon as those fleecy, changeling clouds sail by, The rest forsake their mountain-peaks so high. Such craggy scenery, witch'ry and romance, Wilder the senses sure in spell-bound trance ! Though — Heaven ! -how, passing praise, must now be seen To mount in regal dignity the queen Of these nocturnal realms ; whose empire teems With blessings, shed from the urn of her reflected beams ! Mark the pellucid vapours round her car ; Its virgin, sober, silv'ry sheen afar O'er gladden'd earth. In every land and age Thy birth has been the hallow'd theme of sage, Of thankful and of raptur'd man, Of yore Th' assembled ancients piously would pour Their feelings and their sentiments in holy rite, Tho' little could these acts thy benefits requite. But, ah ! — to think, that some ! Such always were, Who little for their sacred'st obligations care. And part of them, to slander sole devote, PROSPECT AND REFLECTION. 55 Will vow the proofs of chastity denote The grossest guilt : and for their demon-fane Select the purest victim to be slain. Like me upou this mount, Endymion gaz'd, Lost in the wonders of the sight he prais'd ; Diana smil'd as now, enthron'd the same, But foul Detraction, squint, — did lust to blast her fame. And thou, fair Stour, whose green-sward banks so well I love to muse, thou canst delighted tell The honours of that queen, whose mild rays glance On thy playful ripple, till it dance Cheerily the vales among ; where tripping light, Full many a dryad, in dew-dropt vest bedight, Steals from her hollow oak, thy Naiades to join. She culls the night-clos'd bluebell, shall entwine Her virgin tresses, and of auburn bright, To grace with revelry the sober night. No faded chaplet of putrescent flow'rs Drops from the brow of Comus here ; no hours Of guilt, where squalid droops the blushless rose, Or myrtle sickening its green life foregoes. Cynthia's fresh beam ne'er knew inebriate flame : Twould petrify the breath, corrupt of shame. 56 DONJON. Here heav'n-lov'd chastity, in starry zone, Preserves her happy court — and honourable throne. Yes, here from every fountain, brook and lake, From mountain rock and dell their nymphs forsake The mossy grot or cave. Tis the hour serene, To weave fresh crown of oak, or sedge, or evergreen, And frolic pastime share — blithe as the lunar sheen. Silent each meadow — purest silence all ! Brisk bound their feet, yet never heard to fall, Or crush the enamell'd mead. By whispers low, And becks well understood, they to and fro The mazes wind and ravel through the dance ; And prudent still, still on no mischief chance. A beauty they divide ; tho' iEgle claim To be the paragon of grace, and paid the name By every sister nymph. Ne'er envy knew This sisterhood, but love gave love its due. Blanch'd in pure Diana's beam, surpassing fair And delicate, sure iEgle's form asks care Of partial heav'n ! 'tis symmetry divine : No mortal mould nor clay could ere have made it thine ! That native elegance, that simple ease, Lend ever tothyport some new-born charm to_please. PROSPECT AND REFLECTION, S7 Thine eye's blest radiance darts no wanton ray, Like basilisk not kills, nor leads astray ; But sheds a cheerfulness, that shews, in part, The Elysian treasure of a guileless heart ! Thy graces' fount, Boeotia, never gave Reflected beauty, such as loves to lave In S tour's less celebrate — tho' pure and placid wave. May industry and farthest land commerce With thee, a navigated stream, and nurse To mariner ! the manumitted black Too, — may he ride thy free-born track, Loving and loved ! — that mutual chain, shall bind The sable pilot's heart, whilst Albion find His freight, the richest freight, — that loads a grateful mind ! Now myriad vapours in one flood combine, And weave for Stour their mantle's pearly shine, Who slumbers on unseen, — a nether stream. The hush'd night's empress flings her grey-lit-beam ; And fancy loves the sorcery to adorn, E'en till the first faint tints of tell-tale dawn Th' illusive charm dissolve, — and breathe the breath of morn. Flow on, sweet Stour ; meander thro' our vale 58 DONJON. And ever be thy charms my favorite tale ! Not that, majestic Thames, I could forget ' The pious loyalty once felt, whilst yet Upon thy fostering, recreative shore, I bath'd my infant limbs, — and sipp'd thy classic lore; Nor mem'ry magnetize no heart-felt sigh, Would fain forbid my vainest hopes to die ; Would fain revive the flush of boyhood spent, — Nay all the peril, that its rashness lent. Did but a brother seat him at the helm, Let hostile currents threaten to o'er whelm, Our pinnace still should brave the bridge's pile, The pilot pleas'd I'd trust, and still on horror smile ! But lost the chaste moon's cheer on drowsy men, Sunk on their downy couch ; and clos'd their ken To all, save what the cozening poppy wand Of Morpheus conjure up ; — that God so fond To act his curtain'd imagery. Here dreams The child of nurse's tyranny ; he screams To tear the drum, to see what made the noise Within ; and early vindicates the rights of boys ! The elder brother too, — his brain surcharg'd With lesson for th' ensuing mom, enlarg'd PROSPECT AND REFLECTION. 59 The muscles of his vengeful arm, enacts Th' inexorable Greek ; and to the wheels Of his triumphant chariot binds the heels Of his fall'n foe, defiTd with dust and gore ; Grossly insults ; then weeps he can no more. Oh, happy — do not these impressions stamp Obdurate pride, and every milder virtue cramp ! Howe'er sublime Moeonian chords may play ; Whate'er their fire ; how choice and sweet their lay ; May ripening years assuage resentment's leaven, And bless' d forgiveness raise an earthly heav'n! May every thought— thy word, thy deed, thy look Receive its temper from the better book ! A sister here, her teens well nigh expir'd, With shorten'd breath dreams of the day desir'd — The happiest, sure ! love's calendar shall note, — Shall tear her from her home and friends, who dote Upon their beauteous child ; who sleepless lie The livelong night, and deeply anxious sigh, And pray and pray,-— and sigh — to read futurity. But youth, all prescient, spurns ungen'rous fear : Dreams, — more than Poestum's rose, — Love's will bloom all the year. 60 DONJON. Heav'n grant— good sense, as well as beauty, wait The plighted pair ; and pluck the thorn from fate, Must rankle in the breast of wedded dolts. Sense is love's guardian more than beauty's bolts. That agony, snore and sigh alternate, Confess yon miser's bonds and interest great. Seldom sleeps he ! — and now chill dews of fear Conjure anxieties that danger's near. Poor wretch ! he dreams his key's confin'd to th'lock ! " The wards are damag'd ! Was there ever shock like this ? How came it so ? Here, Susan ! run ! — A smith !" But Susan, he forgot had done With this world — part starv'd, part broken hearted ; His dupe of promise had for ever parted With him and her last hope of wedded wealth. Her wages scanty, sacrificed her health, His trusty maid was sunk into her grave, And not another could be found his slave. Yet no remorse is his, his dread is thieves Alone. " What shall he do ? " He now believes The rusty iron and its age the cause ; Thinks of some cheap smith,— but if he withdraws, PROSPECT AND REFLECTION. 51 What surety his ? He can't extract the key, He can't unlock, but others may— and thieves there be At every turn and angle of the world ! His eyeballs roll, his nether lip is curl'd. This iron chest he cannot break ; would fain Have op'd to count his pelf again ; — — And yet — if op'd — how after make secure ? Aye ! there's a pang ! must make the usurer poor. His soul's convulsed ; the fever'd brain beats high ; Wishes the grave his bank, — and almost dares to die; But dare not stir. There gazes on his key ; The heart blood curdling, all his spirits flee ; Conscience upbraids and points — his direful destiny. All horror struck he starts, — now moans, — And grasping wild his hair, — awakes with his own groans. There sleeps another, honest as some think. He knows to swim, whate'er insolvent sink. Prudent of pence, composits of a pound, To pay the tradesman none is stricter found ; But with a thrift, to meanness close allied, Some self indulgences are gratified. 52 DOXJON. He dreams of stocks, of consols, omnium and scrip, And does not scruple to pollute his lip With just a little slander, can he but trip His happy neighbour, and his friends estrange, Transferring interests, shall his own arrange. Selfish and proud, hard hearted to distress, Little recks he the charity may bless Another's board, may heal man's jarring strife, And kindly qualify the ills of life. How restless he ! his arts have fail'd to day ; The poor man stands, maugre what foe could say. How pain'd he breathes : for conscience would be heard. He'd scorn the monitor, as bugbear and absurd. Yet now one injured neighbour's shade appears, And thus addresses his resistless fears. " Oh, couldst not thou thy opulence enjoy, Pamper thy appetite until it cloy, But my little vineyard — must wantonly destroy ; Must lend thy busy tongue to blast my name, And cover industry with undeserved shame ? " There dreams a son of Abraham of his gold, Full seven times refined, correctlv told PROSPECT AND REFLECTION. g3 His interests, and a safer bank ne'er knew Usurious cunning than this generous Jew. Forgiven and forgotten in downy rest Each vulgar insult of the day, how blest His peaceful couch i not his the heart and soul, Can conscience, like an incubus, control, Whose mountain- weight inflicts — excruciating dole. A benison, the choicest, waits thy sleep. And why ? thon wip'st the tear from eyes that weep, And art to penury, as pastors to their sheep. Orphan or widow, in thy fold receiv'd, By honest sympathy are straight relieved : Thy breast, the asylum of extended love, Invests its sureties in the firm above. Unlike the churl with charitable creed In mouth, but on its spirit loth to feed. Of christian virtue talks he, and no more, For to the poor is clos'd both heart and door. He'll give to plenty what it cloth not ask, And add his sunshine where the prosp'rous bask. What is his dream ? of nectar and delight ! Ambrosial dainties, tempting to the sight, But far, far beyond the reach ! Though oft he Greedy thinks to taste, with festive ecstacy, g4 DONJON This banquet of the poor, by angels sent :<— Yet hope deluded, sick'ning, well nigh spent, Distorts his eyes and bursts the seal of sleep. They glaze in film ; they from their sockets deep Still fix upon the viands their dying light, — Still covet to the last — the tantalizing sight. What means this burst of light ? Why deeper glows The firmament with heat unwont? Who knows The mystic cause? 'Tis not from nature sure: Her light's creation gen'rous, just and pure. Her orb diurnal and her lunar beam, Comets, and galaxy, and various stream, Pour'd from a fount benign. Here burns the grain, For which we have toil'd and pray'd — and garner'd all in vain ! Tis here gaunt famine strides the blaze. — And hark ! From thence it came — that scream of horror. Mark Devastation's rapid shaft ! — and where — oh, Soul-startling spectacle of fright and woe ! Smother'd in the dread, lumber'd mansion's fall, And to the death scorch'd — tho' on pity call Responsive cries of hundreds, — the mother And her babe ! — widower, daughter, brother, Stript of their hard earn'd, reputable home PROSPECT AND REFLECTION. Q$ And means, now doomed in beggary to roam, Fugitives from all, save hopelessness and grief, Must envy sufferings that have found relief. Who can express the varying sound and sight Of scene so strange ? yet who forget this night? A vivid change disrob'd its sombre vest, And all the hemisphere in borrowed sheen is drest. There gleams reflection neither night nor day, While ruin flits on wings of twilight ray. The sullen furnace roar : wild, wasteful smash ; Anon the clattering tile ; the shock and crash ! Commingled yells ! the brute and human shriek ! And Fear the witness would, but cannot speak. The trusty mastiff, chain 'd to fire and pain, Howls out his final pang. Oft and again, Leagued with the waking wind, quick flashes rise, And hold dominion o'er the anger'd skies. 'Tis no brief despotism runs its length : Not yet the elements have pass'd their strength. Another flash! — fresh shooting sparks ! — dense smoke, That seems awhile the struggling flame to choke ! Now issue forth reserved and smouldering fires, Till when convulsed and — leaping into spires, — Exulting, quivering, each in sated rage expires. g 2 (56 DOKJOX.. Yet no ! — the peerless beams of infant day Dart on our meaner element ; whose way Now bursts anew.— ~Tho' shorn, — intensely red ? Glows it impassion 'd, jealous, and still dread. Aurora's clouds, that skim yon azure bright, Clash their penumbras on this vexed light ; Where gradual wreathes the grey fume's many a shade ; As tho' to task some artist hand display 'd, And beauty grace the wreck— that desolation made. But who is't boasts this noble deed ? where ke, The neighbour, knight and flower of chivalry, Whose noble heart conceivd, and whose own hand Dar'd, all muffled in the guilty dark, to brand With ruin another's weal, — himself with shame Unutterable ! come blushing forth and claim The smiles of wondering day ; then go thee, chew Incendiarism's food,— and serve thy hell anew. What unknown monster gave thee baneful birth ? Whence stol'st thou, horrid alien to this earth ? By what ascent from hell sent here, to taste The fruits of heav'n bless'd industry, then waste And ravage with relentless flame ? Art thou PROSPECT AND REFLECTION. 57 Some minister of mad revenge ? Avow, If can'st, what fault the toilsome steed Or lowly kine arraign. What urgent need Has thus their agonizing pangs and death decreed? Though thou usurp'st the throne of peaceful night, The bed-rid and the suckling breast affright ; Wide tho' thy sceptre blaze its fell dismay, And cureless ruin wound the eye of day ; Will virgin justice from her starry height Pour down no penalty or pain, to right The violated honours of the year, And blast thy triumph, whilst inflicting fear ? A temperament of fire there yet may be, That cruelty ne'er dreamt, nor heaven let see ; Some ghastly hydra or chimera shape, With Cerberus' yawn, or famish'd tiger's gape; Some conscious horror, or some hopeless pang, More dire than ever brute's ferocious fang, Of what ere poison'd or rack'd wretch complain'd, A Tityus endured, or poet yet has feign'd. Then pause, thou wretch, may meditate a deed, Shall make exult to see thy victim bleed, And count his writhing throes. Summon reason ; 68 DONJON. Look well her guise betray no proof of treason. Dost purpose craftily revenge or pelf ? Give conscience hearing. Go, respect thyself. But sure in cruel flame none can delight, Save fiends ! What, man ! who first in piteous plight Of infancy, yet to his maker dear, Th' essential comfort to existence here Has felt of fire ; in chilling age the embers Bows to as a household god, — remembers, Much too grateful ever to reverse Such elemental blessing to a curse ! — Blessing no thankfulness can e'er repay. It is his hearth's, his altar's guardian stay ! Loving to loose stern winter's frozen chain, What time he'd hunger and would thirst in vain, Did not, with all the nurse's fostering care, This cordial friend his vines, and aliment prepare. Ah me, that man, or devil, can distress With instruments, by nature meant to bless ! And what avails it, mem'ry shew that pile Combust, aside the blushing waters of the Nile, So glares reflected in its frightful mass Of rueful conflagration ? There alas ! Smelted a mine of wealth and golden lore ; PROSPECT AND REFLECTION. 59 A world's invaluable and vested store. There 'twas great Lagides, thy Alma Palace stood, Asylum of the scholar, genius, and the good ! Thine, Alexandria,— thine the omen'd fall,— Thy schools, and thy philosophy and all To barbarism and to Omar ! Tis not (Egyptus' pearls dissolv'd ; nor with what A wanton queen luxuriously may deck, And win a Roman to her fatal neck t That wisdom covets or would weep to lose . Not for such things the sorrowing muse Upon thy ashes, learning, sheds a tear: Tis that the torch of ign'rance light the bier, And science' wasted lamp — but glimmer dark and drear. How had the soul of gentle Scipio yearn'd ; How with this sacrifice his heart have burn'd ; Could here fair learning's, and the muses' friend Witness th' irrevocable flames ascend On wings of barbarous ruin. Oh, could grief Avail, for ev'ry spark — a tear would find relief. And thou, Persepolis, in ruin, — albeit grand, And marvel of magnificence — dost stand A lamentable record of mad power, 70 DONJON. Let loose in idle and inebriate hour. There Persia's victor 'twas, by Thais led, And portent of his birth misjudg'd, made head Against the honours of a laurell'd name : His name, whose natal night, we're told by fame, Thy wonder, Ephesus, phrophetic laid in flame. That mansion, eastward ! — do its wails maintain Some rich man's yawning, lazy, pamper'd train, Strutting in silken hose and foppish shoe, — Apes of importance vain, — and servants little true ; Whilst many a peasant, weary and ill-fed, Scarce owns a pallet to repose his head ? No ; 'tis for disease, the hurt, and the distress'd, Which brother men have gen'rous built and bless'd As heav'n smil'd applause. Charity's in th' land, Tho' oft some niggard doles — with cold, ignoble hand. How few proportion to their means their alms, And tho' gold covet, feel not half its charms ! How many can their twenties, fifties give, But scores of thousands leave, that heirs may live. May iEsculapius happily preside Long o'er this pious scene ! may there spread wide Compassion's wing, shall raise the drooping poor, And wealth transplant a rose to every cottage door ! PROSPECT AND REFLECTION. 71 And the neighbouriug dome ? — Those gates alas ! Detain a tenantry, denied to pass Their boundary, 'till expiate such crimes, As swell the calendar and stain the times. Oh, happiest of the happy he, who strives To cleanse and purify his neighbours' lives, Himself the rare ensample ! much is due From the parental, priestly ties ; from you, Th' associate ; or the instructor of the mind, To gauge its faculties and bias find, Did these their sacred offices unite With equal energy and equal might, Mankind should see a golden age return, And each unkindly passion cease to burn. Education and ensample ! these twain Must constitute man's highest gain. 'Tis not the depths of learning's lore to sound ; In arts excel ; — how good alone is found. Knowledge and thought are weapons smooth and keen; But how discreetly use them must be seen, Or to adorn or serve ! by others' ill To point youth's prudence and restrain his will ; T'illustrate causes and results of vice ; To foster virtues ; court conceptions nice ; 72 DONJON. To win with suavity, with reason mild; Yet whilst indulgent, not to spoil the child. The code of life t' engrave upon the boy Should chief the Mentors of our sons employ. And most perhaps the morals of the poor Should owe to reason prejudice's cure. Taught well to read and better still to THINK, For wisdom might they thirst — its social cup might drink. A nation's happiness is found to flow Not more from what the prince than subjects know. The heart and intellect of each need learn Their separate duties justly to discern ; The hind convinc'd, obedience is his part, Will reverence the laws with honest heart ; Whilst kings, taught wisdom by kind heav'n above, Shall know their crown's best gem — to be the people's love. And when the durance of a felon ends, May there some pitying angel raise him friends ! Let each proud sinner learn himself 'to know, Nor be exceptless all the world his foe ! The worst of felons is our brother still ; PROSPECT AND REFLECTION. 73 The best of men abusers of the will. Shall thought on science and the arts be spent, Yet charity's bright genius fail t' invent Encouragement for penitence and grief ? Shall prudence not administer relief To destitute despair? O sons of wealth, Who lounge and idle, to the loss of health, Ye might employ some moments to devise How wretches may return to virtue, and be wise. Blest is the boon, where affluence has will'd Its patch of land, the famish'd poor have till'd! How sure the thanks, some little spot, when sown, To know its fruits and husbandry their own ! Tis here the smile beams on the native soil, All patriot pride and honorable toil! The hind, that delves from dawn till evening's dew, Opening for others opulence anew, It ill befits to gall with penury's chain, And stamp on industry the sluggard's stain. Another sun departs. Such fiick'ring beam These eyes may muse no more. -And now, or is't a dream? O for expression ! where no effort faint, 74 DONJON. Where daring verse might sing, and genius paint This majesty of light, thy realms have drest, Thou gorgeously sublime, — thou ruby-glowing West ! As onward bound the generous steeds of day ; Exhale their genial fires and spurn delay; We quaff the vine mature; but couch on down, Ere yet our grace its purple nectar crown : Heedless how gratitude this debt redeem, Nor thank to-day's, nor doubt to-morrow's beam. Here too! — Ccelestial sprites! — what creature's wond'rous shade Glides godlike down the East, as tho' to aid The waning day '?-— The pride of christian land ; Substance of all that's elegant, that's grand. Stupendous pile of beauty, as of strength! That hesitating time vouchsafes a length Of days unwont, as tho 1 himself desir'd, And could not choose, but spare charms so admir'd; So rob'd appropriate in sober grey, Smiling a reverend triumph o'er decay. Why doth surprize arrest repeated gaze ? Still claim for grace some more than vulgar praise? How could this mass, torn from the quarry rude, Cement in art's munificentest mood PROSPECT AND REFLECTION. 75 Each choicely delicate and finished stroke ? Thy faithful votary must fain invoke Some holy guardian, still protect thy tow'rs, Thy hallow'd offices, thy Heav'nly pow'rs. Challeng'd, yet dumb, herb flattery stands aghast, Her craft outrivall'd and by truth surpass'd : May oft my pausing step, and wistful ear, Thine echoing aisle invite, soon as some clear, Rich-voic'd, and choral hymn chastely shall lend Its heav'nward notes, and earth-born care suspend ! Hebrus I'd quit for thy more valued haunt, To taste the pure spring of thy sterling chaunt. Here mine be rapture, scarce akin to earth, By music feasted on my Saviour's birth ; Here grateful mount this soul to quires above, On Hallelujahs of empyreal love ; My every sense absorbed in these alone, Here joy in homage to my Maker's throne ! May no wild maniac, no Vandal foe Insult thy creed, or sanctity o'erthrow ! Thy every hurt may visitor deplore, Till piety, till taste, till science be no more ! Thou, in the honours of thy hoaried age, Like good and great men's, most the heart engage. 7g DOSJON Let youthful smiles assume the jewel's ray, A patriarch's glory brighter beams display. Tis not the colour of a verdant spring, Nor lights and shades that summer fling, Can paint the landscape in such beauty true, As autumn's varied, soft, and parting hue. Unveil'd my destiny of future hours, Perchance my last now contemplate thy tow'rs ; A course, hence exil'd, bend to fate's control ; Or, run my sand, part soon the weary soul ; — Soon this fleet streamlet time — Eternal ocean roll ! Yet pray'd 1 ne'er, — ne'er yet my fancy drank A hope so profitless ! — my earthly rank Should such ascendant gain on men below, That thou my requiem, — thou my praise bestow. This for such pillars of thy faith reserve, As best support thee with unwearied nerve, And where from its creator — least the image swerve. ' Tis here reposes in his cloister 'd grave A relative, whose virtues could not save From wreck of meaner clay, — the gen'ral doom ! — To watch the progress of his offspring's bloom. Lamented brother, lov'd from earliest date/ PROSPECT AND REFLECTION. ^7 And semblance to thy mother ! that charm so great, As 'twere once meant by pity's grace above, To soothe domestic grief, and pledge my love To both : — a love not forward to display A tinsel lustre to the gossip day ; But witness'd by each star, each angel care, When hearts can pour forth fond and fervent prayer. Far to the south a younger semblance lies, Of beauteous kin. Oh ! could she hear these sighs Convulsive, —sure 'twould rend her gentle heart : For did but ache a parent's head, her art 'Twas bound the kerchief, steep'd in many a tear, As trill'd each nerve her sensibility and fear. Type of those blossoms, fresh the breezes drave From apple-bough and almond o'er her grave, In life's bright spring she fell ; — fell from these arms, That strove to stay, and to protect the charms, Grim atrophy could rob. In vain I bore Her to thy airy height, Donjon, — no more To taste thy draughts of renovating breath : Higher looked her pious soul, — and borrow'd wings of death ! Pleas'd with the priz^ — to grace her lonely side, — h 2 78 DONJOH, The grave a loving sister elaim'd, to hide The worth of female lore— and all the father's pride ! But these wept objects shar'd not all my grief, Call'd not alone on pity for relief. Wing'd on the chilling blast fresh tidings knoll'd Of souls departed, — souls with heav'n enroll'd ! Life's sojourn fmish'd, their career's good end, Mourn'd by each foe, and doubly dear to friend. Oh ! who shall fix the boundary of gref, If fast fall those, our solace and relief ! — From fond and grateful hearts too rudely snatched, With all their worth,— I'd almost said unmatch'd. The doleful knell yet vibrates on the ear, Still ling'ring memory must bedew the bier With kinsmen's, paupers', and — a grateful poet's tear. What unsophisticate and simple sounds are these ? Sounds that ideas associate shall please When taste may pall for proud and craftier notes. Sweeter than response to bell-team chime, May playful bound, at early matin time, PROSPECT AND aEFLECTION. 79 From yonder wood ; sweeter than her first kiss, The mother give her babe, plighting the bliss Of love connubial ; than Freedom's breeze More sweet to patriot heart, which ill agrees With bondage of the base ; — nay, sweet beyond compare To me that knell, when eas'd of toil and care, God's children, one and all, are ask'd to join in pray'r! Kind spirit of the sabbath bell, that floats Around his cot, long, — long ! mayst thou invite The poor and aged to that cheering rite, Can lift him to the bosom of his God ! Saint Martin's oratory tells where once trod The zealous Augustine, whose christian train Then lustrated in font of earliest fane, And Ethelbert approved : for Bertha sigh'd And gain'd, what had her beauty been denied, Perchance. Her proofs, persuasion, pious heart, — These won the Pagan consort, to depart From gross idolatries, well pleas'd t'embrace A faith, on mercy built, on penitence and grace. Thou, temple meek, humility's own type, 80 donjon. Albeit venerable, blest, and ripe Of years, 'tis not from idly curious call, Thus oft 1 seek thy consecrated wall Of antique clay, thy font of sculptur'd skill. Not the frail Vessel's beauty can thus fill My heart with adoration. The design And use imperishable be it mine To thank ; mine the vast masonry to praise, — Howe'er inadequate these lowly lays,— Of sin forgiv'n, — that arch of boundless span, Wide as the wanderings of guilty man,— Redemption's scheme ! Slunk from the city crowd, Alike defamatory, envious and proud, Inspired, I ruminate thy wondrous creed, And cares distract on its nepenthe feed. At sight of thee, I note the cross's cause, Glow with its triumph, bind me to its laws ; While the wean'd, wearied soul earth's vanity abhors. For what's life's record ? days of embitter'd joys, Delusive pleasures, or of trifling toys. Andsee yon monitory trace and track Of Augustine, thy splendour, wealth, and wrack. So vain is all man's boasted art and pow'r, Pilaster, column, Keystones of an hour, PROSPECT AND REFLECTION. gl To hold against the press of time, or hand Of pillage ! strip'd of thy lofty stand, And gorgeous decoration, thou once grand Spire, thou architrave, — alas! how humble Now. Now pride with humbler dust can crumble, Trodden by every vulgar foot ! I pray You vers'd in antique lumber, here display The difference 'twixt dust in quality. Which The heart dust of the arrogant and rich ? Where the arch priest's ? and shew me where a king's? Their value too ? — come weigh these things ;— A prelate's pound and monarch's. Best or wo^est, Which dust wilt separate, weigh and charge fox first ? And whose the heaviest in your estimation, — The pauper's dust, or his who rul'd a nation ? Yet is there he, such atoms can unite : — Ay ! quicker than the swiftest lightning's flight, — So dread to think ! — Perchance yon almonry May rise again, and interceder be. Of yore refected here, its poor may be Awak'd, to deprecate the destiny And wrath of justice. With cheering face, And mien, bright charity,— on whom some grace, 82 donjon. Some good,eachlov'd and loving cherub has impress'd, Alike to his paternal smile who bless'd Creation jubilant, — kind maid 'tis thou May'st smooth the furrows on displeasure's brow ; For luxuries plead, and crimes, that in their day, Deepen'd the sluggish cloister's lifeless ray, And precinct, dedicate to heav'n, stain'd. Where bloated fortune's self at length disdain 'd In shame, to glut her maw and revenues more, Blush'd for the idol, she could once adore, And sped her course reform 'd — from superstition's shore. The clock ! —to midnight's chill and startled ear What solemn monitor ! — who shall the fear Conceive, that strikes his melancholy cell Like its poor wretch, — who now must only tell The remnant hours of a brief, forfeit life, The morrow's morn exacts : tho' child or wife, Distract, must ne'er embrace him more ? — and yet Some culprit life may sooner pay its debt, Be't mine, or be't my neighbour's. Hours have fled Since curfew rang, and most folk ta'en their bed. Man must be thrifty of his couch and sleep, Who vigils of philosophy wouid keep. PROSPECT AND REFLECTION. g3 But lucubration in excess were weak, For some remission the stretch'd thoughts bespeak; And he must know, who hopes his Maker's care, Recluse devotion owes the closet pray'r. There extern objects fail t'engross the mind, And best he knows his very self to find, With each vague thought call'd home — to a Creat( kind. Farewell, ye groves, to whom so much I owe, From you my happiest. contemplations flow ; From you my health. And may the public taste And estimate ne'er slight thy gifts, nor waste Their hours and health with scenery less sane ! Farewel, sweet Donjon, 'till I come again ! And should no more these footsteps hither bend , Be thou to others as to me a friend ! Raise the dull soul, the sinking pulse awake ; Some moral flight let pensive votaries take ; Engage their feelings to the happiest tone, And Health and Gratitude — The high priz'd blessing own ! finis. • L CTcg m&3. »£ £KCC