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-º-º-º-º-
º
Mow Pºzzº rought ſº ſº bed:
Bº who own º ºenoºr of ºzºa,
The horrorſ of ººz Vº
ºne º ºne ſº
ºr ºver
ºr ºr
/* 2.
º
ſº ſº ºr ſº

POEMS
WRITTEN AND PUBLISHED DURING THE
AMERICAN REVOLUTIO R
47/ º
AND Now --
REPUBLISHED FROM THE ORIGINAL MANUSCRIPTS;
- NTE-R-S-E-R-S-E D.
WITH TRANSLATIONS FROM THE ANCIENTS,
AND OTHER PIECES NOT HERETOFORE IN
PRINT, -
-
BY PAHILIP FR ENEAU.
-Justly to record the deeds of fame, -
A muse from heaven should touch the soul with flame;
Some powerful spirit in superior lays
Should tell the conflicts of the stormy days.
THE THIRD EDITION, IN TWO vºs.
PHILADELPHIA :
*Roº. The PREss of Lypia º BAILEY, No. 10.
NORTH-A-LLE-


Copy-right secured according to Law.

POEMS, &c. s
BOOK III.
CONTAINING ORIGINAL POEMS, WRITTEN AND PUB.
LisHEDAT DIFFERENT PERIODs, DURING THE RE.
VOLUTIONARY WAR.
-
"O THE
AMERICANS OF THE UNITED STATES.
First ſublished ºvember, 1797.
MEN of this passing age – whose noble deeds
Honour will bear above the scum of Time:
Ere this eventful century expire,
Once more we greet you with our humble rhyme:
Pleased, if we meet your smiles, but—if denied,
Yet, with you a sentence, we are satisfied.
Catching our subjects from the varying scene
Of human things; a mingled work we draw,
Chequered with fancies odd, and figures strange,
Such as no coºl, poet ever saw
Who writ beneath some stºr MAN's cieling placed;
Travelled no lands, nor roved the watery waste.
To seize some features from the faithless past;
Be this our care—before the century close:
The colours strong-for; if we deem aright,
The coming age will be an age of ºroge: -
When sordid cares will break the muses' dream.
And coºoº sensº be ranked in seat supreme.
Vol. II. B

º POEMIS ON
Go, now, dear book; once more expand your
wings:
Still to the cause of MAN severely true:
Untaught to flatter ſhride, or fawn on kings:-
Trojan, or Tyrian,”—give them both their due-
When they are right, the cause of both we head,
Mnd both will flease us well,—if both will read.
BARNEY'S INVITATION.
COME, all ye lads who know no fear,
To wealth and honour with me steer
In the Hyper ALI privateer,
Commanded by brave BARNEY.
She's new and true, and tight and sound.
Well rigged aloft, and all well found-
Come away and be with laurel crowººd,
Away—and leave your lasses.
Accept our terms without delay,
And make your fortunes while you may,
Such offers are not every day
In the power of the jolly sailor.
Success and fame attend the brave.
But death the coward and the slave,
Who fears to plough the Atlantic wave,
To seek the bold invaders.
Come, then, and take a cruising bout,
Our ship sails well, there is no doubt,
She has been tried both in and out,
And answers expectation.
Let no proud foes whom Europe bore
Distress our trade, insult our shore—
Teach them to know their reign is o'er,
Bold Philadelphia sailors.
* Trus, Tºgue nº nº dºmine ageºur.

SEVERAL, OCCASIONS
5.
We'll teach them how to sail so near,
Or to venture on the Delaware,
When we in warlike trim appear,
And cruise without Henlopen.
Who cannot wounds and battles dare
Shall never clasp the blooming fair;
The brave alone their charms should share,
The brave are their protectors.
With hand and heart united all,
Prepared to conquer or to fall,
Attend, my lads, to honours call,
Embark in our Hyder Ali.
From an eastern prince she takes her name,
Who, smit with freedom's sacred flame,
Usurping Britons brought to shame,
His country's wrongs avenging:
See, on her stern the waving stars–
Inured to blood, inured to wars,
Come, enter quick, my jolly tars,
To scourge these warlike Britons.
Here’s grog enough—then drink about,
I know your hearts are firm and stout;
American blood will never give out,
And often we have proved it.
Though stormy oceans round us roº-
We'll keep a firm undaunted soul,
Befriended by the cheering bowl,
Sworn foes to melancholy
While timorous landsmen lurk on shore,
'Tis ours to go where cannons roar—
On a coasting cruise we'll go once more,
Despisers of all danger;
And Fortune still, who crowns the brave
Shall guard us over the gloomy wave
A fearful heart betrays a knave;
Success to the Hyder Ali.



5 - POEMS ON
song,
ow captain BARNEY’s victory ovº º sº
C ENER 1 - Mºº-
Mſiril 26, 1782.
O’ER the waste of waters cruising,
Long the General Monk had reigned;
All subduing, all reducing,
None her lawless rage restrained:
Many a brave and hearty fellow
Yielding to this warlike foe,
When her guns began to bellow
Struck his humbled colours low.
But grown bold with long successes,
Leaving the wide watery way,
She, a stranger to distresses,
Came to cruise within Cape May :
* Now we soon (said captain Rogers)
* Shall their men of commerce meet;
* In our hold we'll have them lodgers,
* We shall capture half their fleet.
* Loſ I see their van appearing—
“Back our topsails to the mast–
* They toward us full are steering
* With a gentle western—blast;
* I've a list of all their cargoes,
* All their guns, and all their men:
* I am sure these modern Argo’s
* Can't escape us one in ten :
* Yonder comes the charming Sally
“Sailing with the General Greene–
* First we'll fight the Hºpen Air,
* Taking her is taking them :
* She intends to give us battle,
* Bearing down with all her sail-
* Now, boys, let our cannon rattle.
* To take her we cannot fail.

SEVERAL, OCCASIONS.
* Our eighteen guns, each a nine pounder,
* Soon shall terrify this foe;
* We shall maul her, we shall wound her,
* Bringing rebel colours low”-
While he thus anticipated
Conquests that he could not gain,
He in the Cape May channel waited
For the ship that caused his pain.
Captain Barney then preparing,
Thus addressed his gallant crew-
“Now, brave lads, be bold and daring,
* Let your hearts be firm and true;
* This is a proud English cruiser,
“Rowing up and down the main,
* We must fight her—must reduce her,
* Though our decks be strewed with slain.
* Let who will be the surviver,
* We must conquer or must die,
“We must take her up the river,
“Whate'er comes of you or I:
“Though she shews most formidable
“With her eighteen pointed nines,
* And her quarters clad in sable,
“Let us baulk her proud designs.
* With four nine pounders, and twelve sixes
* We will face that daring band;
* Let no dangers damp your courage,
* Nothing can the brave withstand.
* Fighting for your country’s honour,
* Now to gallant deeds aspire;
* Helsman, bear us down upon her,
* Gunner, give the word to fire!”
Then yard arm and yard arm meeting,
Strait began the dismal fray,
Cannon mouths, each other greeting,
Belched their smoky flames away:
Soon the langrage, grape and chain shot,
That from Barney’s cannons flew,
Swept the Monk, and cleared each round top.
Killed and wounded half her crew.
Vol. II. B 2.
8. POEMS ON
Captain Rogers strove to rally:
But they from their quarters fled,
While the roaring Hyder Ali
Covered o'er his decks with dead.
When from their tops their dead men tumbled,
And the streams of blood did flow,
Then their proudest hopes were humbled
By their brave inferior foe.
Allaghast, and all confounded.
They beheld their champions fall,
And their captain, sorely wounded,
Bade them quick for quarters call. -
Then the Monk’s proud flag descended,
And her cannon ceased to roar;
By her crew no more defended,
She confessed the contest o'er,
Come, brave boys, and fill your glasses,
You have humbled one proud foe,
No brave action this surpasses:
Fame shall tell the nations so-
Thus be Britain's woes completed,
Thus abridged her cruel reign,
*Till she ever, thus defeated,
Yields the sceptre of the main.
the crows AND THE CARRion.
ºf MEDICAL story.
IF Ephraim on his bed complains
Offeverish pulse and boiling veins,
And throbs and pulses in his brains,
Then round him flock a ghastly crew
Of doctors old and doctors new,
And doctors, some—the Lord knows who,



SEVERAL OCCASIONS,
Hoping the men had learned their trade,
Poor Ephraim begs them for their aid,
And ſºromises they shall be paid.
Each quotes some book, by way of sham,
Or reads some text from Sydenham,
Which some approve, and some condemn.
At once he hears a barbarous noise,
Like that from herds of butchers' boys,
That every hope of life destroys.
He promises all bills to pay,
But they proceed in angry fray–
Poor Ephraim frets—and well he may.
Each looks at each with vengeful eyes,
Asif contending for a prize
He wants to share—when Ephraim dies.
One talks of cure by cºlonist
But his wise brother, Sydrophel,
Swears, 'tis the readiest way to hell.
While one the lancet recommends,
Another for a blister sends,
And each his every cure defends.
Weary of all they have to say,
Atlast the patient faints away:
Poor Ephraim swoons—and well he may
In Fancy’s dreams, he thinks he roams
In realms where doctor Satan foams,
With Sydrophels and Cunny-combs.
Revived at length, he begs release,
And whines, “Do let your quarrels cease,
Do, doctors, let me die in peace.
“Oh! had I sent for doctress Nº.
Or any thing but cruel man,
To put me on my legs again:
She with her cooling tamarind tea,
At least would not have murdered me
Come -If you love me, do agree

10 POEMS ON
* She would have held my dizzy head-
She would have something to me read-
Or would have somewhat cheering said.
* Good heavens' you cannot all be right-
O do not scratch —O do not bite –
Good doctors, do not, do not fight!”–
Here they began a louder fray–
Oh! Ephraim's dead –to them all play-
Poor Ephraim dies'—and well he may.
LINES
wºn 11-tºn IN A v ERY SMALL GARDEN.
ALITTLE garden, six feet square,
A little parsley planted there; -
A cabbage that shall have no head;
Nine inches long, a spinnage bed.
Some little shrubs, a little tree,
Four little sprigs of rosemary;
A little sage, a little rue,
Some heads of sallad, very few;
Three bean hills ranging in a line;
Five little tulips, very fine:
A carrott head, with scarce a root,
A gooseberry bush that bears no fruit:
Here cabbages look very sad,
And sickly coleworts, near as bad–
The marrow-fats and other peas
Are almost dying with disease:
Potatoes, here, may find a grave
But resurrection will not have:
Of radishes, a dismal crop
Are ready for the devil's shop.
All these are planted in the shade.
And in a little time will fade.

SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 11
All these doin this garden grow,
And little more we want to know,
Except that they, who hence would eat
Shall have—a very little treat.
TO A DEMOCRATIC EDITOR.
NO easy task that press assumes
Which takes the lead in Freedom's band,
And scatters in nocturnal glooms
The blaze of Reason through our land:
Each emºry bellows would, no doubt,
Rise, and asſire to put it out.
Blamed though you are, pursue your way,
Nightevermore precedes the sun;
Whate'er some angry king’s-men say,
You play a game that must be won:
The bliss of man—is the great prize
That yet at stake with tyrants lies.
When first a mean, designing few
Their poisonous dregs by HERALD spread;
An antidote, by such as you,
Was at the root of mischief laid;
With a simple herb from Reason's plains
You kept all right in Freedom's veins.
Now hostile views, and low design
Are busy to annoy your page,
Controulits strength, its fires confine,
And war with sense and reason wage:
They hope, with fogs to quench the sun,
They hope your useful race is run.
But, though some narrow hearts contrive
To shove you from your mounted car;
Right pleasantly we see you drive,
And hardly heed their little war :
12 POEMS ON
Like insects, creeping in the dirt,
They merely serve to make you sport.
Who looks at Kings, a court, a queen,
With childish pomp, and borrowed fame,
But wonders from what genius mean
Their chaos of confusion came-
Yet those on little things depend,
And every reptile is their friend.
GEORGE THE THIRD’s
SOLILOQUI".
WHAT mean these dreams, and hideous forms that
rise
Night after night, tormenting to my eyes-
No real foes these horrid shapes can be,
But thrice as much they vex and tortureme.
How cursed is he-how doubly cursed am I-
Who lives in pain, and yet who dares not die;
To him no joy this world of Nature brings,
In vain the wild rose blooms, the daisy springs.
Is this a prelude to some new disgrace, -
Some baleful omen to my name and race –
It may be so–ere mighty Cesar died
Presaging Nature felt his doom, and sighed;
A bellowing voice through midnightgroves was heard,
And threatening ghosts at dusk of eve appeared—
Ere Brutus fell, to adverse fates a prey,
His evil genius met him on the way,
And so may mine -but who would yield so soon
A prize, some luckier hour may make my own?
Shame seize my crown, ere such a deed be mine
No-to the last my squadrons shall combine,
And slay my foes, while foes remain to slay,
Or heaven shall grant me one successful day.












SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 13
Is there a robber close in Newgate hemmed,
Is there a cut-throat, ſettered and condemned:
Haste, loyal slaves, to George's standard come,
Attend his lectures when you hear the drum;
Your chains I break—for better days prepare,
Come out, my friends, from prison and from care,
Far to the west I plan your desperate sway,
There, 'tis no sin to ravage, burn, and slay
There, without fear, your bloody aims pursue,
And shew mankind what English thieves can do.
That day, when first I mounted to the throne,
I swore to let all foreign foes alone.
Through love of peace to terms did I advance,
And made, they say, a shameful league with France.
But different scenes rise horrid to my view,
I charged my hosts to plunder and subdue–
At first, indeed, I thought short wars to wage
And sent some jail-birds to be led by Gage.
For 'twas but right, that those we marked for slaves
Should be reduced by cowards, fools, and knaves;
Awhile, directed by his feeble hand,
Those troofs were kicked and pelted through the
land,
Or starved in Boston, cursed the unlucky hour
They left their dungeons for that fatal shore.
France aids them now, a desperate game I play,
And hostile Spain will do the same, they say;
My armies vanquished, and my heroes fled,
My people murmuring, and my commerce dead,
My shattered navy pelted, bruised, and clubbed,
By Dutchmen bullied, and by Frenchmen drubbed,
My name abhorted, my nation in disgrace,
How should I actin such a mournful case .
My hopes and joys are vanished with my coin.
My ruined army, and my lost Burgoyne.
What shall I do—confess my labours vain,
Or whet my tusks, and to the charge again.
But where's my force—my choicest troops are fled,
Some thousandscrippled, and a myriad dead–
If I were owned the boldest of mankind,
And hell with all her flames inspired my mind.
-1. POEMS ON
Could I at once with Spain and France contend,
And fight the rebels, on the world’s green end?
The pangs of ſtarting I can ne'er endure,
Yet hart we must, and part to meet no more :
Oh, blast this Congress, blast each upstart state,
On whose commands ten thousand captains wait;
From various climes that dire Assembly came,
True to their trust, as hostile to my fame;
'Tis these, ah these, have ruined half my sway,
Disgraced my arms, and led my slaves astray–
Cursed be the day, when first I saw the sun,
Cursed be the hour, when I these wars begun:
The fiends of darkness then possessed my mind,
And powers unfriendly to the human kind.
To wasting grief, and sullen rage a prey,
To Scotland’s utmost verge I'll take my way,
There with eternal storms due concert keep,
And while the billows rage, as fiercely weep-
Ye highland lads, my rugged fate bemoan,
Assist me with one sympathizing groan;
For late 1 find the nations are my foes,
I must submit, and that with bloody nose,
Or, like our James, fly basely from the state,
Or share, what still is worse-old Charles's fate.
A DIALOGUE
BET wºn
GEORGE AND FOX.
SUPPOSED TO HAVE PASSED A Bou T THE TIME OF
THE APPROACH OF THE COMBINED FLEETS OF
FRANCE AND SPA IN TO THE E RITISH co-sºº's.
Mugust, 1779.
GOOD CHA Rºy Fox, your counsel I implore,
Still George the third, but potent George no more
By Noarº conducted to the brink of fate,
I mourn my folly and my pride, too late:

SEVERAL OCCASIONS. lº
The promises he made, when once we met
In Kew's gay shades, I never shall forget ;
That at my feet the western world should fall,
And bow to me, the potent lord of all-
Curse on his hopes, his councils and his schemes,
His plans of conquest, and his golden dreams,
These have allured me to the jaws of hell;
By Satan tempted thus Iscariot fell:
Divested of majestic pomp, I come,
My royal robes and pride I’ve left at home.
Speak freely, friend, whate'er you choose to say:
Suppose me equal with yourself to-day :
How shall I shun the mischiefs that impend ?
How shall I make Columbia, yet, my friend?
I dread the power of each revolted State,
The trembling east hangs balanced with their weight.
How shall I dare the rage of France and Spain,
And lost dominion o'er the waves regain?
Advise me quick, for doubtful while we stand,
Destruction gathers o'er this wretched land:
These hostile squadrons, to my ruin led,
These gallic thunders fill my soul with dread:
If these should triumph-Britain thou must fall.
And bend, a province to the conquering Gaul.
If this must be—thou earth, expanding wide,
Unlucky George in thy dark entrails hide
Ye oceans, wrap me in your dark embrace—
Ye mountains, shroud me to your lowest base
Fall on my head, ye everlasting rocks
But why so pensive, my good Charley Fox :
ºr -
While in the arms of power and peace you lay,
Ambition led your restless soul astray.
Possest of lands, extending far and wide,
And more than Rome could boast in all her pride,
Yet, not contented with that mighty store,
Like some base miser, still you sought for more,
And, allin raptures for a tyrant's reign,
You strove your subjects' dearest rights to chain.
Those ruſhan hosts, beyond the ocean sent,
By your command, on blood and murder bent,
Vol. II. C
















º POEMS ON
With cruel hand the form of man defaced,
And laid the toils of art and nature waste.
(For crimes like these imperial Britain bends,
For crimes like these her ancient glory ends.)
Those lands, once truest to your name and race,
Which the wide ocean's utmost waves embrace,
Your just protection basely you denied,
Their towns you plundered, and you burnt beside.
Virginia's slaves, without one blush of shame,
Against their cause you armed with sword and flame
At every port your ships of war you laid,
And strove to ruin and distress their trade;
Yethere, even here, your mighty projects failed;
For then from creeks their hardy seamen sailed,
In slender barques they crossed a stormy main,
And trafficked for the wealth of France and Spain;
Cross either tropic and the line they passed,
And, deeply laden, safe returned at last:
Northink they yet had bowed to Britain's sway,
Though distant nations had not joined the fray,
Alone they fought your armies and your fleet,
And made your Clinton’s and your Howe's retreat,
And yet while France stood doubting if to join,
Your ships they captured, and they took Burgoyne.
How vain is Britain's strength, her armies now
Before Columbia’s bolder veteransbow;
Her gallant veterans all her force despise,
Though late from ruin we beheld them rise;
Before their arms our strongest bulwarks fall,
They storm the rampart and they scale the wall;
With equal dread, on either service sent,
They seize a fortress, or they strike a tent.
But should we bow beneath a foreign yoke,
And potent France atchieve the humbling stroke.
Yet, every power, and even ourselves, must say,
* Justis the vengeance of the skies to-day tº
For crimes like our's dire sufferings must atone;
Forbear your fasts, and let the gods alone—
By cruel kings, in fierce Britannia bred,
Such seas of blood have first and last been shed.
That now, distrest for eachinhuman deed,
Our turn is conne–out turn is come to bleed.


SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 17
Forbear your groans; for war and death array,
March to the foe, and give the fates their way.
Can we behold without one dying groan,
The fleets of France superior to our own?
Can we behold, without one poignant pang,
The foreign conquests of the brave D'Estaing?
North is your friend, and now destruction knocks.
Still take his counsel, and regard not Fox.
George.
Ah! speak not thus—your words will burst my heart.
Some softer counsel to my ears impart.
How can I march to meet the insulting foe,
Who never yet to hostile plains did go?
When was I versed in battles or in blood
When have I fought upon the faithless flood?
Much better could at my palace door -
Recline, and hear the distant cannons roar.
Generals and admirals Britain yet can boast,
Some fight on land, and some defend the coast;
The fame of these throughout the globe resounds,
To these I leave the glory and the wounds;
But since this honour for no blood atones,
I must and will-be careful of my bones.
What pleasure to your monarch would it be,
If Lords and Commons could at last agree;
Could Worth with Fox in firm alliance stand,
And Burke with Sandwich shake the social hand,
Then should we bring the rebels to our feet,
And France and Spain in gloriously retreat,
Her ancient glories to this isle return,
And we no more for lost Columbia mourn.
ºor.
Alliance – what -my master must be mad :
Say, what alliance can with these be had :
Can lambs and wolves in social bands ally:
When these prove friendly, then will North and
Alliance no-curse the abject thought;
Ally with those their country's ruin sought

















18 POEMS ON
Who to perdition sold their native land,
Leagued with the foe, a close connected band-
Ally with these ſº-1 speak it to your face-
Alliance here, is ruin and disgrace.
Angels and devils in such bonds unite,
So hell is allied to the realms of light
Let Worth or Sackville still my prayers deride,
Let turn-coat Johnstone take the courtly side,
Even Piº, iſ living, might with these agree :
But no alliance shall they have with me.
But since no shame forbids your tongue to own
A royal coward fills Britannia's throne;
Since our best chiefs must fight your mad campaigns
And be disgraced, at last, by him who reigns,
No wonder, leaven such ill success attends. -
No wonder North and Mansfield are your friends
Take my advice, with them to battle go,
These book-learned heroes may confront the foe-
Those first who led us towards the brink of fate,
Should still be foremost, when at Pluto's gate;
Let them, grown desperate by our weight of woes
Collect new fury from this host of foes, -
And allied with themselves, to ruin steer,
The just conclusion of their mad career.
George.
No comfort in these cruel words I find-
Ungrateful words to my tormented mind:
With me alone, both France and Spain contend.
And not one nation can be called my friend:
Unpitying now the Dutchman sees me fall,
The Russian leaves me to the thundering Gaul, -
The German, grown as careless as the Dane,
Consigns my carcase to the jaws of Spain.
Where are the hosts they promised me of yore,
When rich and great they heard my thunders roar:
While yet confessed the master of the sea,
The Germans drained their wide domain for me.
And, aiding Britain with a friendly hand,
Helped to subdue the rebels and their land?
Ah! rebels, rebels insolent and mad;
Our Scottish rebels were not half so bad–





SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 19.
They soon submitted to superior sway;
But these grow stronger as my hosts decay -
What crowds have perished on their hostile shore!
They went for conquest, but returned no inor-
Columbia, thou a friend in better times :
Lost are to me thy pleasurable climes:
You wish me buried in eternal night,
You curse the day when first I saw the light-
Our commerce vanished, hostile nations share,
And thus you leave us naked, poor, and bare;
Despised by those who should our cause defend,
And helpless left, without one pitying friend.
These dire afflictions shake my changeful throne,
And turn my brain–avery idiot grown:
Of all the isles, the realms with which I part,
Columbia sits the weightiest at my heart,
She she provokes the deepest, heavies: sigh,
And makes ºne doubly wretched, ere I die.
Some dreary convent's unfrequented gloom
(Like Charles of Spain) had better be my doom.
There while in absence from my crown I sigh,
George Prince of Wales, these ills may rectify;
A happier fortune may his crown await,
He yet, perhaps, may save this sinking state: -
I'll to my prayers, my bishops, and my beads,
And beg God’s pardon for my heinous deeds
Those streams of blood, that spilt by my command,
Call out for vengeance on this guilty land.
- Fºº.
In one short sentence take my whole advice,
(It is no time to matter and be nice)
With all your soul for instant Peace contend,
Thus shall you be your country's truest friend—
Peace, instant peace, may *y your tottering throne,
But wars, and death, and blood can profit none,
To Catharine send, in humble garb arrayed,
And beg her intercession, not he aid.
Withdraw your armies from
And vex her oceans with yourſ
Vain are their conquests. past
For what this hour the
Vol II.
the Americº shore,
eets no more;
experience shews,
y º the next they lose
2.





















20 POEMS ON
Implore the friendship of those injured States:
No longer strive against the stubborn fates.
Since heaven has doomed Columbia to be free,
What is her commerce and her wealth to thee
Since heaven that land of promise has denied.
Regain by cunning what you lost by pride:
Immediate ruin each delay attends,
Imperial Britain scarce her coast defends;
Hibernia sees the threatening foes advance,
And feels an ague at the thoughts of France;
Jamaica mourns her half-protected state,
Barbadoes soon may share Grenada's fate,
And every islethat owns your reignto-day,
May bow to-morrow to the Frenchman’s sway,
Yes—while I speak, your empire, great before,
Contracts its limits, and is great no more.
Unhappy prince! what madness has possest,
What worse than madness seized your vengeful breast,
When white-robed peace before your portal stood,
To drive her hence, and stain the world with blood
For this destruction threatens from the skies;
See hostile navies to our ruin rise;
Our fleets inglorious shun the force of Spain,
And France, triumphant, stems the subject main.
Cºnno, 1779.
TO CRISPIN O'CONNER,
ºf B-4CK-VOO DSM.A.W.
(supposed to as waitrºx By Hezekiah salent.
WISE was your plan when twenty years ago
From Patrick's isle you first resolved to stray,
Where lords and knights, as thick as rushes grow,
And vulgar folks are in each other's way;
Where mother-country acts the step-dame's part,
Cuts off by aid of hemp, each petty sinner,
And twice or thrice in every score of years
Hatches sad wars to make her brood the thinner.

SEVERAL OCCASIONS. ºn
How few aspire to quit the ungrateful soil
That starves the plant it had the strength to bear:
How many stay, to grieve, and fret, and toil,
And view the plenty that they must not share.
This you beheld, and westward set your nose,
Like some bold prow, that ploughs the Atlantic foam,
–And left less venturous weights, like famished
Crows,
To feed on hog-peas, hips, and haws, at home.
Safe landed here, not long the coast detained
Your wary steps:—but wandering on, you found
Far in the west, a paltry spot of land,
That no man envied, and that no man owned.
A woody hill, beside a dismal bog-
This was your choice; nor were you much to blame:
And here, responsive to the croaking frog,
You grubbed, and stubbed, and feared no landlord's
claim. -
An axe, an adze, a hammer, and a saw ;
These were the tools, that built your humble shed:
A cock, a hen, a mastiff, and a cow;
These were your subjects, to this desert led.
Now times are changed—and labour's nervous hand
Bids harvests rise where briars and bushes grew;
The dismal bog, by lengthy sluices drained,
Supports no more hoarse captain Bull Frog's crew-
Prosper your toil-but, friend, had you remained
In lands, where starred and gartered nobles shine,
When you had, thus to sixty years attained,
What different fate, "Squire Crispin had been thine.
Nine pence a day, coarse fare, a bed of boards,
The midnight loom, high rents, and excised beer;
Slave to dull squires, kings' brats, and huffish lords,
(Thanks be to Heaven) not yet in fashion here.

22 POEMS ON
CRISPIN'S ANSWER.
MUCH pleased am I, that you approve
Freedom's blest cause that brought me here :
Ireland I loved-butthere they strove
To make me bend to King and Pººr.
I could not bow to noble knaves,
Who Equal. Rights to men deny -
Scornful, I left a land of slaves,
And hither came, my axe to ply:
The axe has well repaid my toil–
No king, no priest, I yet espy
To tythe my hogs, to tax my soil,
And suck my whiskey bottle dry-
Inforeign lands what snares are laid:
There royal rights all right defeat;
They taxed my sun, they taxed my shade,
They taxed the offal that I eat.
They taxed my hat, they taxed my shoes.
Fresh taxes still on taxes grew;
They would have taxed my very nose,
Had I not fled, dear friends, to you.
A SATIRE
ºlº TO ºf HOSTILE *TTACA
[First written, and published 1775.
LONG have I sate on this disastrous shore,
And, sighing sought to gain a passage o'er
To Europe's towns, where, as our travellers say,
Poets may flourish, or perhaps they may,
But such abuse has from your coarse pen fell
I think I may deter my voyage as well,

SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 23.
Why should I far in search of honour roam,
And dunces leave to triumph here at home?
Great Jove in wrath a spark of genius gave,
And bade me drink the mad Pierian wave,
Hence came those rhymes, with truth ascribed to me,
That urge your little soul to cruelty:
If thus, tormented at these slighty lays,
You strive to blast what ne'er was meant for praise,
How will you bear the more exalted rhyme
By labour polished, and matured by time?
Devoted madman what inspired your rage,
Who bade your foolish muse with us engage?
Against a wind-mill would you try your might,
Against a castle would a pigmy fight?
What could your slanderous pen with malice arm
To injure those, who never meant you harm
Have we from you been seeking to attain
The mean ideas of your barren brain
Have I been seen in borrowed clothes to shine,
And, when detected, swear by Jove they are mine
O miscreant, hostile to your own repose, -
From your own malice your destruction flows:
Blessed be our western world-its scenes conspire
To raise a poet’s fancy and his fire,
Lo, blue-topt mountains to the skies ascend!
Lo, shady forests to the breezes bend.
See mighty streams meandering to the main :
See lambs and lambkins sport on every plain!
The spotted herds in flowery meadows see
But what ungenerous wight, are these to thee —
You find no charms in all that nature yields,
Then leave to me the grottoes and the fields:
We interfere not with your vast design—
Pursue your studies, and 111 follow mine,
Pursue well pleased your theologic schemes,
Attend professors, and correct your themes,
Still some dull nonsense, low-bred witnvent,
Or prove from scripture what it never meant,
Orfarthrough law, that land of scoundrels, stray,
And truth disguise through all your mazy way,
Wealth you may gain, your clients you may squeeze.
And by long cheating, learn to live at ease;
24, POEMS ON
If but in Wood or Littleton well read,
The devil shall help you to your daily bread.
O waft me far, ye muses of the west–
Give me your green bowers and soft seats of rest-
Thrice happy in those dear retreats to find
A safe retirement from the scoundrel kind-
Though dire misfortunes every step attend,
The muse, still social, still remains a friend-
In solitude, her converse gives delight,
With gay poetic dreams she cheers the night,
She aids me, shields me, bears me on her wings,
In spite of growling whelps, to high, exalted things,
Beyond the miscreants that my peace molest,
Miscreants, with dullness and with rage opprest.
Hail, thou saic ºr Genius foe to honest fame,
Patron of dunces, and yourself the same,
You dream of conquest-tell me, how, or whence?
Act like a man and combat me with sense—
This evil have I known, and known but once,
Thus to be galled and slandered by a dunces
Saw rage and weakness join their dastard plan
To crush the shadow, not attack the man.
What swarms of vermin from the suitry south.
Like frogs surround your pestiential mouth–
Clad in the garb of sacred sanctity,
What madness prompts you to invent a lie :
Thou base defender of a wretched crew,
Thy tonguelet loose on those you never knew,
The human spirit with the brutal joined,
The imps of Orcus in your breast combined,
The genius barren, and the wicked heart
Prepared to take each trifling miscreant's part,
The turned up nose, the monkey's foolish face,
The scorn of reason, and your sire's disgrace-
Assist me, gods, to drive this dog of rhyme
Back to the torments of his native clime,
Where dullness mingles with her native earth,
And rhymes, not worth the pang that gave them
birth .
Where did he learn to write or talk with men-
A senseless book-worm, with a scribbling pen-









SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 25
In vile acrostics thou mayest please the fair,
Not less than with your looks and powdered hair,
But strive no more with rhyme to daunt your foes,
Or, by the flame that in my bosom glows,
The muse on you shall her worst fury spend,
And hemp or water, your vile being end.
Aspersed like me, who would not grieve and rage;
Who would not burn, this stant to engage 2
Him and his friends, a mean, designing race,
I, singly I, must combat face to face-
Alone istand to meet the ſoul-mouthed train,
Assisted by no poets of the plain,
whose timorous muses cannot swell their theme
Beyond a meadow or a purling stream- -
Were not my breast impervious to despair,
And did not Clio reign unrivalled there,
must expire beneath the ungenerous host,
And dullness triumph o'er a poet lost.
Rage gives me wings, and ſearless prompts me on
To conquer brutes the world should blush to own;
No peace, no quarter to such imps I lend,
Death and perdition on each line I send;
Bring all the withings that your host supplies,
A cloud of nonsense and a storm of lies–
Your kitchen wit -Saxon Apo's loud applause
That wretched rhymer with his lanthorn jaws-
His deep set eyes forever on the wink,
His soul extracted from the public sink–
All such as he, to my confusion call-
And though ten myriads—I despise them all.
Come on, dº sº, come—your muse is wil-
ling, -
Your prose is merry, but your verse is killing–
Come on, attack me with that whining prose,
Your beard is red, and swine-like is your nose,
Like burning brush your bristly head of hair,
The ugliest image of a Greenland bear—
Come on-attack us with your choicest rhymes,
Sound void of sense betrays the unmeaning chimes–
Come, league your forces; all your witcombine.
Your wit not equal to the bold design

















26 POEMS ON
The heaviest arms the muse can give, I wield,
To stretch a green goose floundering on the field,
Scribbler, who, aided by some spurious muse,
But bellows nonsense, and but writes abuse,
Insect' immortal and unfading grown,
But by no deeds or merits of its own-
So, when some hateful monstersees the day,
In spirits we preserve it from decay,
But for what end, it is not hard to guess-
Not for its value, but its ugliness.
Now, by the winds which shake your rubric mop.
(That nest of witches, or that barber's shop)
Great Satirist hear—Be wise in times to come,
A dunce by nature, let your muse be dumb,
Lest you, devoted to the infernal skies,
Descend, like Lucifer, no more to rise—
Sick of all feuds, to reason we appeal
From wars of hafter, and from wars of steel,
Let others here their hopes and wishes end,
We to the sea with weary steps descend.
Quit the mean conquest that such swine might yield,
And leave one ſhoºt to enjoy the field.
In distantisles some happier scene we choose,
And courtin soften shades the unwilling muse,
Thrice happy there through peaceful plains to rove,
Or the cool verdure of the Orange Grove,
Safe from the miscreants that our peace molest,
Miscreants, with dullness and with rage opprest




SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 27
TO MYRTALIS,
on Herº LIGHTNING WIRES, OR conductions”,
HOW bold this project, to defy
The artillery of a summer sky:
Round you, unmoved, the lightning plays,
While others perish in the blaze.
The fluid fire, in deafening peals,
Along the warm conductor steals;
And thence directed to the ground,
It glances off without a wound .
Thus guarded, while the heavens are bowed,
You, fearless, see the passing cloud :
And Jove's red bolts unheeded fall,
Near You, who slight, or scorn them all.
The beaver on your sacred scull,
(Secure as Salamander's wool)
Assists to keep from your rigg’d head
The flash that strikes us, wretches, dead.
But while the sulphur of the skies,
Disarmed, from this fair lady flies;
Or while the warm electric fire
In flashes darts along her spire,
She, not so merciful or kind,
(Or we, not guarded to her mind)
By Cupid’s darts, procures our fall,
By Cupid’s arrows kills us all.
* See Brydome's Letters from Sicily to Becksford, alderman of
London. In one of these he seems, rather seriously, to argue, that
any one by being armed with a conductor, in a thunder squal, may
º be secure from danger ºf lightning—it is said the plan
been carried into practice in Scotland.
Vol. II.












º poems on
NEREUS AND THETIS.
* She loved not the savour of tar nor of hitch,
“But a lubber mightscratch her where'er she did itch.
Shakesheare’s Temſiest
-
THETIS a partner, early took
Not for his virtues, or his look ;
Whose business was, the seas to roam-
She could not bear a spouse at home.
He sometimes sailed the Atlantic seas,
Him, Greenland's ice did sometimes squeeze;
And once he steered old ocean round,
And cal-skins brought from Wootka sound.
Poor wight –though frequently distressed,
Thetis supposed it for the best :
And when some sad mishap befel,
She wondered “he came ºff so well.”
This creature of amphibious kind;
This husband to her whims resigned,
Though toiling for her, many a mile,
Returning, rarely met a smile :-
When ather feet his gains he threw,
Map ºf received the tribute due
* I thought you were demerged, my dear!
* Lal Nereus, what! already here !”
Now just at home a month-no more,
She wished the ocean had no shore :
Wondered the anchor was not weighed,
And fretted at the stay he made.
His porcelain ware, or India lace,
Could hardly purchase one embrace.
* These sattinetts and diamond rings –
* You should have brought me better things!"
While he was silent as a mouse
She quarrelled with the Custom House;


SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 29
Did little else but scold and pout,
* Because they did not clear him out.”
If he, in port, rode commodore,
she tweaked his nose when he came on shore :-
Though he knew how to point great guns,
She made him strike to squibs and fºuns.
When he at ſhride began to fret,
And swore it would be “his ruin yet;"
When he rebuked her freaks and whims,
She wished him swampt in “southern clims”
When he some fault began to find,
And said, “as how,” that “love is blind,
With poisoned joys, embittered sweets”
She bade him mind his tº tacks and sheets.”
Ah Thetis why so hard a fate.
Such cruel conduct to your mate;
Like Carey's chickenst, would you have
Him always rambling on the wave?
Wild ganders, travelling with the wind,
Returning, meet their Madams kind–
When he returns from his next cruise,
For Heaven’s sake, make him now-a goose.
* Climates, or Climes.
* A small aquatic Bird that is rarely or nº seen in ºvers, or
very near land. There are multiº ºf them in the gulph stream,
and to the eastward. They are easily caught with a small hook.
and bait; and will follow vessels many leagues, to feed ºn any
ºffal that may happen to be thrown overboard. -
º POEMS ON
MEGARA AND ALTAVOLA.
ro. A FEMALE satinist (AN ENGL1sh Acºrn Ess) on
RECEIVING FROM H E R No. 1. OF A v ERY SATIn ICAL
and prºping attack”.
“In the rag, in the rag-whewgh ſ—
* 0 well flown dart "-
Shakesheare's King Lear.
- -
A SATIRE is arrived this day,
And it must be repelled this night:
Ye Powers assist us what to say,
For, from ourselves, we nothing write.
We could have laughed at all you said,
But when you writ—it struck us dead –
MegaRA –do forbear to write,
Or rage with less malignant spite.
Leave it to men to snap and snarl-
Be you the sweet engaging girl-
Great in your smiles-weak in your arm-
All vengeance, with no power to harm.
I'll borrow from a scribbling set
A Raven's feather, black as jet,
And with the vengeance of the pen
Create confusion in your pen.
This, from an impulse all unknown,
Shall temper down your heart of stone.
Turn storms of hail to showers of rain,
And bring your happy smiles again.
But still, unwilling to resent
What folly for a sºrrºr meant,
Peruse a fable that may blast,
And your number one–make number last
* Six copies only, of this little Poem were printed and sent tº tº
satirist-hºre the correspondence ended, 1797.





SEVERAL OCCASIONS.
In ancient times, no matter when,
A lady, in some ancient reign
(Perhaps in Greece, perhaps in Rome.
Perhaps in countries nearer home.)
This lady, rather fond of Fun,
Had put a suit of armour on :
With bow and arrows, and her fan
She conquered many an honest man.
One day she met, in a desart waste
A wight unseemly to her taste;
His brow, she thought, had too much frown ;
Thought she, “I’ll fetch the fellow down.”
And strait she bends her twanging bow,
And to his breast the arrows go!
They tore a passage through his vest,
But bounded from his solid chest.
Another dart she aimed, and missed,
Then boarded him, and bit his fist–
Her grinders left a trifling mark–
They were not grinders of a shark.
She scampered then, and, as she flew,
Another feeble arrow threw,
Which though intended for one shot,
It glanced aside, and touched him not.
Enraged, he threw his mantle off,
And said, She shall be flagued enough
Then, swift as fate, her pace defied,
Outwent her trot, and joined her side-
Megara was in such a glow
When thus the ruffian hailed her, “Hoa–
What, Madam, are your spirits low -
Heave to '-you are my prisoner now *—
Megara saw that all was gone H.
She saw, her teeth would now be drawn:
She saw her weapons were his prize,
She saw it, and with flowing eyes,
Vol. II. D 2
32 POEMS ON
And with a feeble squeak or two,
She faintly bawled out, who ARE You !
vºltavola.
* From whence I came, or what I am,
“Perhaps I may inform you, Ma'am :
* I come from lands of eurº pºligºr,
* Where female warriors do not Bºrº.
“You view me with an eye of scorn!-
* When I was old you were unborn:
* When I aspired on eagle's wings
* You were among unthought of things.
“And did you hope to escape my rage,
* You toy-shop on a strolling stage :
“You insect of a puny race,
* You baggage formed of gauze and lace
* The proudest strength you can assume,
* Shakes not one feather from my plume.
* Mylot is in the ºther cast,
* I sail upon the northern blast;
* Am mostly seen when whirlwinds rise,
* And love the storm that rends the skies.
* When thunders roar and lightnings flash,
* Then is my time to cut a dash;
* The clouds of hell alarm me less
* Than you, some sad old fashioned dress.
* And, if to answer some great end,
* I to this wrangling world descend,
* With force unknown, and pinions strong,
* I travel quick and stay not long.
“My spear is like a weaver's beam,
* And pointed well at each extreme;
* It flies with a tremendous force,
* And rivals lightning in its course.
“Of all things that are seen or known,
* I hate a cºlº-and say, Begone
* Stagnation from this rolling ball,
or slumbers in this one an ºut all







SEVERAL OCCASIONS.
* I rise upon the drift of snow-
* In polar frosts my spirits glow-
* In the torrid zone, Itemperate keep,
* And wake. when you, Megara, sleep.
* I come from ghosts, that dreary brood,
* Whose aspect would congeal your blood!
* A people on the infernal coast,
* Who know me well, and love me most.
* I courted there, and found her kind,
“A ghostess, suited to my mind;
* Her wedding gown was flounced with soot,
* And near her nose hung snuff and smut :
* She pointed to her father's gate,
(A grave-yard was his whole estate)
“The bars were weak, the boards were thin,
* She sung a psalm and took me in.
“Of shadowy stuff my parents were,
* Composed of fogs, or framed of air:
* He sold his brimstone to the skies,
* While nitre kindled in Her eyes.
“They feasted on the vapours blue,
* Their glass of wine was evening dew ;
* On Etna's top they made their bed,
“And there was I, their devil, bred.
* My prowess is almost adored,
* I blunt the edge of onios's swoºp ,
* I seize aqua Rius by the throat,
* Nor care for iºn on the goat.
* My word is, when I meet my foes,
* HERE's to Tºº Lucky wºn tº Air Blows:
“And, instant, all is sighs and Broans,
* And battered heads, and broken bones.
* I now reward you for your spite—
* I draw my weapon—see, how bright!
“My last exploit in war I crown, -
“And thus—and thus—I throw you down.
* Ah, miscreant why that scream of death:
* I only meant to-draw your teeth.
34 POEMS ON
“Oh no –I scorn to take your life-
* Go, Madam,_be a ſtrudent wife.
* But, lady, I would have you know
“You lose your arrows and your bow:
“They are indeed of slender make,
* And, in your hands, might kill a rake :
“So, to prevent such fatal harms,
* I leave you destitute of arms
“I now must go!” he, laughing, said,
And vanished to the Stygian shade.
- -
This contest with MegaRA done,
Thou dear, defeated Amazon -
As happy, now, as man can be,
I hang my pen on yonder tree:
It only asks one day of rest,
It yields to every changing blast—
Yes—let it stay suspended there,
And strike My colours—if you dare:
ON THE
DEATH OF A MASTER BUILDIER,
Orº.
FREE M.A.S.O.W. G.F HIGH R.A.W. K.
[wºrrºw by REquest.]
ASSEMBLED this day on occasion of grief,
We mourn the occasion, the loss of our chief;
A Mason, our master, that built up a pile
By the compass and square in the masonic style.
At the word of the Builder, who built Ali at first
Turned chaos to order, and darkness dispersed,
Our architect leavesus, that mason so skilled,
The fabric of virtue and freedom to build.

SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 35
As far as this nature, called human, can go,
A pattern he was of perfection below;
By the line and the plummet he built up a wall,
As firm as old time, and, we trust, not to fall.
By science enlightened, a friend to mankind,
He came, for the purpose exactly designed;
Like the Baptist of old, in the annals of fate,
Precursor of all that is noble and great.
He thought it an honour the trowel to hold,
And to be with the craft, as a brother enrolled:
To the practice of virtue he knew they were bound
Wherever a lodge or a mason is found.
Designed as he was, to excel and transcend,
Yet he courted the titles of brother and friend;
And these in the fabric of masons are more
Than monarchs can gives—and which tyrants abhor.
With a patron like this, we are proud to prepare
The stone and the mortar, our building to rear,
And copy, from Hºt, who can make it endure,
Who raised the first building, and keeps all secure.
In such a grand master all masons were blessed;
The world and all masons his merits confessed;
But now he is gone in new orbits to move
And join the first builder of all things above.

36 POEMS ON
THE BRITISH PRISON SHIP
-4 POEM,
WRITTEN row Ann's the close of 1780, AND FIRst
PUBLISHED BY MIR. FRANCIS BAILEY, PHILADEL-
Phi A, EARLY IN THE YEAR 1781.
-
Amid these ills no tyrant dared refuse
My right to fen the dictates ºf the muse,
To faint the terrors ºf the infernal flace,
And fiends from Eurońe, insolent as base.
-
cANTo I. The Caſhture.
ASSIST me, Clio while in verse I tell
The dire misfortunes, that a ship befell,
Which outward bound, to St. Eustatia's shore,
Death and disaster through the billows bore.
From Philadelphia's happy port she came;
(And there the builder planned her lofty frame.)
With wondrous skill, and excellence of art,
He formed, disposed, and ordered every part,
With joy, beheld the stately fabrick rise
To a stout bulwark, of stupendous size,
*Till launched at last, capacious of the freight,
He lefther to the pilots, and her fate.
First, from her depths the tapering masts ascend,
On whose tall bulk the transverse yards depend,
By shrouds and stays secured from side to side
Trees grew on trees, suspended o'er the tide:
Firm to the yards extended, broad and vast,
They hung the sails, susceptive of the blast,
Far o'er the prow the lengthy bowspritlay,
Supporting on the extreme the taut fore-stay,
Twice ten six pounders, at their port holes placed.
And ranged in rows, stood hostile in the waist:
Thus all prepared, impatient for the seas,
She left her station with an adverse breeze.




SEVERAL, OCCASIONS. 37.
This her first outset from her native shore,
To seas a stranger, and untried before.
From the fine radiance, that his glories spread,
Ere from the east gay Phoebus lifts his head,
From the brightmorn, a kindred name she won,
Aurora called, the daughter of the sun,
Whose form, projecting, the broad prow displays,
Far glittering o'er the wave, a mimic blaze.
The gay ship now, in all her pomp and pride,
With sails expanded, flew along the tide;
‘Twas thy deep stream, O Delaware, that bore
This pile intended for a southern shore,
Bound to those isles where endless summer reigns.
Fair fruits, gay blossoms, and enamelled plains;
Where sloping lawns the roving swain invite;
And the cool morn succeeds the breezy night,
Where each glad day a heaven unclouded brings
And sky-topt mountainsteem with golden springs.
From cape Heslopes, urged by favouring gales,
When morn emerged we sea-ward spread our sails,
Then east-south-east, explored the briny way,
Close to the wind departing from the bay:
No longer seen the hoarse resounding strand,
With hearts elate we hurried from the land,
Escaped the dangers of that shelving ground,
To sailors fatal, and for wrecks renowned
The gale increases as we plough the main,
Now scarce the hills their sky-blue mist retain:
At last they sink beneath the rolling wave,
That seems their summits, as they sink, to lave.
Abaft the beam the freshening breezes play,
No mists advancing to deform the day,
No tempests rising on the splendid scene,
A sea unruffled, and a heaven serene.
Now Sol's bright lamp, the heaven-born source of
light, -
Had passed the line of his meridian height,
And westward hung—retreating from the view
Shores disappeared, and every hill withdrew;
When still suspicious of some neighbouring foe.
Aloft the master bade a seamango.
38 POEMS ON
To mark if from the mast’s aspiring height,
Through all the round, a vessel came in sight.
Too soon the seaman's glance extending wide,
Far distant in the east a ship espied,
Her lofty masts stood bending to the gale,
Close to the wind was braced each shivering sail;
Next from the deck we saw the approaching foe,
Her spangled bottom seemed in flames to glow
When to the winds she bowed in dreadful haste,
And her lee-guns lay deluged in the waist;
From her top-gallant waved an English Jack :
With all her might she strove to gain our tack,
Nor strove in vain—with pride and power elate,
Winged on by winds, she drove us to our fate,
No stop, no stay her bloody crew intends,
(So flies a comet with its host of fiends)
Nor oaths, nor prayers arrest her swift career,
Death in her front, and ruin in her rear.
Struck at the sight, the master gave command
To change our course, and steer toward the land-
Straight to the task the ready sailors run,
And while the word was uttered, half was done;
As, from the south, the fiercer breezes rise
Swift from her foe alarmed AuroRA flies,
With every sail extended to the wind
She fled the unequal foe that chaced behind.
Along her decks, disposed in close array,
Each at its port, the grim artillery lay,
Soon on the foe with brazen throat to roar;
But, small their size, and narrow was their bore;
Yet, faithful, they their destined station keep
To guard the barque that wafts them o'er the deep,
Who now must bend to steer a homeward course
And trust her swiftness rather than her force.
Unfit to combat with a powerful foe:
Her decks too open, and her waist too low.
While o'er the wave, with foaming prow, she flies,
Once more emerging, distant landscapes rise;
High in the air, the starry streamer plays,
And every sail its various tribute pays.
To gain the land, we bore the weighty blast;
And now the wished for caſe appeared at last;





SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 39
But the vext foe, impatient of delay,
Prepared for ruin, pressed upon his prey:
Near, and more near, in aweful grandeur came
The frigate Ints, not unknown to fame;
In is her name—but Hancock once she bore,
Framed and completed on New AL prox’s shore,
By Masley lost, the swiftest of the train
That fly with wings of canvas o'er the main.
Then, while for combat some with zeal prepare,
Thus to the heavens the boatswain sent his prayer;
* List all ye powers that rule the skies and seas.
* Shower down perdition on such thieves as these,
* Winds, daunt their hearts with terror and dismay,
“And sprinkle on their powder salt sea-spray :
* May bursting cannon, while his aim he tries,
* Distract the gunner, and confound his eyes–
* The chief that awes the quarter-deck, may he
* Tripped from his stand, be tumbled in the sea.
* May they who rule the round ſoft's giddy height
* Be canted headlong to perpetual night;
* May fiends torment them on a leeward coast,
“And help forsake them when they want it most–
“From their wheeled engines torn be every gun-
“And now, to sum up every curse in one,
* May latent flames, to save us, intervene,
“And hell-ward drive them from their magazine!”—
The frigate, now, had every sail unfurled,
And rushed tremendous o'er the watery world;
(Thus fierce felides eager to destroy,
Chaced the proud Trojan to the gates of Troy–
Swift o'er the waves, while hostile they pursue,
As swiftly from their fangs Aunor a flew,
At length HENLoren’s cape we gained once more.
And vainly strove to force the ship ashore;
Stern fate forbade the barren shore to gain,
Denial sad, and source of future pain.
For then the inspiring breezes ceased to blow,
Lost were they all, and smoothed the seas below º
By the broad cape becamed, our lifeless sails
No longer swelled their bosoms to the gales;
Vol. II. E.


40 POEMS ON
The ship, unable to pursue her way,
Tumbling about, ather own guidance lay,
No more the helm its wonted influence lends,
No oars assist us, and no breeze befriends;
Mean time the foe, advancing from the sea,
Ranged her black cannon, pointed on our ſee:
Then up she ſuffed, and blazed her entrails dire:
Bearing destruction, terror, death, and fire.
Vext at our fate, we primed a piece, and then
Returned the shot, to shew them we were men.
Dull night at length her dusky pinions spread,
And every hope to 'scape the foe was fled,
Close to thy cape, Henlopen, though we pressed,
We could not gain thy desert, dreary breast;
Though ruined trees beshroud thy barren shore
With mounds of sand half hid, or covered o'er,
Though ruffian winds disturb thy summitbare,
Yet every hope and every wish was there:
in vain we sought to reach the joyless strand,
Fate stood between, and barred us from the land.
All dead becamed, and helpless as we lay,
The ebbing current forced us back to sea,
While vengeful Iris, thirsting for our blood,
Flashed her red lightnings o'er the trembling flood;
At every flash a storm of ruin came
*Till our shocked vessel shook through all her frame.
–Mad for revenge, our breasts with fury glow
To wreak returns of ven ce on the foe:
Full at his hull our pointed guns we raised,
His hull resounded as the cannons blazed :
Through his broad sails while some a passage tore,
His sides re-echoed to the dreadful roar,
Alternate fires dispelled the shades of night-
But how unequal was this daring fight
Our stoutest guns threw but a six-pound ball,
Twelve pounders from the foe our sides did maul;
And, while no power to save him intervenes,
A bullet struck our captain of marines;
lierce, though he bid defiance to the foe
He felt his death and ruin in the blow,
Headlong he fell, distracted with the wound,
The deck distained, and heart blood streaming round




several occasions. 4.1.
Another blast, as fatalin its aim.
Winged by destruction, through our rigging came
And aimed aloft, to cripple in the fray,
Shrouds, stays, and braces tore at once away,
Sails, blocks, and oars in scattered fragments fly-
Their softest language was subºr, on prº.
Repeated cries throughout the ship resound;
Nowevery bullet brought a different wound;
Twixt wind and water, one assailed the side :
Through this aperture rushed the briny tide-
'Twas then the master trembled for his crew,
Andbade thy shores, O Delaware, adieu -
And must we yield to yon’ destructive ball,
And must our colours to these ruffians fall !
They fall!-histhunders forced our strength to bend,
The lofty topsails, with their yards, descend,
And the proud foe, (we to his mercy cast)
His wish completed in our woe at last.
Conveyed to York, we found, at length, too late,
That Death was better than the prisoners' fate,
There doomed to famine, shackles, and despair,
Condemned to breathe afoul, infected air
In sickly hulks, devoted while wełay,
Successive funerals gloomed each dismal day
But what on captives British rage can do,
Another Canto, friends, shall let you know.
cºro II. The Prison Sºfts.
Tº various horrors of these hulks to tell,
These Prison Ships where pain and penance dwell,
Where death in tenfold vengeance holds his reign,
And injured ghosts, yet unavenged, complain,
This be my task ungenerous Britons, you
Conspire to murder whom you can’t subdue.
That Britain's rage should dye our plains with gore,
And desolation spread through every shore,
None e'er could doubt, that her ambition knew—
This wastorage and disappointment due;
42 POEMS ON
But that those legions whom our soil maintained,
Who first drew breath in this devoted land,
Like famished wolves, should on their country prey,
Assist its foes, and wrest our lives away,
This shocks belief–and bids our soil disown
Such knaves, subservient to a bankrupt throne.
By them the widow mourns her partner dead,
Her mangled sons to darksome prisons led,
By them—and hence my keenest sorrows rise,
My friend—companion-my Orestes dies
Still for that loss must one true friend complain,
And sad Qºheſia mourn her loss—in vain
Ah! come the day when from this bleeding shore
Fate shall remove them, to return no more—
To scorched Bahama shall the traitors go
With grief, and rage, and unremitting woe,
On burning sands to walk their painful round,
And sigh through all the solitary ground,
Where no gay flower their haggard eyes shall see,
And find no shade—but from the cypress tree.
So much we suffered from the tribe I hate,
So near they showed us to the brink of fate,
When three long months in these dark hulks we lay
Barred down by night, and fainting all the day
In the fierce fervours of the solar beam,
Cooled by no breeze on Hudson's mountain-stream:
That not unsung these murderous acts shall fall
To black oblivion, that would cover all!
No masts or sails these crowded ships adorn,
Dismal to view, neglected and forlorn;
Here, mighty ills oppressed the imprisoned throng,
Dull were our slumbers, and our nights were long-
From morn to eve along the decks we lay
Scorched into ſevers by the solar ray;
No friendly awning cast a welcome shade,
Once was it promised, and was never made;
No favours could these sons of death bestow,
‘Twas endless vengeance, all unceasing woe:
Immortal hatred does their breasts engage,
And this lost empire swells their souls with rage.
Two hulks on Hudson's stormy bosom lie,
Two, on the east, alarm the pitying eye–

SEVERAL OCCASIONS 43
There, the black Scoreros at her mooring rides,
There, Sºnomºlo swings, yielding to the tides:
Here, bulky Jersey fills a larger space,
And Huster, to all hospitals disgrace.
Thou, Scoºpton, fatal to thy crowded throng,
Dire theme of horror, and Plutonian song,
Requirest my lay—thy sultry decks I know,
And all the torments that exist below :
The briny wave that Hudson's bosom fills
Drained through her bottom in a thousandrills:
Rotten and old, replete with sighs and groans,
Scarce on the waters she sustained her bones;
Here, doomed to toil, or founder in the tide,
At the moist pumps incessantly we plied,
Here, doomed to starve, like famished dogs we tore
The scant allowance, that our tyrants bore.
Remembrance shudders at this scene of fears-
Still in my view some tyrant chief appears,
Some base-born Hessian slave walks threatening by,
Some servile Scot, with murder in his eye,
Still haunts my sight, as vainly they bemoan
Rebellions managed so unlike their own
O may we never feel the poignant pain
To live subjected to such fiends again,
Stewards and Mates, that hostile Britain bore,
Cut from the gallows on their native shore;
Their ghastly looks and vengeance-beaming eyes
Still to my view in dismal visions rise
O may we ne'er review these dire abodes,
These piles for slaughter, floating on the floods,-
And you, that o'er the troubled ocean go,
Strike not your standards to this venomed foe,
Better the greedy wave should swallow all,
Better to meet the death-conducting ball,
Better to sleep on ocean's oozy bed,
At once destroyed and numbered with the dead,
Than thus to perish in the face of day
Where twice ten thousand deaths one death delay.
When to the ocean sinks the western sun,
And the scorched Tories fire their evening gun,
* Down, rebels, down tº the angry Scotchmen cry,
* Base dogs, descend, or by our broad swords dielº
Vol. II. E 2

















44. POEMIS ON
Hail dark abode: what can with thee compare-
Heat, sickness, famine, death, and stagnant air
Pandora's box, from whence all mischiefs flew,
Here real found, torments mankind anew.
Swift from the guarded decks we rushed along,
And vainly sought repose, so vast out throng;
Four hundred wretches here, denied all light;
In crowded mansions pass the infernal night,
Some for a bed their tattered vestments join,
And some on chests, and some on floors recline :
Shut from the blessings of the evening air
Pensive we lay with mingled corpses there,
Meagre and wan, and scorched with heat, below,
We looked like ghosts, ere death had made usso-
How could we else, where heat and hunger joined
Thus to debase the body and the mind,
Where cruel thirst the parching throat invades,
Dries up the man, and fits him for the shades.
Nowatersladed from the bubbling spring
To these dire ships these little tyrants bring
By plank and ponderousbeams, completely walled.
In vain for water and in vain we called
No drop was granted to the midnight prayer,
To rebels in these regions of despair.
The loathsome cask a deadly dose contains,
Its poison circling through the languidveins;
* Here, generous Briton, generous as you say,
* To our parched tongues one cooling drop convey,
* Hell has no mischief like a thirsty throat,
* Not one tormenter like your David Sºodºº
Dull passed the hours, till, from the east displayed
Sweet morn dispelled the horrors of the shade;
On every side the dire objects met the sight,
And pallid forms, and murders of the night—
The dead were past their pain, the living groan,
Nor dare to hope another morn their own;
But what to them is moºn’s delightful rayº
Sad and distressful as the close of day;
O'er distant streams appears the dewy green,
And leaſy trees on mountain tops are seen,
But they negroves nor grassy mountainstead,
Marked for alonger journey to the dead.
* A British superintendant of the prison slips



SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 45
Black as the clouds, that shade St. Kilda's shore,
Wild as the winds, that round her mountains roar,
At every post some surly vagrant stands,
Culled from the English or the Hessian bands-
Dispensing death triumphantly they stand.
Their musquets ready to obey command;
Wounds are their sport, as ruin is their aim :
On their dark souls compassion has no claim,
And discord only can their spirits please :
Such were our tyrants here, and such were these.
Ingratitude no curse like thee is found
Throughout this jarring world's tumultuous round,
Their hearts with malice to our country swell
Because, in former days, we used them well-
This pierces deep, too deeply wounds the breast;
We helped them naked, friendless, and distrest,
Received them, vagrants, with an open hand;
Bestowed them buildings, privilege, and land-
Behold the change - when angry Britain rose,
These thankless tribes became our fiercestfoes,
By them devoted, plundered, and accurst,
Stung by the serpents, whom ourselves had nursed.
But such a train of endless woes abound,
So many mischiefs in these hulks are found,
That on them all a poem to prolong
Would swell too far the horrors of our song—
Hunger and thirst, to work our woe, combine.
And mouldy bread, and flesh of rotten swine:
The mangled carcase, and the battered brain,
The doctor's poison, and the captain's cane,
The soldier's mucºuet, and the steward's debt,
The evening shackle, and the noon-day threat.
That balm, destructive to the pangs of care,
Which Rome of old, nor Athens could prepare,
Which gains the day for many a modern chief
When cool reflection yields a faint relief,
That charm, whose virtue warms the world beside,
Was by these tyrants to our use denied;
While yet they deigned that health some balm to lade
The putrid water felt its powerful aid,
But when refused—to aggravate our pains–
Then ſevers raged and revelled through our veins:




45 POEMS ON
Throughout our frames we felt its deadly heat.
We felt the pulse with quicker motions beat:
A pallid hue o'er every face was spread,
Unusual pains attacked the fainting head;
No physic here, no doctor to assist,
With oaths, they placed us on the sick men's list;
Twelve wretches more the same dark symptoms took,
And these were entered on the doctor's book;
The loathsome Hustºn was our destined place,
The Hunter to all hospitals disgrace;
With soldiers, sent to guard us on our road,
Joyful we left the Scorpion's dire abode:
Some tears we shed for the remaining crew,
Then cursed the hulk, and from her sides withdrew.
-
canto ni. The Hoshital Prison Shift.
Now towards the Hunter's gloomy sides we came,
A slaughter house, yet hospital in name;
For few came there, till ruined with their fees,
And half consumed, and dying of disease;—
But when too near, with labouring oars we plied
The Mate, with curses, drove us from the side;
That wretch who, banished from the navy crew,
Grown old in blood, did here his trade renew,
His rancorous tongue, when on his charge let loose,
Uttered reproaches, scandal, and abuse,
Gave all to hell, who dared his king disown,
And swore mankind were made for George alone.
A thousand times, to irritate our woe,
He wished us foundered in the gulph below;
Althousand times, he brandished high his stick,
And swore as often that we were not sick
And yet so pale –that we were thought by some
A freight of ghosts, from death's dominions come
But calmed at length—for who can always rage,
Or the fierce war of boundless passion Wage,
He pointed to the stairs that led below
To damps, disease, and varied shapes of woe-





SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 47
Downto the gloom we took our pensive way,
Along the decks the dying captives lay . -
some struck with madness, some with scurvy pained,
But still of putrid fevers most complained
on the hard floors these wasted objects laid,
There tossed and tumbled in the dismal shade,
There no soft voice their bitter fate bemoaned,
And death trode stately, while the victims groaned;
of leaky decks I heard them long complain,
Drowned as they were in deluges of rain,
Denied the comforts of a dying bed,
And not a pillow to support the head
How could they else but pine, and grieve, and sigh,
Detest a wretched life—and wish to die.
Scarce had Imingled with this dismal band
When a thin victim seized me by the hand
“And art thou come,” (death heavy on his eyes)
* And art thou come to these abodes—(he cries ;)
* Why didst thou leave the Scorſion’s dark retreat,
* And hither haste, a surer death to meet?
“Why didst thou leave thy damp infected cell? –
* If that was purgatory, this is hell
“We, too, grown weary of that horrid shade
* Petitioned early for the doctor's aid;
“His aid denied, more deadly symptoms came,
* Weak, and yetweaker, glowed the vital flame;
* And when disease had worn us down so low
* That few could tellif we were ghosts, or no,
* And all asserted death would be our fate
* Then to the doctor we were sent—too late.
* Here wastes away Eurymedon the brave,
* Here young Palemon finds a watery grave,
* Here loved ºſcander, now, alas no more;
* Dies, far sequestered from his native shore;
* He late, perhaps, too eager for the fray,
* Chaced the proud Briton o'er the watery way,
* Tillfortune, jealous, bade her clouds appear,
* Turned hostile to his fame, and brought him here.
* Thus do our warriors, thus our heroes fall,
* Imprisoned here, sure ruin meets them all,
* Or, sent afar to Britain's barbarous shore,
* There pine in prisons, and return no more -





º POEMS ON
* Ah rest in peace, each injured, parted shade,
* By cruel hands in death's dark weeds arrayed,
* The days to come may to your memory raise
* Piles on these shores, to spread through earth you
praise.” - -
The Hessian Doctor.
From Broºklyn heights a Hessian doctor came,
Not great his skill, nor greater much lºis fame;
Fair Science never called the wretch her son,
And Art disdained the stupid man to own ;
Can you admire that Science was so coy,
Or Art refused his genius to employ —
Domen with brutes an equal dullness share,
Orcuts yon’ grovelling mole the midway air–
ºn polar worlds can Eden's blossomsblow,
Dotrees of God in barren deserts grow.
Are loaded vines to Etna's summit known,
Or swells the peach beneath the frozen zone
Yet still he put his genius to the rack;
And, as you may suppose, was owned a guark.
He on his charge the healing work begun
With antimonial mixtures, by the tun,
Ten minutes was the time he deigned to stay,
The time of grace allotted once a day.
Hedrenchedus well with bitter draughts, tistrue.
Mosºrums from hell, and corter from Peru-
Some with his pills he sent to Pluto's reign,
And some he blistered with his flies of Spain;
His Tartar doses walked their deadly round,
Till the lean patient at the potion frowned,
And swore that hemlock, death, or what you will,
Were nonsense to the drugs that stuffed his bill-
On those refusing, he bestowed a kick.
Or menaced vengeance with a walking stick :-
Here, uncontrouled, he exercised his trade,
And grew experienced by the deaths he made,
By frequent blows we from his cane endured
He killed at least as many as he cured,
On our lost comrades built his future fame,
And scattered fate, where'er his footsteps came

SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 49
-
some did not bend, submissive to his skill,
And swore he mingled poison with his pill,
But we acquit him by a fair confession,
He was no Myrmidon—he was a Hessian-
Although a beast, he had some sense of sin
or else the Lord knows where we now had been;
No doubt, in that far country sent to range
Where never prisoner meets with an exchange-
No centries stand, to guard the midnight posts,
Nor seal down hatch-ways on a crowd of ghosts.
Knave though he was, yet candour must confess
Notchief physician was this man of Hesse-
One master o'er the murdering tribe was placed,
By him the rest were honoured or disgraced ;
Once, and but once, by some strange fortune led
He came to see the dying and the dead-
He came—but anger so deformed his eye.
And such a faulcheon glittered on his thigh,
And such a gloom his visage darkened o'er,
And two such pistols in his hands he bore!
That, by the gods —with such a load of steel,
He came, we thought to murder, not to heal–
Rage in his heart, and mischief in his head,
He gloomed destruction, and had smoteus dead,
Had he so dared-but fear with-held his hand–
He came-blasphemed—and turned again to land.
The Benevolent Caſtain. -
From this poor vessel, and her sickly crew
A British seaman all his titles drew,
Captain, esquire, commander, too, in chief,
And hence he gained his bread, and hence his beeſ,
But, sir, you might have searched creation round
And such another ruſhan not have found-
Though unprovoked, an angry face he bore,
All were astonished at the oaths he swore;
He swore, till every prisonerstood aghast,
And thought him Satan in a brimstone blast,
He wished us banished from the public light,
He wished us shrouded in perpetual night.
That were he king, no mercy would he show.
But drive all rebels to the world below

50 POEMS ON
That if we scoundrels did not scrub the decks
His staff should break our base rebellious necks;–
He swore, besides, that should the ship take fire
We too must in the pitchy flames expire;
And meant it so—this tyrant, I engage,
Had lost his life, to gratify his rage.
If where he walked a murdered carcase lay,
Still dreadful was the language of the day—
He called us dogs, and would have held us so.
But terror checked the meditated blow,
Of vengeance, from our injured nation due
To him, and all the base unmanly crew.
Such food they sent, to make complete our woes.
It looked like carrion torn from hungry crows:
Such vermin vile on every joint were seen,
So black, corrupted, mortified, and lean,
That once we tried to move our flinty chief,
And thus addressed him, holding up the beef;
* See, captain, see! what rotten bones we pick,
* What kills the healthy cannot helf the sick :
* Not dogs on such by Christian men are fed,
* And see, good master, see, what lousy bread tº
* Your meat or bread (this man of death replied)
* "Tis not my care to manage or provide–
* But this, base rebel dogs, I’d have you know,
* That better than you merit we bestow :
* Out of my sight!”-nor more he deigned to say,
But whisked about, and frowning, strode away.
Conclusion.
Each day, at least six carcases we bore
And scratched them graves along the sandy shore.
By feeble hands the shallow graves were made,
No stone, memorial, o'er the corpses laid :
In barren sands, and far from home, they lie,
No friend to shed a tear, when passing by;
O'er the mean tombs insulting Britons tread,
Spurn at the sand, and curse the rebel dead.
When to your arms these fatal islands fall,
(For first, or last, they must be conquered all)
SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 51
Americans to rites sepulchral just
with gentlest footstep press this kindred dust,
And o'er the tombs, if tombs can then be found.
Place the green turf, and plant the myrtle round
These, all in Freedom's sacred cause allied,
For Freedom ventured, and for Freedom died.
To base subjection they were never broke,
They could not bend beneath a foreign yoke:
Had these survived, perhaps in thraldom held,
To serve the Britons they had been compelled-
Ungenerous deed —can they the charge deny
This to avoid how many chose to die!
Americans a just resentment shew,
And glut revenge on this detested foe:
While the warm blood distends the glowing vein
Still shall resentment in your bosoms reign:
Can you forget the greedy Briton’s ire,
Your fields in ruin and your domes on fire,
No age, no sex, from lust and murder free,
And, black as night, the hell-born refugee
Must York forever your best blood entomb,
And these gorged monsters triumph in our doom,
Who leave no art of cruelty untried;
Such heavy vengeance, and such hellish pride!
Death has no charms—his realms dejected lie
In the dull climate of a clouded sky,
Death has no charms, except in British eyes,
See, armed for blood, the ambitious vultures rise,
See how they pant to stain the world with gore,
And millions murdered, still would murder more;
That selfish race, from all the world disjoined,
Perpetual discond spread among mankind,
Aim to extend their empire o'er the ball,
Subject, destroy, absorb, and conquer all;
As if the power, that formed us, did condemn
All other nations to be slaves to them
Rouse from your sleep, and crush the invading band,
Defeat, destroy, and sweep them from the land,
Allied like you, what madness to despair,
Attack the ruffians while they linger there;
There ſºon sits, a tyrant all complete,
See Waughan, there, with rude Kºhausen meet.
Vol II. F. -

52 POEMS ON
And every wretch, whom honour should detest
There finds a home—and Arnold with the rest.
Ah! traitors, lost to every sense of shame,
Unjust supporters of a tyrant's claim;
Foes to the rights of freedom and of men,
Flushed with the blood of thousands you have slain,
To the just doom the righteous heavens decree
We leave you toiling still in cruelty,
Or on dark plans in future herds to meet,
Plans formed in hell, and projects half complete:
The years approach that may to ruin bring
Your lords, your chiefs, your desolating king,
Whose murderous deeds will stamp his name accurs
And his last efforts more than damn the first.
-
ON
THE MEMORABLE VICTORY,
on TAIN ED BY THE GALLANT CAPTAIN 50HN PAT.
Sovies, or Le Bow Roºſe ºrchard, (on FATHER
Ricº Rip) over THE BRITISH ship or was sº
phis, or 44 GUNS, UNDER THE conſº AND or cAP
TAIN PEARSON -
First published in Mr. FRANcis Banºv's Freeman
Journal, Philadelfiſhia, August, 1781.
O’ER the rough main, with flowing sheet,
The guardian of a numerous fleet,
Serafiſhis from the Baltic came :
A ship of less tremendous force
Sailed by her side the self-same course,
Countess ºf Scarborough was her name.
And now their native coasts appear,
Britannia’s hills their summits rear
Above the German main :
Fond to suppose their dangers o'er,
They southward coastalong the shore.
Thy waters, gentle Thames, to gain.



SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 53.
Full forty guns Seraphis bore,
And Scarborough's Countess twenty-four,
Manned with Old England's boldest tars-
What flag that rides the Gallic seas
Shall dare attack such piles as these,
Designed for tumults and for wars:
Now from the top-mast’s giddy height
A seaman cried—“ Four sailin sight
“Approach with favouring gales,”
Pearson, resolved to save the fleet,
Stood off to sea, these ships to meet,
And closely braced his shivering sails.
With him advanced the Countess bold,
Like a black tar in wars grown old :
And now these floating piles drew nigh:
But, muse, unfold, what chief of fame
In the other warlike squadron came,
Whose standards at his mast-head fly.
'Twas Jones, brave Jones, to battle led
As bold a crew as ever bled
Upon the sky-surrounded main;
The standards of the western woºd
Were to the willing winds unfurled,
Denying Britain's tyrant reign.
The Good-Man-Richard led the line;
The Alliance next: with these combine
The Gallic ship they Pallas call,
The Vengeance, armed with sword and flame;
These to attack the Britons came—
But two accomplished all.
Now Phºebus sought his pearly bed:
But who can tell the scenes of dread,
The horrors of that fatal night.
Close up these floating castles came:
The Good-Man-Richard bursts in flame;
Seraphis trembled at the sight.
º POEMS ON
-
She felt the fury of her ball:
Down, prostrate, down the Britons falſ.
The decks were strewed with slain.
Jones to the foe his vessel lashed;
And, while the black artillery flashed,
Loud thunders shook the main.
Alas! that mortals should employ
Such murdering engines, to destroy
That frame by heaven so nicely joined:
Alas! that ever the god decreed
That brother should by brother bleed,
And poured such madness in the mind.
But thou, brave Jones, no blame shalt bear,
The rights of men demand your care:
For these you dare the greedy waves-
No tyrant, on destruction bent,
Has planned thy conquests—thou art sent
To humble tyrants and their slaves.
See –dread Seraphis flames again-
And art thou, Jones, among the slain,
And sunk to Neptune's caves below
He lives—though crowds around him fa
Still he unhurt, survives them all;
Almost alone he fights the foe.
And can your ship these strokes sustain
Behold your brave companions slain,
All clasped in ocean's cold embrace
Stºike, on be sunk—the Briton cries
Srºk tº you can-the chief replies,
Fierce lightnings blazing in his face.
Then to the side three guns he drew,
(Almost deserted by his crew)
And charged them deep with woe:
By Pearson's flash he aimed hotballs;
His main-mast totters—down it falls-
O'erwhelming half below.

























SEVERAL OCCASIONS 55
Pearson had yet disdained to yield,
But scarce his secret fears concealed,
And thus was heard to cry-
* With hell, not mortals, I contend:
tº what art thou—human or a fiend,
* That dost my force defy
* Return, my lads, the fight renew !”–
So called bold Pearson to his crew;
But called, alas! in vain;
Some on the decks lay maimed and dead;
Some to their deep recesses fled,
And hosts were shrouded in the main.
Distressed, forsaken, and alone,
He hauled his tattered standard down,
And yielded to his gallant foe;
Bold Pallas soon the Countess took-
Thus both their haughty colours struck,
Confessing what the brave can do.
But, Jones, too dearly didst thou buy
These ships possest so gloriously,
Too many deaths disgraced the fray :
Your barque that bore the conquering flame,
That the proud Briton overcame,
Even she forsook thee on thy way;
For when the morn began to shine,
Fatal to her, the neean brine
Poured through each spacious wound;
Quick in the deep she disappeared;
But Joxes to friendly Belgia steered,
With conquest and with glory crowned.
Go on, great man, to scourge the foe,
And bid these haughty Britons know
They to our Thirteen Stars shall bend;
The Stars that, clad in dark attire,
Long glimmered with a feeble fire,
But radiant now ascend.
Vol. II. F 2

55 POEMS ON
Bend to the Stars that flaming rise
On western worlds, more brilliant skies,
Fair Freedom's reign restored
So when the Magi, come from far,
Beheld the God-attending star,
They trembled and adored.
AN ANCIENT PROPHECY.
WHEN a certain great King, whose initialis G,
Forces stamps upon paper, and folks to drink TEA :
When these folks burn his tea and stampt paper, like
stubble-
You may guess that this king is then coming to trou
ble.
But when a pºrtion he treads under feet,
And sends over the ocean an army and fleet,
When that army, half-famished, and frantic with rag:
Is cooped up with a leader, whose name rhymes tº
Caº ;
When that leader goes home, dejected and sad;
You may then be assured the king's prospects an
bad.
But when B. and C. with their armies are taken
This king will do well, if he saves his own bacon:
In the year seventeen hundred and eighty and two
A stroke he may get that will make him look blue
And soon, very soon, will the season arrive,
When Mºbuchadnezzar to pasture shall drive.
-
In they ear eighty-three, the affair will be over
And he shall eat turnips that growin Hanover:
The face of the Lion will then become pale, -
He shall yield fifteen teeth, and be sheered of his tº
Oking, my dear king, you shall be very sore.
From the Stars and the Strines you will mercy in
plore,
And your Lion shall growl, but hardly bite more-

SEVERAL, OCCASIONS. sº
A usurpºs prayſºn.
.
* Ah! merite-t-on ensuite le nom d’homme -
que le restera-t-il de cette grande opulence? un cer-
cueil deplombe, et quelques marbres sculptés!—Eh!
quand il est en ton pouvoir de metamorphoser ces
pieces de metal enjouissances pures et intimes, ap-
prends a les connoitre, a les gouter: veux tu etre
maudit aprèsta mort, et que Pon dise; “il a dépensé
pour son orangerie, pourses chevaux, pourses chiens
-et pourles hommes, sessemblables–Rien"
Voitaine.
* O THOU who taught me first to think
An iron chest, and full of chink
is better far than meat or drink;
Who slily whispered in my ear
That six per cent, a month, or near,
Is all that’s worth attention here;
Do thou my honest aims befriend,
Assist me to my journey’s end,
And from the scourge of law defend:
O Satan! I thy aid implore,
That thou wouldst yet increase my store,
Since much does always covet more.
If trading men upon me call
ºil make ºngº easy to them all.
And they shall at my altar fall.
Thou prime inventor of all coin,
Of Banks, who formed the vast design,
ºive me but gold, and I am thine.
is he entitled to the name of a man can he carry his immense
riches with him to another world no indeed a leaden cºin and
a tombstºne will there constitute all his possessions—should he not
rather, while it is in his power, change his money into riches of a
ºre pure and interesting nature, and learn how to know and enjºy
them—Why would he have himself ºursed and abominated arºs
death, when the world will say, What sums he spent on his gardens,
is lºses his dºgs—but to man, his fellow creature ºf
ºthing.

5- POEMS ON
I crave noblessings parsons prate on,
My bags are what I rest my fate on,
Then fill them up-and take me, Satan.”
-
-
AN ADDRESS
TO THE
COMMANDER IN CHIEF, OFFICERS, AND
SOLDIERS OF THE AMERICAN ARMY.
ACCEPT, greatmen, that share of honest praise
A grateful nation to your merit pays:
Verse is too mean your merit to display,
And words too weak our praises to convey.
When first proud Britain raised her hostile hand
With claims unjust to bind our native land,
Transported armies, and her millions spent
To enforce the mandate that a tyrant sent;
* Resist! resist!” was heard through every state,
You heard the call, and feared your country’s fate;
Then rising fierce in arms, for war arrayed, -
You taught to vanquish those who dared invade.
Those British chiefs whom former wars had
crowned
With conquest—andin every clime renowned;
Who forced new realms to own their monarch's law,
And whom even George beheld with secretawe-
Those mighty chiefs, compelled to fly or yield,
Scarce dared to meet you on the embattled field;
To Boston's port you chased the trembling crew,
Quick, even from thence the British veterans flew—
Through wintry waves they fled, and thought each
Wave -
Their last, best safety from a foe sobrave.
What men, like you, our warfare could command.
And bring us safely to the promised land?

SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 59
Notswoln with pride, with victory elate- -
'Tis in misfortune you are doubly great:
when Hoºve victorious our weak armies chased,
And, sure of conquest, laid Cesarea waste,
When prostrate, bleeding, at his feet she lay,
And the proud victor tore her wreathes away,
Each gallant chief put forth his warlike hand,
And raised the drooping genius of the land,
Repelled the foe, their choicestwarriors slain,
And drove them howling to their ships again.
While others kindle into martial rage
Whom fierce ambition urges to engage,
An iron race, by angry heaven designed
To conquer first, and then enslave mankind;
Here, chiefs and heroes more humane we see,
They venture life, that others may be free.
O 1 May you live to hail that glorious day
When Britain homeward shall pursue her way—
That race subdued, who filled the world with slain
And rode tyrannic o'er the subject main –
What few presumed, you boldly have atchieved,
A tyranthumbled, and a world relieved.
O WAshington, who leadst this glorious train,
Still may the fates thy valued life maintain–
Rome's boasted chiefs, who, to their own disgrace,
Proved the worst scourges of the human race,
Pierced by whose darts a thousand nations bled,
Who captive princes at their chariots led;
Born to enslave, to ravage, and subdue–
Return to nothing, when compared to you;
Throughout the world your growing ſame has spread,
In every country are your virtues read;
Remotest India hears your deeds of fame,
The hardy Scythian stammers at your name;
The haughty Turk, now longing to be free,
Neglects his Sultan to enquire of thee;
The barbarous Briton hails you to his shores,
And calls him. Rebel—whom his heartadores.
Still may the heavens prolong your vital date,
And still may conquest on your banners wait-
Whether afar to ravaged lands you go,
Where wild Pozoºmac's rapid waters flow,
GQ POEMS ON
Oºwhere Saluda laves the fertile plain
And, swoln by torrents, rushes to the main;
Or ifagain to Hudson you repair
To smite the cruel foe thatlingers there—
Revenge their cause, whose virtue was their crime,
The exiled hosts from Carolina’s clime.
Late from the world, in quiet mayest thou rise
And, mourned by millions, reach your native skies-
With patriot kings and generous chiefs to shine,
Whose virtues raised them to be deemed divine :
May VASA’ only equal honours claim, -
Alike in merits—not the first in fame! [1781.]
A NEW YORK TORY,
TO HIS
FRIEND IN PHILADELPHIA.
IDEAR sº so anxious to hear of your health
I beg you would send me a letter by stealth:
I hope a few months will quite alter the case,
When the wars are concluded, we'll meet and em-
brace.
For I’m led to believe, from our brilliant success,
And, what is as clear, your amazing distress,
That the cause of rebellion has met with a check
That will bring all its patrons to hang by the neck.
Cornwallis has managed so well in the South,
Those rebels want victuals to put in their mouth;
And Arnold has stript them, we hear, to the buff-
Has burnt their tobacco, and left them the snuff,
Dear Thomas, I wish you would move from that
town
Where meet all the rebels of fame and renown;
* Gustavus Vasaº of Sweden, the deliverer of his country.






SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 61
When our armies, victorious, shall clear that vile nest
You may chance, though a Tory, to swing with the
rest.
But again—on reflection-I beg you would stay-
You may serve us yet better than if moved away-
Give advice to Sir HARRY of all that is passing,
What vessels are building, what cargoes amassing:
Inform, to a day, when those vessels will sail,
That our cruisers may capture them all, without
fail-
By proceedings, like these, your peace will be made
The rebellious shall swing, but be you ne'er afraid.
I cannot conceive how you do to subsist–
The rebels are starving, except those who list;
And as you reside in the land of Gomorrah,
You must fare as the rest do, I think, to your sorrow.
Poor souls if ye knew what a doom is decreed,
(Imean not for you, but for rebels indeed)
You would tremble to think of the vengeance in store,
The halters and gibbets-I mention no more.
The rebels must surely conclude they're undone,
Their navy is ruined, their armies have run;
It is time they should now from delusion awaken–
The rebellion is done—for the Taumauliº is taken
TO LORD CORNWALLIS,
-47" ſo RK-VIRGI.M.I.A.
HAIL, great destroyer (equalled yet by none)
Of countries not your master's, nor your own;
Hatched by some demon on a stormy day,
Satan's best substitute to burn and slay;
Confined at last; hemmed in by land and sea,
Burgoyne himself was but a type of thee!
* An American 36 gunfrigate captured by the ºitish

62 POEMS ON
Like his, to freedom was your deadly hate,
Like his your baseness, and be his your fate:
To you, like him, no prospect Nature yields
But ruined wastes and desolated fields—
In vain you raise the interposing wall,
And hoist those standards that, like you, must fall,
In you conclude the glories of your race,
Complete your monarch’s and your own disgrace.
What has your lordship's pilfering arms attained?
Vast stores of fºunder, but no State regained-
That may return, though you perhaps may groan,
*Restore it, CHARLEy, for 'tis not your own–
Then, lord and soldier, headlong to the brine
Rush down at once—the devil and the swine.
Wouldst thou at last with Washington engage,
Sad object of his pity, not his rage?
See, round thy posts how terribly advance
The chiefs, the armies, and the fleets of France;
Fight while you can, for warlike Rochambeau
Aims at your head his last decisive blow;
Unnumbered ghosts from earth untimely sped,
Can take no rest till you, like them, are dead—
Then die, my lord; that only chance remains
To wipe away dishonourable stains,
For small advantage would your capture bring,
The fºundering servant ºf a bankruſt king. [1781)
A LONDON DIALOGUE,
BETWEEN My Loºps, DUNMoRE AND GERMAINE.
Dunmore.
EVER since I returned to my dear native shore,
No poet in Grubstreet was ever dunned more—
I'm dunned by my barber, my taylor, my groom -
How can I do else than to fret and to fume:
SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 63
They join to attack me with one good accord, --
From morning till night 'tis “my lord, and my lord.
And there comes the cobler, so often denied-
If I had him in private, I'd thresh his tough hide.
Germaine.
would you worry the man that has found you in
shoes 2
Come, courage, my lord, I can tell you good news-
Virginia is conquered, the rebels are banged,
You are now to go over and see them safe hanged:
I hope it is not to your nature abhorrent
To sign for these wretches a handsome death war-
rant-
Were I but in your place, I’m sure it would suit
To sign their death warrants, and hang them to boot.
- Dunmore.
My lord –I'm amazed—have we routed the foe -
I shall govern again then, if matters be so–
And as to the hanging, in short, to be plain,
I'll hang them so well, they’ll ne'er want it again.
With regard to the wretches who thump at my gates,
I'll discharge all their dues with the rebel estates;
In less than three months I may send a polacca
As deep as she'll swim, sir, with corn and tobacco.
Germaine.
And send us some rebels—a dozen or so
They'll serve here in London by way of a show;
And as to the tories, believe me dean cousin,
We can spare you some hundreds to pay for the
dozen.
Vol. II.







64. POEMS ON
LORD CORNWALLIS
To sir Hewry olivarov,
[From York—virginia.]
FROM clouds of smoke, and flames that round m:
glow,
To you, dear Clinton, I disclose my woe,
Here cannons flash, bombs glance, and bullets fly;
Not Ansolip's self endures such misery.
Was I ſoredoomedin tortures to expire,
Hurled to perdition in a blaze of fire? -
With these blue flames can mortal man contend-
What arms can aid me, or what walls defend ?
Even to these gates last night a phantom strode,
And hailed me trembling to his dark abode:
Aghast I stood, struck motionless and dumb,
Seized with the horrors of the world to come.
Were but my power as mighty as my rage,
lºan different battles would Cornwallis wage,
Beneath his sword yon threatºning hosts shoul
Eroºn,
The earth would quake with thunders all his own.
O crocodile' had I thy flinty hide,
Swords to defy, and glance the balls aside,
By my own prowess would I rout the foe,
With my own javelin would I work their woe–
But fates averse, by heaven's supreme decree,
Nile's serpent formed more excellent than me.
Has heaven, in secret, for some crime decreed
That I should suffer, and my soldiers bleed;
Or is it by the jealous powers concealed,
That I must bend, and they ignobly yield? - -
Ah! no-the thought o'erwhelms my soul with grie
Come, bold sir Harry, come to my relief;
Come, thou brave man, whom rebels ºne call
But Britons, Graves—come Digby, devil, and all:
Come, princely WILLIAM, with thy potent aid,
Can George's blood by Frenchmen be dismayed





SEVERAL OCCASIONS. º
From a king's uncle once Scotch rebels run;
And shall not these be routed by a son º
Come with your ships to this disastrous shore,
come—or 1 sink—and sink to rise no more.
By every motive that can sway the brave
Haste, and my feeble, fainting army save;
Come, and lost empire o'er the deep regain,
Chastise these upstarts that usurp the main:
I see their first rates to the charge advance,
I see lost Iris wear the flags of France ;
There a strict rule the wakeful Frenchman keeps.
There, on no bed of down, lord Rawdon sleeps
Tired with long acting on this bloody stage.
Sick of the follies of a wrangling age,
Come with your fleet, and help me to retire
To Britain's coast, the land of my desire–
For me the foe their certain captive deem,
And every triſler takes me for his theme-
Long, much too long, in this hard service tried,
Bespattered still, bedeviled, and belied;
With the first chance that favouring fortune sends
I fly, converted, from this land of fiends;
Convinced, for me, she has no gems in store,
Nor leaves one triumph, even to hope for more.
1781.

66 POEMS ON
ON THE ****
OF GEN. EARL CORNWALLIS,
WHO, WITH ABOUT SEVEN THous AND MEN, SUR-
RENDERED THEMSELVEs PRISONERS OF WAR, T0
THE ALLIED ARMIES OF AMERICA AND FRANCE
ON ºn E MEMORA. B.L.E. NINETEENTH OF OCTOBER,
1781.
* One brilliant game our arms have won to-day,
ºfmother, Princes, yet remains to ſlay,
Mºnother mark our arrows must attain—
Gattº assist –nor be our efforts vain.”
Hom, Odyssey, Book XXII.
A CHIEFTAIN, formed on Howe, Burgoyne, and
Gage,
Once more, nor this the last, provokes my rage-
Who saw these Wimrods first for conquest burn:
who has not seen them to the dust return
This conqueror next, who ravaged all our fields,
Foe to the Rights of Man, Cornwallis yields –
None e'er before essayed such desperate crimes,
Alone he stood, arch-butcher of the times,
Roved, uncontrouled, this wasted country oer,
Strewed plains with dead, and bathed his jaws with
Gore.
'Twas thus the wolf, who sought by night his prey.
And plundered all he met with on his way,
Stole what he could, and murdered as he passed,
Chanced on a trap, and lost his head at last.
What pen can write, what human tongue declare
The endless murders of this Loºp of war
Nature in him disgraced the form divine;
Nature mistook she meant him for a-swine :
That eye his forehead, to her shame, adorns;
Blush | Nature, blush—bestow him tail and horns -
By him the orphan mourns—the widowed dame
Saw ruin spreading in the wasteful flame;
-
- in the original—“Phºebus assist–Not be the labour vain






SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 57.
Gashed o'er with wounds, beheld with streaming eye
A son, a brother, or a consort, die!
Through ruined realms bones lie without a tomb.
And souls he sped to their eternal doom,
Who else had lived, and seen their toils again
Blessed by the genius of the rural reign.
Convinced we are, no foreign spot of earth
But Britain only, gave this warrior birth:
That white-cliffed isle, the vengeful tyrants' den,
Has sent us monsters, where we looked for men.
When memory paints their horrid deeds anew,
And brings these murdering miscreants to our view.
We ask the leaders of these bloody bands,
Can they expect compassion at our hands –
But may this year, the glorious eighty-one,
Conclude successful, and all wars be done;
This brilliant year their total downfall see,
And what Cornwallis is, Sir Hºly be.
O come the time, nor distant be the day,
When our swift navy shall its wings display;
Manned by brave souls, to seek the British shore,
The wrongs revenging that their fathers bore :
As earthquakes shook the huge Colossus down,
So shake the wearer of the British crown;
Unpitying next his hated offspring slay,
Or into foreign lands by force convey :
Give them their turn to pine and die in chains,
Till not one tyrant of the race remains.
Thou, who residest on those thrice happy shores,
Where white-robed peace her envied blessings pours,
Stay, and enjoy the pleasures that she yields.
But come not stranger, to our wasted fields.
For warlike hosts on every plain appear;
War damps the beauties of the rising year-
in vain the groves their bloomy sweets display;
War's clouded winter chills the charms of May:
Here human blood the trampled harvest stains.
Here bones of men yet whiten all the plains -
Seas teem with dead; and our unhappy shore
Forever blushes with its children’s Gore.
ºut turn your eyes—behold the tyrant fall.
Nº say–Cornwailis has atchievedian
Vol II. G. º.

68 POEMS ON
All mean revenge AMERICANs disdain,
Oft have they proved it, and now prove again;
With nobler fires their liberal bosoms glow ;
Still in the captive they forget the foe:-
But when a nation takes a wrongful cause,
And hostile turns to heaven’s and nature's laws,
When, sacrificing at ambition’s shrine,
Kings slight the mandates of the power divine,
And devastation spread on every side,
To gratify their malice or their pride,
And send their slaves, their projects to fulfil
To wrest our freedom, or our blood to spill:—
Such to forgive, is virtue too sublime;
For even compassion has been found a crime.
A prophet once, for miracles renowned,
Bade Joash smite the arrows on the ground–
Taking the mystic shafts, the prince obeyed,
Thrice smote them on the earth—and then he stay
ºld-
Grieved when he saw full victory denied,
* Six times you should have smote,” the prophe
cried,
* Then had proud Syria sunk beneath your power:-
* Now thrice you smite her—but shall smite no
more.”
Cornwallis thou art ranked among the great;
Such was the will of all-controuling fate.
As mighty men, who lived in days of yore,
Were figured out some centuries before;
So you with them in equal honour join,
Your great precursor's name was Jack Burgoyne
Like you was he, a man in arms renowned,
Who, hot for conquest, sailed the ocean round;
This, this was he who scoured the woods for praise.
And burnt down cities to describe the blaze.
So, while on fire, his harp Rome's tyrant strung,
And as the buildings flamed, old Nero sung.
Who could have guessed the purpose of the fates.
When that vain boaster bowed to conquering Gates
Then sung the sisters, as the wheel went round.
(Could we have heard the invigorating sound)
SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 59
Thus surely did the fatal sisters sing–
* When just four years do this same season bring,
* And in his annual journey, when the sun
* Four times completely shall his circuit run,
* An angel then shall rid you of your fears,
* By binding Satan for a thousand years,
“Shallash his godship to the infernal shore,
“To waste the nations, and deceive no more;
* Make wars, and blood, and tyranny to cease,
“And hush the rage of Europe into peace.”
Joy to your lordship, and your high descent,
You are the Satan that the sisters meant.
Too soon you found your race of ruin run,
Your conquests ended, and your battles done :
But that to live is better than to die,
And life you chose, though life with infamy,
You should have climbed your loftiest vessel's mast
Took one sad survey of your wanton waste,
Then plunged forever to the watery bed,
Lost all your honours—even your memory dead.
Ashamed to live, and yet afraid to die,
Your courage slackened as your foe drew nigh–
Ungrateful chief, to yield your favourite band
To chains and prisons, in a hostile land:
To the wide world your Wegro friends to cast,
And leave your Tories to be hanged at last –
You should have fought with horror and amaze,
Till scorched to cinders in the cannon blaze,
Till all your host of Gog-magogs was slain,
Doomed to disgrace no human shape again–
From depths of woods this hornet host he drew—
Swift from the south the envenomed ruſhans flew -
Destruction followed at their cloven feet,
Till you, Fayette, constrained them to retreat,
And held them close, till your famed squadron came
De Grºsse, completing their eternal shame.
When the loud cannon's unremitting glare,
Andred hotballs compelled you to despair,
How could you stand to meet your generous foe:
Did not the sight confound with rage and woe —
In thy great soul what godlike virtues shine,
What inborn greatness, Washise roº, is thine –





70 POEMS ON
Else had no prisoner trod these lands to-day,
All, with his lordship, had been swept away,
All doomed alike death’s vermin to regale,
Nor one been left to tell the dreadful tale
But his own terms the mean invader named-
He nobly gave the firisoner all he claimed,
And bade Cornwallis, conquered and distressed,
Bear all historments in one tortured breast.
Now cursed with life, a foe to man and God,
Like Cain, we drive you to the land of Mod:
He with a brother's blood his hands did stain,
One brother he-you have a thousand slain.
On eagle's wings explore your homeward flight,
Plan future conquests, and new battles fight:
Such horrid deeds your murdering host defame
We grieve to think their form, and ours, the same :
Remorse be theirs!—even you, though much too late,
Shall curse the day you languished to be great :
And, may destruction rush, with speedy wing:
Low as yourself to drag each tyrant king :
Swept from this stage, the race that vex our ball,
Deep in the dust may every monarch fall,
To wasted nations bid a long adieu,
Shrink from an injured world—and fare like YOU
TO THE MEMORY
OE
THE BRAVE AMERICANS,
UNDER GENERAL CREENE, IN souTH cartoirº A. WHe
FELL IN THE ACTION or stºrtºn 8, 1781.
AT Eurºv springs the valiant died:
Their limbs with dust are covered o'er-
Weep on, ye springs, your tearful tide:
How many heroes are no more
SEVERAL OCCASIONS.
71
If in this wreck of ruin, they
Can yet be thought to claim a tear,
O smite your gentle breast, and say
The friends of freedom slumber here
Thou who shalt trace this bloody plain,
ºf goodness rules thy generous breast.
Sigh for the wasted rural reign;
Sigh for the shepherds, sunk to rest
Stranger, their humble graves adorn;
You too may fall, and ask a tear :
'Tis not the beauty of the morn
That proves the evening shall be clear-
They saw their injured country’s woe:
The flaming town, the wasted field;
Then rushed to meet the insulting foe;
They took the spear—but left the shield.
Led by thy conquering genius, Greene,
The Britons they compelled to fly:
None distant viewed the fatal plain,
None grieved; in such a cause to die—
But, like the Parthian, famed of old,
Who, flying, still their arrows threw;
These routed Britons, full as bold,
Retreated, and retreating slew.
Now rest in peace, our patriot band;
Though far from Nature's limits thrown,
We trust, they find a happier land,
A brighter sun-shine of their own.
TO AN OLD MAN.
WHY, dotard, wouldst thou longer groan
Beneath a weight of years and woe—
Thy youth is lºst, thy pleasures flown,
dage proclaims, 'Tis time to go.”


72 POEMS ON
To willows sad and weeping yews
With us awhile, old man, repair,
Nor to the vault thy steps refuse,
Thy constant home must soon be there.
To summer suns and winter moons
Prepare to bid a long adieu,
Autumnal seasons shall return
And spring shall bloom, but not for you.
Why so perplext with cares and toil
To rest upon this darksome road;
'Tis but a thin, a thirsty soil,
A barren and a bleak abode.
Constrained to dwell with pain and care,
These dregs of life are bought too dear,
*Tis better far to die, than bear
The torments of life's closing year.
Subjected to perpetualills
A thousand deaths around us grow :
The frost the tenderblºssom kills,
And roses wither as they blow.
Cold, nipping winds your fruits assail,
The blasted apple seeks the ground,
The peachesfall, the cherries fail,
The grape receives a mortal wound.
The breeze, that gently ought to blow,
Swells to a storm, and rends the main :
The sun, that charmed the grass to grow
Turns hostile, and consumes the plain;
The mountains waste, the shores decay,
Once purling streams are dead and dry–
'Twas Nature's work—'tis Nature’s play,
And Nature says, that all must die.
Yon flaming lamp, the source of light.
In chaos dark may shroud his beam
And leave the world to mother Night.
A farce, a phantom, or a dream.



SEVERAL OCCASIONS. º
What now is young, must soon be old,
Whate'er we love, we soon must leave :
'Tis now too hot, 'tis now too cold-
To live, is nothing but to grieve.
How bright the morn her course begun,
Nomists bedimmed the solar sphere-
The clouds arise—they shade the sun,
For nothing can be constanthere.
Now hope the longing soul employs,
In expectation we are blest;
But soon the airy phantom flies,
For lo! the treasure is possest.
Those monarchs proud that havoc spread,
(While pensive REAson dropt a tear)
Those monarchs have to darkness fled,
And ruin bounds their mad career.
The grandeur of this earthly round,
Where folly would forever stay,
is but a name, is but a sound–
Mere emptiness and vanity.
Give me the stars, give me the skies,
Give me the heaven’s remotest sphere,
Above these gloomy scenes to rise
Of desolation and despair.
Those native fires, that warmed the mind,
Now languid grown, too dimly glow,
Joy has to grief the heart resigned,
And love, itself, is changed to woe.
The joys of wine are all you boast,
hese for a moment, damp your pain:
The gleam is o'er, the charm is lost-
And darkness clouds the soul again.
Then seek no more for bliss below,
Where real bºss can ne'er be found;
Aspire where sweeter blossomsblow
And fairer flowers bedeck the ground:



74. POEMS ON
Where plants of life the plains invest;
And green eternal crowns the year,
The little god, that warms the breast,
Is weary of his mansion here.
Like Phosphor, sent before the day,
His height meridian to regain,
The dawn arrives—he must not stay
To shiver on a frozen plain.
Life's journey past, for fate prepare-
*Tis but the freedom of the mind;
Jove made us mortal—his we are,
To Jove, be all our cares resigned.
PROLOGUE
To A THE ATRICAL ENTERTAINMENT IN
PºſL-410 E. Lºº.
WARS, cruel wars, and hostile Britain's rage
Have banished long the pleasures of the stage;
From the gay painted scene compelled to part,
(Forgot the melting language of the heart)
Constrained to shun the bold theatric show,
To act long tragedies of real woe,
Heroes, once more attend the comic muse;
Forgetour failings, and our faults excuse.
In that fine language is our fable drest
Which still unrivalled, reigns o'er all the rest:
Of foreign courts the study and the pride,
Who to know this, abandon all beside;
Bold, though polite, and ever sure tº please;
Correct with grace, and elegant with ease;
Soft from the lips its easy accents roll,
Formed to delight and captivate the soul:
In this Eugenia tells her easy lay,
The brilliant work of county Beaumarchais :

SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 75
In this Racine, Voltaire, and Boileau sung,
The noblest poets, in the noblest tongue.
If the soft story in our play expressed
Can give a moment's pleasure to your breast,
To you, GREAT MEN,” we must be proud to say
That moment's pleasure shall our pains repay :
Returned from conquest and from glorious toils,
From armies captured and unnumbered spoils;
Ere yet again with generous France allied,
You rush to battle, humbling British pride;
While arts of peace your kind protection share,
O let the muses claim an equal care,
You bade us first our future greatness see,
Inspired by you, we languished to be free :
Even here, where Freedom lately sat distrest,
See a new Athless rising in the west!
Fair Science blooms, where tyrants reigned before,
Red war, reluctant, leaves our ravaged shore-
Illustrious heroes, may you live to see
These new Republics powerful, great, and free;
Peace, heaven born peace, o'er spacious regions
spread,
While discord, sinking, veils her ghastly head.
[1782.
STANZAS,
occasion ED BY THE RUINS OF A COUNTRY INN, UN-
ROOFED AND BLoWiN DOWN IN A STORM.
WHERE now these mingled ruins lie
A temple once to Bacchus rose,
Beneath whose roof aspiring high,
Full many a guest forgot his woes:
Addressed to the Commander in Chief, and several ºf the Officer
ºf the lºcºmº, then present, at the theatre in Soutlººk
Vol. II. H.
75 POEMS ON
No more this dome, by tempests tornº
Affords a social safe retreat;
But ravens here, with eye forlorn,
And clustering bats henceforth will meet
The Priestess of this ruined shrine,
Unable to survive the stroke,
Presents no more the ruddy wine,
Her glasses gone, her china broke.
The friendly Host, whose social hand
Accosted strangers at the door,
Has left at length his wonted stand,
And greets the weary guest no more.
Old creeping Time, that brings decay,
Might yet have spared these mouldering walls,
Alike beneath whose potent sway
A tem/ile or a tavern falls.
is this the place where mirth and joy.
Coy nymphs and sprightly lads were found
Indeed no more the nymphs are coy,
No more the flowing bowls go round.
is this the place where festive song
Deceived the wintry hours away?
No more the swains the tune prolong.
No more the maidens join the lay:
Is this the place where Nancy slept
In downy beds of blue and green 3–
Dame Nature here no vigils kept,
No cold unfeeling guards were seen.
'Tis gone –and Nancy tempts no more.
Deep, unrelenting silence reigns;
Of all that pleased, that charmed before,
The tottering chimney scarce remains:
Ye tyrant winds, whose ruńan blast
Through doors and windows blew too strong.
And all the roof to ruin cast,
The roof that sheltered us so long.



SEVERAL, OCCASIONS. º
Your wrath appeased, I pray be kind
ºf Mopsus should the dome renew
That we again may quaff his wine,
Again collect our jovial crew.
PRINCE WILLIAM HENRY,
THE ROYAL ADVENTURER.
—“ Elles one brillé fires du trºme, a raison de leurs
charmes. If a fallu gue leurs esclaves ne sºloignassent
hoint du sejour de leur fluissance. Elles son devenues
les reines de la societé, et les arbitres du gºt et des
ſlaisirs : Elles on vu, avec indifference, ſº ſtereº
eurs enour, leurºſils humiliae, fourou ºu elles conti-
ºuassent ºagiler dans le tourbillon des cours,” &c."
- Mºrabegº.
PRINCE WILLIAM, of the Brunswick race,
To witness George's sad disgrace
The royallad came over,
Rebels to kill, by Right Divine–
Derived from that illustrious line,
The beggars of Hanover.
Somany chiefs got broken pates
In vanquishing the rebel States,
So many nobles fell,
That George the third in passion cried,
“Our royal blood must now be tried:
* "Tis that must break the spell:
* The favourites ºf a throne baskin its sunshine, like ºies
in a fine day. Their very slaves, at the foºt of rºy partake of
the delusion. They keep a nation under their feet and their every
fully influences, and is followed by, the multitude. They care not
if their fathers, and their nearest relatives, are ºped into the
dust, provided they can figure away in the circles of a court º

78 POEMS ON
“To you (the fat pot-valiant Swise
“To Digby said) dear friend of mine,
“To you I trust my boy;
* The rebel tribes shall quake with fears,
* Rebellion die when he appears,
“My Toniºs leap with joy.”
So said, so done—the lad was sent,
But never reached the continent,
An island held him fast-
Yet there his friends danced rigadoons,
The Hessians sung, in High Dutch tunes,
* Prince William’s come at last.”
-->
* Prince William comes º the Briton said-
* Our labours, now, will be repaid-
* Dominion be restored—
** Our monarch is in William seen,
“He is the image of our queen,
* Let William be adored P’
The Tories came with long address,
With poems groaned the Royal Press.
And all in William's praise–
The youth astonished looked about
To find their vast dominions out,
Then answered, in amaze :
* Where all your vast domain can be,
* Friends, for my soul I cannot see:
* "Tis but an empty name;
* Three wasted islands, and a town
* In rubbish buried, half burnt down,
* Is all that we can claim :
* I am of royal birth, 'tis true,
* But what, my sons, can princes do,
* No armies to command 2–
* Cornwallis conquered and distrest.
* Sir Henry Clinton grown a jest–
* I curse—and quit the land.”





SEVERAL OCCASIONS 79
LORD DUNMORE'S PETITION,"
TO THE
LEGISLATURE OF VIRGIW IM.
Hunterr she werh–
THAT a silly old fellow, much noted of yore,
And known by the name of John, earl of Dunmore,
Hasagainventured over to visit your shore.
Thereason of this he begs leave to explain—
In England they said you were conquered and slain,
(But the devil take him who believes them again)-
So, hearing that most of you Rebels were dead,
That some had submitted, and others had fled,
mustered my Tories, myself at their head,
And over we scudded, our hearts full of glee,
As merry as ever poor devils could be,
Our ancient dominion, Virginia, to see;
ºur shoe-boys, and tars, and the very cook's mate
Already conceived he possessed an estate,
And the Tories no longer were cursing their fate.
Myself, (the don Quixote) and each of the crew,
Like Sancho, hadislands and empires in view—
hey º captains, and kings, and the devil knows
Who -
ºu. now, to our sorrow, disgrace, and surprise,
No longer deceived by the Father ºf Lies,
We hear with our ears, and we see with our eyes :-
I have therefore to make you a modest request,
º m sure, in my mind, it will be for the best)
dmit me again to your mansions of rest.
-
* This and a number of preceding and subsequent poems rela-
º: º the Pºlitical affairs ºf the revolutionary war, were first pub-
º in ºf tº Bailey’s Freemaº ºn tº tº
Vol. II. H 2.
80 POEMS ON
There are Eden, and Martin, and Franklin, and
Tryon,
All waiting to see you submit to the Lion,
And may wait ’till the devil is king of Mount Sion:-
Though a brute and a dunce, like the rest of the clan.
I can govern as well as most Englishmen can : -
And if I’m a drunkard, I still am a man:
I miss'd it some how in comparing my notes,
Or six years ago I had joined with your votes;
Notaided the negroes in cutting your throats.
Although with so many hard names I was branded,
I hope you’ll believe, (as you will, if your candid)
That I only performed what my master commanded
Give me lands, whores, and dice, and you still may be
free;
Let who will be master, we sha’nt disagree;
If king orif Congress—no matter to me:-
I hope you will send me an answer straitway,
For 'tis plain that at Charleston we cannot long stay.
–And your humble petitioner ever shall pray.
January, 1782.
- EPIGRAM,
occasiosen by the title or mºn, Rivington's
New-Yonk Royal Gazette BEING scarcely tº
ºlº
SAYS Satan to Jemmy, “I hold you a bet
* That you mean to abandon our Royal Gazette,
* Or, between you and me, you would manage thing:
better
* Than the Title to print on so sneaking a letter.
* Royal pºinter to his Britannie majesty, while his forces º
the city of New York, from 1776 to November 25, 1 sº








SEVERAL OCCASIONS: 31
“Now being connected so long in the art,
* It would not be prudent at present to part;
“And people, perhaps, would be frightened, and fret
* If the devil alone carried on the Gazette.”
Says Jemmy to Satan (by way of a wipe)
“Who gives me the matter should furnish the type;
“And why you find fault, I can scarcely divine,
* For the types, like the printer, are certainly thine.
**Tis yours to deceive with the semblance of truth,
* Thou friend of my age, and thouguide of my youth:
“But, to prosper, pray send me some further supplies,
* A sett of new types, and a sett of new lies.” [1782.
LINES
ºccasioned by MR. Rivington's new titular ſyſtes tº
his Royal Gazette.
WELL–now (said the devil) it looks something
better . -
Your title is struck on a charming new letter -
Last night in the dark, as I gave it a squint, -
I saw my dear partner had taken the hint.
I ever surmised (though twas doubted by some)
That the old types were shadows of substance tº
Conne : -
But if the New Leºn is pregnant with charms
It grieves me to think of those cursed King's Arms.
The Dieu et mom droit (his God and his right)
is so dim, that I hardly know what is meant by it;
The paws of the Lion can scarcely be seen,
And the Unicorn's guts are most shamefully lean.
The Crown is so worn of your master the despot,
That hardly know which tis (a crown or a pisspot,
When I rub up my day-lights, and look very sharp
just can distinguish the Irishman's harp,
82 POEMS ON
Another device appears rather silly,
Alas! it is only the shade of the LILLY :
For the honour of George, and the fame of our na-.
tion,
Pray, give his escutcheons a rectification—
Or I know what I know (and I’m a queer shaver)
Of HIM and his arms I'll be the In-graver. [1782.
-
on Mºn. Rivington’s
Newly ENGRAved kno's ARMs,
To HIS ROYAL GAZETTE.
FROM the regions of night, with his head in a sack,
Ascended a person accoutred in black,
And upward directing his circular eye whites;
(Like the Jure-divino political Levites)
And leaning his elbow on Rivington's shelf,
While the printer was busy, thus mused with him.
self-
* My mandates are fully complied with at last,
* New ARMs are engraved, and new letters are cast;
* I therefore determine and freely accord,
* This servant of mine shall receive his reward.”
Then turning about to the printer he said,
* Who late was my servant shall now be my aid;
* Since under my banners so bravely you fight,
* Kneel down—for your merits I dubb you a knight,
* From a passive subaltern Ibid you to rise
* The ºverton, as well as the PRINTER or Lies.”
- [1782.







SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 83.
A SPEECH
*hat should have been shoken by the King ºf the Island
ºf Britain to his Parliament.
MY lords, I can hardly from weeping refrain,
When I think of this year, and its cursed campaign;
But stillitis folly to whine and to grieve,
For things will yet alter, I hope and believe.
Of the four southern States we again are bereaved,
They were just in our grasp (or I’m sadly deceived):
There are wizzards and witches that dwell in those
lands
For the moment we gain them, they slip from our
hands.
Our prospects, at present, most gloomy appear :
Cornwallis returns, with a flea in his ear,
Sir Henry is sick of his station, we know–
And Amherst, though pressed, is unwilling to go.
The HERo that steered for the cape of Good Hope
With Monsieur Suffrein was unable to cope—
Many months are elapsed, yet his task is to do—
To conquer the Cape, and to conquer Peru:
When his squadron at Portsmouth he went to equip,
He promised great things from his Firty-sus ship
But, let him alone—while he knows which is which,
He'll not be so ready to “die in a ditch.”
This session, I thought to have told you thus much.
* A treaty concluded, and peace with the Dutch"-
But, as stubborn as ever, they vapour and brag.
And sailby my nose with the Prussian flag.
The Empress refuses to join on our side,
As yet with the Indians we’re only allied:
(Though such an alliance is rather improper,
We English are white, but their colour is copper.)
* Johnstone.
84. POEMS ON
-
The Irish, I fear, have some mischief in view;
They ever have been a most troublesome crew-
If a truce or a treaty hereafter be made,
They shall pay very dear for their present free trade.
Dame Fortune, I think, has our standard forsaken,
For Tobago, they say, by Frenchmen is taken :
Minorca's beseiged—and as for Gibraltar,
By Jove, if it's taken I'll take to the halter.
It makes me so wroth, I could scold like Xantippe
When I think of our losses along Mississippi-
And see in the Indies that horrible Hyder
His conquests extending still wider, and wider.
*Twixt Washington, Hyder, Don Galvez, De Grasse.
By my soul, we are brought to a very fine pass–
When we've reason to hope new battles are won
A packet arrives—and an army's undone :
In the midst of this scene of dismay and distress
What is best to be done, is not easy to guess,
For things may go wrong though we planthem aright.
And blows they must look for, whose trade is to fight.
In regard to the Rebels, it is my decree
That dependent on Britain they ever shall be:
Or I’ve captains and hosts, that will fly at my nod
And slaughter them all-by the blessing of God.
But if they succeed, as they’re likely to do,
Our neighbours must part with their colonies too;
Let them laugh and be merry, and make us their jest.
When La Plata revolts, we will laugh with the rest-
'Tis true that the journey to castle St. Juan
Was a project that brought the projectors to ruin;
But still my dear lords, I would have you reflect
Who nothing do venture can nothing expect.
If the Commons agree to afford me new treasures.
My sentence once more is for vigorous measures:
Accustomed so long to head winds and bad weather,
Lºtus conquer—or go to the devil together. Itſ sº




SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 35
RIVINGTON'S
LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT.
SINCE life is uncertain, and no one can say,
How soon we may go, or how long we shall stay,
Methinks he is wisest who soonest prepares,
And settles, in season, his worldly affairs:
Some folks are so weak they can scarce avoid crying,
And think when they’re making their wills they are
dying:
'Tis surely a serious employment—but still,
Whoe'er died the sooner for making his will?
Let others be sad, when their lives they review,
But I know whom I've served and ºn faithfully too:
And though it may seem afanatical story
He often has she wea ºne a glimpse of his glory.
ºnnºis, my carcase I give and devise
To be made into cakes of a moderate size,
To nourish those tories whose spirits may droop,
nº serve the king's army with portable soup.
Unless mistake, in the scriptures we read
That worms on the dead shan deliciously feed,”
The scripture stands true—and that I am gº ºn.
For what are our ſeries and soldiers but verminº-
This soup of all soups can't be becamed that of been
And this may to some be a mater of grief:)

86 POEMS ON
But I am certain the Bull would occasion a laugh,
That beef-portable soup should be made of a cair.
To the king, my dear master, I give a full set
(In volumes bound up) of the Royal Gazette,
In which he will find the vast records contained
Of provinces conquered, and victories gained.
As to ARNoºn, the traitor, and Satan, his brother,
I beg they will also accept of another;
And this shall be bound in Morocco red leather,
Provided they’ll read it, like brothers, together.
But if Arnold should die, 'tis another affair,
Then Satan, surviving, shall be the sole heir ;
He often has told me he thought it quite clever,
So to him and his heirs I bequeath it forever.
I know there are some (that would ſain be thought
wise)
Who say my Gazette is a record of lies;
In answer to this, I shall only reply-
All the choice that I had was, to starve or to lie.
My fiddles, my flutes, French horns and guittars”
leave to our Heroes now weary of wars—
To the wars of the stage they more boldly advance,
The captains shall play, and the soldiers shall dance:
To Sir Henry Clinton, his use and behoof,
I leavemy French brandy, of very good proof;
It will give him fresh spirits for battle and slaughter
And make him feel bolder by land and by water:
Yet I caution the knight, for fear he do wrong
*Tis avant laviande, et afres le foissoni—
It will strengthen his stomach, prevent it from turn
nº
And digest the affront of his effigy—burning.
* The articles of bequest in this poem were incessantly adver
used in the Royal Gazette, and º of with a dexterity peculiar
to the editor of that paper.
# It became fashionable at this period with the British officers tº
assume the business of the Drama; to the no small mortification ºf
those who had been holding them up as the undoubted conqueror
ºf North America.
+ Before flesh and after fish–See tº cº-


SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 87.
To Baron KNYPHAusen, his heirs and assigns,
I bequeath my old Hock, and my Burgundy wines,
To a true Hessian drunkard, no liquors are sweeter,
And I know the old man is no foe to the creature.
To a gener AL, my namesake,” I give and dispose
Of a purse full of clipped, light, sweated half.joes;
Ihereby desire him to take back his trash,
Andreturn me my HANNAY's infallible wash.
My chessmen and tables, and other such chattels
give to Cornwallis, tremendous in battles:
By moving of these (not tracing the map)
He'll explain to the king how he got in the rºar.
To good David Matthews (among other slops)
give my whole cargo of Maredant's drops,
If they cannot do all, they may cure him in part
And scatter the poison that cankers his heart:
Provided, however, and nevertheless,
That what other estate I enjoy and possess
At the time of my death (if it be not then sold) -
Shall remain to the Tories, to Have AND to hold.
As I thus have bequeathed them both carcase and
fleece,
The least they can do is to wait my decease;
But to give them what substance i have, ere I die,
And be eat up with vermin, while living—not 1–
In witness whereof (though no ailment I feel)
Hereuntoiset both my hand and my seal;
As the law says) in presence of witnesses twain,
Squire John Coghilliºn, and brother ºugh Gaine.
[1782.]
* Gen. James Robertson.
Vol. II. I
88. POEMS ON
SUICIDE. :
THE WEAKAºESS OF THE HUMAN" MIVD.
A. M. Rºw E A NEC Doºº.
–º HE might have lived, although the folitical sh
had been lost in the breakers.”
From the sheech ºf a Roman senator
on the death ºf Cato.
THE Shipwright, Nature, laid the keel,
And gave proportions just and true;
She built him firm, and shaped him well
To pass Life's stormy ocean through:
Awhile he sailed that rugged sea
with currents fair and breezes free.
Fortune on all his projects smiled;
For him, she seemed to have no frown,
Her sun was bright, her sky was mild,
And everything went smoothly on—
While thus he thought, “If one there be,
Dame Fortune’s favourite-I am he ſº
At length he met a little blast
That weaker vessels might have stood:
He saw his summer sun o'er cast,
And tempests howling on the flood–
“The portfar off for which westeer,
* "Tis best (said he) to founder here.”
Regardless of a feeble crew,
Dependent on his care and skill;
He bored his planks and sheathing through.
And ocean did his vessel fill—
So, down he went amidst that main.
From whence he will not come again.



SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 29
T11 p.
POLITICAL BALANCE:
OR2 THE
ºf TES OF BRITMIM" ºf Wºd AMERICA.
COMPARED :
… ºn LE-
Deciding Fates, in Homer's stile, we shºw,
4nd bring contending gods once more to view.
As Jove the Olympian (who both I and you know,
Was brother to Neptune, and husband to Juno)
Was lately reviewing his papers of state,
He happened to light on the records of Fate:
In Alphabet order this volume was written–
So he opened at B, for the article Britain–
She struggles so well, said the god, I will see
What the sisters in piuto's dominions decree.
And, first, on the top of a column he read
Qi aking, with a mighty soft place in his head,
“Who should join in his temper the ass and the mule,
* The third of his name, and by far the worst fool:
His reign shall be famous for multiplication,
º The sire and the king of a whº generation:
But such is the will and the purpose of fate,
* For each child he begets he shall forfeit a state:
* In the course of events, he shall find to his cost
* That he cannot regain what he foolishly lost;
"Of the nations around he shall be the dºsion,
“And know, by experience, the rule of Division.”
so Jupiter read–agoloffirst rank—
And still had read on but he came to a blank.
Fºr the Fates had neglected the rest to reveal—
They either forgot it, or chose to conceal:

90 POEMS ON
When a leaf is torn out, or a blot on a page
That pleases our fancy, we fly in a rage—
So, curious to know what the Fates would say next,
No wonderif Jove, disappointed, was vext.
But still, as true genius not frequently fails,
He gianced at the Virgin, and thought of the Scales
And said, “To determine the will of the Fates,
* One scale shall weigh Britain, the other the States."
Then turning to Vulcan, his maker of thunder,
Saidhe, “My dear Vulcan, I pray you look yonder,
* Those creatures are tearing each other to pieces,
“And, instead of abating, the carnage increases.
eater,
“You must make me a globe of a shorter diameter;
* The world in abridgement, and just as itstands
* With all its proportions of waters and lands;
* But its various divisions must so be designed,
* That I can unhinge it whene’er I’ve a mind– -
* How else should I know what the portions will
weigh,
* Or which of the combatants carry the day?”
Old Vulcan complied, (we’ve no reason to doubt it)
So he put on his apron and strait went about it-
Made center, and circles as round as a pancake,
And here the Pacific, and there the Atlantic
An axis he hammered, whose ends were the poles,
(On which the whole body perpetually rolls)
A brazen meridian he added to these,
Where four times repeated were ninety degrees.
I am sure you had laughed to have seen his drollatº
tude. -
When he bent round the surface the circles of latt
tude.
The zones, and the tropics, meridians, equator,
And other fine things that are drawn on saltwater
Away to the southward (instructed by Pallas)
He placed in the ocean the Terra Australis,






SEVERAL, OCCASIONS. 91
New Holland, New Guinea, and so of the rest-
AMERica lay by herself in the west:
From the regions where winter eternally reigns,
To the climes of Peru he extended her plains;
Dark groves, and the zones did her bosom adorn,
And the Crosiers,” new burnished, he hung at Cape
Horn.
The weight of two oceans she bore on her sides,
With all their convulsions of tempests and tides;
Vastlakes on her surface did fearfully roll,
And the ice from her rivers surrounded the pole.
Then Europe and Asia he northward extended,
Where under the Arctic with Zembla they ended;
The length of these regions he took with his garters,
Including Siberia, the land of the Tartars).
In the African clime (where the cocoa-nut tree grows)
He laid down the desarts, and even the negroes,
The shores by the waves of four oceans embraced,
And elephants strolling about in the waste.
In forming East India, he had a wide scope,
Beginning his work at the cape of GoodHope;
- hen eastward of that he continued his plan,
Till he came to the empire and isles of Japan.
Adjacent to Europe he struck up an island,
One part of it low, but the other was high land)
With many a comical creature upon it,
And one wore a hat, and another a bonnet.
Like emmits or ants in a fine summer's day,
ey ever were marching in battle array,
9: skipping about on the face of the brine,
kewitches in egg-shells (their ships of the line)
These poor little creatures were all in a flame,
Tº the lands of America urging their claim,
ºil biting, or singing, or spreading their sails;
(For º had formed them with stings in their
tails.)
sº in the ºn of a cross, which nº ºne sºuth pole in
Southern latitudes.
Vol II. 2.
92 POEMS ON
So poor and so lean, you might count all their ribs,"
Yet were so enraptured with crackers and squibs,
That Vulcan with laughter almost split asunder,
* Because they imagined their crackers were thun-
der.”
Due westward from these, with a channel between,
A servant to slaves, Hibernia was seen,
Once crowded with monarchs, and high in renown,
But all she retained was the Harp and the Crown!
Insulted forever by nobles and priests,
And managed by bullies, and governed by beasts,
She looked –to describe her I hardly know how-
Such animage of deathin the scowl on her brow:
For scaffolds and halters were full in her view,
And the fiends of perdition their cutlasses drew :
And axes and gibbets around her were placed,
And the demons of murder her honours defaced–
With the blood of the won tº her mantle was stained.
And hardly a trace of her beauty remained.
Her genius, a female, reclined in the shade,
And, sick of oppression, so mournfully played,
That Jove was uneasy to hear her complain,
And ordered his blacksmith to loosen her chain:
Then tipther a wink, saying, “Now is your time,
* (To rebel is the sin, to revolt is no crime)
* When your fetters are off, if you dare not be free
“Be a slave and be damned, but complain not to me."
But finding her timid, he cried in a rage—
“Though the doors are flung open, she stays in the
cage.
* Subservient to Britain then let her remain,
* And her freedom shall be, but the choice ºf her
chain.”
At length, to discourage all stupid pretensions,
love looked at the globe, and approved its dimensions
And cried in a transport—"Why what have we here
* Friend Vulcan, it is a most beautiful sphere
* Their national debt being now above lºgº,000,000 sterling:







SEVERAL, OCCASIONS. 93
*Now while I am busy in taking apart
* This globe that is formed with such exquisite art,
* Go, Hermes, to Libra, (you're one of her gallants)
“And ask, in my name, for the loan of her balance.”
Away posted Hermes, as swift as the gales,
And as swiftly returned with the ponderous scales;
And hung them aloft to a beam in the air,
So equally poised, they had turned with a hair.
Now Jove to Columbia his shoulders applied,
But aiming to lift her, his strength she defied—
Then, turning about to their godships, he says–
“A popy so vast is not easy to raise;
“But if you assist me, I still have a notion
“Our forces, united, can put her in motion,
“And swing her aloft, (though alone I might fail)
“And place her, in spite of her bulk, in our scale;
“If six years together the Congress have strove,
“And more than divided the empire with Jove ;
“With a Jove like myself, who am nine times as great,
“You can join, like their soldiers, to heave up this
weight.”
Soto it they went, with handspikes and levers,
And upward she sprung, with her mountains and ri-
vers .
Rocks, cities, and islands, deep waters and shallows,
Ships, armies, and forests, high heads, and fine fel-
lows:
* Stick to it tº cries Jove tº Now heave one and au.
At least we are lifting “one-eighth of the ball."
ºf backward she tumbles—then trouble begins,
"And then have a care, my dear boys, of your shins!”
When gods are determined what project can fail?
they gave a hard shove, and she mounted the scale;
suspended aloft, Jove viewed her with awe
And the gods, for their may had a hearty—huzza.
But Neptune bawled out—" Why Jove you're a
noddy,
** Britain sufficient to poise that vastbody?
* American sºldiers.
94. POEMS ON
* "Tis nonsense such castles to build in the air-
“As well might an oyster with Britain compare.”
“Away to your waters, you blustering bully,”
“Said Jove, “ or I'll make you repent of your folly,
“Is Jupiter, Sir, to be tutored by you?—
* Get out of my sight, for I know what to do 1"
Then searching about with his fingers for Britain,
Thought he, “this same island I cannot well hit on!
* The devil take him who first called her the Gatatº
“If she was—she is vastly diminished of late ſº
Like a man that is searching his thigh for a flea,
He peeped and he fumbled, but nothing could see:
Atlast he exclaimed—I am surely upon it—
* I think I have hold of a Highlander's bonnet.”
But finding his error, he said with a sigh,
“This bonnetis only the island of Skie!”
So away to his namesake the PLANET he goes,
And borrowed two moons to hang on his nose.
Through these, as through glasses, he saw her quite
clear,
And in raptures cried out—º I have found her—she's
here .
* If this be not Britain, then call me an ass,
* She looks like a gem in an ocean of glass.
* But, faith she's so small I must mind how I shake
her -
* In a box I’ll inclose her, for fear I should break her
“Though a god, I might suffer for being aggressor
* Since scorpions, and vipers, and hornets possess
her ;
* The white cliffs of Albion I think I descry,
“And the hills of Pinlimmon appear rather nigh-
* But, Vulcan, inform me what creatures are these
* That smellso of onions, and garlick, and cheese?
Old Vulcan replied—“Odds splutter a nails
* Why, these are the Welch, and the country is
Wales.
_
* An Island on the north-west of Scotland.








SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 95
* When Taffy is vext, no devil is ruder–
* Take care how you trouble the offspring of Tupon.
*On the crags of the mountains hur living ºur seeks,
* Hur country is planted with garlick and leeks;
“So greatis hur choler, beware how you teaze hur,
* For these are the Britons—unconquered by Caesar.”
“But now, my dear Juno, pray give me my mittens,
*(These insects I am going to handle are Britons)
“I’ll draw up their isle with a finger and thumb,
“As the doctor extracts an old tooth from the gum.”
Then he raised her aloft—but to shorten our tale,
She looked like a cºop in the opposite scale—
Britannialso small, and Columbia so large-
A ship of first rate, and a ferryman's barge!
Cried Pallas to Vulcan, “Why, Jove's in a dream–
* Observe how he watches the turn of the beam :
*Was ever a mountain outweighed by a grain?
“Or what is a drop when compared to the main?
But Momus alledged–º in my humble opinion,
“You should add to Great-Britain her foreign domi-
hion, -
“When this is appended, perhaps she will rise,
“And equal her rival in weight and in size.”
Alas! (said the monarch) your projectis vain,
-- But little is left of her foreign domain;
… And, scattered about in the liquid expanse,
That little is left to the mercy of France;
* However, well ºf them, and give her fair play"—
And soon in the scale with their mistress they ſay:
But the gods were confounded and struck with sur-
prise,
And Vulcan could hardly believe his own eyes.
For (such was the purpose and guidance of fate,
ºr foreign dominions diminished her weight—
by which it appeared to Britain's disaster,
Her foreign possessions were changing their master.
º hen, as he replaced them, said Jove with a smile-
Cotºniº shall never be ruled by an isle-

96. POEMS ON
“But vapours and darkness around her may rise,
“And tempests conceal her a-while from our eyes;
* Solocusts in Egypt their squadrons display,
“And rising, disfigure the face of the day,
“So the moon, at her full, has a frequent eclipse,
“And the sun in the ocean diurnally dips.
* Then cease your endeavours, ye vermin of Britain-
(And here, in derision, their island he spit on)
“”Tis madness to seek what you never can find,
“Or to think of uniting what Nature disjoined:
“But still you may flutter awhile with your wings,
“And spit out your venom and brandish your stings
“Your hearts are as black, and as bitter as gall,
* A curse to mankind—and a blot on the Balt.*
Mºril, 1782.
* It is hoped that such a sentiment may not be deemed whº
liberal—Every candid person will certainly draw a line between
brave and magnanimous people, and a most vicious and vºl.
government. Perhaps the following extract from a pamphle
lately published in London and republished at Baltimore (June
1809) by Mr. Bernard Dornin, will place the preceding sentimen
in a fair point of view -
* A better spirit than exists in the English people, never existed
in any people in the world; it has been misdirected, and squand
upon party purposes in the most degrading and scandalous manner
they have been led to believe that they were benefiting the cº-
merce of England by destroying the commerce of America, the
they were defending their sºvereign by perpetuating the bigº
ºppression of their fellow subjects their rulers and their guide
have told them that they would equal the vigour of France º
equalling her atrocity, and they have gone on, wasting that opiº
lence, patience and cºurage, which if husbanded by pººdent, an
moderate counsels, might have proved the salvation of mankinº
The same policy of turning the good qualities of Englishmen."
their own destruction, which made Mr. Pitt omnipotent, contº
ues his power to those who resemble him only in his vices adº
tage is taken of the loyalty of Englishmen, to make them meanº
submissive; their piety is turned into persecution; their cour*
into useless and obsºnate contention; they are plundered because
they are ready to pay, and soothed into assinine stupidity becº
they are full of virtuous patience. If England must º at last
so let it be that event is in the hands of God, we must dry wº
our tears, and submit. But that England should perish swindline
and stealing that it should perish waging war against lazar-hº
and hospitals, that it should perish persecuting with monastic hº
gotry; that it should calmly give itself up tº be ruined by the
flashy arrogance of one man, and the narrow fanaticism of another
these events are within the power of human beings, but I did nº
* * * *gnanimity of Englishmen would ever º'
such degradations.”





SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 97.
-
ON A HONEY BEE,
DRINKING FROM A GLASS OF WINE, AND DROWNED
T HERE IN.
LBy Hezekiah SALEM.]
THOU, born to sip the lake or spring,
Or quaff the waters of the stream,
Why hither come on vagrant wing 3–
Does Bacchus tempting seem-
Did he, for you, this glass prepare :-
Will I admit you to a share :
Didstorms harrass or foes perplex,
Did wasps or king-birds bring dismay-
Did wars distress, or labours vex,
ºr did you miss your way?–
A better seat you could not take
Than on the margin of this lake.
Welcome!—I hail you to my glass:
All welcome, here, you find;
Here, let the cloud of trouble pass,
Here, be all care resigned—
This fluid never fails to please,
And drown the griefs of men or bees.
What forced you here, we cannot know,
And you will scarcely tell– -
Butcheery we would have you go
And bid a glad farewell:
ºn lighter wings we bid you fly.
Your dart will now all foes defy.
Yet take not, on too deep a drink,
And in this ocean die;
ºte bigger bees than you might sink,
Even bees full six feet high.
Like Pharaoh, then, you would be said
9 perish in a sea of red.


98. poems on
Do as you please, your will is mine;
Enjoy it without fear—
And your grave will be this glass of wine,
Your epitaph—a tear-
Go, take your seat in Charon's boat,
We'll tell the hive, you died afloat.
The gougers.
ON SEEING A TRAVELLER Gougºn,” A Nº ornº-
wis E 11. L TREATED BY SOME CITIZENS or Loº
Town, NEAR A PINE BARREN.
WAS it the part of honest men
Who bear the name of citizen,
On a poor stranger thus to fall,
And sightless make his visual ball:-
Who first such savage warfare taught,
His heart was out of marble wrought.
This Traveller, now, his way must grope
Alone, and eyeless, void of hope–
And shine the sun however bright, -
Allis to him perpetual night,
A chaos all, and all a gloom,
A close connection with the tomb.
Why do I hold so dull a pen
To satirize ferocious men;
Why is it not impelled, inforce
To give such bosoms their remorse,
And bid them with a conscience sore
Repent for what they can’t restore!
* A brutal practice very common several years ago in the lº
ºivilized parts ºf some ºf the southern states, in which it was the
first object of the assailant to deprive his antagonist of his º
sight

SEVERAL occASIONs. 99.
From him, whom they have sightless made
Forgiveness never can be had—
Iheard him call them growling dogs,
I heard him curse this town of logs:
For vengeance he put up a prayer
And more than once I heard him swear,
That, such an outrage to repay,
He ne'er again would come this way:
That thunder on the town should fall,
And poverty torment them all:
The liquids fail that filled their spring,
And they five miles their water bring :
He ne'er would shade their tavern door
Nor hold discourse with rogue or whore,
Nor money spend for bread or beer,
Norcyder that is vended here-
Nortell the news to Belia's sons
While forests grow, or water runs.
ADDRESS TO A LEARNED PIG.
* PAR riculan EMINENCE WHO, IN A CERTAIN
GREAT CITY, W As VISITED BY PERSONS OF THE
FIRST *Msire AND prisºnºcºrrow.
9THOU, marked out by Fate from vulgar swine.
Among the learned of a age to shine,
ºn whom 'squires, ladies, parsons, come to gaze,
Bold, science-loving pig,
Who, withoutgown or wig
ºn force your way through learning's thorny maze
ºlow many high learned wights in days of old
(Whom Farºe has ºn the great enrolled)
ºved by their wits—were banished, hanged, or sold;
-While you, on better ages fallen, Olucky swine!
Canby your wit on pyes and sweetmeats dine–
Vol. II. K.

tou POEMS ON
When house and lands are gone and ºftent,
Then learning is most excellent—
(So says a proverb through the world well known)-
You, that were pigged to grovelin a stye,
Have left your swill for science high-
Without a rival of your race,
You hold a most distinguished place–
All that the heart can wish flows in to you,
Who real happiness pursue,
And are well fed, on whate'er hog stye thrown.
Now, if one had the chance to choose one’s state
On this world’s stage, and not controuled by Fate
Who would not wish to have his little brains
Lodged in the head of LEARNep pig,
Rather than be a man, and toil, and sweat, an
di
With all the sense the human scull contains.
With us, we all are wise, we all things know,
But every pig-inferior is to you—
The restate fools and simpletons—and so-
What, next, will be the science you attain
Science —to you, that opens all her store -
Already have you in your sapient brain
More than most aldermen—and gumſhtion more
Than some, who capers cut on Congress floor.
May we not hope, in this improving age
Of human things—to see on TERRA's stage
Hogstake the lead of men, and from their styes
To honours, riches, office, rise!
Adepts in Latin, Commerce, Physick, Law -
From what is seen, such inference we draw–






SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 10.
sin Hºy cinton's
I. VºITATIO.W.
* COME, gentlemen Tories, firm, loyal and true,
Here are axes, and shovels, and something to do-
For the sake of our king
Come, labour and sing:
You left all you had for his honour and glory.
And he will remember the suffering Tory:
We have, it is true,
Some small work to do;
But here's for your pay
Twelve coppers a day,
And never regard what the rebels may say,
Butthrow on your jerkins and labour away.
ſo raise up the rampart, and pile up the wall,
To pull down old houses and dig the canal,
To build and destroy–
Be this your employ,
in the daytime to work at ºr fortifications,
*al in the night from the rebels your rations:
The king wants your aid -
Not empty parade;
Advance to your places
Ye men of ºngº,
ader too much on your former disgraces,
* year, I presume, will quite alter your cases.
Attend at the can of the fºr and drummer,
he French and the nebus are coming next summer,
And forts we must build
- Though Tories are killed—
en ºurage, my jockies, and work for your king,
*You are take nº doubt you wºulºng-
If York we can hold -
I'll have you enrolled ;
And after you're dead
Yournames may be read
ºlor their monarch both laboured and bled,
º their necks for their ºf and their
-
Nor po
--
As wh
And
102 PoEMS ON
*Tis an honour to serve the bravest of nations,
And be left to be hanged in their capitulations-
Then scour up your mortars
And stand to your quarters,
'Tis nonsense for Tories in battle to run,
They never need fear sword, halbert, or gun;
Their hearts should not fail 'em,
No balls will assail’em,
Forget your disgraces
And shorten your faces,
For 'tis true as the gospel, believe it or not,
Who are born to be hanged will never be shot.
DIALOGUE
At Hype-PARE consºº (London.)
Burgoyne.
LET those, who will be proud and sneer,
And call you an unwelcome peer,
But I am glad to see you here:
The prince that fills the British throne,
Unless successful, honours none;
Poor Jack Burgoyne –you're not alone.
Cornwallis.
Your ships, De Grasses have caused my grief-
To rebel shores and their relief
There never came a luckier chief:
In fame's black page it shall be read,
By Gallic arms my soldiers bled—
The rebels ºne in triumph led.
- Burgoyne.
Our fortunes different forms assume:-
I called and called for elbow-room,
Till Gates discharged me to my doom.


SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 103
But you, that conquered far and wide,
In little York thought fit to hide,
The subject ocean at your side.
Cornwallis.
And yet no force had gained that post-
Not Washington, his country's boast,
Nor Rochambeau, with all his host
Nor all the Gallic fleet's parade—
Had Clinton hurried to my aid,
And Sammy Graves been not afraid.
Burgoyne.
For head knocked off, or broken bones,
Or mangled corpse, no price atones;
Nor all that prattling rumour says,
Nor all the piles that art can raise,
The poet's or the parson’s praise.
Cornwallºs.
Though I am brave, as well as you,
Yet still I think your notion true;
Dear brother Jack, our toils are o'er-
With foreign conquests plagued no more,
We'll stay and guard our native shore.
ON THE
LATE ROYAL SLOOP OF WAR,
GENERAL MONK,
FORMERLY THE WASHINGTON }
Mounting six quarter deck Wooden Guns.
WHEN the Washingtonship by the English was beat,
They sent her to England to shew their great feat,
And Sandwich straitway, as a proof of his spunk,
Dashed out her old name, and called her the Moskº-
General Monk, who was the most active agent in restoring
hºles the second.
V or II. K 2


104. POEMS ON
* This Moºk hated Rebels (said Sandy) "od rot 'em
* So heave her down quickly, and copper her bottom:
* With the sloops of our navy we'll have her en-
rolled,
“And manned with picked sailors, to make her ſº
bold.
* To shew that our king is both valiant and good,
* Some guns shall be iron, and others be wood;
“And, in truth, (though I wish not the secret to
spread) -
* All her guns should be wooden—to suit with his
head.”
TRUTH ANTICIPATED.º.
A R v INGTONIAN DIALOGUE-
WHAT brilliant events have of late come to pass.
No less than the capture of Monsieur De GaAssº
His majesty's printer has told it for true,
As we had it from him, so we give it to you.
Many folks of discernment the story believed,
And the devil himselfitat first had deceived,
Haditinot been that Satan imported the stuff,
And signedit George Rodney, by way of high proof
Said Satan to Jemmy, “Let’s give them the whº
fiers-
* Some news I have got that will bring in the tº
pers,
*And truth it shall be, though I passit for lies,
“And making a page of your newspaper size.
* A wide field is open to favour my plan,
* And the rebels may prove that I lie—if they can
__
occasioned by the naval victory gained by Admiral tº
and Capt. Cornwallis, of the British nºt in the West Indiº º
the squadron of Count De Grasse.

SEVERAL OCCASIONS. tºº,
* Since they jested and laughed at our lying before,
* Letit pass for a lie, to torment them the more-
“My wings are yet wet with the West-India dew,
“And Rodney Ileft, to come hither to you,
* I left him bedeviled with brimstone and smoke,
* The French in distress, and their armament broke.
* For news so delightful, with heart and with voice
“The Tories of every degree may rejoice;
* With charcoal and sulphur shallutter their joy
“'Till they all get as black as they paint the old Boy,”
Thus, pleased with the motion, each cutting a caper,
Down they sat at the table, with pen, ink, and paper;
In less than five minutes the matter was stated,
And Jemmy turned scribe, while Satan dictated.
“Begin (said the devil) in the form of a Letter,
"(If you callit true cony, 'tis so much the better)
“Make Rodney assert he met the French fleet,
“Engaged it, and gave 'em a total defeat.
“But the better to vamp up a show of reality,
"The tale must be told with circumstantiality,
"What vessels were conquered by Britain's bold sons:
“Their quotas of men, and their number of guns.
“There's the Pilla de Paris—one hundred and ten-
“Write down, that George Rodney has killed half her
ºn-
* That her hull and her rigging are shattered and
shaken,
* Her flag humbled down, and her admiraltaken:
“Le Cesar, ºstrue, is a seventy-four.
* But the Villa de Paris was thirty-six more;
“With a grey goose's quilliſ that ship we did seize
On, -
* Le Cesar must fall, or I'll know what’s the reason.
* The next that I fix on to take, is the Hector,
(Her name may be Trojan, but shall not protect her,
- Don't faulter, dear comrade, and look like a goose,
It we’ve taken these three, we can take cºrºuse.
as POEMS ON
“The last mentioned ship runs their loss up to four,
* Le Diadem sunk, shall make it one more;
“And now, for the sake of round numbers, dear cou-
sin,
* Write Ardent, and then we have just half a-dozen!"
Jemmy smiled at the notion, and whispered, “Ofy
* Indeed, 'tis a shame to persuade one to lie”–
But Satan replied—“Consider, my son,
* I am a prince of the winds, and have seen what is
done: -
* With a conquest, like this, how bright we shall
shine !
* That Rodney has taken six shifts of the line,
* Will bein your paper a brilliant affair;
* How the tories will laugh, and the rebels will swear
* Butfarther, dear Jemmy, make Rodney to say,
* If the sun two hours longer had held out the day,
* The rest were so beaten, so baisted, so tore,
* He had taken them all, and he knew not but more."
So the fartners broke up, as good friends as they me
And soon it was all in the Royal Gazette ;
The Tories rejoiced at the very good news,
And said, There’s no fear we shall die in our shoes.
Now let us give credit to Jemmy, forsooth,
Since once in away he has hit on the truth:
ºf again he returns to his practice of lies,
He hardly reflects where he'll go when he dies.
But still, when he dies, let it never be said
That he rests in his grave with no verse at his head
But furnish, ye poets, some short epitaph,
And something, like this, that readers may laugh:
Here lies a King's Printer, we needn't say who :
There is reason to think that he tells what is true:
But if he lies here, tisnot over-strange,
His present position is but a small change,
So, reader, passion—ºtis a folly to sigh,
For all his lifelong he did little but irº. 1782.







SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 107
ow.
SIR HENRY CLINTON'S RECALL.
THE dog that is beat has a right to com/lain–
Sir Harry returns a disconsolate man,
To the face of his master, the Lord’s oil-anointed,
To the country provided for thieves disappointed.
Our Freedom, he thought, to a tyrant must fall,
He concluded the weakest must go to the wall;
The more he was flattered, the bolder he grew-
He quitted the old world to conquer the new.
But in spite of the deeds he has done in his garrison,
(And they have been curious beyond all comparison)
He now must go home, at the call of his king,
To answer the charges that Arnold may bring.
But what are the acts that this chief has atchieved :-
If good, it is hard he should now be aggrieved,
And the more, as he fought for his national glory,
Nor valued, a farthing, the Right of the story.
This famous greatman, and two birds” of his feather,
In the Cerberus frigate came over together;
But of all the bold chiefs that re-measure the trip,
Not two have been known to return in one ship.
Like children that wrestle and scuffle in sport,
They are very well pleased as long as unhurt,
But a thump on the nose, or a blow in the eye,
Ends the fray—and they go to their daddy and cry.
Sir Clinton, thy deeds have been mighty and many,
You said all our paner was not worth a penny;
('Tis nothing but rags, quoth honest Will Tryon,
Average to discourage the Sons ºf the Lion?)
But Clinton thought thus—“It is folly to fight,
* When things may by easier methods come right,
* There is such an art as counterfeit—ation–
“And ſº do my utmost to honour our nation;
Generals. Howe and Burgoyne.
see his Letters to Gen. Parsons



108 POEMS ON
* I'll shew this damned country that I can enslave her,
* And that by the help of a skilful engraver,
tº And then let the rebels take care of their bacon,
* We’ll play them a trick, or I’m vastly mistaken.”
But the project succeeded not quite to your liking,
So you paid of your artist, and gave up BILL struk-
1NG :
But 'tis an affair I am glad you are quiton,
You had surely been hanged had you tried it in Bri.
tain.
At the taking of Charleston you cut a great figure,
The terms you propounded were terms full of rigour.
Yet could not foresee poor CHARLEy’sº disgrace,
Nor how soon your own colours would go to the
C -si-.
When the town had surrendered, the more to dis-
grace ye;
(Like another true Briton who did it at Statia)
You broke all the terms yourself had extended,
Because you supposed the rebellion was ended;
Whoever the tories marked out as a whig.
If gentle, or simple, or little, or big,
No matter to you—to kill 'em and spite 'em.
You soon had 'em up where the dogs could nºt bit:
*em.
Then thinking these rebels were snug and secure.
You left them to Rawdon and Nesbit Balfour ;
(The face of the latter a mask should be drawed on,
And to fish for the devil my bait should be Rawdon.)
Returning to York with your ships and your plunder
And boasting that rebels must shortly knock under
The first thing that struck you, as soon as you landed
Was the fortress at West-Point, where Arnold com:
manded.
Thought you, “If friend Arnold this fort will deliver
* We then shall be masters of all Hudson’s river,
* The east and the south losing communication,
* The Yankies will die by the act of Sarvation.”
-
* Cornwallis.
SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 109
Soof; you sent André (not guided by Pallas)
Who soon purchased Arnold, and with him the gal-
lows;
Your loss I conceive than your gain was far greater,
You lost a good fellow, and got a vile traitor.
Now Carleton comes over to give you relief,
A knight like yourself, and commander in chief,
But the chief he will get, you may tell the dear honey,
Will be a black eye, hard knocks, and no money.
Now with—“ Britons, strike home tº your sorrows
dispel,
Away to your master, and honestly tell
That his arms and his artists can nothing avail,
His men are too few, and his tricks are too stale:
Advise him at length to be just and sincere;
Of which not a symptom as yet doth appear,
As we plainly perceive from his sending Sir Guy
The Treaty to break with our Gallic Ally. [1782.]
SIR GUY CARLETON'S
ADDRESS TO THE AMERICANS.
FROM Britain's famed island once more I come
ºver,
Noisland ºn earth is in prowess above her,
With powers and commissions your hearts to recover
Our king, I must ten you, is plagued with a phan-
tom,
* they call it) that hourly doth haunt
And relief my dear rebels, you only can grant him.
Tom Gage and Sir Harry, Sir William, (our boast)
ºd Howe. and the rest that have travelled the coast.
* tailed in their projects of laying tº ghost
Sº unless the damned spectre myself can expe.
will yet kill our monarch. I know very well,
a gallop him of on his lion to hell,

110 POEMS ON
But I heartily wish, that, instead of Sir Guy,
They had sent out a seer from the island of Skie,
Who rebels, and devils, and ghosts could defy:
So great is our prospect of failing at last,
When I look at the present, and think of the past,
I wish with our heroes I had not been classed;
For though, to a man, we are builies and bruisers,
And covered with laurels, we still are the losers,
*Till each is recalled with history accusers:
But the war now is altered, and on a new plan;
By negociation we'll do what we can–
And I am an honest, well-meaning old man;
Too proud to retreat, and too weak to advance,
We must stay where we are, at the mercy of chance,
*Till Fortune shall help us to lead you a dance.
Then lay down your arms, dear rebels–0 hone
Our king is the best man that ever was known,
And the greatest that ever was stuck on a throne:
His love and affection by all ranks are sought;
Here take him, my honies, and each pay a groat-
Was ever a monarch more easily bought?
In pretty good case, and very well found,
By night and by day we carry him round;
He must go for a groat, if we can't get a pound.
Break the treaties you made with Louis Bouasos
Abandon the congress, no matter how soon,
And then, alltogether, we'll play a new tune.
'Tis strange that they always would manage the
roast,
And force you their healths and the Dauphin's tº
toast :
Repent my dear fellows, and each get a host -
Or, if you object that one host is too few.
We generous Britons will help you to ºn
With a beam laid across—that will certainly do.
The folks that rebelled in the year forty-five
We used them so well that we left few alive
But sent them to heavenin swarms from their hº







SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 111
Your noble resistance we cannot forget,
'Tis nothing but right we should honour you yet;
If you are not rewarded, we die in your debt.
So, quickly submit, and our mercy implore,
Be as loyal to George as you once were before,
Dr I'll slaughter you all—and probably more.
What puzzled sir Harry, sir Will, and his brother,
Perhaps may be done by the son of my mother,
With the Sword in one hand and a branch in the
other.
My bold predecessors (as fitting their station)
At their first coming out, all spoke proclamatios:
listhe custom with us, and the way of our nation.
Then kil-al-la-loo -Shelaly, I say :-
ºf we cannot all fight, we can all run away—
And further at present I choose not to say [1782.
MODERN IDOLATRY,
OR ENGLISH quixotism.
ºnative shades delight no more,
haste to meet the ocean's roar,
seek a wild rebellious shore
Beyond the Atlantic main.
Tishonour calls –I must away –
***se nor pleasure tempts my stay,
ºr all that Love himself can say,
A moment shall detain.
To meet those hosts that dare disown
Allegiance to Britainia ºne
* the sword that pities none,
I draw their rebel blood;
Amazement shan their troops confound
* gasping, prostrate on the ground.
* sword shall drink from every wound
A life destroying flood:
Vol. 11. 1.








112 POEMS ON
The swarthy Indian, yet unbroke,
Shall bend his neck to Britain's yoke,
Or flee from her avenging stroke
To desarts yet unknown ;
The Atlantic isles shall own her sway,
Peru and Mexico obey,
And those who yet to Satan pray
Beyond the southern zone.
For George the third I date to go
Through Etna's fire and Greenland's snow,
Where'er our subject waters flow.
The vast unbounded main.
In him true glory shines complete,
In him a thousand virtues meet-
Twere heaven to die at George's feet.
Could I that blessing gain!
For George the third I dare to fall,
Since he to me is all in all-
May he subdue this earthly ball.
And nations tribute bring :-
Yºon rebel States shall wear his chain
Where traitors now with tyrants reign-
And yielded shall be all the main
To George our potent king.
When honour calls to guard his throne.
My life I dare not call my own–
My life I yield, without a groan,
For him whom I adore :
In endless glory he shall reign-
'Tis he shall conquer France and Spain-
Though I perhaps may ne'er again
Behold my native shore. -
EIPILOGUE. |
Tisso well known is hardly worth relating
That men have worshipped gods, though of their
creating -
Arts handy work they thought they might adore.
And bowed to gods that were but logs before










SEVERAL OCCASIONS 113
Idols, of old, were made of clay or wood,
And, in themselves, did neither harm nor good,
Acted as though they knew the good old rule,
* Friend, hold thy peace, and you'll be thought no
fool.”
Britons their case is yours—and linked in fate
You, like your Indian allies—good and great-
How to some frowning block yourselves did rear,
And worsh ºvooden monarchº-out of fear—
THE PROJECTORS.
BEFORE the brazen age began,
And things were yet on Saturn's plan,
None knew what sovereign bliss there lay
in ruling, were it but a day.
Each with spontaneous food content,
His life in Nature's affluence spent;
The sun was mild, serene and clear,
And walked in Libra all the year;
º tempests did the heaven deform,
was not too cold not yet too warm ;
ººple were then at small expence,
They dug no ditch, and made no fence,
No patentees by sleight or chance
For Indian lands got double grants,
Nº. for their wants, but just to say,
If you come here, expect to pay.”
*se grasping souls, your pride repress;
Beyond you wºn mºst you possess?
ften poor acres ºn supply
ºustic and his family.
Why, Jobbers, would you have ten score,
Ten thousand, and ten thousand more :
º is a truth well understood, -
All would be tyrants if they cou’dº






114. POEMS ON
The love of sway has been confessed
The ruling passion of the breast:
Those who aspire to govern states,
If baulked by disapproving fates,
Resolve their purpose to fulfil:
And scheme for tenants at their will.
Ten thousand acres, fit for toil,
In Indiana’s fertile soil–
Ten thousand acres' come agree-
Timon is named the patentee :
And, as the longing stomach craves,
He'll honour fools and flatter knaves.
If Rome, of old, to greatness rose;
Triumphant over all her foes,
None need believe that people then
Were more in strength than modern men;
If o'er the world their eagles waved,
‘Twas property their freedom saved;
From lands, not shared amongst the few,
An independent spirit grew :
Each on a small and scanty spot, -
With much ado his living got,
Inured to labour, from his birth,
Each Roman soldier tilled the earth,
Great as a monarch on the throne
By having something of His own.
ON
ºv. Roº Rºnso wrºs Procºſo.º.
OLD Judas the traitor (not need we much wondeº
Falling down from the gallows, his paunch splitas"
der,
Affording, 'tis likely, a horrible scent
Rather worse than the sulphur of hell, where he**
So now this brachieftain, who long has suspended
And kept out of view, what his masterintended

SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 115
Bursts out all at once, and an inside discloses,
Disgusting the tories, who stop up their noses.
The short of the matter is this, as I take it-
New-York of true Britons is plainly left naked,
And their conduct amounts to an honest confession,
They cannot depend on the run-a-way Hessian.
In such a dilemma, pray what should they do?
Hearts loyal, to whom should they look butto You?-
You know pretty well how to handle the spade,
To dig their canals, and to make a parade;
The city is left to your valiant defence,
And, of course, it will be but of little expence,
Since there is an old fellow that looks somewhat sooty
Who, gratis, will help you in doing your duty–
* In doing our duty – tis duty indeed
* (Says a Tory) if this be the way that we speed;
"We never loved fighting, the matter is clear-
“If we had, I am sure, we had never come here.
George we owned for our king, as his true loyal sons,
But why will he force us to manage his guns –
. holist in the army or cruise on the wave,
* them do as they will–tis their trade to be
"ave.
Guns, mortars, and bullets, we easily face;
But when they're in motion—it alters the case :
- To skirmish with Huppies is an our desire–
*or though we can murder, we cannot stand ſº.
To the standards of Britain we nea for protection,
- here we are gathered, a goodly collection:
ºne most of us think it is rather too hard
For refusing to arm, to be put under guard;
* ºnows undergaard what ills we may feel-
- º * expression that means a great deal-
*gst the rebels they ºne 'em who will not turn
- out.
But here we are left in a sorrowful doubt-
Cºntain Huddy, an American Captain who, after capitulating
- º hºuse ºnged by refugees, called new leves.
Vol II. 2.








116 POEMS ON
* These Britons were always so sharp and so snifty-
* The rebels excuse you from serving, when fifty,
* But here we are counted such wonderful men
* We are kept in the ranks, till we are four score and
ten.
* Kicked, cuffed, and ill-treated from morning ºil
night- -
* We have room to conjecture, that all is not right:
* For FREEdom, we fled from our country’s defence
“And freedom we'll get—when death sends us hence
* If matters gothus, it is easy to see
* That asidiots we’ve been, so slaves we shall be:
* And what will become of that heaceable train
* Whose tenets enjoin them from war to abstain?
“Our city commandant must be an odd shaver,
* Not a single exception to make in their favour -
* Come, let us turn round and rebelliously sing,
* Huzza for the Congress –the defil take the º
[1782.
ARNOLD'S DEPARTURE.
* Mala soluta navis earºº alive
Ferens olentern Mºvium,” &c.
IMITATED FROM HORACE.
WITH evil omens from the harbour sails
The ill-fated barque that worthless ARNoºn bears-
God of the southern winds, callup the gales,
And whistle in rude fury round his ears.
With horrid waves insult his vessel's sides,
And may the east wind on a leeward shore
Her cables part while she in tumult rides,
And shatter into shiversevery oar.
And let the north wind to her ruin haste.
With such a rage, as when from mountains high
He rends the tall oak with his weighty blast,
And ruin spreads where'er his forces fly.

SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 11.
º
May not one friendly star that night be seen;
No Moon, attendant, dart one glimmering ray,
Nor may she ride on oceans more serene
Than Greece, triumphant, found that stormy day.
When angry Pallas spent her rage no more
On vanquished Ilium, then in ashes laid,
But turned it on the barque that Ajax borest
Avenging thus her temple, and the maid.
When tossed upon the vast Atlantic main
Your groaning ship the southern gales shall tear,
How will your sailors sweat, and you complain
And meanly howl to Jove, that will not hear !
But if atlast, upon some winding shore
A prey to hungry cormorants you lie,
A wanton goat to every stormy poweri
Anda fat lamb, in sacrifice, shall die.
A PICTURE OF THE TIMES,
WITH occasion a L. REFLECTIONS.
STILL round the world triumphant Discord flies,
ºil angry kings to bloody contests rise; -
Hosts bright with steel, in dreadful order placed,
ºdships contending on the watery waste.
stracting demons every breast engage,
*earied nations glow with mutual rage;
Still to the charge the routed Briton turns.
he war still rages and the battle burns;
* man with man in deadly combat join,
* the black navy form the flaming line;
ºath smiles alike at battles lost or won–
tº does for him what Nature would have done.
-
º ºnser, son of Oileus king of the Loºns. º ---
ºntº in the temple of Pallas whº was the cº- º
ºne ºn his return from the siege of tº
he tº gº ºne ºn
118 POEMS ON
Can scenes like these delight the human breast-
Who sees with joy humanity distrest?
Such tragic scenes fierce passion might prolong,
But slighted Reason says, they must be wrong.
Cursed be the day, how brightsoe'er it shiued,
That first made kings the masters of mankind;
And cursed the wretch who first with regal pride
Their equal rights to equal men denied;
But cursed, o'er all, who first to slavery broke,
Submissive bowed, and owned a monarch's yoke:
Their servile souls his arrogance adored
And basely owned a brother for a lord ;
Hence wrath, and blood, and feuds, and wars began
And man turned monster to his fellow man.
Not so that age of innocence and ease
When men, yet social, knew no ills like these;
Then dormant yet, Ambition (half unknown)
No rival murdered to possess a throne;
No seas to guard, no empires to defend–
Of some small tribe the father and the friend.
The hoary sage beneath his sylvan shade
Imposed no laws but those which reason made;
On peace, not war; on good, not ill, intent,
He judged his brethren by their own consent;
Untaught to spurn those brethren to the dust;
In virtue firm, and obstinately just,
For him no navies roved from shore to shore,
No slaves were doomed to dig the glittering ore:
Remote from all the vain parade of state,
Noslaves in scarlet sauntered at his gate,
Nor did his breast the angry passions tear,
He knew no murder, and he felt no fear.
Was this the patriarch sage-Then turn your eyes
And view the contrast that our age supplies:
Touched from the life, we trace no ages fled,
We draw no curtain that conceals the dead;
To distant Britain let the view be cast,
And say, the present far exceeds the past;
Of all the plagues that ever the world have cursed.
Name George, the tyrant, and you name the wors:
What demon, hostile to the human kind.
Planted these fierce disorders in the mind








SEVERAL occasions.
119
All, urged alike, one phantom we pursue,
But what has war with human kind to do?
In death's black shroud our bºss can never be found 2.
Tis madness aims the life-destroying wound,
Sends fleets and armies to these ravaged shores
Plots constant ruin, but no peace restores.
0 dire ambition –thee these horrors suit;
lost to the human, she assumes the brute;
She proudly vain, or insolently bold,
Her heart revenge, her eye intent on gold,
Swayed by the madness of the present hour
Lays worlds in ruin for extent ºf power;
That shining bait, which droptin folly's way
Tempts the weak mind, and leads the heart astray.
Thou happiness still sought but never found,
Wein a circle, chace thy shadow round;
Meant all mankind in different forms to bless,
Which, yet possessing, we no more possess:
Thus far removed and painted on the eye
Smooth verdant fields seem blended with the sky,
ºut where they both in fancied contact join
ºvain we trace the visionary line;
still as we chace, the empty circle flies, -
merge new mountains, or new oceans rise. Ilfº
PRINCE WILLIAM HENRY’s
SOLILOQUI".
** a sloºp sº ºne public aeroicrºss tº ºut a
*El Pºia rom tº bºth of the paupº or
***Nº, son to Louis ºvº-
Pºople are mad, thus to adore the Dauphin-
Heaven grantºne bºat may soon be in his coffin–
* honours here to this young Frenchman shown.
Of right should be prince George's, or my own:











120 POEMS ON
And all those wreathes, that bloom on Louis now,
Should hang, unfading, on my father's brow.
To these far shores with longing hopes I came
(By birth a Briton, not unknown to fame)
Pleasures to share that loyalty imparts,
Subdue the rebels, and regain their hearts.
Weak, stupid expectation-all is done :
Few are the prayers that rise for George's son
Nought through the waste of these wide realms
trace,
Butrage, contempt, and curses on our race,
Hosts, with their chiefs, by bold usurpers won,
And not a blessing left for George's son
Here on these isles” (my terrors not a few)
I walk attended by an exiled crew :
These from the first have done their best to please.
But who would herd with sycophants like these?
This vagrant race, who their lost shores bemoan.
Would bow to Satan, if he held our throne-
Ruled by their fears—and what is meaner far.
Have worshipped William only for his stan
To touch my hand their thronging thousands strº
And tired my patience with unceasing love-
In fame's fair annals told me I should live,
And, a roun ºn WILLIAM, to late times arrive:
Must Digby’s royal pupil walk the streets,
And smile on every ruſhan that he meets;
Or teach them, as he has done—he knows when-
That kings and princes are no more than men
Must 1, indeed! disclose, to our disgrace,
That Britain is too small for George's race
Here in the west, where all did once obey,
Three islands only, now, confess our sway;
and in the east we have not much to boast.
For Hºnºr Ali drives us from that coast –
Yield, rebels, yield–or I must go once more
Back to the white cliffs of my native shore:
(Where, in process of time, shallgo Sir Guy,
And where Sir Hanºv has returned to sigh-
_-
* New Yº-and the neighbouring Islands.
SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 121:
Whose hands grew weak when things began to cross,
Nor made one effort to retrieve our loss)
Oatmeal and Scottish kale-pots round me rise,
And Hanoverian turnips greet mine eyes;-
Welch goats and naked rocks my bosom swell,
And Teague dear Teague —to thee Ibid farewell-
Curse on the Dauphin and his friends, I say,
He steals our honours and our rights away.
Digby -our anchors —weigh them to the bow,
And eastward through the wild waves let us plough :
Such dire resentments in my bosom burn,
That to these shores I never will return,
Till fruits and flowers on Zembla’s coasts are known,
And seas congeal beneath the torrid zone L1782]
THIL
POLITICAL WEATHERCOCK.
TIS strange that things upon the ground
* commonly most steady found
While those in station proud
Are turned and twirled, or twist about
Now here and there, now in or out,
Mere play things to a cloud.
Seeyonder innuential man,
sºlate the stern Republican
While interest bore him up;
º him. recant abjure the cause:
ºn support tyrannic laws,
The dregs of slavery’s cup.
Thus, on yon steeple towering high,
Where clouds and sºns an acºa fly,
The weather-cock is placed ,
Which only ºne the sº does blow
**ºne point of compass true,
hen veers with every blast

























122 - POEMS ON
But things are so appointed here
That weather-cocks on high appear,
On pinnacle displayed,
While sense and worth, and reasoning wights,
And they who plead for Human Risºrs,
Sº humºe in the shade.
-
BEELZEBUB's REMONSTRANCE
(oN A. LATE ºrvisºrosian Aeology son Lying.)
YOUR golden dreams, your flattering schemes,
Alas! where are they fled, Sir
Your plans deranged, your prospects changed
You now may go to bed, Sir-
How could you thus, impelled by fear,
Give up the hopes of many a year –
Your fame retrieved, and soaring high
In tºurn's resemblance seemed to fly;
But now you grow so wondrous wise,
You turn, and own that allis-lies.
A fabric that from hell was raised,
On which astonished rebels gazed,
And which the world shall ne'er forget,
No less than Rivington's Gazette,
Demolished at a single stroke-
The angel Gabriel might provoke.
* That all was lies,” might well be true.
But why must this betold by you?
Great master of the scheming head,
Where is your wonted cunning fled?
It was a folly to engage
That truth hencefºrº shºuld ſº your mage:
When you must know, as well as I.
Your first great object is—to tº





Slºw ERAL OCCASIONS. 123
Your fortune was as good as made,
Great artist in the fibbing trade
But now I see, with grief and pain,
Your credit cannot rise again:
No more the favorite of my heart,
No more will I my gifts impart.
Yet something shall you gain at last
For lies contrived in seasons past—
When pressing to the narrowgate
ºil shew the portal marked by fate,
Where all mankind, as preachers say
Are apt to take the wider way,
And though the Royal Printer swear,
Willholt him in, and keep him there! 1782.
-
THE
REFUGEES' PETITION
TO
SIR GUY CARLETON.
Hºly shºwers,
*Tyour honour's petitioners, Tories by trade,
ºn the first of the war have lent Britain their aid,
* done all they could, both in country and town,
* support of the king and the rights of his crown;
* now to their grief and confusion, they find
The devil may take them who are farthest behind.”
ºtherea of an as als they still have been placed
* Rebels and Frenchmen run often have faced,
ºve been in the midst of distresses and doubt
H. *er they came in or whene'er they went out:
**upported the king and defended his church,
* now in the end, must be left in the lurch.
Vol. II. M









124 POEMS ON
Though often, too often, his arms were disgraced
We still were in hopes he would conquer at last,
And restore us again to our sweethearts and wives
The pride of our hearts and the joy of our lives-
But he promised too far, and we trusted too much
And who could have looked for a war with the Dutch
Our board broken up, and discharged from our sº
tions,
Sir Guy it is cruel to cut of our rations;
Of a project, like that, whoe'er was the mover,
It is, we must tell you, a hellish manoeuvre;
A plan to destroy us-the basest of tricks
By means of starvation, a stigma to fix.
ºf a peace be intended, as people surmise,
(Though we hope from our souls these are nothin
but lies) -
Inform us at once what we have to expect,
Nortreat us, as usual, with surly neglect;
Or, else, while you Britons are shipping yourfreight
We'll go to the Rebels, and get our estates.
SIR GUY'S ANSWER.
WE have reason to think there will soon be a peacº
And that war with the Rebels will certainly cease
But, be that as it will, I would have you to know
That as matters are changing, we soon may chaº
too :
in short, I would say, (since I have it at heart)
Though the war should continue, yet we may dº
Four offers in season I therefore propose,
(As much as I can do in reason, God knows)
in which, though there be not too plentiful carº
There still is sufficient to keep you from starº
And, first of the first, it would mightily charm nº
To see you, my children, enlist in the army.
SEVERAL OCCASIONS. jº
Or enter the navy, and get for your pay
A furthing an hour, which is sºftence per day-
There's Hector Clackmanan, and Arthur O’Gregor
And Donald M-Donald shall rule you with vigour:
If these do not suit you, then take your new plan,
Make your heace with the rebels, (march off to a man :)
There rank and distinction perhaps you may find
Andrise into offices fit to your mind
But if still you object—f advise you to take a
Farewell to New-York—and away to Jamaica.
RIVINGTON'S REFLECTIONS
HE more I reflect, the more plain it appears,
If I stay, I must stay at the risque of my ears,
I have so be-peppered the foes of our throne,
Be-rebelled, be deviled, and told them their own,
That if we give up to these rebels at last,
Tisa chance if my ears will atone for the past.
'Tis always the best to provide for the worst-
So evacuation in mention the first:
Carleton should sail for our dear native shore
As Clinton, Cornwallis, and Howe did before)
And take of the soldiers that serve for our guard,
* step that the Tories would think rather hard)
“still I surmise, for aught I can see,
* Congress or sº would meddle with me.
For what have 1 done, when we come to consider,
But sold my commodities to the best bidder?
If I offered tº He for the sake of a post,
*I to be blamed if the king offered most
he King's Royal Printer-Five hundred a year?-
Hºween you and me, 'twas a handsome affair .
ºwould not for that give matters a stretch,
Andieback and forward, and carry and fetch,
May have some pretensions to honour and ſºme–
ºf what are they both but the sound of a name.








126 - POEMS ON
Mere words to deceive us, as I have found long since
Live on them a week, and you’ll find them, but non-
sense-
The late news from Charleston my mind has per
plext,
If that is abandoned—I know what goes next:
This city of York is a place of great note,
And that we should hold it I now give my vote;
But what are our votes against Shelburne's decrees:
These people at helm steer us just where they please
So often they’ve had us all hands on the brink,
They’ll steer us at last to the devil, I think :
And though in the danger themselves have a share,
It will do us small good that they also go there.
It is true that the Tories, their children and wives
Have offered to stay, at the risque of their lives,
And gain to themselves an immortal renown
By ALL turning soldiers, and keeping the town:
Whoe'er was the Tory that struck out the plan,
In my humble conceit, was a very good man;
But our words on this subject need be very few-
Already I see that it never will do: -
For suppose a few ships should be left us by Britain
With Tories to man them, and other things fitting
In truth we should be in a very fine box,
As well they mightguard us with ships on the stocks
And when I beheld them aboard and afloat,
I am sure I should think of the bear ºn the boat.
On the faith of a printer, things look very black-
And what shall we do, alas! and alack.
shan we quit our young princes and full bloods
peers,
And bow down to viscounts and French chevaliers
Perhaps you may say, “As the very last shift .
* we'll go to New-scotland, and take the king's gº
Good folks, do your will—but I vow and I swº
I'll be boiled into soup before I'll live there:
Is it thus that our monarch his subjects degrades |-
Let him go and be damned with his axes and spadº
–Of all the vile countries that ever were known
in the frigid, or torrid, or temperate zone.






SEVERAL, OCCASIONS. jºr
(From accounts that I’ve had) there is not such ano-
ther :
It neither belongs to this world or the other:
A favour they think it to send us there gratis,
To sing like the Jews at the river Euphrates,
And, after surmounting the rage of the billows,
Hang ourselves up at last with our harps on the wil-
lows:
Erel sail for that shore, may I take my last nap-
Why, it gives me the palsy to look on its map :
And he that goes there (though I mean to be civil)
Mayfairly be said to have gone to the devil.
Shall I push for Old England, and whine at the
throne
Indeed they have JEMMIES enough of their own
Besides, such aname I have got from my trade,
They would think I was lying, whatever I said:
hus scheme as I will, or contrive as I may,
Continual difficulties rise in the way: -
Inshort, if they let me remainin this realm,
What isit to Jemmy who stands at the helm
I'll petition the rebels (if York is forsaken)
For a place in their zion which ne’er shall be shaken;
I am º they’ll be clever: it seems their whole
study :
They hung not young Asgill for old captain Huppy.
And it must be a truń that admits no denying,
*y spare us for Munner they'll spare us for tº:
ING.
-
Poirs may think as they please, but to me it would
stem,
* greatmen at home have done nothing but
Team :
º *mming and twisting and shifting about,
º nd * getting in, and others turned out,
º º With their bragging and looking so big,
ººid was to dance atheatrical jig.
Sev -
* years now, and more, we have tried every
A. plan.
And are just -
- as near conquering as when we began,
Vol. II Q. º º
-

128 POEMS ON
Great things were expected from Clinton and Howe,
But what have they done, or where are they now?
Sir Guy was sent over to kick up a dust,
Who already preparesto return in disgust–
The object delusive we wish to attain
Has been in our reach, and may be so again-
But so oddly does heaven its bounties dispense.
And has granted our king such a small share of sense
That, let Fortune favour or smile as she will,
We are doomed to drive on, like a horse in a mill,
And though we may seem to advance on our rout,
*Tis but to return to where we sate out.
From hence I infer (by way of improvement)
That nothing is got by this circular movement;
And I plainly perceive, from this fatal delay,
We are going to ruin the round-about way!
Some nations, like ships, give up to the gale,
And are hurried ashore with a full flowing sail;
So Sweden submitted to absolute power,
And freemen were changed to be slaves in an hour
Thus Taeopone soon from his grandeur came dow"
Forsaking his subjects and Corsican crown;
But we-ºtis our fate, without ally or friend,
To go to perdition, close hauled to the wind.
The case is too plain, that if I stay here
I have something to hope and something to fear:
In regard to my carcase, I should nºt mind that-
can say, “I have lived,” and have grown very fat:
Have been in my day remarkable shifty,
And soon, very soon, will be verging on fifty.
'Tis time for the state of the dead to prepare,
'Tis time to consider how things will gothere:
Some few are admitted to Jupiter's hall.
But the dungeons of Pluto are open to all-
The day is approaching as fast as it can
When Jemmy will be a mere moderate man.
Will sleep under ground both summer and wintº
The hulk of a man, and the shell of a printer,
And care not a farthing for George, or his line.
What empires startup, or what kingdoms decline
our parson last Sunday brought tears from *
eyes, -
When he told us of heaven, I thought of my lies-
SEVERAL, OCCASIONS,
To his flock he described it, and laid it before 'em,
(Asif he had been in its Sanctum Sanctorum)
Recounted its beauties that never shall fade,
And quoted John Bunyan to prove what he said;
Debarred from the gate who the Truth should deny,
Or tº whosoe'er loveth or maketh a lie.”
Through the course of my life it has still been my
lot
In spite of myself, to say “things that are not.”
And therefore suspect that upon my decease
Notapoet will leave metoslumber in peace,
But at least once a week be-scribble the stone
Where Jemmy, poor Jemmy, lies sleeping alone!
Howe'er in the long run these matters may be,
ºf the scripture is true, it has bad news forme—
And yet, when I come to examine the text,
And the learned annotations that Poole has annexed,
Throughout the black list of the people that sin
I cannot once find that I’m mentioned therein;
Whoremongers, idolaters, all are left out,
And wizzards, and dogs (which is proper, no doubt)
But he who says, I’m there, mistakes or forgets–
It mentions no Paintens of Royal Gazettes :
In truth, I have need of a mansion of rest,
And here to remain might suit me the best–
Philadelphia in some things would answer as well,
Some Tories are there, and my papers might sell)
But then I should live amongst wranging and strife,
And beforced to say credo the rest of my life:
For their sudden conversion ºm much at a loss-
am told that they bow to the wood of the cross,
And worship the reliquestransported from Rome,
St Peter's toe-nails, and St. Anthony’s comb-
ºf thus the true faith they no longer defend
Iscarcely can think where the madness will end-
ºf the greatest among them submitto the Pope
hat Reason have I for indulgence to hope?

130 POEMS ON
If the Congress themselves to the CHAPEL did pass,
Ye may swear that poor JEMMy would have to sing
Inass.
December, 1782.
HUGH GAINE'St LIFE.
City of New-York, Jan. 1st, 1783.
To the Senates of York, with all due submission,
Of honest Hugh GAINE the humble fetition;
ºn Account of his Life he will also firefix,
And some trifies that haffened in seventy-six;
He homes that your honours will take no ºffence,
If he sends you some groans of contrition from hence,
And, further, to fºove that he's truly sincere,
He wishes you all a happy New Year.
-
AND, first, he informs, in his representation,
That he once was a printer of good reputation,
And dwelt in the street called Hanover Square,
(You'll know where it is, if you ever was there)
* “On the 4th of Novemberlast, the clergy and selectmentſ
* Boston paraded through the streets after a crucifix, and joined in
“a procession in praying for a departed soul out of Purgatºry; and
“for this they gave the example of Congress, and other American
“leaders, on a former necasion at Philadelphia, some of whom, in
“the height of their zeal, even went so far as to sprinkle themselves
“with what they call Holy water.”—Royal Gazette, of December
** 11, inst.
† A character well remembered in New York, and the adjº
eant States-now deceased.
# The British army evacuated New York the November follow-
nº.
§ The Legislature of the State were at this time in session ºf
Fusº it. -


SEVERAL OCCASIONS.
Nextdoor to the dwelling of doctor Brownjohn,
(Who now to the drug-shop of Pluto is gone)
But what do I say—who ever came to town,
And knew not Hugº Garnº at the Bible and Crown.
Now, if I was ever so given to lie,
My dear native country I wouldn't deny .
I know you love Teagues) and 1 shall not conceal
That I came from the kingdom where Phelim
O'Neale
And other brave worthies ate butter and cheese,
And walked in the clover-fields up to their knees;
Full early in youth, without basket or burden,
With a staffin my hand, I passed over Jordan,
(I remember my comrade was doctor Magraw”
And many strange things on the waters we saw,
Sharks, dolphins, and sea-dogs, bonettas, and whales,
And birds at the tropic, with quills in their tails)
And came to your city and government seat,
And found it was true you had something to eat;
When thus I wrote home—“ The country is good,
"They have plenty of victuals and plenty of wood:
"The people are kind, and, whatever they think,
“I shall make it appear, I can swim where they'll
“sink;
"Dear me! they’re so brisk, and so full of good cheer,
my soul, I suspect they have always new year,
. And therefore conceive it is good to be here.”
Sº said, and so acted— put up a press,
nº printed away with amazing success;
Neglected my person, and looked like a fright,
as bothered all day, and was busy all night,
º' money come in, as the papers went out,
While Parker and Weyman were driving about,
And cursing and swearing, and chewing their cuds.
And wishing Hugh Gaine and his press in the suds:
Ned Weyman was printer, you know to the king,
And thought he had got all the world in a string,
Though riches not always attend on a throne)
So he swore I had found the philosopher's stone,
* A cynical and very eccentric Physician.
New York Pºinters, many years before the Revolution.



132 POEMS ON
And called me a rogue, and a son of a bitch,
Because I knew better than him to get rich.
Tomalice like that 'twas in vain to reply—
You had known by his looks he was telling a lie.
Thus life ran away, so smooth and serene–
Ah! these were the happiest days I had seen!
But the saying of Jacob I found to be true,
* The days of thy servant are evil and few ſº
The days that to me were joyous and glad,
- -
Are nothing to those which are dreary and sad
The feuds of the Stamfºrt foreboded foul weather,
And war and vexation all coming together:
Those days were the days of riots and mobs,
Tarº feathers, and tories, and troublesome jobs—
Priestspreaching up war for the good of our souls,
And libels, and lying, and Liberty poles,
From which, when some whimsical colours you waved
We had nothing to do, but lookºap and be saved-
(You thought, by resolving, to terrify Britain—
Indeed, if you did, you were damnably bitten)
I knew it would bring an eternal reproach,
When I saw you a-burning Cadwallader’s" coach:
I knew you would suffer for what you had done,
When I saw you lampooning poor Sawney his son,
And bringing him downto so wretched a level,
As to ride him about in a cant with the devil-
-
WELL, as I predicted that matters would be-
To the stamp-act succeeded a tax upon Tea.
Whatchest-hulls were scattered, and trampled, and
drowned, -
And yet the whole tax was but three pence her pound
May the hammer of Death on my noddle descend
And Satan torment me to time without end.
ºf this was areason to fly into quarrels,
and feuds that have ruined our manners and morals:
A parson himself might have sworn round the coº
Dass.
That folks for a trifle should make such a rumºus,
_-
* Lieutenant-Governor Cadwalladº Colden.

SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 133
Such a rout as to set half the world in a rage,
Make France, Spain, and Holland with Britain en-
gage
While the Emperor, the Swede, the Russ, and the
Dane
All pity John Bull-and-run off with his gain.
But this was the season that I must lament-
| first was a whig with an honest intent;
Not a Yankee among them talked louder or bolder,
With his sword by his side, or his gun on his shoul-
der;
Yes, I was a whig and a whig from my heart,
But still was unwilling with Britain to part
Ithought to oppose her was foolish and vain,
thought she would turn and embrace usagain,
And make us as happy as happy could be,
By renewing the aera of mild sixty-three:
And yet, like a cruel, undutiful son,
Whoevil returns for the good to be done,
Unmerited odium on Britain to throw,
printed some treason for Philip Faeneau,
Some damnable poems reflecting on Gage,
The king and his council, and writ with such rage,
So full of invective, and loaded with spleen,
Sº sneeringly smart, and so hellishly keen,
That, at least in the judgment of halfourwise men,
Alec to herself put the nib to his pen.
-
At this time arose a certain king Sears,
homade it his study to banish our fears:
was, without doubt, a person of merit, -
Great knowledge, some wit, and abundance of spirit;
Could talk like a lawyer, and that without fee,
And threatened perdition to all that drank tea.
ºng sermons did he against Scotchmen prepare,
And drank like a German, and drove away care.
Ah! don't you remember what a vigorous hand he
put
To drag of the great guns, and plague captain Van-
deſivt.”
cºntain of the Asia man ºn cannonaded the city
134 POEMS ON
That night* when the HERo (his patience worn out)
Put fire to his cannons and folks to the rout,
And drew up his ship with a shring on her cable,
And gave us a second confusion of Babel,
And (what was more solid than scurrilous language)
Poured on us a tempest of round shot and langrage;
Scarce a broadside was ended till another began again
–By Jove' it was nothing but Fire away Flannaganº
Somethought him saluting his Sally's and Nancy's
Till he drove a huge ball through the roof of San
Francisi
The town by his flashes was fairly enlightened,
The women miscarried, the beaux were all frightened
For my part, I hid in a cellar (assages
And Christians were wont in the firimitive ages:
Thus the Profiñet ºf old that was wraht to the sky
Lay snug in a cave till the tempest went by,
But, as soon as the comforting spirit had spoke,
He rose and came out with his mystical cloak):
Yet I hardly could boast of a moment of rest,
The dogs were a-howling, the town was distrest.
But our terrors soon vanished, for suddenly SEARs
Renewed our lost courage and dried up our tears.
Our memories, indeed, must have strangely de
cayed
If we cannot remember what speeches he made,
What handsome harangues upon every occasion,
How he laughed at the whim of a British Invasion.
“P-x take 'em, (said he] do ye think they will
come?
* If they should—we have only to beat on our druº
* And run ºf the flag of American freedom,
“And people will muster by millions to bleed ºn
“What freeman need value such blackguards as these
* Let us sinkin our channel some Chevaux de frº
* — and then let 'em come and we’ll show ‘em ſai
play— - -
*But they are not madmen—I ten you-not they
* August 1775:
A cant phrase among privateers men.
* A noted inn-holder in New-Yºrk.





SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 135
From this very day 'till the British came in,
We lived, I may say, in the Desert ºf Sin
Such beating, and bruising, and scratching, and tear-
*5 -
Such kicking, and cuffing, and cursing and swearing 2
—But when they advanced with their numerous fleet,
And Washington made his nocturnal retreat,”
(And which they ſermitted, I say, to their shame,
Or else your New EMPIRE had been but a name)
We townsmen, like women, of Britons in dread,
Mistrusted their meaning, and foolishly fled;
Like the rest of the dunces I mounted my steed,
And galloped away with incredible speed,
To Nºw ank I hastened—but trouble and care
Gºuſ on the cruſſier and followed me there /
There I scarcely got fuel to keep myself warm.
And scarcely found spirits to weather the storm;
And was quickly convinced I had little to do,
The Whigs were in arms, and my readers were few)
So, after remaining one cold winter season,
And stuffing my ſafers with something like treason,
And meeting misfortunes and endless disasters,
ºnd forced to submit to a hundred new masters,
thought it more prudent to hold to the one-
And (after repenting of what I had done,
And cursing my folly and idle pursuits)
Returned to the city, and hung up my boots.
-
As matters have gone, it was plainly a blunder,
But then I expected the Whigs must knock under,
And I always adhere to the sword that is longest,
And stick to the party that’s like to be strongest:
That you have succeeded is merely a chance,
I never once dreamt of the conduct of France —
falliance with her you were promised–at least
You ought to have shewed me your stan in the east,
Norlet me go of uninformed as abeast.
When your army I saw without stockings or shoes,
Orvictuals—or money, to pay them their dues,
* From Long-Island.
Vol. II. N
136 POEMIS ON
(Excepting your wretched Congressional/after
That stunk in my nose like the smoke of a taper,
A cartload of which for a dram might be spental
That damnable bubble, the old Continental
That took people in at this wonderful crisis,
With its mottoes and emblems, and cunning devices:
Which, bad as it was, you were forced to admire,
And which was, in fact, the fillar ºf fire,
To which you directed your wandering noses,
(Like the Jews in the desert conducted by Moses
When I saw them attended with famine and fear,
Distressin their front, and Howe in their rear;
When I saw them for debt incessantly dunned,
Not a shilling to pay them laid up in your fund;
Your ploughs at a stand, and yourships run ashort-
When this was apparent (and need I say more?)
handled my cane, and I looked at my hat, -
And cried—“God have mercy on armies like that
took up my bottle, disdaining to stay, -
And said–º Here’s a health to the Vicar of Bº
And cocked up my beaver, and—strutted away."
Asººn of my conduct, I sneaked into town.
(Six hours and a quarter the sun had been down)
It was, I remember, a cold, frosty night, -
And the stars in the firmament glittered as brigh
Asif (to assume a poetical stile)
Old Vulcan had give them a rub with his file.
*Till this cursed night, I can honestly say,
Ine'er before dreaded the dawn of the day;
Not a wolf or a fox that is caught in a trap
Eer was so ashamed of his nightly mishap-
couldn't help thinking what is might befall nº
What rebels and rascais the British would call nº
And how I might suffer in credit and purse.
If not in my person, which still had been worse
At length resolved (as was surely my duty)
To go for advice to parson Auchmuty tº
The parson who now I hope is in glory,
Was then upon earth, and a terrible tory,
- - ... nº
* A high church Episcopalian, then rector of Triº ||
N. Y. since uuceased.



SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 13?
Not Cooper” himself of ideas perplext,
Sonicely could handle, and torture a text,
When bloated with lies, through his trumpet he
sounded
The damnable sin of opposing a crowned head;
Like a penitent sinner, and dreading my fate,
In the grey of the morning I knocked at his gate;
(Nodoubt he was vexed that I roused him so soon,
(For his saintship was mostly in blankets till noon.)
At length he approached in his vestments ºf black-
Alas, my poor heart! it was then on the rack,
like a man in an ague, or one to be tried
shook—and recanted, and blubbered, and sighed)
His gown, of itself, was amazingly big,
Besides, he had on his canonical wig,
And frowned at a distance; but, when I came near,
ked pleasant and said–º What, Hugh, are you here
* Your heart, I am certain, is horribly hardened,
“But if you confess—your sin will be ſardoned;
* Inºſite ºf my fireachments, and all I could say,
* the frodigal son, you wandered away,
- º ºne, dear feminent, which is the best,
- To be * the rebels, fursued and distresſ,
- Devºid ºf all comfºrt, an hones of relief,
Prºse to be herº, and partake the king's beef;
* More feofile resemble the snake than the dove,
* mºre are converted by terror than love:
* Y. ke a sheeſ on the mountains, ºr rather ***
- *dered away from the ninety and nine;
- while at the ºffers ºf mercy you ºurned:
*ºr error you saw, and at length have returned:
* master will therefore consider your case,
*restore you again to favour and grace,
ºligº ºn. from utter confusion,
a rebels ºn tº ºn their delusion.”
Ah, rebels (said I) they are rebels indeed-
ºusement, I hope, by the king is decreed:
º have hung up his subjects with bed-cords and
halters,
And banished his fººts, and thrown down his al-
ºrs.
-
-
Miles Coºper. President of King’s (now Columbia College)

138 POEMS ON
“And I-even I–while Iventured to stay,
* They sought for my life—to take it away!
* I therefore propose to come under your wing,
* A foe to REBELLIox—a slave to the king.”
Such solemn confession, in scriptural stile,
Worked out my salvation, at least for a while;
The parson pronounced me deserving of grace,
And so they restored me to firinting and flace.
But days, such as these, were too happy to last:
The sand of felicity settled too fast!
When I swore and protested I honoured the throme
The least they could do was to let me alone:
Though George I compared to an angel above,
They wanted some solider proofs of my love;
And so they obliged me each morning to come
And turn in the ranks at the beat of the drum,
While often, too often (I tell it with pain)
They menaced my head with a hickory cane,
While others, my betters, as much were opprest-
But shame and confusion shall cover the rest.
You, doubtless, will think I am dealing in fable
When I tell you I guard an afficer's stable—
With usage like this my feelings are stung;
The next thing will be, I must heave out the dung
Sir hours in the day is duty too hard,
And Rivington sneers whene'er I mount guard
And laughs till his sides are ready to split -
With his jests, and his satires, and sayings of wit:
Because he’s excused, on account of his post,
He cannot go by without making his boast,
Asif I was all that is servile and mean –
But fortune, perhaps, may alter the scene,
And give him his turn to stand in the street,
Burnt ºrandy supporting his animal heat-
But what for the king or the cause has he done
That we must be toiling while he can look on
Great conquests he gave them on after—ºtis tº
When Howe was retreating, he made him ſº
Alack it's too plain that Britons must fall-
When loaded with laurels—they go to the wall.
From hence you may guess I do nothing but gº
And where we are going I cannot conceive-

SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 139
The wisest among us a change are expecting:
It is not for nothing, these ships are collecting:
It is not for nothing, that MATHEws, the mayor.
And legions of Tories, for sailing prepare;
It is not for nothing, that John Coghill KNAF
Isfiling his papers, and plugging his tap ;
See Skinner himself, the fighting attorney,
is boiling potatoes, to serve a long journey :
But where they are going, or meaning to travel
Would puzzle John Faustus, himself to unravel -
Perhaps to Penobscot, to starve in the barrens,
Perhaps to St. John's, in the gulph of St. Lawrence -
Perhaps to New-Scotland, to perish with cold,
Perhaps to Jamaica, like slaves to be sold;
Where, scorched by the summer, all nature repines.
Where Phoebus, great Phoebus, too glaringly shines.
And fierce from the zenith diverging his ray
Oppresses the isle with a torrent of day.
Since matters are thus, with proper submission
Permitmeto offer my humble periºrios:
(Though the form is uncommon, and lawyers may
sneer,
With truth I can ten you, the scribe is sincere:)
ºr. since it is plain we are going away,
ºu will suffer Hugh Gaine unmolested to stay,
sand is near run (life itself is a span)
leave him to manage the best that he can:
Whoever are his masters, or monarchs, or regents,
*the future he's ready to swear them allegiance;
he enown he will promise to holdin disgrace:
* Bºtº-allow him to stickin its place,
A. ill *AT; in due season, you wish to put down,
º bid him keep shop at the sign of the crows.
º Turk with his turban should setup at last here
* he gives him protection, he’ll own him his
master,
* Mield due obedience (when Britain is gone)
*h ruled by the sceptre of Paesay tº Joº.
Vol. II. Nº.

14 U. POEMS ON
My press, that has called you (as tyranny drove
her)
Rogues, rebels, and rascals, a thousand times over,
Shall be at your service by day and by night,
To publish whate'er you think properto write;
Those tunes which have raised George the third to
level
With angels—shall prove him as black as the devil
To him that contrived him, a shame and disgrace,
Nor blest with one virtue to honour his race!
Who knows but, in time, I may rise to be great,
And have the good fortune to manage a state?
Great noise among people great changes denotes,
And I shall have money to purchase their votes-
The time is approaching, Iventure to say,
When folks worse than me will come into play,
When your double faced people will give themselves
airs,
And Arni to take hold of the helm of affairs,
While the honest bold solipiº, who sought your tº
nown:
Like a dog in the dirt, shall be crushed and held down
Of honours and profits allow me a share :
frequently dream of a president’s chair!
And visions full often intrude on my brain,
That for me to interpret, would rather be vain.
Biestseasons advance, when Britons shall find
That they can be happy, and you can be kind,
When Rebels no longer at Traitors shall spurn.
When Ansoºn himself will in triumph return
But my hafter informs me it’s time to conclude:
I fear my Address has been rather too rude-
fit has-for my boldness your pardon I pray:
And further, at present, presume not to say,
Except that (for form's sake) in haste I remain . .
vº º much gainſ.
SEVERAL, OCC Asio Nº. 141
on ºn E
DEPARTURE OF THE BRITISH
FROM CHARLESTOM,
(December 14, 1782.)
HIS triumphs of a moment done;
His race of desolation run,
The Briton, yielding to his fears,
To other shores with sorrow steers:
To other shores—and coarser climes
He goes, reflecting on his crimes,
His broken oaths, a murdered Hayne,
And blood of thousands, spilt in vain.
To Cooner's stream, advancing slow,
Ashley no longer tells his woe:
Nolonger mourns his limpid flood
Discoloured deep with human blood.
Lo! where those social streams combine
Again the friends of Freedom join;
And, while they stray, where once they bled,
Rejoice to find their tyrants fled.
Since memory paints that dismal day
When British squadrons held the sway,
And circling close on every side,
By sea and and retreat denied—
Can she recall that mournful scene,
And not the virtues of a Gººse,
ho greatin war—in danger tried,
has won the day, and crushed their pride.
Through barren wastes and ravaged lands,
He led his bold undaunted bands;
Through sickly climes his standard bore
here never army marched before:
º fortitude, with patience joined:
The virtues of a noblemina)


142 POEMS ON
He spread, where'er our wars are known,
His country's honour and his own.
Like Hercules, his generous plan
Was to redress the wrongs of men;
Like him, accustomed to subdue,
He freed a world from monsters too.
Through every want and every ill
We saw him persevering still,
Through Autumn's damps and Summer's heat,
*Till his great purpose was complete.
Like the bold eagle, from the skies
That stoops, to seize his trembling prize;
He darted on the slaves of kings
At Camden plains and Eutaw springs.
Ah! had our friends that led the fray
Survived the ruins of that day,
We sould not damp our joy with pain,
Nor, sympathizing, now complain.
Strange that of those who nobly dare
Death always claims so large a share,
That those of virtue most refined
Are soonest to the grave consigned
But fame is theirs—and future days
On pillared brass shall tell their praise;
Shall tell—when cold neglect is dead–
* These for their country fought and bled.”




SEVERAL ocCASIONS. 143
LINES
WRITTEN FOR MR. Rºck Eºrº, on THE EXHIBI-
TIONS AT HIS EQUESTRIAN C1R cºus-
AMIDST the high affairs of state,
Profound harangues, and learned debate;
Amidst this tiresome hum of things,
Declining popes and falling kings—
(That sentence of destruction passed
Which yields them to their doom at last)
May we not ask one man of mirth
While crowns are tumbling to the earth)
Notask, amidst such great affairs
From day to day that stun our ears,
How drives the circus on?
The Greeks, of old, their coursers trained
To Isthmian feats, and led the band
Of nimble steeds to war's alarms—
They drew the car, or ploughed their farms:
LYMPIA, at her festive games
Of Grecian lads and Grecian dames
Beheld assembled thousands meet
f prancing steeds, with active feet,
9 rush across the plain-
Almost instructed how to fly,
he multitude, in wild amaze
ronounced the horse above all praise;
And wondered how these earth-born steeds
Were taught, thoughbred in fields and meads.
ºve's coursers to defy.”—
ºut. Ricketts, your superior art
ºn to the steed new gifts impart;
different soul inspires his frame:
He leaps, he bounds with other force
an ever nerved the Grecian horse-
-
* It was ſeigned in Grecian mythology, that arºe of horses ex-
º, in ºil and cavalry service that had their ºrigin from
the stable ºf ºne gods.

14-1 POEMS ON
From precepts that your skill explains
He human attitudes attains,
And moves through all the varying scene
With eye of fire and spirit keen-
See how majestic, how refined
The ideas in a brutal mind
But, Ricketts, O forbear!
If we, the ruling human race
May not on higher beings press,
Make not the horse, by precepts rare,
A nival to mankinn.
ON THE
BRITISH KING'S SPEECH,
---O-M-E-No-N-G PEACE w I-L --E AMERICAN
starts. [1783.]
GROWN sick of war, and war's alarms
Good George has changed his note at last–
Conquest and death have lost their charms;
He, and his nation stand aghast.
To think, what fearful lengths they’ve gone,
And what a brink they stand upon.
Old Burr and North, twin sons of hell,
If you advised him to retreat,
Before our vanquished thousands fell,
Prostrate, submissive at his feet:
Awake once more his latent flame,
And bid us yield you all you claim.
The Macedonian wept and signed
Because no other world was found
Where he might glut his rage and pride,
And by its ruin be renowned;
The world that Sºny wished to view
George fairly had—and lost it too.
SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 145
Let jarring powers make war or peace,
Monster –no peace can greet your breast:
Our murdered friends can never cease
To hover round and break your rest!
The Furies will your bosom tear,
Remorse, distraction, and despair
And hell, with all its fiends, be there:
Cursed be the ship that ever sets sail
Hence, freighted for your odious shoreº
May tempest's o'er her strength prevail,
Destruction round her roar .
May Nature all her aids deny,
The sun refuse his light,
The needle from its object fly,
No star appear by night;
*Till the base pilot, conscious of his crime,
Directs the prow to some more cºnstraw clime.
Genius' that first our race designed,
To other kings impart
The finer feelings of the mind,
The virtues of the heart;
Whene'er the honours of a throne
Fall to the bloody and the base,
Like Britain's tyrant, pull them down.
Like his, be their disgrace
Hibernia, seize each native right!
Neptune, exclude him from the main;
Like her that sunk with all her freight,
The Royal George, take all his fleet,
And never let them rise again:
Confine him to his gloomy isle,
Let Scotland rule her half,
Spare him to curse his fate awhile,
And Wººd, thou to write his Epitaph-
* At that time Poet Laurent to the king of Great-Britain.







**6 POEMS ON
MANHATTAN CITY :
A PICTURE.
FAIR mistress of a warlike state,
What crime of thine deserves this fate?
While other ports to FREEdom rise,
In thee that flame of honour dies.
With wars and horrors overspread,
Seven years, and more, we fought and bled :
Seized British hosts and Hessian bands,
And all—to leave you in their hands.
While British tribes forsake our plains,
In you, a ghastly herd remains:
Must vipers to your halls repair;
Must poisontaint that purest air :
Ah! what a scene torments the eye:
In thee, what putrid monsters lie!
What dirt, and mud, and mouldering walls,
Burnt domes, dead dogs, and funerals :
Those grassy banks, where oft we stood,
And fondly viewed the passing flood;
There, owls obscene, that day-light shun,
Pollute the waters, as they run.
Thus in the east—once Asia's queen–
PALMYRA’s tottering towers are seen;
While through her streets the serpent feeds.
Thus she puts on her mourning weeds.
Lo! Skinneathere for Scotia hails
The sweepings of Cesarean jails:
While, to receive the odious freight,
A. thousand sable transforts wait.
Had he been born in days of old
When men with gods their squires enrolled,
Herºes had claimed his aid abºve,
Arch-quibbler in the courts of Jove.

SEVERAL, OCCASIONS.
14,
0 chief, that wrangled at the bar-
Grown old in less successful war;
What crowds of miscreants round you stand,
What vagrants bow to your command.
A RENEGADO EPISTLE.
DARK glooms the day that sees me leave this shore,
To which ſate whispers we must come no more:
From civil broils what dire disasters flow—
hose broils condemn me to a land of woe
Where barren pine trees shade the dreary steep,
ºwn o'er the soil or murmur to the deep,
Where sullen fogs their heavy wings expand,
And nine months winter chills the dismalland .
ºuld no kind stars have marked a different way,
Stars, that presided on my natal day?–
by is not man endued with power to know
* ends and meanings of events below :
Why did not heaven (all other sense denied)
ºth me to take the true-born Buckskin side,
new me the balance of the wavering fates
* fortune smiling on these new-born states.
º of my heart'—my refuge and relief,
ho * me on through seven long years
ºnet,
º hºse better genius taught you to remain
º sºft quiet of your rural reign,
A. º still despised the Rebels and their cause,
º While you paid the taxes, damned their laws,
º wisely stood spectator of the fray
**usted George, whatever he chose to say :
* happy thou, who wore a double face,
* the balance turned, could each embrace;
**ppy Jºsus had tº ar,
* a language foreign to my heart,
º *oped from pomp and dreams of regal state
* the friendship of the men I hate,
Vol. II. O
of

148 POEMIS ON
These strains of woe had not been penned to-day,
Nor I to foreign climes been forced away:
Ah! George—that name provokes my keenestrºgº
Did he not swear, and promise, and engage
His loyal sons to nurture and defend,
To be their god, their father, and their friend-
Yet basely quits us on a hostile coast
And leaves us wretched, where we need him most
His was the part to promise and deceive,
By him we wander and by him we grieve;
Since the first day, that these dissentions grew
When Gage to Boston brought his blackguard crew
Amused with conquests, honours, riches, fame,
Posts, titles, earldoms—and a deathless name,
From place to place we urgeour vagrant flight
To follow still these vapours of the night,
From town to town have run our various race,
And acted all that’s mean, and all that’s base-
Yes—from that day until this hour we roam,
Vagrants forever from our native home.
And yet, perhaps, fate sees the golden hour
When happier hands shall crush rebellious powº
When hostile tribes their plighted faith shall own
And swear subjection to the British throne,
When George the fourth shall new petitions spur".
And banished thousands to their fields return.
From dreams of conquest, worlds, and empires"
Britain awaking, mourns her setting sun,
No rays of joy her evening hour illume,
'Tis one sad chaos, one unmingled gloom
Too soon she sinks unheeded to the grave.
No eye to pity, and no hand to save:
what are he crimes that she alone must bend
Where are her hosts to conquer and defend-
Must she alone with these new regions part
These realms that lay the nearest to her heatº
But soared at once to independent power
Not sunk, like Scotland, in the trying hour -
See slothful Spaniards golden empires keep
And rulevast realms beyond the Atlantic deº
Must sue alone surrender half our reign, -
And they their empires and their worlds retº
SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 149
Britannia rise—send Johnstone to Peru,
Seize thy bold thunders and the war renew,
Conquest or ruin-one must be your doom,
Strike—and secure a triumph or a tomb
But we, sad outcasts from our native reign,
Driven from these shores, a poor deluded train,
In distant wilds, conducted by despair,
Seek vainly seek, a hiding place from care!
Even now yon’ tribes, the foremost of the band,
Crowd to the ships and cover all the strand ;
Forced from their friends, their country, and their
GOD,
see the unhappy miscreants leave the sod
Matrons and men walk sorrowing side by side.
And virgin grief, and poverty, and pride;
All all with aching hearts prepare to sail,
And late repentance, that has no avail!
While yet Istand on this forbidden ground
hear the death-beu of destruction sound,
And threatening hosts, with vengeance on their brow,
º “where are Britain’s base adherents now *
hese, hot for vengeance, by resentment led,
ºne on our hearts the failings of the head;
* no peace, no favours they extend,
ºr rage no bounds, their hatred knows no end ;
** firm league I see them all combined.
We, like the damned, can no forgiveness find–
As soon might Satan from perdition rise,
*the lost angels gain their vanished skies,
*malice cease in their dark souls to burn,
"e, once fled, be suffered to return.
Cursed be the use that was formed with France
* their lilies, and the stars, advance!
ºthey not turn our triumphs to retreats,
*Prove our cosquests nothing but periºrs:-
I | heart misgives ºne, as their chiefs draw near
feel the influence ºf all-potent fear :
*eforth must 1, abandoned and distrest,
*k at the door of pride, a beggar guest,
learn from years of misery and pain
** oppose fair Freedom's ºause again -

150 POEMS ON
One truth is clear from Nature, constant still,
Kingshold not worlds, or empires, at their will:-
Nor rebels they, who native freedom claim,
Conquest alone can ratify the name
But great the task, resistance to controul
When genuineviºur fires the stubborn soul;
The warlike beast, in Lybian deserts placed
To reign the master of the sun-burnt waste,
Not tamely yields to wear a servile chain:
Force may attempt it, and attempt in vain-
Mervous and bold, by native valour led :
His firowess strikes the firoud invader dead,
Byforce nor fraud from Freedom’s charms beguiled
He reigns secure the monarch ºf the wild.
TANTALUS,
[1783.]
RIVINGTON'S CONFESSIONS.
ADDRESSED
TO THE WHIGS OF WEIſ. YORK,
LONG life and low spirits were never my choice.
As long as I live I intend to rejoice; -
When life is worn out, and no wine’s to be had,
'Tis time enough then to be serious and sad.
'Tis time enough then to reflect and repent,
When our liquor is gone, and our money is spent
But I cannot endure what is practised by some
This anticipating of mischiefs to come:
A debt must be paid, I am sorry to say,
Alike in their turns by the grave and the gay.
And due to a despot that none can deceive
Who grants us no respite and signs no reprisº
Thrice happy is he that from care can retreat
And its plagues and vexations put under his ſee








SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 151
Blow the storm as it may, he is always in trim,
And the sun’s in the zenith forever to him.
Since the world then, in earnest, is nothing but care,
(And the world will allow I have also my share)
Yet, tossed as I am in the stormy expanse,
The bestway, I find, is to leave it to chance.
Look round, if you please, and survey the wide ball
And chance, you will find, has direction of all:
Twas owing to chance that I first saw the light,
And chance may destroy me before it is night!
Twas a chance, a mere chance, that your arms gained
the day,
Twas a chance that the Britons so soon went away,
To chance by their leaders the nation is cast
And chance to perdition will send them at last.
Now because I remain when the puppies are gone
You would willingly see me hanged, quartered, and
drawn,
Though I think I have logic sufficient to prove
That the chance of my stay—is a proof of my love.
For deeds of destruction some hundreds are ripe,
But the worst of my foes are your lads of the type:
ºcause they have nothing to put on their shelves
hey are striving to make me as poor as themselves.
There's Loubos, and Kollock, those strong bulls of
Bashan, -
*striving to hºme away from my station,
And Holt, all at once, is as wonderful great
Asif none but himself was to print for the state.
º all are convinced I’d a right to expect
** a sinner returning you would not reject–
Quite sick of the scarlet and slaves of the throne,
**ow at your option to make me your own.
Suppose I had gone with the Tories and rabble,
**tarve or be drowned on the shoals of cape Sable,
had suffered, 'tis true—but I’ll have you to know,
ºu nothing had gained by my trouble and woe.
Vol II. O 2
lsº POEMS ON
You say that with grief and dejection of heart
I packed up my awls, with a view to depart,
That my shelves, were dismantled, my cellars un-
stored,
My boxes afloat, and my hamperson board:
And hence you infer (I am sure without reason)
That a right you possess to entangle my weazon-
Yet your barns I ne'er burnt, nor your blood have
spilt,
And my terror alone was no proof of my guilt.
The charge may be true-for I found it in vain
To lean on a staff that was broken in twain,
And ere I had gone at Port Roseway to fix,
I had chose to sell drams on the south side of Styx.
I confess, that with shame and contrition opprest.
I signed an agreement to go with the rest, -
But ere they weighed anchor to sail their last trip,
I saw they were vermin, and gave them the slip:
Now why you should call me the worst man alive
On the word of a convert, I cannot contrive,
Though turned a plain, honest republican, still
You own me no proselyte, do what I will.
My paper is altered—good people, don’t fret;
I call it no longer the Royal Gazette,
To me a great monarch has lost all his charms.
I have pulled down his Lion, and trampled his Amºs
While fate was propitious, I thought they might
stand,
(You know I was zealous for George's command)
But since he disgraced it, and left us behind,
If I thought him an angel—I’ve altered my mind.
On the very same day that his army went hence
ceased to tellies for the sake of his pence:
And what was the reason the true one is best-
I worship no suns when they hang to the west:
In this I resemble a Turk or a Moor,
Bright Phºebus ascending, I prostrate adore:
And, therefore, excuse me for printing some layº
An ode or a sonnet in Washington's praise.




SEVERAL OCCASIONS is:
His prudence, and caution has saved your dominions,
This chief of all chiefs, and the pride of Virginians:
And when he is gone—I pronounce it with pain-
Wescarcely shall meet with his equal again.
The gods for that hero did trouble prepare,
But gave him a mind that could feed upon care,
They gave him a spirit, serene but severe,
Above all disorder, confusion, and fear;
In him it was fortune where others would fail:
He was born for the tempest, and weathered the gales
Old Plato asserted that life is a dream
And man but a shadow, a cloud or a stream;
By which it is plain he intended to say
That man, like a shadow, must vanish away:
If this be the fact, in relation to man,
Andiſeach one is striving to get what he can,
hope, while I live, you will all think it best,
To allow me to bustle along with the rest.
A view of my life, though some parts might be so-
lemn,
Would make, on the whole, a ridiculous volume:
ºn the life that's hereafter (to speak with submission)
hope I shall publish a better edition:
Even swine you permit to subsist in the street;-
pupily a dog that lies down to be beat-
The fºrget what is past, for the year's at a close-
*ndmen of my age have some need of repose.
-
º as to the Tories that yet may remain,
he scarcely need give you a moment of pain:
ºutdate they attempt when their masters are fled;
*When the soulis departed who wars with the dead?
ºn the waves of the Styx had they rode quarantine,
They could not have looked more infernally lean
han the day, when repenting, dismayed and dis-
test.
He the doves to their windows, they flew to their
ºst.

154 POEMS ON
Poor souls: for the love of the king and his nation
They have had their full quantum of mortification;
Wherever they fought, or whatever they won
The dream’s at an end-the delusion is done.
The TEMPLE you raised was so wonderful large
Not one of them thought you could answer the charge,
It seemed a mere castle constructed of vapour,
Surrounded with gibbets, and founded on PAPER.
On the basis of freedom you built it too strong
And CARLEros confessed, when you held it so long,
That if anything human the fabric could shatter,
The Royal Gazette must accomplish the matter.
An engine like that, in such hands as my own
Had shaken king Cuproº himself from his throne,
In another rebellion had ruined the Scot,
While the Pope and Pretender had both gone to pot
If you stoodmy attacks, I have nothing to say-
I fought, like the Swiss, for the sake of my pay;
But while I was proving your fabric unsound
Our vessel missed stay, and we all went aground.
Thus ended in ruin what madness begun,
And thus was our nation disgraced and undone,
Renowned as we were, and the lords of the deep,
If our outset was folly, our exit was sleep.
A dominion like this, that some millions had cost-
The king might have wept when he saw it was lost;"
This jewel—whose value I cannot describe;
This pearl—that was richer than all his Dutch tribe.
When the war came upon us, you very well knew
My income was small and my riches were few-
If your money was scarce, and your prospects wº
bad,
Why hinder me printing for people that had
'Twould have pleased you, no doubt, had Igone with *
few setts
Of books, to exist in your cold Massachusetts;
* The negro king in Jamaica; whom the English declared Indº-
pendent in 1739.

SEVERAL OCCASIONS 155
Or to wander at Wewark with ill-fated Hugh,
Not a shirt to my back, nor a soal to my shoe :
Now, if we mistook (as we did, it is plain)
Our error was owing to wicked Hugº Gaine,
For he gave such accounts of your starving and strife
Asproved that his pictures were drawn from the life.
The part that I acted, by some men of sense
Was wrongfully held to be malice prepense,
When to all the world else it was perfectly plain,
One principle ruled me—apassion for gain.
ſou pretend I have suffered no loss in the cause,
And have, therefore, no right to partake of your
laws :
Some people love talking—I find to my cost,
too am a loser—my PENSION is lost.
Nº did not your printers repeatedly stoop
0 descant and reflection my poºr ABLE soup :
Atmehave your porcupines darted the quill,
Yºu have plundered my Office and published my Wilſ.
Resolved upon mischief, you held it no crime
tº steal my ºftections, and pºint them in rhyme,
Then all the town knew (and a number confessed)
That papers, like these, were no cause of arrest.
You never considered my struggles and strife;
That my lot is to toianá to worry through life;
My windows you broke—not a pane did you spare-
my house you have made a mere old man ºf war.
And still you insist I’ve no right to complain –
indeed if I do, ºn afraidiºs in vain–
*am willing to hope you're too learnedly read
* hang up a printer for being misled.
If this be your aim, I must think of a flight-
* lºss than a month I must bid you good night,
nº hurry away to that when-ridden shore
here Cºos and cºlºros retreated before
º signs in the sky, and from tokens on land
*inclined to suspect my departure's at hand-

156 POEMS ON
Old Argo” the ship, in a peep at her star,
I found they were scraping her bottom for TAR
For many nights past, as the house can attest, ,
A boy with a feather-bed troubled my rest:
My shop, the last evening, seemed all in a blaze,
And a new crowed at midnight, my waiting man says:
Even then, as I lay with strange whims in my head,
A ghost hove in sight, not a yard from my bed,
It seemed General Robºtson, brawly arrayed,
But I grasped at the substance, and found him a
shade . -
He appeared as of old, when head of the throng,
And loaded with laurels, he waddled along-
He seemed at the foot of my bedstead to stand
And cried-º Jamie Rivington, reach me your hand;
“And Jamie, (said he] I am sorry to find
* Some demon advised you to loiter behind;
* The country is hostile–you had better get of it.
“Here’s nothing but squabbles, all plague, and nº
profit
* Since the day that Sir William came here with his
“ throng
* He managed things so, that they always went
“wrong:
“And though for his knighthood, he kept Mºscº
* ANZA,
* I think he was nothing but mere Sancho Panza:
* That famous conductor of moon-light retreats.
* Sir HaRav came next with his armies and fleets,
“But, finding “the Rebels were dying and dead."
“He grounded his arms and retreated—to bed
* Other luck we had once at the battle of Boyne
“But here they have ruined earl Charles and Burgº
* Here brave colonel ºncºon was thrown on his
-- back,
“And here lies poor Andred the best of the pack."
__
* A sºuthen cºnstellatiºn cºnsisting ºf twenty-four stars.
SEVERAL, OCCASIONS. 15?
So saying, he fitted away in a trice,
Just adding, “he hoped I would take his advice”-
Which I surely shall do, if you push me too hard-
And so I remain, with eternal regard,
JAMEs Rivington, Printer, of late to the king,
But now a republican-under your wing-
Let him stand where he is—don't push him down
hill, -
And he'll turn a true Blue-skin, or just what you
will.
December 31st, 1783.
THE AMERICAN SIBERIA
WHEN Jove from darkness smote the sun,
And Nature earth from chaos won,
One part she left a barren waste
By stormy seas and fogs embraced.
love saw her vile neglect, and cried,
"What madness did your fancy guide-
Why have you left so large a space
With winter brooding o'er its face?
Notrees of stately growth ascend.
Eternal fogs their wings expand–
My favorite—man–I place not there,
But spirits of a darker sphere.
ºf Nature's self neglects her trade
What strange confusion will be made:
Such climes as these I doomed to fall
On Saturn's cold unsocial ball:
But such a blemish, here, to see–
How can it else but anger me?
W. here chilling winds forever freeze,
What fool win ºr on lands like these?”
Nature, abashed, thus made reply:
-
When earth I formed, I don't deny,


158 POEMS ON
Some parts Iportioned out for pain,
Hard storms, dull skies, and—little gain.
Mankind are formed with different souls.
Some will be suited near the poles,
Some pleased beneath the scorching line,
And, some, Mew Scotland, will be thine.
Yet, in due time, my plastic hand
Shall mould it o'er, if you command:
By you I act—if you stand still
The world comes tumbling down the hill!”
Untouched-(said Jove)—remain the place:
In days to come I’ll form a race,
Born to betray their country’s cause,
And aid an alien monarch’s laws.
When traitors to their country die,
Tolands, like this, their phantoms fly;
But when the brave by death decay
The mind explores a different way.
Then, Nature, hold your aiding hand-
Let fogs and tempests chill the land;
While this degenerate work of thine
To knaves and knafsacks I resign.
O-C CASIONED
BY GENERAL WASHINGTON'S
Annival. IN PHILADELPHIA, on His way to His ºf
SIDENCE IN VIRGINIA (DEcºMBER, 1783.) -
THE great, unequal conflict past.
The Briton banished from our shore,
Peace, heaven-descended, comes at last,
And hostile nations rage no more;
From fields of death the weary swain
Returning, seeks his native plain.

SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 1.59
nevery vale she smiles serene,
Freedom's bright stars more radiant rise,
New charms she adds to every scene,
Her brighter sun illumes our skies;
Remotest realms admiring stand,
And hail the Hero of our land :
He comes –the Genius of these lands-
Fame's thousand tongues his worth confess,
Who conquered with his suffering bands,
Andgrew immortal by distress:
Thus calms succeed the stormy blast,
And valour is repaid at last.
0 Washington -thrice glorious name.
What due rewards can man decree—
Empires are far below thine aim,
And sceptres have no charms for thee;
ºrtue alone has your regard,
And she must be your great reward.
Encircled by extorted power,
Mºnarchs must envy your Retreat
º cast, in some ill-fated hour,
heir country's freedom at their feet;
Twas yours to act a nobler part
For injured Freedom had your heart.
For ravaged realms and conquered seas
ºne gave the great imperial prize,
And swelled with pride, for ſeats like these
ansferred her heroes to the skies:-
brighter scene your deeds display,
ºu gain those heights a different way.
When Faction reared her bristly head,
º Joined with tyrants to destroy,
here'er you marched the monster fled,
*ous her arrows to employ .
* caught from you a bolder flame,
despotstrembled at your name.
Vol. II. P

160 POEMS ON
Ere war's dread horrors ceased to reign,
What leader could your place supply?-
Chiefs crowded to the embattled plain,
Prepared to conquer or to die-
Heroes arose—but none, like you,
Could save our lives and freedom too.
In swelling verse let kings be read,
And princes shine in polished prose;
Without such aid your triumphs spread
Where'er the convex ocean flows,
To Indian worlds by seas embraced,
And Tartar, tyrant of the waste.
Throughout the east you gain applause:
And soon the Old World, taught by you,
Shall blush to own her barbarous laws,
Shall learn instruction from the Weºu -
Monarchs may hear the humble plea,
Nor urge too far the proud decree.
Despising pomp and vain parade,
At home you stay, while France and Spain
The secret, ardent wish conveyed,
And hailed you to their shores in vain:
In Vernon's groves you shun the throne,
Admired by kings, but seen by none.
Your fame, thus spread to distant lands,
May envy’s fiercest blasts endure, -
Like Egypt’s pyramids it stands,
Built on a basis more secure ;
Time’s latest age shall own in you
The patriot and the statesman too.
Now hurrying from the busy scene,
Where bold Potowmack's waters flow,
Mayºst thou enjoy thy rural reign,
And every earthly blessing know;
Thus nº who Rome's proud legions swayed
Returned, and sought his sylvan shade.
_-
* Cincinnatus.
SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 161
Not less in wisdom than in war
Freedom shall still employ your mind,
Slavery must vanish, wide and far,
Till not a trace is left behind;
Your counsels not bestowed in vain,
Shallstill protect this infant reign.
So, when the bright, all-cheering sun
From our contracted view retires,
Though folly deems his race is run,
On other worlds he lights his fires!
Cold climes beneath his influence glow,
And frozen rivers learn to flow.
9 say, thou great, exalted name:
What Muse can boast of equal lays,
Thy worth disdains all vulgar fame,
Transcends the noblest poet's praise:
Artsoars, unequal to the flight,
Andgenius sickens at the height.
For States redeemed our western reign
Restored by you to mildersway,
Your consciºus glory will remain
hen this great globeis swept away,
And all is lost that pride admires,
* all the pageant scene retires.
A NEWSMAN'S ADDRESS.
WHAT tempests gloomed the by-past year-
hat disma prospects then arose
* at your doors I dared appear,
**any were our griefs and woes;
But time a length has changed the scene,
* Prospects, now, are more serene.
had news we brought you every day,
* seamen slain, your ships on shore,
hº *my fretting for their pay-
"Twas well they had not fretted more!)


162 POEMS ON
‘Twas wrong indeed to wear out shoes.
To bring you nothing but bad news-
Now let’s be joyful for the change-
The folks that guard the English throne
Have given us ample room to range,
And more, perhaps, than was their own:
To western lakes they stretch our bounds.
And yield the Indian hunting grounds.
But pray read on another year,
Remain the humble newsman's friend;
And he'll engage to let you hear
What Europe's princes next intend -
Even now their brains are all at work
Torouse the Russian on the Turk.
Well—if they fight, then fight they must
They are a strange contentious breed;
One good effect will be, I trust,
The more are killed, the more you’ll read:
For past experience clearly shews,
Tºwn assing is the LIFE ºf News.
January 1, 1784.
THE TRIUMPHAL ARCH.
TOWARD the skies
What columns rise -
in Roman stile, profusely great
What lamps ascend,
What arches bend,
And swell with more than Roman state.
High o'er the central arch displayed,
Old Janus shuts his temple door,
And shackles war in darkest shade-
Saturnian times in view once more.


SEVERAL OCCASIONS.
Pride of the human race, behold
In Gallia’s prince the virtues glow,
Whose conduct proved, whose goodness told
That kings can feel for human woe.
Thrice happy France, in Louis blest,
Thy genius droops her head no more;
In the calm virtues of the mind
Equal to him no Titus shined—
No Trajan—whom mankind adore.
Another scene too soon displays:
Griefs have their share, and claim their part,
They monuments to ruin raise,
And shed keen anguish on the heart:
Those heroes that in battle fell
Demand a sympathetic tear,
Who fought, our tyrants to repell–
Memory preserves their laurels here.
Invernalskies
Thus tempests rise,
Andclouds obscure the brightest sun-
º' wreathes are gained
With blood unstained—
to honours without ruin won.
The arms of France three lines mark–
In honours dome with these enrolled
The plough, the sheaf, the gliding barque
The riches of our state unfºld. -
Allied in heaven, asun and stars
ºriendship and peace with France declare-
he branch succeeds the spear of Mars,
Commence repairs the wastes of war;
*ties of concord ancient foes engage,
Proving the day-spring of a brighter age
These Stºres defended by the brave,
Their military trophies, see
The virtue that of oia could save
all still maintain them, great and free,
Arts shall pervade the western wild,
*d savage hears become more mud.
Vol. ii. P2

164 POEMS ON
Of science proud, the source of sway,
Lo! emblematic figures shine;
The arts their kindred forms display,
Manners to soften and refine :
A stately tree to heaven its summit sends,
And clustered fruit from thirteen boughsdepends.
With laurel crowned
A chief renowned
(His country saved) his faulchion sheathes;
Neglects his spoils
For rural toils,
And crowns his plough with laurel wreaths:-
While we this Roman chief survey,
What apt resemblance strikes the eye.
Those features to the soul convey
A Washington, in fame, as high,
Whose prudent, persevering mind
Patience with manly courage joined,
And when disgrace and death were near,
Looked through the dark distressing shade,
Struck hostile Britons with unwonted fear, -
And blasted their best hopes, and pride in ruinlaid:
Victorious Virtue! aid me to pursue
The tributary verse, to triumphs due–
Behold the peasant leave his lowly shed,
Where tufted forests round him grow ;-
Though clouds the dark sky overspread,
War's dreadful art his arm essays,
He meets the hostile cannon's blaze,
And pours redoubled vengeance on the foe.
Born to protect and guard our native land,
Victorious Virtue still preserve us free;
Pierry—gay child of peace, thy horn expand
And, Coscoºp, teach us to agree!
May every virtue that adorns the soul
Be here advanced to heights unknown before:
Pacific ages in succession roll
*Till Nature blots the scene,
Chaos resumes her reign
And heaven with pleasure views its works no tº
- º
ºn ºccasion ºf a mºnotic festival at Pºirº
10. Iº. - -

SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 1.65
SCANDINAVIAN WAR SONG. º.
Barberr hatris scamma
Parata scio in aula :
Bibenus Cereuzstam
Eac concavis crazeriºus craniorum.
Mon gemit vir fortis contra mortem
Magnificiºn oppºrdomibus, &c.
TRANSLATION--
BRAVE deeds atchieved, at death’s approach I smile.
-In Balder's hall I see the table spread,
The enlivening ALE shall now reward my toil,
Quaffed from their sculls, that by my faulchion bled.
Heroes no more at death's approach shall groan:
In lofty Opin's dome all sighs forbear-
Conscious of bloody deeds, my fearless soul
Mounts to greatoºst hall, and revels there.
MARS AND VENUS-
A NYMPH, the pride of all the plain,
ºn beauty's charms excelled by none,
By Thºsis loved, a gallantswain,
Would not a mutual passion own,
Nor yield to him her hand (she said,
Till he forsook the soldier's trade.
These camfis, and drums, and martial arts,
In me (she cried) no fleasure move:
* arms ºrize ºut Cuſhidº darts;
ind what has ºr no do ºn lºve?
Compºsed (with a great deal more) by one of the warriºr
ºf the sº more tº gº years ago, a few hours
ºthe expired. -
iºlin (or wºoden) one of the ancient Saxon deities. Baldeº
ºn tº ºn.




166 POEMS ON
Reject such dangerous arts as these,
And take me, Thyrsis, when you flease.
* What have I done (the youth rejoined)
That you should thus our trade despise :
Venus, of old, to MARs was kind,
Who gained her favours in the skies:
A soldier's glory is to dare
All danger—and to guard the fair.
When sent to rove some foreign waste
O'er mountains marching, bleak and cold.
We cheerful to the combat haste,
In honour’s brilliant band enrolled-
Even there, when wrapt in frost and snow,
Even there, sweet girl, I dream of you.
Since thus, when called to war's alarms,
For absent nymphs our bosoms burn;
In peace, devoted to your charms,
Ah! let me find a just return :
Believeme, Fortune ne'er can part
A soldier and a generous heart.”
While thus he urged his moving strain,
She, conscious what his language meant,
No longer sported with his pain,
But, sighing, sweetly smiled consent-
What Venus ºut on MARs ºf daat,
What influence has-a cºntain's coat
-
PEW TER-PLATTER ALLEY
IM PHILADELPHIA,
(as ºr AerºRep is unsunny, 1784)
FROM Christ-Church graves, across the way.
A dismall horrid place is found,
Where rushing winds exert their sway,
And Greenland winter chills the ground.
SEVERAL OCC ASIONS. º
No blossoms there are seen to bloom,
No sun pervades the dreary gloom
The people of that gloomy place
In penance for some ancient crime
Are held in a too narrow space,
Like those beyond the bounds of time,
Who darkened still, perceive no day,
While seasons waste, and moons decay.
Cold as the shade that wraps them round,
This icy region prompts our fear;
And he who treads this frozen ground
Shall curse the chance that brought him here-
The slippery mass predicts his fate,
A broken arm, a wounded pate.
When August sheds his suitry beam,
May Celianever find this place,
Not see, upon the clouded stream,
The fading summer in her face;
And may she ne'er discover there
The grey that mingles with her hair.
The watchman sad, whose drowsy call
Proclaims the hour forever fled,
Avoids this path to Pluto's hall;
For who would wish to wake the dead -
Stillet them sleep—it is no crime–
hey pay notax to know the time.
No coaches hence, in glittering pride,
Convey their freight tº take the air,
Nº gods nor heroes here reside,
or powdered beau, nor lady fair–
hall to warmer regions flee,
And leave these glooms to Towne” and me.
Benjº Towº, then Printer of the Evening Post.


168 POEMS ON
THE HURRICANE.º
HAPPY the man who, safe on shore,
Now trims, at home, his evening fire;
Unmoved, he hears the tempests roar,
That on the tufted groves expire:
Alas! on us they doubly fall,
Our feeble barque must bear them all.
Now to their haunts the birds retreat,
The squirrel seeks his hollow tree,
Wolves in their shaded caverns meet,
All, all are blest but wretched we-
Foredoomed a stranger to repose,
No rest the unsettled ocean knows.
While o'er the dark abyss we roam,
Perhaps, with last departing gleam,
We saw the sun descend in gloom,
No more to see his morning beam;
But buried low, by far too deep,
On coral beds, unpitied, sleep
But whata strange, uncoasted strand
Is that, where fate permits no day—
No charts have we to mark that land,
No compass to direct that way-
What Pilot shall explore that realm,
What new Columbus take the helm
While death and darkness both surround.
And tempests rage with lawless power,
Offriendship’s voice I hear no sound,
No comfort in this dreadful hour-
What friendship can in tempests be,
What comfort on this raging sea?
The barque, accustomed to obey,
No more the trembling pilots guide: -
Alone she gropes her trackless way,
While mountains burst on either side—
Thus, skill and science both must fall;
And ruin is the lot of all.
* Near the east end of Jamaica. July 30, 1784.

SEVERAL OCCASIONS, 169
ON
THE DEATH
OF THE
REPUBLICA.V PATRIOT AWD STATESMAW,
GENERAL JOSEPH REED.
SOON to the grave descends each honoured name
That raised their country to this blaze of fame:
Sages, that planned, and chiefs that led the way
To Freedom's temple, all too soon decay,
Alike submit to one impartial doom,
Their glories closing in perpetual gloom,
Like the pale splendours of the evening, fade,
While night advances, to complete the shade.
Reep, 'tis for thee we shed the unpurchased tear,
Bend o'er thy tomb, and plant our laurels there:
Your acts, your life, the noblest pile transcend,
And Virtue, patriot Virtue, mourns her friend,
Gone to those realms, where worth may claim regard,
And gone where virtue meets her best reward.
Nosingle art engaged his vigorous mind,
in every scene his active genius shined:
Nature in him, in honour to our age,
At once composed the soldier and the sage-
ºn to his purpose, vigilant and bold,
Petesting traitors, and despising gold,
He scorned all bribes from Britain's hostile throne,
ºr all his country's wrongs he held his own.
Reep, rest in peace: for time’s impartial page
Shall raise the bush on this ungrateful age.
ºng in these climes thy name shall flourish fair,
he statesman’s pattern and the poet’s care;
ºng in these climes thy memory shall remain,
And still new tributes from new ages gain,
air to the eye that injured honour rise-
or traitors triumph while the patriot dies.




170 POEMS ON
THE FIVE AGES.
THE reign of old Saturn is highly renowned
For many fine things that no longer are found,
Trees always in blossom, men free from all pains,
And shepherds as mild as the sheep on their plains
In the midland Equator, dispensing his sway,
The Sun, they pretended, pursued his bright way,
Not rambled, unsteady, to regions remote,
To talk once a-year, with the crab and the goat.
From a motion like this, have the sages explained
How summer forever her empire maintained;
While the turf of the fields by the plough was un-
broke, -
And a house for the shepherds, the boughs of an oak
Yet some say there never was seen on this stage
What poets affirm of that innocent age,
When the brutal creation from bondage was free.
And men were exactly what mankind should be.
But why should they labour to prove it a dreami-
The poets of old were in love with the theme,
And, leaving to others mere truth to repeat,
In the regions of fancy they found it complete.
Three ages have been on this globe, they pretend
And the fourth, some have thought, is to be without
end ;
The first was of Gold–But a fifth, we will say,
Has already begun, and is now on its way.
Since the days of Arcadia, if ever there shined
A ray of the first on the heads of mankind,
Let the learned dispute—but with us it is clear,
That the aera of ea ºn was realised here.
Four ages, however, at least have been told.
The first is compared to the purest of Gold-
But, as bad luck would have it, its circles were few
And the next was of Silver-if Ovid says true.

SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 171
But this, like the former, did rapidly pass-
While that which came after was nothing but Brass
–An age of mere tinkers—and when it was lost,
Hard Iron succeeded—we know to our cost.
And hence you may fairly infer, if you please,
That we’re nothing but blacksmiths of various de-
grees,
Since each has a weapon, of one kind or other,
To stir up the coals, and to shake at his brother.
Should the Author of Nature reverse his decree,
And bring back the age we're so anxious to see,
Agreement, alas!—you would look for in vain, -
The stuff might be changed, but the staff would re-
ºnaln.
The lawyer would still find a client to fleece,
The doctor, a patient to pack offin peace,
The parson, some hundreds of hearers prepared
To measure his gifts by the length of his beard.
Old Momus would still have some cattle to lead,
Who would hug his opinions, and swallow his creed–
Soit's best, we presume, that things are as they are
ºf Iran's the meanest—we've nothing to fear.
[1784]
A RENEGADO EPISTLE
TO THE
IMD EP E.W. D.E.A.T." AMERICA A/S.
WE Tories, who lately were fightened away,
When you marched into York all in battle array,
* Whigs, in our exile have somewhat to say.
From the cºme of New scouana we wish you to
know
still are in being—mere spectres of woe,
ºut dignity high, but our spirits are low.
Vol. II. Q
172 POEMS ON
Great people we are, and are called the king's friends
—But on friendships like these what advantage at:
tends?
We may stay and be starved when we’ve answered
his ends !
The Indians themselves, whom no treaties can bind
We have reason to think are perversely inclined-
And where we have friends is not easy to find.
From the day we arrived on this desolate shore
We still have been wishing to see you once more,
And your freedom enjoy, now the danger is o'er.
Although we be-rebelled you up hill and down,
It was all for your good—and to honour a crown
Whose splendours have spoiled better eyes than out
OWI.
That traitors we were, is no more than our due,
And so may remain for a century through,
Unless we return, and be tutored by you.
Although with the dregs of the world we are classed
We hope your resentment will soften at last,
Now your toils are repaid, and our triumphs are past
When a matter is done, 'tis a folly tofret-
But your market-day mornings we cannot forget
With your coaches to lend, and your horses to let
Your dinners of beef, and your breakfasts of toast
But we have no longer such blessings to boast,
No cattle to steal, and no turkies to roast.
Such enjoyments as these, we must tell you with pº
'Tis odds we shall only be wishing in vain
Unless we return and be brothers again.
We burnt up your mills and your meetings. *tis trutº
And many boldfellows we crippled and slew-
(Aye! we were the boys that had something to do!)
Old Huppy we hung on the Neversink shore-
But, Sirs, had we hung up a thousand men more
They had all been avenged in the torments wellº







SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 178
- When Asgill, to Jersey you foolishly fetched,
And each of us feared that his neck would be stretch-
ed,
When you were be-rebelled, and we were be-wretch-
ed.
In the book of destruction it seems to be written,
The Tories must still be dependent on Britain-
The worst of dependence that ever was hit on.
Now their work is concluded—that pitiful jobb–
They send over convicts to strengthen our mob-
And so we do nothing but snivel and sob.
The worst of all countries has fallen to our share,
Where winter and famine provoke our despair,
And fogs are forever obscuring the air.
Although there be nothing but sea dogs to feed on,
Qur friend Jemmy Rivington made it an Eden—
But alas! he had nothing but lies to proceed on.
Deceived we were all by his damnable schemes
When he coloured it over with gardens and streams,
And grottoes and groves, and the rest of his dreams.
ºut heads were so turned by that conjurer's spell,
We swallowed the lies he was ordered to tell—
ºut his “happy retreats” were the visions of hen.
We feel so enraged we could rip up his weazon,
When we think of the soil he described with its trees
On;
*the plenty that reigned, and the charms of each
Season.
Like a parson that tells of the joys of the best
**man to be hanged—he himself thought it best
**emain where he was, in his haven of rest.
ºnce he helped us away by the means of his types,
* Precepts should only have lighted our pipes,
**ample was rather to honour your stripes.
Now, if we return, as were bone of your bone,
We'll renoun an ame.
ance to G -
throne E. ºrge and his
And be the bee-eeeeets that ever were knºwn-

174 - POEMS ON
In a ship, you have seen (where the duty is hard)
The cook and the scullion may claim some regard,
Though it takes a good fellow to brace the mainyard
Howe'er you despiseus, because you are free,
The world's at a loss for such people as we,
Who can pillage on land, and can plunder at sea.
So long for our rations they keep usin waiting-
The lords and the commons, perhaps, are debating
If Tories can live without drinking or eating.
So we think it is better to see you by far-
And have hinted our meaning to governor Pannº-
The worst that can happen is feathers and tar.
Mova-Scotia, Feb. 1784.
ON THE
EMIGRATION TO AMERICA,
AND
PEOPLA G THE WESTERM covy TRY
TO western woods, and lonely plains,
Palemon from the crowd departs,
Where Nature’s wildest genius reigns.
To tame the soil, and plant the arts—
What wonders there shall freedom show,
What mighty States successive grow.
From Europe's proud, despotic shores
Hither the stranger takes his way,
And in our new found world explores
A happier soil, a milder sway,
Where no proud despot holds him down,
No slaves insult him with a crown.
* Then Governor of Nova Scotia.






SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 175.
And forests bloomed but to decay.
What charming scenes attract the eye,
On wild Ohio’s savage stream :
There Nature reigns, whose works outvie
The boldest pattern art can frame;
There ages past have rolled away,
From these fair plains, these rural seats,
So long concealed, so lately known,
The unsocial Indian far retreats,
To make some other clime his own,
Where other streams, less pleasing, flow,
Anddarker forests round him grow.
Great Sires of floods whose varied wave
Through climes and countries takes its way,
Towhom creating Nature gave
Ten thousand streams to swell thy sway
No longer shall they useless prove,
Noridly through the forests rove;
Norlonger shall your princely flood
From distantlakes be swelled in vain,
Not longer through a darksome wood
Advance, unnoticed, to the main,
Fat other ends the heavens decree—
d commerce plans new freights for thee.
While virtue warms the generous breast,
There heaven-born freedom shall reside,
Nor shall the voice of war molest,
Nor Europe's all-aspiring pride-
here Reason shall new laws devise,
Andorder from confusion rise.
ºrsaking kings and regal state,
With all their pomp and fancied bliss,
he traveller owns, convinced though late.
ºrealm so free, so blest as this—
he east is half to slaves consigned,
"here kings and priests ench in the mind.
- * Mississippi.
Vol II. Q2

176 POEMS ON
O come the time, and haste the day,
When man shallman no longer crush,
When Reason will enforce her sway,
Northese fair regions raise our blush,
Where still the African complains,
And mourns his yet unbroken chains.
Far brighter scenes a future age,
The muse predicts, these States will hail;
Whose genius may the world engage,
Whose deeds may over death prevail,
And happier systems bring to view,
Than all the eastern sages knew.
END OF BOOK THIRD.



SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 17?
BOOK IV.
CºSISTING OF MISCELLANEQUs PIECES, ON THE
ºs QF THE TIMES, INTERSPERSED.WITH
QTHERS ON MORAL, SATIRICAL, AND POLITICAL
SUBJECTS.
*Difficile era: non satiram scribere.”
Juvenat.
“Erftlebo numerum, reddargue tenebris.”f
Vincil.
ON THE
DEATH OF COLONEL LAURENS.
SINCE on her plains this generous chief expired,
hom sages honoured, and whom France admired;
des fame no statues to his memory raise,
Nº swells one column to record his praise
Where her palmetto shades the adjacent deeps,
Ailection sighs, and Carolina weeps
hou, who shalt stray where death this chief cons
fines, -
Revere the patriot, subject of these lines:
Not from the alsº the ºuse transcº his name,
nd more than marble shall declare his fame
here scenes more glorious his great soul engage,
ºnies: thrice worthy in that closing page
a conquering Time to dark oblivion calls,
he marble toºters, and the column falls.
AURENs thy tomb while kindred hands adorn,
northern muses, too, inscribe your urn-
-
It was not easy in those times to avoid writing satirically.
When the volume is completed we will return to the shades.
A. Yºung American officer of the first merit, who fell in an en-
*ment with a detachment ºf the ºritish from Charlestºn, near
ºriver. Cumbahee, in South Cºolina, August, 1782.


178 POEMS ON -
-
Of all, whose names on death's black list appear,
No chief, that perished, claimed more grief sincere,
Not one, Columbia, that thy bosom bore,
More tears commanded, or deserved them more .
Grief at histomb shall heave the unwearied sigh,
And honour lift the mantle to her eye:
Fame through the world his patriot name shall spread,
By heroes envied and by monarchs read:
Just, generous, brave—to each true heart allied:
The Briton’s terror, and his country’s pride;
For him the tears of war-worn soldiers ran,
The friend of freedom, and the friend of man.
Then what is death, compared with such atomb,
Where honour fades not, and fair virtues bloom;
When silent griefon every face appears,
The tender tribute of a nation’s tears;
Ah! what is death, when deeds like his, thus claim,
The brave man’s homage, and immortal fame.
MONUMENTAL LINES,
Apparassen to a pisconsolate person, THAT wº
successively examiou ºn of two sisters, whº
prºp or a consumption within about twº
years of each other, in the earnie of youth
AND BEAUTY -
TWO sisters here in earth’s cold bosom rest,
Once, of their sex, the loveliest and the best-
Long did, for both a sorrowing mother sigh,
As with a mother's griefs she saw them die-
First, handsome Asses took the silent way,
More lovely ANNA, next, became death’s prey:
Anna, whom youth embellished with its charms.
Anna, whom heaven has ravished from your arms ºr
Now, what is life to you, unhappy man,
Since thus deprived of Asses and of Anse

SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 179
ON
THE VICISSITUDES OF THINGS,
“THE constant lapse of rolling years
Awakes our hopes, provokes our fears
Of something yet unknown;
We saw the last year pass away,
But who, that lives can safely say,
The next shall be his own º
So hundreds talk—and thousands more
Descant their moral doctrines o'er;
And when the preaching's done,
Each goes his various, wonted way,
To labour some, and some to play—
So goes the folly on.
How swift the vagrant seasons fly:
They’re hardly born before they die,
st in their wildcareer,
Like atoms round the rapid wheel,
We seem the same, though changing still,
Mere reptiles of a year.
Some haste to seek a wealthy bride,
Some, rhymes to make on one that died;
And millions curse the day,
When firstin Hymen's silken bands
he parson joined mistaken hands,
And bade the bride obey.
While sad Amelia vents her sighs,
In epitaphs and elegies,
ºr her departed dear,
Who would suppose the muffled bell,
Andnourning gowns, were meant to tell.
ºr grief will last—a year :
ºn folly's path how many meet–
What hosts will live to ºe and cheat-


180 POEMS ON
How many empty pates
May, in this wise, eventful year,
In native dignity appear
To manage Rising STATEs.
How vain to sigh-the wheel must on
And straws are to the whirlpool drawn,
With ships of gallantimien— -
What has been once, may time restore;
What now exists, has been before-
Years only change the scene.
In endless circles all things move;
Below, about, far off, above,
This motion all attain–
If Folly's self should flit away,
She would return some New year's days
With millions in her train.
Sun, moon, and stars, are each a sphere,
The earth the same, (or very near)
Sir Isaac has defined-
In circles every coin is cast,
And hence our cash departs so fast,
Cash—that no charm can bind.
From you to us—from usitrolls
To comfort other cloudy souls:-
If again we make it square,”
Perhafts the uneasy guest will stay
To cheer usin some wintry day,
And smooth the brew of care.
* The old Continental

SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 181
ON THE
FIRST AMERICAN SHIP,
(EMPRESS OF CHIWA, CAPT, GREEWE)
that Explora ºn THE Rout to chrºMA, AND THE EAST-
1Nones, AFTER THE REvolution, 1784.
WITH clearance from Bellona won
She spreads her wings to meet the Sun,
Those golden regions to explore
Where George forbade to sail before.
Thus, grown to strength, the bird of Jove,
impatient, quits his native grove,
With eyes of fire, and lightning's force
Through the blue ºther holds his course.
No foreign tars are here allowed
To mingle with her chosen crowd,
Who, when returned, might, boasting, say
They shewed our native oak the way.
To that old track no more confined,
by Britain's jealous court assigned,
She round the Stormy Cape shall sail
And, eastward, catch the odorous gale.
To countries placed in burning climes
And islands of remotest times
She now her eager course explores,
Abd soon shall greet Chinesian shores.
From thence their fragrant tº as to bring
Without the leave of Britain's king;
And Poacetain wane, enchased in gold,
The product of that finer mould.
Thus commerce to our world conveys
All that the varying taste can please;
*Cºn Tºmenºa (the Cape of Storms) so called by Vasco da
º, and by the earliest Portuguese adventurers to India—now
alled the came of Good Hope-



182 POEMS ON
For us, the Indian looms are free,
And Java strips her spicy TREE.
Great pile proceed!-and o'er the brine
May every prosperous gale be thine,
*Till freighted deep with Asia’s stores,
You reach again your native shores.
- -
Esperanza's Manch.
BEING STANZAs ADDRESSED To A PERSON Wºło Cº-
-
plained ºne in as alwars unronºunaire.”
HE stood with his front to the north,
His hat was encumbered with snow;
His purse was a purse of no worth,
His walk was the valley of woe.
His brow was the image of care,
He sighed when he saw it his lot—
He thought he had more than his share,
But said, he regarded it not. -
Wherever he steptor he trode
Some trouble or obstacle lay;
No level he saw on his road
For mountains obstructed his way:
Above him were harpies and hawks,
And vultures, with horrible shrieks;–
Some gave him unmerciful strokes,
Some struck at his eyes with their beaks.
Around him were tygers and bears,
All hoping to feast on his beef;
Beneath him deceptions and snares
occasioned some nº ºf grief
The hurricane blew from the pole
Direct to the point he was bound–
It tried all the stuffin his soul,
And whistled incessantly round.
SEVERAL OCCASIONS, 183
In chance he ascended a hill
The ruffians were seen on his track,
And, if they designed not to kill,
They pulled the poor traveller back.
And when he attained to some bluff
And downward began to progress,
Each gave him a thump or a shove
Though no one could merit it less-
Enraged at the ills he essayed
He raised up his staff, with a frown;
“And why all this malice (he said)
And why are you pushing me down :
Not one of you all have I harmed,
quietly travel my path;
et vultures and devils are armed
To teaze with their rancour and wrath:
My object I swear to attain
The house that is built on the hill–
on strive to prevent me—in vain–
For reach it I certainly will.”
ºforward he went, with a growl,
That fightened the insolent crew;
They fled from his sight with a how
And left him his road to pursue.
He ºse above malice and spite,
* courage and conduct displayed-
line palace he gained on the height.
Which all his disasters repaid.
Vol. H. º


184 POEMS ON
THE NEWSMONGER:
ºf CHARACTER.
AN insect lives among mankind
For what wise ends by fate designed
'Tis hard, 'tis very hard, to find.
In pain for all, but thanked by few
Not twice a year he gets his due-
Yet, patiently he struggles through.
Beneath some garret roof restrained
To one dull place forever chained
His word is, “little money gained.”
The flowers that deck the summer field.
The bloom of spring, too long concealed,
To him no hour of pleasure yield.
His life is everlasting whim;
The seasons change—but scarce for him-
On sheets of news his eyes grow dim.
He life maintains on self-esteem,
He plans, contrives, and lives by-scheme-
And blots good paper—many a ream.
Distrest for those he never saw–
Of kings and nobles not in awe,
He scorns their mandates, and their law.
Relief he finds for others' woes-
The wants of all the world he knows-
His boots are only out at toes.
Now, Europe's feuds distract his brains:
Now, Asia’s news his head contains—
But still his labour for his pains.
The river Scheid he opens wide,
And Joseºn's ships in triumph ride-
The Dutchmen are not on his side.
On great affairs condemned to fret-
The interest on our fºreign dº
He hopes good Louis may fºrgº
SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 185
He fears the Basks will hurt our trade;
And fall they must-without his aid-
Meanwhile his taylor goes unſaid.
Qur western hosts, which Britons keep
In spite of treaties, break his sleep–
He plans their capture—at one sweef.
He grumbles at the furice of flour,
And mourns and mutters, many an hour,
Thatcongress have so little flower.
Although he has no ships to lose
The Algerines he loves to abuse–
And hopes to hear—some bloody news.
The French (he thinks) will soon prepare
To undertake some grand affair–
So 'tis but was tº we need not care.”
Where Mississippi laves the plain
He hopes the bold Kentucky swain,
Will seize the forts, and plague old Shain :
Such morning whims, such evening dreams:
Through wakeful nights he plans odd schemes,
9 dispossess her of those streams.
He prophesies, the time must come
When few will drink west Indiarum
ºr ºf irits will befrogfathome.
The Tories on New Scotland's coast,
He thinks may of full bellies boast
ºn half a century—at most
Then shakes his head, and shifts the scene
alks much about the “Empress Queen.”
d wonders what the Austrians mean:
He raves, and scolas and seems afraid
*Stºres will break by China trade,
Since Sºcie for their ºn is paid ºr
Then tells. that, “just about next June,
* in his new balloon
"make a journey—to the moon.”

















186 POEMS ON
Thus, all the business of mankind,
And all the follies we might find
Are huddled in his shattered mind.
*Till taught to think of new affairs,
At last, with death, he walks down stairs,
And leaves–the wide world to his heirs.
[1784.
To
A CONCEALED ROYALIST :
ON A. v. RULENT ATTACK-
* We have force to crumble you into dust, althºs
- -
you were as hard as rocks, adamant, or jasſier.
Kiss-Lº, alias, John Tuck, Viceroy of Canº
WHEN round the bark the howling tempest tº
Tossed in the conflict of a thousand waves,
The lubber landsmen weep, complain, and sigh.
And on the pilot's skill, or heaven, rely;
Lurk in their holes, astonished and aghast,
Dreading the moment that must be their last.
The tenſes done—their terror also ceases,
And up they come, and shew their shameless faces.
At once feel bold, and tell the pilot, too,
º did nº more ºn they–themselves—could dº
A for to rºasts º ose your new restores -
There is a TYRANT wºom your soul. Aponºs:
And every line you write too plainly shows,
ſº heart is hostile to that tº a Nºs roºs.
what worse than folly, urged this genius dull
with cºst ºnes to shade his leadº
scull-
so midnight darkness union claims with light:
So, oil and water in one mass unite :-
__
* --------e. -
ºn the last releasºn poet ºf the ºn Cº.
tury.






SEVERAL OCCASIONS 18:
No more your rage in flundered verse repeat,
Sink into prose—even there no safe retreat.
Rººp's patriot ſame to distant years may last,
When rancorous refºiles to the dogs are cast,
Or, where oblivion spreads her weary wings,
Lost in the lumber of forgotten things;
And none shall ask, nor wish to know, nor care,
Who-what their names—or when they lived—or
where.
TO
THE concealed ROYALIST :
IN ANSWER TO A SECOND ATTACK.
* Quid immerences hospites vexas, canis
Ignavus adversum luhos 2
Quin huc imanes, sº fºotes, vertis minas,
Ef ºne remorsurum fetis 2–
Hon. Epop. 10.
BASE as they are, this rancorous royal crew
Seem baser sºn, when they are fraised by you.
By you adornº in regal garb they shine,
"at through your verse, and stink in every line.
True child of folly-eldest of her tribe-
º could you dream that you were worth a bribe-
ºted scripºle, ºn pointies ºn
ºracº ºne ºr you dare not to fºſſil:
ºund your own neck the guythe or halter twine,
And be the science of a hangman thine :-
*** we from you furloined one shred of wit,
º did we imitate one line you writ?
* to your verse – we do not rob the dead,
he clay cold offspring of a brazen head.
-
-
tº cººrdly against wolves, yet moiests strangers that
--- º *rel with him—approach, whelp, and attack us, wº
* tº dºsh your teeth dººny our tº
Vol II. R -






º POEMS ON
Doctor retire what madness would it be
To point artillery at a mite like thee?–
Such noxious vermin clambering from their shell,
By squibs and crackers might be killed as well.
But, if you must torment the world with rhymes,
(Perhaps you came to curse us for our crimes)
In sleepy odes indulge your smoky wit,
Pindarics would your happy genius fit-
With your coarse white-wash daub some miscream's
face,
Puppies advanced, or traitors in disgrace:
To gain immense renown we leave you free,
Go, scratch and scribble, uncontrouled by me:-
Haste to the realms of nonsense and despair-
The ghosts of murdered rhymes will meet youthere
Like rattling chains provoke unceasing fears,
And with eternal jinglings-stun your ears.
TC)
THE CONCEALED ROYALIST,
ON HIS FARE ºr L.
* I will meet you, Brutus, at Philºſº.”
Rox: An his Toº
SINCE INR, thank heaven! is all the blood ſº
spill,
Health to the driver of the grey goose quill:
Such war shall leave no widow in despair,
Nor curse one orphan with the public care.
ºis the worst wound the heart of man can feel
When touched, or worried, by an ass’s heel-
With generous satire give your foes their due -
Nay, give them more, and fºove them ecºndrels toº
Make them as black as hell's remotest gloom:
But still to genius let them owe their doom -






SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 189
By Jove's red lightnings ’tis no shame to bleed,
But, by a grovelling swine-is death indeed –
Now, by the laurels of your royal crew,
I knew no shame, till I engaged with you –
But such an odour atmosphered your song,
I held my nose, and quickly passed along,
Grieved for the wretch who could such filth display,
His maw disgorging in the public way.
Armed though we are, unusual tumults rise ;-
But all resentment in my bosom dies.
We deem, that in the skirmish of a day,
This bard must perish, and his verse decay:
This day he goes to black oblivion's clime;
Turned, chased, and routed by the “power of rhyme.”
We wished him still unhandled and unhurt
We wished no evils to this man of dirº ,
We thought to leave him sweltering in his den,
Notwith such rottentrash to inge the pen:
But his mean labours wrought his fºresent woe,
And his own scribblings, now, have laid him low
Before his eyes the sexton's spade appears,
And muſhed bells disorganize his ears :
Already is his mean existence fled,
Sense, wit, and reason—all proclaim him pean :
In his own lines he toiled his funeral bell, -
And when he could not sing—he stunk—farewell.
-
-O.
THE ROYALIST UNIVEILED :
ºn appressed to all whom ºr may concean.)
THE Sage who took the wrong soºn by the ears,
And more than ºoms claimed for ſermonweers º
º, from twelve wigwams down to eight decreased.
*now your prophet, and may serve for priest-
190 POEMIS ON
Ye, who embraced the democratic plan,
Yet with false tears beheld the wrongs ºf man-
To him apply—go–soothe him in distress,
To him fall prostrate—and to him confess.
When first that slave of slaves began to write,
Trurº cursed his pen, and Reason took her flight:
Dullness on him her choicestopiates shed,
Black as his heart, and sleepy as his head.
Him on her soil. HIBERNIA could not bear;
The viſier sickened in that wholesome air –
Then rushed abroad, a Jesuit, in disguise,
Flush, on the wings of malice, rage, and lies;
To this new world a nuisance and a pest,
To curse the worthy, and abuse the best.
Thou base born mass of insolence and dirt,
With all the will, but not the hower to hurt;
Whose shallow brain each empty line reveals-
Art thou worth draggling at our chariot wheels?-
Who, on the surface of a rugged ground,
Would stooptotrail your carcase round and round-
No-like a FELON, hanged to after time,
Be one more victim to the “force of rhyme.”
Waft us, ye powers, to some sequestered place,
Where never mºre shewed its hateful face-
Remove us far from all the ruffian kind
(Baseness with insolence forever joined)
To some retreat of solitude and rest—
Nor shall another pang disturb the breast–
When thought returns—and one regrets to know,
He HAD To combat witH A Two-Factºn Fors.







sever AL occasions. 19,
TO THE
KEEPER OF THE
KING'S WATER WORKS.
NEAR KINGSTON, IN THE ISLAND or JAMAICA, on
BEING REF used a puncil EoN or war ER.
wºrrºw Aucusº, 1784.
* The celestial Deities frotect and relieve strangers in
ºvery country, as long as those strangers res/hect
and submit to the laws ºf the country.”
KIEN-Lºir, alias, John Tuck, Viceroy ºf Canton.
CAN me, who o'er two Isbies holds the sway,
Where'er the ocean flows, whose fleets patrole,
Who bids Hibernia's rugged sons obey.
And at whose noa (you say) shakes either pole :
ºn tº whose crown a thousand jewels grace
ºf worth untold—can he, so rich, deny
ºne wretched puncheon from this ample waste,
Begg'd by his quondam subject, very dry :
Mºst are the springs in yonder cloud-capthill:
hy, then, refuse the abundant flowing wave?
Where hogs, and dogs, and keefers drink their fill,
we not something from such plenty crave 3-
Kºrea —must we with empty cask return
Just view the limpid stream that runs to waste |-
enied the stream that flows from nature’s urn,
| locks and bolts secured from rebel taste
Well-if we must inform the royal ear,
ºr are some ºng that now in Britain live:
Tell him, that nature is no miser here:
Tºllim-ºlds what beggars give–




192 POEMS ON
TO SIR TOBY,
A SUGAR PLANTER IN THE INTERIOR PARTS OF JA-
MAICA,
Near ºne crºr of six yaco De La vecº, (SPAMs
rown) 1784.
* The motions of his shirit are black as night,
* And his affections dark as Erebus.”
Shakes peºp.
IF there exists a hell-the case is clear-
Sir Toby’s slaves enjoy that portion here:
Here are no blazing brimstone lakes—'tis true :
But kindled Rum too often burns as blue ;
In which some fiend, whom nature must detest,
Steeps Toby's brand, and marks poor Cudjoe's breast."
Here whips on whips excite perpetual fears,
And mingled howlings vibrate on my ears:
Here nature's plagues abound, to fret and teaze.
Snakes, scorpions, desſions, lizards, centipees-
No art, no care escapes the busy lash ;
All have their dues—and all are paid in cash-
The eternal priven keeps a steady eye
On a black herd, who would his vengeance fly,
But chained, imprisoned, on a burning soil,
For the mean avarice of a tyraxt, toil!
The lengthy cart-whip guards this monster's reign-
And cracks, like pistols, from the fields of case.
ye Powers who formed these wretched tribes tº
late,
What had they done, to merit such a ſate -
Why were they brought from EBoºst suitry wº
To see that plenty which they must not taste-
-
* This passage has a reference to the West India custº (ºne
tioned by law) ºf branding a newly imported slave on the
with a red hot iron, as an evidence of the purchaser's propertº
A small negro kingdom near the river Senegal



SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 193
Toop, which they cannot buy, and dare not steal;
ams and potatoes—many a scanty meal –
One, with a gibbet wakes his negro's fears,
One to the windmill nails him by the ears;
One keeps his slave in darkened dens, unfed,
One puts the wretch in ſickle ere he's dead:
This, from a tree suspends him by the thumbs,
That, from his table grudges even the crumbs.
O'eryond rough hills a tribe of females go,
Each with her gourd, her infant, and her hoe;
Scorched by a sun that has no mercy here,
Driven by a devil, whom men call overseer—
In chains, twelve wretches to their labours haste;
Twice twelve I saw, with iron collars graced
Are such the fruits that spring from vast domains :
swealth, thus gar, Sir Toby, worth your pains –
Who would your wealth on terms, like these, possess,
Where all we see is pregnant with distress–
Angola's natives scourged by ruſhan hands,
And toil's hard product shipp'd to foreign lands.
Talk not of blossoms, and your endless spring;
What joy, what smile, can scenes of misery bring?—
Though nature, here, has every blessing spread,
ºr is the labourer—and how meanly fed :
Here Stygian paintings light and shade renew,
Pictures of hen, that virgº pencil drew.
ºre, surly Charons make their annual trift,
ºshoºts arrive in every Guinea shift,
To find what al...sºs these western sºles afford,
lºnian scourges, and despotic lords.
Here, they, of stuff determined to be free,
Must climb the rude cº, of the Lºguanº
*Yond the clouds, in sculking haste repair,
And hardly safe from brother railore there.
-
See ºned. Book 6th–and Fenelon’s Telemachus. Book 18.
he mountains northwººd of Kingston
Alluding to the Independent negroes in the blue mountains.
** a stipulater. ward, deliver up every fugitive that falls into
* hºnº ºne ºngº ºvernment








194 POEMS ON
WRITTEN
AT PORT ROYAL,
IV* THE ISL.M.W.D OF JAMAIC-4-
sEPTEMBER, 1784.
HERE, by the margin of the murmuring main,
Fond, her poor remnants to explore—in vain-
Ilonely stray through these dejected lands,
Cheered by the noon-tide breeze on burning sands,
Where the dull Shaniard, owned these mangroº
shades,
And ports defended by his Pallisades”-
Though lost to HIM, Port Royal claims a sigh,
Nor will the muse her humble verse deny.
Of all the towns that graced Jamaica's isle,
This was her glory, and her ſhroudes hile, -
Where tails on toils bade wealth’s gay structures tº
And commerce reared her glory to the skies:
St. Jaso, seated on a distant plain,
Ne'er saw the tall ship entering from the main-
Unnoticed streams her Cobra'st margin lave,
Where yon tall plantains cool her flowing wave.
And barren sands, or rock-encumbered hill,
Confess the founders fears—or want of skill.
While o'er these wastes with wearied step we gº
Past scenes of fate return, in all their woe-
Here for their crimes (ſerºſis) in ages fled,
Some vengeful fiend, familiar with the dead-
Through these sad shores, in angry triumph passed
Stormed in the winds, and raged in every blast-
Here, o/ening sº confessed the Almighty hand.
Here, the dark ocean rolled across the land:
* Pallisades a narrow strip of land about seven miles in ength.
running nearly from north tº south, and forming the harbour "
Port Royal and Kingston.
† A small river ſailing into Kingston Bay, nearly oppºsite Pºrt
Rºyal—and which lºsiº source in the Hill beyºnd sººnish Tº"




SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 195
Here, house and hosts a moment tore away,
Here, mangled man, with deadly aspect lay,
Whom fate refused to end their rakeish feast,
And time to call the sexton, or the priest
Where yon’ tall barque, with all her ponderous
load,
Commits her anchor to its dark abode
Eightfathoms down—where darkened waters flow,
To stain the sulphur of the caves below;
There, midnight sounds torment the stranger's ear,
And drums and ſiſes play drowsy concerts there
ºf ghosts all restless –(cease they to complain
More than a century should relieve their pain.”-)
Sadºunes of woe disturb the hours of sleep,
And fancy aids the fiddlers of the deep;
Dull superstition hears the drowsy hum;
ºmit with false terrors of the world to come.
What, now, Port Royal rests of all your pride –
lost are your glories, which were spread so wide-
* of sand is thine—by heaven's decree;
And wasting shores that scarce resist the sea :
this Poºr Royal, on Jamaica's coast,
The Spaniard's envy, and the Britons' boast –
Ashattered roof on every hut appears,
And mouldering brick-work wakes the stranger's
fears .
Tº church, with scarce a priest, we grieve to see,
* at its door, and rust ºn is key –
One lonely iss, with tiresome search was found,
here one sad negro dealthis beverage round:
- * was the task to wait the impatient call;
H. was the landlord, post-boy, pimp-and all–
ºary eyes on every side were cast;
He sº the present—and revolved thenae)
hey here, now there, in quick succession stole,
ºnced at the bar, or watched the unsteady boºſ.
ºsprightly lads, or handsome Yankee maids,
*in these streets, or wander in these shades–
ºtharmers here, with lively step, are seen
ºut the shade, or wander on the green
- - -
A. *stition, at present, existing only among the gnorant.
Vol. II. - S.

196 POEMS ON
To other lands past time beheld them go;
And some are slumbering in the deep-we know-
A negro tribe, but ill their place supply,
With bending back, short hair—and vengeful eye-
That gloomy race lead up the evening dance,
Skip on the sands, or dart the alluring glance:
Sincere are they –no-on your gold they doat-
And in one hour—for that would cut your throat.
Allis deceit—half hellisin their song
And from the silent thought?–You have domeº
wrong
A feeble rampart guards this luckless town,
Where banished Tories come to seek renown,
Where hungry slaves their little stores retail,
And worn out veterans watch the approaching sail.
Here, scarce escaped the mad Tornado's rage.
Why came I here to plan some future page—
To these dull scenes, with curious view, who came:
Should tell a story of some ancient fame
Not worth the search What roofs are left to fall
Guns, gales, and earthquakes will confound them
all
All will be lost—though hosts their aid implore,
The “Twelve Apostles” shall protect no more
Nor guardian heroes save the impoverished plain.
No priest shall paw-waw—and no church remain-
Northis Palmetto yield her evening shade
Where the dark negro his dull music played.
He casts his view beyond the adjacent strand,
And looks, still grieving to his native land:
Turns and returns from yonder murmuring shore.
And points to Gamera-hemust see no more
Where shallwego what Lethe can we find
To drive the devil's ideas from the mind –
No buckram hero can relieve the eye;
And buckram dressesshine—most mournfully
Ye mountains vast whose base the heavens sº
tain - -
Farewell, blue mountains, and fair Kingston's pº
-
Rºyal
-
* Astrong commanding Battery in the hills opposite Port







SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 197
Though nature here almost herself transcends,
On this gay spot the dear attachment ends !
Who would be sad, to leave a sultry clime,
Where true Columbian virtue is a crime:
Where parching sands are driven by every blast,
And hearl to swine are by the muses cast–
Where want and death, and care, and grief, reside;
Andboisterous gales impell the imperious tide.
Yestormy winds awhile your wrath suspend–
Who leaves the land, a female, and a friend;
Quits this bright isle for a dark sea, and sky—
ºr even Port Royal leaves without a sigh -
THE
AMERICAN DEMOSTHENES.
ºccasion an ºr a very wear and insipid prº-
course on a Founts of July, INDIRECTLY RE-
*Robariº ºne prºtocºlaric aº PRESENTATIVE
Sºsnº.
LBr Hezekiah SALEM.
SOUND without sense, and words devoid of force,
brough which no art could find a clue;—
And poor, and shackling was the whole discourse
that kept me, ſº long from you.
Heads of discourse, to heads less general split,
ºned like small ºth cleft from some heavy logº;
*as cold that could no object hit,
losed half our eyes—all vapour, smoke, or fog.
º and long groans, and periods of a mile,
* on the sleepy audience tumbled down;-
"as thus from forts, contrived in antique style.
198 POEMS ON
From Troy's high walls
(Where flew no balls)
The men who fought
With reason thought,
They had a right
From that safe height,
(By way of lessening their besiegers' number)
To tumble on their heads
Rocks, beams, or roofs of sheds,
Cows' horns, bricks, rubbish, chamber pots, or lumbº
Oh speaker —with artillery like your own,
With only shot, no powder in your gun,
How can you hope the sleepers to awake?—
Trust me, although you stamp, and scold, and frown
You may besiege, but cannot take
That stubborn host—the prºtocratic Toº
TO LYDIA. *
Tº furocul a ſhatria, ah duraſ inculia desertº
Me sine, sola videºs
Prºc. EcºLogº.
TITUS, safe arrived, she greets the strand,
And leaves her pilot for the land;
But Lypia, why to deserts roam,
And thus forsake your floating home.
To what fond care shall I resign
The bosom, that must ne'er be mine:
With lips, that glow beyond all art,
Oh! how shall I consent to part
Long may you live, secure from woes,
Late dying, meet a calm Tºpose,
- __
º
º
* Miss India Morris, a young quaker lady, on herlanding
the sloop Industry, alsº in Georgia, December º





SEVERAL, OCCASIONS. 190
And flowers, that in profusion grow,
Bloom round your steps, where'er you go.
On you all eyes delight to gaze,
All tongues are lavish in your praise;
With you no beauty can compare,
Nor Georgia boast one flower so fair.
Could I, fair girl, transmit this page,
A present, to some future age,
You should through every poem shine,
You, be adored in every line:
From Jersey coasts too loth to sail,
Sighing, she left her native vale;
Borne on a stream that met the main,
Homeward she looked, and looked again.
The gales that blew from of the land
ost wantonly her bosom fanned,
And, while around that heaven they strove,
Each whispering zephyr owned his love.
Aso'er the seas, with you I strayed,
The hostile winds our course delayed,
ºut proud to waſ a charge so fair,
ºne were kind—and held youthere.
I could not grieve, when you complained
That adverse gales our barque detained
here foaming seas to mountains grow,
From sulphs of death, concealed below.
When travelling o'er that lonely wave
ºme your feverish hand you gave,
And sighing, bade metelyou, true,
Whatlands again would rise to view:
When night came on, with blustering gale.
ºn feared the tempest would prevail,
d anxious asked, if I was sure
hat on those depths we sailed secure?
Delighted with a face so fair,
half forgot my weight of care
Vol II, S 2

200 POEMS ON
The dangerous shoal, that seaward runs;
Encircled moons, and shrouded suns.
With timorous heart and tearful eyes,
You saw the deep Atlantic rise,
Saw wintry clouds their storms prepare,
And wept, to find no safety there.
Throughout the long December's night,
(While still your lamp was burning bright)
To dawn of day from evening's close
My pensive girl found no repose.
Then now, at length arrived from sea,
Consent, fair nymphs to stay with me—
The barque—still faithful to her freight,
Shall still on your direction wait.
Such charms as your's all hearts engage:
Sweet subject of my glowing page,
Consent, before my Argo roves
To sun-burntisles and savage groves.
When sultry suns around us glare,
Your poet, still, with fondest care,
To cast a shade, some folds will spread
Of his coarse topsails o'er your head.
When round the barque the billowy wave
And howling winds, tempestuous, rave,
By caution ruled, the helm shall guide
Safely, that Argo o'er the tide.
Whene'er some female fears prevail.
At your request we’ll reef the sail,
Disarm the gales that rudely blow,
And bring the loftiest canvas low.
When rising to harass the main
Old Boreas drives his blustering train.
Still shall they see, as they pursue.
Each tender care employed for you.
To all your questions—every sigh.
I still will make a kind reply;
Give all you ask, each whim allow,
And change my style to thee and ſhow


SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 201
If verse can life to beauty give,
For ages I can make you live;
Beyond the stars, triumphant, rise,
While Cynthia's tomb neglected lies:
Upon that face of mortal clay
I will such lively colours lay,
That years to come shall join to seek
All beauty from your modest cheek.
Then, Lydia, why our bark forsake;
The road to western deserts take?
That lip—on which hung half my bliss,
Some savage, now, will bend to kiss;
Some rustic soon, with fierce attack,
May force his arms about that neck;
And you, perhaps, will weeping come
º seek—in vain—your floating home
THE ARGONAUT;
OR,
LOST AL WEATURER.
TRUE to his trade the slave of fortune still-
a sweet isle, where never winter reigns,
found him at the foot of a tail hill,
Mending old sails, and chewing sugarcanes:
*ivy round him grew, and mingled vines,
ºntains, bananas ripe, and yellow pines.
| And flowering night-shade, with its dismalgreen,
Ash-coloured iris, painted by the sun,
| And fair-haired hyacinth was near him seen,
* China pinks by marygolds o'er-run –
- But what (said he] have men that sail the seas,
"Ah, what have they to do with things like these












302 POEMS ON
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I did not wish to leave those shades, not I,
Where Amoranda turns her spinning-wheel;
Charmed with the shallow stream, that mur-
mured by,
I felt as blest as any swain could feel,
Who, seeking nothing that the world admires,
On one poor valley fixed his whole desires.
With masts so trim, and sails as white as snow,
The painted barque deceived me from the land.
Pleased, on her sea-beat decks I wished to go.
Mingling my labours with her hardy band;
To reef the sail, to guide the foaming prow
As far as winds can waft, or oceans flow.
To combat with the waves who first essayed,
Had these gay groves his lightsome heartbeguiled
His heart, attracted by the charming shade,
Had changed the deep sea for the woody wild;
And slighted all the gain that Neptune yields
For Damon's cottage, or Palemon’s fields.
His barque, the bearer of a feeble crew,
How could he trust when none had been to prove
* her;
Courage might sink when lands and shores with:
* drew,
And feeble hearts a thousand deaths discover:
But Fortitude, tho' woes and death await,
Still views bright skies, and leaves the dark to fate.
From monkey climes where limes and lemons gro".
And the sweet orange swells her fruit so fair,
To wintry worlds, with heavy heart, I go
To face the cold glance of the northern bear
Where lonely waves, far distant from the sun.
And gulphs of mighty strength, their circuits run
But how disheartening is the wanderer's fate.
When conquered by the loud tempestuous maº
On him, no mourners in procession wait.
Nor do the sisters of the harp complain-
On coral beds and deluged sands they sleep.
Who sink in storms, and mingle with the deep-
SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 203
"'Tis folly all—and who can truly tell
* What storms disturb the bosom of that main,
* Whatravenous fish in those dark climates dwell
* That feast on men—then stay, my gentle swain
* Bred in yon' happy shades, be happy there:
“And let these quiet groves claim all your care.”
So spoke poor Ralph, and with a smooth sea gale
Fled from the magic of the enchanting shore,
But whether winds or waters did prevail
I saw the black ship ne'er returning more,
Though long I walked the margin of the main,
And long have looked–and still must look in vain
LOG-TOWN TAVERN.”
IBy HEzekian salºº
THROUGH sandy wastes and floods of rain
To this dejected place I came,
Where swarthy nymphs, in tattered gowns,
From pine-knots catch their evening flame:
Where barren oaks, in close array,
With mournful melody condole;
Where no gay fabrics meet the eye.
Nor painted board, nor barber's pole.
Thou town of Locs so justly called,
In thee who halts at evening's close,
Not dreams from Jove, but hosts of ſeas
Shall join to sweeten his repose.
ºurse on this dejected place
Where cold, and hot, and wet, and dry,
And stagnant ponds of ample space
The puttia steams of death supply.
in the ºne ºriens of one of the southern states.












204 POEMS ON
Since here I paced on weary steed
Ah, blame me not, should I repine
That sprightly girl, nor social bed,
Norjovial glass this night is mine.
The landlord, gouged in either eye,
Here drains his bottle to the dregs,
Orborrows Susan’s pipe, while she
Prepares the bacon and the eggs.
Jamaica, that inspires the soul,
In these abodes no time has seen
To dartits generous influence round,
To kindle wit and kill the spleen.
The squire of this disheartening inn
Affords to none the generous bowl,
Displays no Bacchus on the sign
To warm the heart and cheer the soul.
To cyder, drawn from tilted cask,
While each a fond attention paid
All grieved to see the empty flask,
Its substance gone, its strength decayed.
A rambling hag, in dismal notes
Screeched out a song, to cheer my grief;
Two lads their dull adventures told,
Ashepherd each—and each a thief.
Dame justice here in rigour reigns–
Each has on each the griping paw:
Whoe'er with them a bargain makes,
Scheme as he will, it ends in Law.
With scraps of songs and smutty words
Each lodger here adorns the walls:
The wanton muse no pencil gives,
A coal her mean idea scrawls.
No merry thought no flash of wit
Was scrawled by this unseemly crew,
With pain Iread the words they writ
Immodest and immoral too.











SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 205
The god of verse, the poet's friend,
Whom Nature all indulgent finds—
That god of verse will never lend
His powers to such degraded minds.
In murmuring streams no chrystal wave
To cheer the wretched hamlet flows;
But frowning to the distant bog
Rosanna with the pitcher goes.
At dusk of eve the tardy treat
Was placed on board of knotty pine;
Each gaping gazed, to see me eat
While round me lay the slumbering swine.
Unblest be she, whose aukward hand
Before me laid the mouldy pone;”
May she still miss the joyous kiss,
Condemned to fret and seep alone.
The horse that bore me on my way
Around him cast a wishful eye,
He looked, and saw no manger near,
And hung his head, and seemed to sigh,
Aºstump of pine, for want of stall,
All night, beneath a dripping tree,
Not fed with oats, but fied with wind, -
Andbuckwheat straw, alone stood he
Discouraged at sovie a treat,
* Pleased to see the approaching dawn,
In haste, we left this dreary place,
Nor said to drink ºn a Yopponºt
May travellers dread to wander here,
mess on penance they be bound–
9 may they never venture near,
Such heas and filthiness abound.
-
A composition of Indian meal and water, ºn hastily before
site on a bºaº. nue. -
* shrub leaf very commonly used in the Carolinas, as a subº-
--ea. -




206 POEMS ON
But should ye come—be short your stay.
For Lent is here forever kept—
Depart, ye wretches, haste away,
Nor stop to sleeſ-where I have slept.
O N THE
LEGISLATURE OF GREAT-BRITAIN
Prohibiting the sale, in London, ºf Doctor David Ramº
say’s History of the Revolutionary war in South
Carolina.
SOME bold bully Dawson, expert in abusing:
Having passed all his life in the practice of bruising:
At last, when he thinks to reform and repent,
And wishes his days had been soberly spent,
Though a course of contrition in earnest begins,
He scarcely can bear to be told of his sins.
So the British, worn out with their wars in the west
(Where burning and murder their prowess confessed)
When, at last, they agreed 'twas in vain to contend
(For the days of their thieving were come to an end
They hired some historians to scribble and flatter.
And foolishly thought they could hush uſ, the matteº
But Ramsay arose, and with mºuth on his side,
Has told to the world what they laboured to hide.
With his pen of dissection, and pointed with steel.
If they ne'er before felt he has taught them to ſee
Themselves and their projects has truly defined.
And dragged them to blush at the bar of mankind
As the author, his friends, and the world might tº
pect,
They find that the work has a damning effect-
In reply to his facts, they abuse him and rail.
And prompted by malice, prohibit the sale.
But, we trust, their chastisement is only begun:
Thirteen are the States—and he writes but of one:
Ere the twelve that are silent their story have told
The king ºil run mad, and the book will be sold.










SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 207
LITERARY IMPORTATION.
HOWEVER we wrangled with Britain awhile
We think of her now in a different stile,
And many fine things we receive from herisle;
Among all the rest,
Some demon possessed
Our dealers in knowledge and sellers of sense
To have a good bishof imported from thence.
The words of Sam Chandler” were thought to be vain,
When he argued so often and proved it so flain
* That Satan must flourish till bishops should reign:"
Though he went to the wall
With his project and all,
Another bold Sammyſ, in bishop's array,
Has got something more than his pains for his pay.
It seems we had spirit to humble a throne,
Have genius for science inferior to none,
ºut hardly encourage a plant of our own:
ſacollege be planned,
Tis all at a stand
Till to Europe we send at a shameful expense,
To send us a book-worm to teach us some sense.
ºn we never be thought to have learning or grace
ºnless it be brought from that horrible place
Where tyranny reigns with her impudent face;
ºn popes and pretenders.
And sly faith-defenders
* ever been hostile to reason and wit,
slaving a world that shall conquer them yet.
'Tis a folly to fret at the picture I draw:
* I say what was said by a Doctor Magrºw;
"If they give us their Bishops, they’ll give us their
* law.”
Hºw that will agree
ºth such people as we,
us leave to the learned to reflect on awhile,
** what they think in a handsomer stile.
Whºlaºud fºr the establishment of an American Episcopa-
ºlº tº the revºlutionary war.
º Samuel Seabury, of Connecticut
Vol. II.


208 POEMS ON
THE
ENGLISHMAN'S COMPLAINT,
I.M CAROLIWA.
ARRIVING from Britain with cargo so nice
Once more have I touched at these regions of rice
Dear Ashley, with pleasure thy stream I review:
But how changed are these plains that we wished tº
subdue.
If through the wild woods he extended his reign,
And death and the hangman were both in his train,
Cornwallis no longer disturbs your repose,
His lordship is dead or at least in a doze.
By Sullivan's island how quiet we pass;
Fort Johnson no longer salutes us, alas –
The season has been you did nothing but mourn,
But now you will laugh at a Briton’s return
Instead of gay soldiers that walked the parade.
Here is nothing but draymen and people in trade:
Instead of our navy that thundered around,
Here is nothing but ships without guns to be found.
Instead of Lord Rawdon and Mesbit Balfour,
Whose names and whose notions you cannot endurº
But whom in their glory you could not forget
When puffed by the froth of the Royal Gazetrº:
Instead of those tyrants, who homewards have floº
This country is ruled by a race of its own,
Whom once we could laugh at-but now we nº
- Say
Seem rising to be in a handsomer way.
To us and our islandeternally foes,
How tedious you are in forgetting your woes:
Your plundered plantations you still will remº.
Although we have left you—three years last Pº
be . . .
SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 209
ELEGY
O.W." MR, ROBERT BELL,
The celebrated humourist, and truly ſhilanthronic Book-
seller, formerly of Philade/hia, written, 1786.
BY schools untaught, from Nature's source he drew
That flow of wit which wits with toil pursue,
Above dependence, bent to virtue’s side;
Beyond the folly of the folio’s pride ;
Born to no power, he took no splendid part,
Yet warm for freedom glowed his honest heart.
Poe to all baseness, not afraid to shame
The little tyrant that usurned his claim :
Bound to no sect, no systems to defend,
He loved his jest, a female, and his friend:-
The tale welltoid, to each occasion fit,
In him was nature—and that nature wit:
Alike to pride and wild ambition dumb,
tº saw no terrors in the world to come.
But, slighting sophists and their flimsy aid,
tº God and Reason left the works they made
In chace of fortune, half his life was whim,
ºfortune saw no sycophant in him;
ºld open, free, the world he called his Own.
ºwished no wealth that cost a wretch a groan-
Too social Beit in others so refined,
*sneaking virtue ne'er possessed your mind–
* Prudence only held her share of sway,
ºil had your cupbeen fun, yourself been gay.
ºut while we laughed, and while the glass went round.
he lamp was dºeºed and no help was found;
On distant shores you died, where none shall tell,
*E ºr sº tº win rules and tº win or Bºil.”


210 POEMS ON
TERRA VULPINA,
OR; -
THE L.A.W.O. O.A.” aro YES.
Here fond remembrance stampt her much love
names,
Here boasts the soil its London and its Thames;
Through all her shores commodious ports abound
Clear flow the waters of the unequal ground;
Cold nipping winds a lengthened winter bring,
Late rise the products of the unwilling spring:
The impoverished fields the labourer's pains disgraº
And hawks and vultures scream through all the place
The broken soil a nervous breed requires, -
Where the rough glebe no generous crops admires-
Dame Nature meanly did her gifts impart,
But smiles to see how much is forced by art.
As Boreas keen, who guides their wintry reign
All bow to lucre, all are bent on gain.
In contact close their neat abodes are thrown,
Its house, each acre; every mile, its town:
With glittering spire the frequent church is seen
Where yews and myrtles wave their gloomy gree”
Where fast-day sermonstell the hungry guest
That a cameleon’s dinner is the best-
There mobs of deacons awe the ungodly wight
And hell's black master meets the unequal fight-
Eternal squabblings grease the lawyer's paw,
All have their suits, and all have studied Law -
With tongue, that Art and Nature taught to speak
Some rave in Latin, some dispute in Greek:
Proud of their farms, in ancient lore they shine.
And one month’s study makes a learned Divine;
Bards of huge fame in every hamlet rise,
Each (in idea) of Virgilian size:
Even beardless lads a rhyming knack display-
Iliads begun, and finished in a day !




SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 211
Rhymes, that of old on Blackmore's wheel were spun,
Come rattling down on zºon's reverend son;
Madly presumed time's vortex to defy!
Things born to live an hour—then squeak and die.
Some, to grow rich, through Indian forests roam,
Some deem it best to stay and thrive at home:
Inspite of all the priest and squire can say,
This world—this wicked world—will have its Way :
Honest through fear, religious by constraint,
How hard to tell the sharper from the saint –
Pond of discourse, with deep designing views
They pump the unwary traveller of his news;
Fond of that news, but fonder to be paid,
Each house a tavern, claims a tavern's trade, -
While he that comes as surely hears them praise
The hospitality of modern days.
Yet, brave in arms, of enterprizing soul,
They tempt old Neptune to the farthest pole,
ºlearning's walks explore the mazy way,
For genius there has shed his golden ray) .
In war's bold art through many a contest tried
True to themselves, they took the nobler side,
And party feuds forgot, joined to agree
at power alone supreme—that left them free.
THE INVALID :
ºccasioned by his visit To PA colºr SPRINGS is
SouTH-carolina, Fon THE REcoverty of His
HEALTH.
ºf barren sands and desert plains
Palapºo made ºf -
ºde day and night through winds and rains,
* escape the doom he feared to meet:
Resolved, he left the cool sea-breeze
in Pacolet Springs to drown disease.
Vol II. T2

212 POEMS ON
* Andoh (he exclaimed) in firime of days
Must I with death my lodging take-
On yonder sun no longer gaze,
Is nature blind—is fate awake 2–
What have I done—what shall I say
To Pacolet Shrings I’ll haste away /*
Though death pursued with all his might,
The wasted youth, when he got there,
Drank wine all day, played cards all night,
Hoping the waters would repair
A meagre carcase, doomed to bring
Its funeral from a mineral spring–
Yesons of Bacchus, brisk and gay,
Blame not the health-restoring wave -
How can those streams prevent decay,
Or better streams from ruin save,
When you mistake those tempting things,
The landlord’s flasks—for Pacolet Springs -
MERCANTILE CHARITY:
A GENUINE STORY.
FROM southern ports a wandering vessel came
That from her size or show small note could claim:
Her freight discharged, compelled in port to stay:
Long by the walls this weary vessel lay.
In vain the captain scratched his sapient scull.
And slushed her masts, or furbished up her hull.
No sails to trim, no work but scraping decks,
Well might such luck a stronger head perplex-
in vain he searched and stopt up every leak.
And advertised his barque from week to week-
all would not do —the dock was still her fate,
Idle the master, unemployed the mate:
No freight appeared, no charter, no employs
Deaf were the shippers and the adventurers cº-


SEVERAL, OCCASIONS. 243.
While with the tide she lay to rise and fall,
The wharfinger, all said, would have her all!
At length, a man who had much wealth in stock,
One May-day morning waddled to the dock,
Addressed the captain, as he pensive sate,
And asked, what say you, friend, will take a freight º'
* Take it, (said Jonas) take it! that I will–
Take it as quick as patient takes a pill:
This idle life's the very worst disease, -
But, let me know your terms, sir—if you please.”
“My terms are so and so"—the man replied-
* What six fence less than all the world beside :
What reason can be given, I humbly ask,
That six pence should be clºſed from every cask?
Five shillings (trust me) is the accustomed freight,
4nd given by every shifter in the state.”
* That may be so! (the skin-flint said, most cool)
And yet there's one exception to the rule:
If you are averse, some dozens will agree
This six-pence saved is meant for chanity:
My terms are good–you can’t be angry, sure-
Each six-fence filched from you—shall bless the floor
STANZAS
waitres at the poor or Moºre sour raiene.
NEAR ºr moºn of BASSE ºf Rºº, cºpa Lovrº
THESE Indian isles, so green and gay
In summer seas by nature placed-
Art hardly told us where they lay,
Till tyranny their charms defaced:
Ambition here her efforts made-
Andavarice rifled every shade.
Their genius wept, his sons to see
foreign arms untimely fall.

214 POEMS ON
And some to distant climates flee,
Where later ruin met them all:
He saw his sylvan offspring bleed,
That envious natures might succeed.
The chief, who first o'er untried waves
To these fair islands found his way,
Departing, left a race of slaves,
Cortez, your mandate to obey,
And these again, if fame says true,
To extirpate the vulgar crew.
No more to Indian coasts confined,
The PATRon, thus, indulged his grief;
And to regret his heart resigned,
To see some proud European chief,
Pursue the harmless Indian race,
Torn by his dogs in every chace.
Ah, what a change the ambient deep
No longer hears the lover's sigh;
But wretches meet, to wail and weep
The loss of their dear liberty:
Unfeeling hearts possess these isles,
Manfrowns—and only nature smiles.
Proud of the vast extended shores
The haughty Spaniard calls his own,
His selfish heart restrains his stores,
To other climes but scarcely known:
His Cuba lies a wilderness,
Where slavery digs what slaves possess.
Jamaica's sweet, romantic vales
In vain with golden harvests teem;
Her endless spring, her fragrant gales
More than Elysian magic seem :
Yet what the soil profusely gave
Is there denied the toiling slave.
Fantastic joy and fond belief
Through life support the galling chain;
Hope's airy prospects banish griefs,
And bring his native lands again:
SEVERAL OCCASIONS.
2ſ
His native groves a heaven display,
The funeral is the jocund day.
For man oppressed and made so base,
In vain from Jove fair virtue fell;
Distress be-glooms the toiling race,
They have no motive to excel:
In death alone their miseries end,
The tyrant’s dread—is their best friend.
How greatºr Herº praise let truth declare,
Who touched with honour's sacred flame,
Bade freedom to some coasts repair
To urge the slave’s neglected claim;
And scorning interest's swinish plan,
Gave to mankind the rights ºf man.
Ascending there, may freedom's sun
In all his force serenely clear,
Along, unclouded circuit run,
Till little tyrants disappear;
And a new race, not bought or sold.
Rise from the ashes of the old-



216 POEMS ON
ON THE PROSPECT
or.
A REVOLUTION IN FRANCE.
* Wow, at the feast they filan the fall ºf Troy;
“The stern debate ATRIDEs hears with joy.”
Hom, Odys,
BORNE on the wings of time another year
Sprung from the past, begins its proud career:
From that bright spark which first illumed these
lands,
See Europe kindling, as the blaze expands,
Each gloomy tyrant, sworn to chain the mind,
Presumes no more to trample on mankind:
Even potent LOUIS trembles on his throne,
The generous prince who made our cause his own,
More equal rights his injured subjects claim,
No more a country’s strength-that country’s shame;
- Fame starts astonished at such prizes won,
And rashness wonders how the work was done.
Flushed with new life, and brightening at the view
Genius, triumphant, moulds the world anew ;
To these far climes in swift succession moves
Each art that Reason owns and sense approves,
What though his age is bounded to a span
Time sheds a conscious dignity on man,
Some happier breath his rising passion swells,
Some kinder genius his bold arm impels,
Dull superstition from the world retires,
Disheartened zealots haste to quench their fires;
One equal rule o'er twelve vast States extends.
Europe and Asia join to be our friends,
* At this time, Rhode Island was not a member of the geneº
Confederation of the American States. [1788.


SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 217.
Our active flag in every clime displayed
Counts stars on colours that shall never fade;
A far famed chief o'er this vast whole presides
Whose motto Hoson is-whom virtuº guides;
His walks forsaken in Virginia's groves
Applauding thousands bow where'er he moves,
Who laid the basis of this exteine sure
Where public faith should public peace secure.
Still may she rise, exalted in her aims,
And boast to every age her patriot names,
To distant climes extend her gentle sway,
While choice—not force—bids every heart obey;
Ne'er may she fail when Liberty implores,
Nor want true valour to defend her shores,
Till Europe, humbled, greets our western wave,
And owns an equal—whom she wished a slave.
EPISTLE
To
THE PATRIOTIC FARMER.
THUS, while new laws the stubborn States re-
claim,
And most for pensions, some for honours aim,
OU, who first aimed a shaft at Groncºs crown,
And marked the way to conquest and renown,
While from the vain, the lofty, and the proud,
etiring to your groves, you shun the crowd-
ºn toils, like your's, in cold oblivion end,
Columbia’s patriot, and her earliest friend?
Best, doubly blest, from public scenes retired,
here public welfare all your bosom fired;
ºur life’s best days in studious labours past
ºur deeds of virtue make your bliss at last;
hen all things fail, the soul must reston these -
*ay heaven restore you to your favourite trees.

218 POEMS ON
And calm content, best lot to man assigned
Beheaven's reward to your exalted mind. -
When her base projects you beheld, with pain.
And early doomed an end to Britain's reign.
When rising nobly in a generous cause
(Sworn foe to tyrants and imported laws)
Thou Dickinson the patriot and the sage,
How much we owed to your convincing page:"
That page the check of tyrants and of knaves.
Gave birth to heroes who had else been slaves,
Who, taught by you, denied a monarch's sway;
And if they brought him low you planned the
Way.
Though in this glare of pomp you take no part
Still must your conduct warm each generous heart:
What, though you shun the patriot vain and loud,
While hosts neglect, that once to merit bowed,
Shun those gay scenes, where recent laurels grow,
The mad procession, and the painted show ;
In days to come, when pomp and pride resign,
Who would not change his proudest wreathes for
thine, -
In fame's fair fields such well-earned honours share.
And Dickinson confess unrivalled there. [1788.
nº prºgrams progress.
FROM his obscure abode,
On many atiresome road
The pilgrim, musing, took his way:
Through dark and dismal groves
Where the sad turtle loves
To pass the night, and kill the day.
In an obscure retreat,
I saw the pilgrim greet,
A barren soil and dreary town;
Thy streets be-gloomed with trees
With pain the traveller sees,
Sylvania, barren of renown.
* The Farmer's Letters, and others of his truly valuable writing
SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 219
What can console him there º-
Not even a house of prayer
With glittering spire is seen to rise
Nonymphs in gaudy trim
Will there be seen by him ;
No music, sermons, balls, or pigeon pies.
Dull, melancholy streams,
Dutch politics and schemes,
Owls screeching in the empty street
Wolves howling at the doors
Bears, breaking into stores;
These make the picture of the town
complete.
O.W.' A DECEMSED DOG.
It all the world mourns for the loss of a friend,
And even in stanza their virtues commend,
Why Sºcho, shouldst thou by the green turf be
prest,
And not have a stanza along with the rest?
The miser that ne'er gave a farthing away,
antippe, that scolded throughout the long day,
he drunken young Quixote, that died in his prime.
In their graves never fail to be flattered with rhyme.
There is an old adage our poets have read,
That “ nothing ºut good should tº sºoke of the dead º
Hence, the priest and the sexton alike we defy,
When we write of the peºp-they allow us to lie.
* I my deat Dog, win a poem compose
That shall break ºf the hearts of the belies and the
beaux;
To the view of each reader your virtues shall shine
In verses, that Haº will fancy divine.
The Stoics of old, were forbid to complain
losses and crosses, vexation and pain;
Vol. II. U









2-0 POEMS ON
When the day I recall, that deprived me of you,
I find, my dear Sancho, I'm not of their crew.
How oft in the year shall visit your grave
Amid the long forest, that darkens the wave
How often lament, when the days's at the close,
That here you must take an eternal repose :
Ah here (I will say) is the path where he run ,
And there stands the tree where a squirrel he won:
And here, in this spot where the willow trees grow,
He dragged out a rabbit that lurked in the snow.
ºf absent, awhile, on the ocean I strayed,
still had in view to revisit this shade—
But alas' you considered the prospect as vain,
Or how could you die, till I saw you again?
A country there is—'tis in vain to deny— -
Where monkies and puppies are sent when they diº
But you-and old Minos shall grant you a pass,
Must rank with the dogs of the gentleman class.
The boatman of Sºyº shall a passage prepare
And the Dog, at the portal, shallwelcome you there:
With the cynics of hell you shall walk a grave pace
Where “Doctors with dogs” is no more a disgrace.
On the bark of this beech-tree, that shadows you
bones, -
With tears, I inscribe these poetical groans:
If a tombstone of wood serves a soldier, 'tis clear
This tree may preserve all your fame—for a year.
For the squirrel you treed, and the duck from tº
- lake,
These stanzas are all the return I can make :
But these, unaffected, my friendship will she wº
And the world will allow—that I give you your duº






SEVERAL OCCASIONS, 221
EPITAPH
0^* FREDERICK THE SECOMO,
***E. KING of Prussia.
[From THE FR exch.]
HERE rests a King—his mortal journey done—
Through life a tyrant to his fellow man.
Who bloody wreathes in bloody battles won,
Nature's worst savage since the world began.
Millions were doomed beneath his sword to die.
Nº art, no care his blasting breath could shun-
º he one MAN, for all this waste, supply –
No'-tell the world, he seven gave ºr one tº
A DIALOGUE
EETWEEN
SHADRACH AND WHIFFLE.
"ShºpRAcH-said wº, eager to º
proach)
Why ride you in that ancient crazy coach
". how it cracks –freighted with you and mas
ºn-
Many suppose it once belonged to 4dam-
º loose so weak, your Driver makes Reſort,
* lisque, each hour, a tumble in the dirt.”
- - - - -
- Alluding to his having never ºed, and being not even tº
*dfath of a cºa -








222 POEMS ON
* WHIFFLE, (said SHADRAch) though it be a
wreck, -
And threatens oft’ the fracture of my neck;
Yet, to the last, this coach I vow I'll ride in,
Which twenty years my grandsire did confide in:
Twill also prove—pray, take it in good part-
had this coach when you had scarce a cart.”
TO THE
MEMORY OF MRS. BURNET,
or ELIZABETH-Town, N. J.
[By request.
TO the dark grave, where silence reigns,
And death his shadowy host detains,
Of life bereſt, and quenched its fires,
Marrion in her bloom retires.
Inclosed in that obscure abode,
The bosom cold, with life that glowed,
No more we trace its wonted charms,
No more the gentle spirit warms.
Fine form tho' mouldering into dust,
This is not all thy doom, we trust;
To other worlds the active mind
Some new perfection goes to find:
From height to height advancing still,
To HIM who doth creation fill,
The power that measured out our span.
And planted reason-light of man.
Composed of Nature's finest clay,
Toºe she her debt did pay,
Who sympathizing, mingles here,
The rising sigh, the melting tear.



SEVERAL OCCASIONS 225
In her, whose memory cannot fade,
Each milder virtue was displayed,
The breast of sentiment refined,
And beauties, native to the mind.
Tomake her image all complete,
How many of her sex must meet.
Virtues in them but thinly sown,
In her conjoined, were all her own :
She (doomed to shine in honour's page,
A model to the coming age)
Was graced with all that could impart
Affection to the coldest heart.
Removed from hence so far away,
What shall a pensive stranger say –
Byfriendship led, and grief sincere,
He drops his pen—and sheds a tear -
TO A DOG :
ºccasioned by purºrºg ºr on sºon E at tº
ISLAND OF SAPOLA, FOR THEFT.
SINCE Nature taught you, TRAy, to be a thief,
What blame have you, for working a your trade:
What if you stole a hºmºsome round of beef;
Theft, in you, code of laws, no crime was made.
The ten commandments you had never read,
Nor did it ever ent in your head:
*art and Nature, careful to conceal,
sclosed not even the traits—Thou shall not steal.
Then to the greenwood, caitifſ, haste away :
There take yºur chance ºn tºº must say,
have no right, for theft, to hang up Tray.
Vol. II. U -
-
º POEMS ON
TO CLARISSA :
A handsome strop-keeper.
[ºr H. SALEM.]
CURSED as a beggar's bratis he,
The unlucky man, that deals with thee,
Who still behind the counter sit
To catch our cash, and shew your wit.
Whate'er you praised—with sly design-
Whate'er you touched—I wished it mine :
And homespun trash from Nabby's paws,
In your fair hands, was English gauze.
'Twas this that ran Rºnaldo mad
At times, and made him look so sad:
For, ere he well could count the cost,
His cash was gone, his credit lost.
His girls grew vain-their dress and show
Alas! soon brought his pockets low :
With India silks their shoes were bound,
The news went all the country round:
With constant duns his doors were vext,
His house with sheriffs was perplext:
His barber's bill he could not pay, -
He blundered—broke, and ran away.
TO CYNTHILA.
THE hermit's wish—a cell be mine,
Insylvanishades to find repose;
To please the eye—that task be thine;
And hourly kill a thousand beaus,
Whose easy charms, so like your own:
With jealousy you gaze upon.








SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 225
You asked me, CYNTara, how I came
To shun the wild tempestuous deep,
And disappointing Neptune's aim
On his cold bosom shun long sleep?-
'Twas chance, 'twas luck—I scarce can tell
What genius played my cards so well.
Yes! Neptune frowned—so heaven decreed-
Yet life might be preserved at least,
Since cruel must he be, indeed,
Who robs a church, and kills the priest:
Then, Cynthia, now some pity shew,
ºr be the storms more kind than you.
TO
A VERY LITTLE MAN,
Fown of WALKING WITH A Wºr LoNG canº.
REASON, in all her works, observes
A fit proportion, just and true:
Man, only, from her great example swerves,
In this we instance you.
Whobade you bear this huge Cycloºcan beam,
Yourself an insect at its foot,
Which, if it fell, would end your mortal dream,
And put your day-light out.
Rival to oaks, no hedgeway shrub we see;
odwarf-like bush with pinesis classed;
Nº branch grows greater than the mother tree,
No shallop wants an admiral's mast.
Goliah's self, that huge unwieldy beast,
With such a staff had shunned his fate:
This CANE might be your Liberty-pole, at leas.
And streamers wear on days of state












226 POEMS ON
Thus, at Honduras, frequent have I seen
Monkies, attached to cedars tall:
There chaced, they climb to shun the hostile train-
What use to you, who do not climb at all!
A staff, like this, from hickory forests come,
*Mongst cudgelling lads might rule the roast:
Might swing the main gate of the Federal Dome,
Potowmack's democratic—boast.
Ah! take advice—this lofty stick forego–
With cooper's hoop-pole rather choose to range;
Or, if your pride should deem such canes too low,
Advance –and take a pipe-stem in exchange.
THE RURAL BACHELOR.
QUITTING the town, and gay abodes of men.
Chance led my footsteps to alonely den,
Around whose walls no lively flowerets grew,
Dull was its aspect, and its doors were few :
The crowing cock was all its morning bell
Mixed with no pleasant voice of Nan or Nell;
No blooming trees, no flowering shrubs were nigh
Nothing to cheer the heart or please the eye:
One weeping-willow raised its baleful head,
Ivy and mint were through his garden spread-
Disgusted with the scene, when drawn more near
I smote my breast, and asked–º What beast lives
here?”
No milk-maid here the selfish wight allows:
But forth he walks himself to milk his cows;
(In hand a staff, on either arm a pail,
Pity he had no dish-clout at his tail)
Cows, that have given him many a hearty kick.
And only fear him for his walnut-stick :
Humbled they stand, a pensive, pining crew.
And see their calves defrauded of their due
SEVERAL occASIONS. 227
None but himself the juicy curd may Squeeze,
None like himself can change the milk to cheese:
Cheese that appears at every slender treat,
And fate foredoomed that he alone must eat
The refuse of his store, the very cheese
That if to market sent, the clerk would seize.
Tired as I am with travelling this long road,
Much as I want, this night, some snug abode,
Something whereon to rest my aching head,
Sºmething, at least, that bears the name of bed;
Tho' many a mile, perhaps, may intervene
Breyet again the haunt of man is seen,
ºnward Ijog—till so the light restores,
Rather than lodge with him—lodge out of doors,
BALLOONS.
Perdomita tellus, tumida cesserunt freia,
Inferna nostros regna geneere impetus:
Immune cellum egº, dignus Alcide labor,
In alta mund; ºatia subºmis fºrar.
Sºc. He ac. Funens.
ASSIST me, ye Muses, (whose harps are in tune)
ſo tell of the flight of the gallan Bºooº
As high as my subject permit ºne to soar
To heights unattempted, unthought of before
We grave learned Doctors, whose trade is to sigh,
Whe labout to chalk out a road to the sky,
*Prove on your plans—or we venture to say,
A genius of Paris will shew us the way.
The earth, on its surface, has all been surveyed,
The sea has been travelled—and deep in the shade
The kingdom of Pluto has heard us at work,
When we dig for his metals, wherever they lurk.
-

















228. POEMS ON
But who would have thought that invention could rise
To contrive a machine that would soar to the skies,
And pierce the bright regions, which ages assigned
To spirits unbodied, and flights of the mind.
Let the gods of Olympus their revels prepare-
By the aid of some pounds of inflammable air
We’ll visit them soon—and forsake this dull ball
With a streamer displayed, and no fear of a fall.
How France is distinguished in Liberty's reign!
What cannot her genius and courage attain?
Throughout the wide world have her arms found the
Way,
And art to the stars is extending her sway.
At sea let the British their neighbours defy-
The French shall have frigates to traverse the sky,
In this navigation more fortunate ſtrove,
And cudgel your Fredericks and Brunswicks above.
If the English should venture to sea with their fleet
A host of Balloons in a trice they shall meet.
The French from the zenith their wings will display
And souse on these sea-dogs, and bear them away.
Ye sages, who travel on mighty designs,
To measure equators and longitude lines—
Instead of a vessel, to traverse the seas,
Construct a Balloon—and you’ll do it with ease:
And ye, who the heavens' broad concave survey,
And, aided by glasses, its secrets betray,
Who gaze, the night through, at the wonderful scenº
Yet still are complaining of vapours between,
Ah, seize the conveyance, and fearlessly rise
To peep at the lanthorns that light up the skies.
And floating above, on our ocean of air,
inform us, by letter, what people are there.
In Saturn, advise us if snow ever melts,
And what are the uses of Jupiter's belts; -
And (Mars being willing pray send us word, greeting
If his people are fonder of fighting than eating





SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 229
That Venus has horns we’ve no reason to doubt,
(I forget what they call him who first found it out)
And you'll find, it is said, if you venture too near,
That the spirits of cuckolds inhabit her sphere.
Ourfolks of good morals it woefully grieves,
That Mercury's people are villains and thieves:
You'll see how it is—but we venture to shew
For a dozen among them, twelve dozens below.
From long observation one proof may be had
That the men in the moon are incurably mad;
However, compare us, and if they exceed
They must be surprizingly crazy indeed.
But now, to have done with our planets and moons—
Come, grantus a ſharent for making balloons—
For I find that the time is approaching the day
When horses shall fail, and the horsemen decay.
Post-riders, at present (called Centaurs of old)
Who brave all the seasons, hot weather and cold;
In future, will leave their dull moneys behind,
And travel, like ghosts, on the wings of the wind.
The stagemen, whose gallopers scarce have the
power
Through the dirt to convey you eight miles in an
hour,
When advanced to balloons, shall so furiously drive
You'll hardly know whether you're dead or alive.
|
The man who at Boston sets out with the sun,
If the wind should be fair, may be with us at one,
At Gunhoºdar Ferry drink whiskey at three,
And by six beat Edentown, ready for tea.
The machine shall be ordered, (we hardly needsay)
To travelin darkness as well as by day
At Charleston by ten he for sleep may prepare,
And by twelve the next day be the devil knows
where.
When the ladies grow sick of the city in June,
What a jaunt they will have in the flying balloon.
hole mornings will see them at toilets preparing,
And forty miles high be their afternoon’s airing.



230 POEMS ON
Yet more with its fitness for commerce we're
struck;
Whatloads of tobacco shall come from Kentucke,
What packs of best beaver bar-iron and pig,
What budgets of buck-skin from Conococheague:
If Britain should ever disturbus again,
(Asthey threaten to do in the next George's reign)
No doubt they will play us a set of new tunes,
And give us a blast from their navy balloons.
To market the farmers will shortly repair
With their hogs and potatoes, wholesale, through the
air,
Skim over the water as light as a feather,
themselves and their poultry conversing together.
| Such wonders as these from Balloons may arise-
And the giants of old, who assaulted the skies
With their Ossa on Pelion, shall freely confess
That all they attempted was nothing to this.
-
PESTILENCE.
HOT, dry winds forever blowing,
Dead men to the grave-yards going :
Constant hearses.
Funeral verses;
Oh! what plagues there is no knowing
Priests retreating from their pulpits.
Some in hot, and some in cold fits
In bad temper,
Of they scamper,
Leaving us—unhappy culprits:
Doctors raving and disputing,
Death's pale army still recruiting—
What a pother
One with tºother .
Some a-writing, some a-shooting



SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 233.
Nature’s poisons here collected,
Water, earth, and air infected—
O, what pity,
Such a city
Wasin such a place erected .
JEFFERY,
OR THE SOLDIER'S PROGRESS,
LURED by some corporal’s smooth address,
His scarlet coat and roguish face,
One half a job on drum head laid,
A tavern treat—and reckoning paid;
Steyonder simple lad consigned
slavery of the meanest kind.
With only skill to drive a plough
musquet he must handle now ;
| ust twirlithere and twirl it there,
Now on the ground, now in the air :
severy motion by some rule
Practice, taught in Frederick's school,”
ust be directed-nicely true—
ºr he be beaten black and blue.
A sergeant, raised from cleaning shoes.
* now this country lad abuse:-
ºn meagre fare grown poor and lean,
treats him like a mere machine,
*cts his look, directs his step,
and kicks him into decent shape,
ºn aukward habit frees the clown,
Pects his head—or knocks him down.
Last Friday week to Bºery-green
The sergeant came with this nº cº-
-
* The Pºussian manual exercise
Vol. II. K





23.2 POEMS ON .
One motion of the firelock missed
The Turon thumped him with his fist:
I saw him lift his hickory cane,
I heard poor Jeffery’s head complain!
Yet this and more he’s forced to bear
And thus goes on from year to year,
Till desperate grown, at such a lot,
He drinks—deserts—and so is shot
- To
A Jººſt"ER OF P.A.M.E.G.Y.R.I.C.
occasioned. By cºntain Fulsom E. coxa natull-
- To Ry vºnses on THE ELECTION or a High Cox-
Sº A. B. L. E.
B.E advised by a friend, who advises but rarely,
Becautious of praising till praise is earned fairly:
There was a sage ºncient this truth did bequeath,
* That merit is only determined by death.”
Panegyric I’m sorry to see you engage in-
Old Mero, at first, was a Titus, or Trajan:
The Indians of Siam bow down to a Log,
And Egypt is said to have worshipped a Dog."
If you will be throwing your jewels to swine,
No wonder they rend you-whenever they dine-
Pray, leave it to puppies to cry up their worth,
And to dunces, to honour the day of their birth.
Whoever the road to preferment would find,
With the eyes of a Dutchman must look at man-
kind;
From the basest of motives, cry cowards are brave,
And laughin his sleeve-when he flatters a knave.
* Arºunds—one of the tutelar deities of ancient Egypt.
SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 233
FANCY'S RAMBLE.
GAY power, that over sleep presides,
And Reason's wakeful reign divides;
Fancy, thou, the Muses’ queen,
Mistress of the poet's vein,
How many charming scenes you paint,
Traverse the globe, without constraint,
And visions to the soul disclose
To entertain her night's repose.
She on her golden pinions brings
The images of absent things;
Through the labyrinth of the brain,
Night after night, she walks unseen,
Noble fabrics doth she raise
In the woods, or on the seas,
ºn some high, steep pointed rock
Trembling to the ocean's shock,
Where the dreary tempests sweep
Clouds along the uncivil deep.
Now she views Arcadian groves
Where the harmless shepherdroves,
And while yet her wings she spreads,
ºtschrystal streams and flowery meads:
By the full-moon light doth shew
Forests of a dusky hue,
here, upon some mossy bed,
ºnocence reclines her head.
T Swift, she stretches over the deep
**cla’s high and smoky steep:
*as on the towering mast
º not travel half so fast-
wifer than the eagle's flight,
*stantaneous rays of light–
contemplative she stands
ºrwegia’s frozen lands.


234. POEMIS ON:
Lofty mountains, bare and brown,
Where the rugged winters frown,
Or impel the ocean surge
To Caledonia's gloomy verge,
Where the winds tumultuous roar,
Vext, that Ossian sings no more.
Then, she roves to southern isles
Where the softened winter smiles;
To Grenada's orange shades,
Or Amazonia’s fertile glades–
To the distant dreary Caſe,”
Fatal to many a gallant ship-
The cape, where mountain billows roll
Dashing from the southern pole,
Loaded with eternal snows;
Where no pleasant harvest grows,
But icy cliffs forever rise
Shrouding their summits in the skies.
Lo! she leads me wide and far
O'er the earth and through the air,
Over rock and over reef
To the proud Canarian cliff, f
Where the sun-bea. yes to abide,
When set to many a hill beside-
Thence she takes her roving aim,
And BRITAIN seeks, of ancient fame,
Stretching far her proud command–
Shackled by some tyraut band:
Since to Caesar first she bowed
Offetters, vain-of slavery, proud!
Now, she wanders far away
In the east to meet the day :
Travels over Ganges streams,
Visits China, in her dreams,
O'er the vast Pacific strays,
And a thousand isles surveys
Where the happy Indian dwells,
Stranger, yet, to Euroſie's sails—
* Cape Horn. + Peak of Teneriſte.


SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 255
Now, though late, returning home.
Lead me to Marcella's tomb,
To behold a moment there
All that once was good and fair–
Who doth here so soundly sleep–
Shall we break this prison deep –
Fancy can but pierce the shade,
Haunt the tomb, where thou art laid-
Gather flowers of pallid hue,
And quit the world, to dwell with you!—
But must those eyes in darkness stay
That once were rivals to the day –
Like heaven's bright lamp, beneath the main
They are but set, to rise again.
ON THE -
DEMOLITION OF AN OLD COLLEGE.
QN New-Year's eve, the year was eighty-nine,
All clad in black, a back-woods’ college crew
With crow-bar, sledge, and broad axe did combine
To level with the dust their antique hau,
a hopes the President would build a new:
ſes, yes, (said they,) this ancient pile shall fall,
And laugh no longer at yon cobler's stan.
The clock struck seven in social compact joined
hey pledged their sacred honors to proceed.
The number seventy-five this feat designed
And first some oaths they swore by canale light
ºn Euclide Elements—no bible did they need:
One must be true, they said the other might—
Besides, nobile could be found that night.
Now darkness ºr the plain her pinions spread,
- hen Fung the bellan unaccustomed peal:
**ushed the brave, the cowards went to bed,
and left the attempt to those who felt full bold
To pull down halls, where years had seen them knee.
Wºº II. X 2














236 POEMS ON
Where Wheelock oft at rakes was wont to scold,
Or sung them many a psalm, in days of old.
Advancing then towards the tottering hall,
(That now at least one hundred years had stood)
They gave due notice that it soon should fall-
Lest there some godly wight might gaping stand.
(For well they knew the world wants all its good
To fright the sturdy sinners of the land,
And shame old Satan, with his sooty band.)
The reverend man that college gentry awes,
Hearing the bell at this unusual hour,
Vext at the infringement of the college laws,
With Indian stride out-sallied from his den,
And made a speech (as being a man in power)-
Alas! it was not heard by one in ten–
No time to heed his speeches, or his pen.
* Ah, rogues, said he, ah, whither do ye run,
* Benton the ruin of this antique pile-
* That, all the war, has braved both sword and gun.
* Reflect, dear boys, some reverend rats are there
* That now will have to scamper many a mile.
* For whom past time old Latin books did spare
* And Attic Greek, and manuscripts most rare.
* Relent, relent to accomplish such designs
* Folks bred on college fare are much too weak;
* For such attemptsmen drink your high-proof win*
* Not spiritless switchel" and vile hogo drams.
* Scarcely sufficient to digest your Greek-
* Come, ſet the college stand, my dear black lambº-
“ Besides—I see you have no battering rams."
Thus he-but sighs, and tears, and prayers*
lost-
so, to it they went with broad-axe, spade, and hº
---
One smote a wall, and one dislodged a post.
Tugged at a beam, or pulled down pigeon-holes
Where Indian lads were wont to study gramma"
-
a mixture of molasses and water-





SEVERAL, OCCASIONS. 237.
Indeed, they took vast pains and dug like moles,
And worked as if they worked to save their souls.
Now to its deep foundation shook the dome:
Farewell to all its learning, ſame and honor
So fell the capitol of heathen Rome,
By Goths and Vandals levelled with the dust–
And so shall die the works of Weal. O'Connor,
(Which he himself will even outlive, we trust:)
But now our story’s coming to the worst–
Down fell the Pile-aghast these rebels stood,
And wondered at the mischiefs they had done
To such a pile, composed of white-oak wood;
To such a pile, so antique and renowned,
Which many a prayer had heard and many a pun—
So, three huzzas they gave, and fired a round,
Then homeward trudged—half drunk—but safe and
sound.
PENNSYLVANIA.
LA FRAGMENT.]
SPREAD with stupendous hills, far from the main,
Fair Pennsylvania holds her golden reign,
Infertile fields her wheaten harvest grows,
Charged with itsfreights her favorite Delaware flows:
From Erie's Lake her soil with plenty teems
0 where the Schuylkill rolls his limpid streams-
weet stream what pencil can thy beauties tell–
here, wandering downward through the woody vale,
y varying scenes to rural bliss invite,
To health and pleasure add a new delight:
ete Juniata, too, allures the swain,
And gay Cadorus roves along the plain;
º, tumbling from the distant hill,
Steals through the waste to turn the industrious min-











ºgg POEMS ON
Where'er those floods through groves or mountains
stray,
That God of Nature still directs the way,
With fondest care has traced each river’s bed
And mighty streams thro’ mighty forests led,
Bade agriculture thus export her freight,
The strength and glory of this favoured State.
She, famed for science, arts, and polished men,
Admires her FRANKLIN, but adores her PENN,
Who, wandering here, made barren forests bloom.
And the new soil a happier robe assume:
He planned no schemes that virtue disapproves,
He robbed no Indian of his native groves,
But, just to all, beheld his tribes increase,
Did what he could to bind the world in peace,
And, far retreating from a selfish band,
Bade Freedom flourish in this foreign land.
Gay towns unnumbered shine through all her
plains,
Here every art its happiest height attains:
The graceful ship, on nice proportions planned,
Here finds perfection from the builder's hand,
To distant worlds commercial visits pays,
Or war's bold thunder o'er the deep conveys.
TO AN AUTHOR.
YOUR leaves bound up compact and fair,
In neat array at length prepare,
To pass their hour on learning's stage.
To meet the surly critic's rage;
The statesman’s slight, the smatterer's sneer-
Were these, indeed, your only fear,
You might be tranquiland resigned:
What most should touch your fluttering mind:
Is that, few critics will be found
To sift your works, and deal the wound.




SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 33.9
Thus, when one fleeting year is past
On some bye-shelf your book is cast
Another comes, with something new,
And drives you fairly out of view -
With some to praise, but more to blame,
The mind returns to—whence it came ,
And some alive, who scarce coºd read
Will publish satires on the dead.
Thrice happy Drypes”, who could meet
Some rivalbard in every street.
When all were benton writing well
It was some credit to excel.
Thrice happy Dryden, who could find
A Milbourne for his sport designed
And Poſie, who saw the harmless rage
ºf Dennis bursting o'er his page
Mightly justly spurn the crºcº ºn.
Who only helped to swell his fame.
On these bleak climes by Fortune throwº
here rigid Reason reigns alone,
Where lovely Fancy has no sway, -
Not magic forms aboutus play=
Nor nature takes her summer hue
time, what has the muse to do?—
An age employed in edging steel
no poetic raptures feel;
No solitudes attracting power,
No leisure of the noon day hour,
No shaded stream, no quiet grove
this fantastic century move,
The muse of love in no request-
º-try your fortune with the rest,
* of the nine you should engage
To meet the famies of the age :
º ** we fear, your choice must fall-
The least engaging of them all-
* See Johnson's lives of the English Poets

240 POEMS ON
Her visage stern—an angry style-
A clouded brow-malicious smile-
A mind on murdered victims placed
She, only she, can please the taste
THE PREPOSTEROUS NUPTIALS.
OR, JANUARY AND JUNE.
THUS winter weds to April's bloom,
Thus lilies blow beside a tomb :
Thus fields of ice on rivers grow
While melting streams are found below.
How strange ataste was here displayed :
Yourself all light, and he all shade;
Each hour you live you look more gay,
While he grows uglier every day.
Employed on undiscovered things:
He to the tune ºf discord sings:
You touch your keys to different strains,
And “May-day morn,” attracts the swains:
Dear lady! in the summer's prime
Can you expect a Christmas time
If twenty years are scarcely run,
Hope not for shring-without a Sun
THE DISTREST THEATRE.”
HEALTH to the Muse'-and fill the glass-
Heaven grant her soon some better place;
Than earthen floor and fabric mean,
Where disappointment shades the scene:
-
* Harmony Hall, at Charleston, now demolished




SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 241
There as I came, by rumour led,
I sighed and almost wished her dead;
Her visage stained with many a tear,
No HALLAM and no. HENRY here
But what could all their art attain º-
When hointed laws the stage restrain
The prudent Muse obedience pays
To sleepy squires, that damn all plays.
Like thieves they hang beyond the town,
They shove her off—to please the gown;–
Though Rome and Athens owned it true,
The stage might mend our morals too.
See, Moſsus all the evening sits
O'er bottled beer, that drowns his wits;
Were Plays allowed, he might at least
Blush—and no longer act the beast.
See, Marcia, now from guardian free,
Retailing scandal with her tea;
Might she not come, nor danger fear
From Hamlet’s sigh, or Juliet's tear.
The world ºut acts the flayer's fiarº
(So says the motto of their art)
That world in vice great lengths is gone
That fears to see its picture drawn.
Mere vulgar actors cannot please;
The streets supply enough of these :
And what can wit or beauty gain
When sleepy dullness joins their train?
A State betrays a homely taste,
By which the stage is thus disgraced,
Where, drestin all the flowers of speech,
ame virtue might her precepts teach.
Let but a dancing bear arrive,
A pig, that counts you four, or five-
d Cato, with his moral strain
May strive to mena the world in vain.
* Tºº Mºndº nºt ºrionem.

ºz POEMS ON
THE MOWA-SCOTIA MENACE.
FROM Sºlºurse’s boasted port, down fºundº'
bay
(To put himself in madam Fortune's way)
A Scotite came, as hungry as a shark,
Master and owner of a crazy barque :
Fish, and fish only, were her weighty load,
With fish was every hole and cranny stowed ;
Even in the cabbin, where he made his bed,
Bundles of fish were for his comfort spread,
In every corner heaps on heaps lay slain,
'Twas fish on fish—and cut-and come again.
At length, to Boston's well-known port arrived.
There many a scheme, to run them, he contrived,
For there, by law (we hardly need to say)
All foreign fish a heavy impost pay.
To save the puty was the captain's wish,
To land, unseen, his long imprisoned fish:
Vain were his schemes—no plan could he devise
To cheat old Argus, with his hundred eyes,
(That hawk who ceaseless waits the coming tides.
Peeps in the hold, or through the cabbin glides)
Vain were his plans, the unlucky sequelshews,
Striving to cheat the customs of their dues,
Ere he was able to complete his wish,
The port-collector seized them every fish
Sblood, death, and wounds ! (the angry capta”
cried)
What vile, ungrateful wretches here reside .
May I he d–d (this dreadful oath he swore.
And stamped, indignant, on his cabbin floor)
May 1 he d–d iſ at some future day, -
When famine marks these Yankees for her frey
When hinching wants their grumbling guns assº
Mºrayers or tears shall ºr my wraºh ºrevail-
Sºe and be d-d, shall be the word—that's ſºlº
Shelburne, nor I, ºil grant relief again



SEVERAL, OCCASIONS. 243
HERMIT'S VALLEY.
WITH eastern winds, and flowing sail
ºthese sequestered haunts we came,
- Where verdant trees and chrystal streams
Adorn the sloping, winding vale;
Where, from the breezy grove we claim,
ºr heaven on earth-poetic dreams.
These simple scenes have pleasures more
han all the busy town can show—
More pleasure here Philanthus took,
ºd more he prized this lonely shore,
ºpen, his pencil, and his book,
an all the groves Madeira bore:
ºte stillis seen a Hermit’s cell,
º ho, fond the haunts of men to fly,
loyed his heaven beneath this shade:
* mouldering caves so blest to dwell,
* sought not from the flowers that die,
Verdure, that would never fade.
lº crowded courts and would-be kings,
here ſawning knaves are most caressed
howould, though of invited, go–
When here so many charming things
by Naº tº perfection dressed,
*Please the man of fancy, grow :
ol. II. Y




244 POEMS ON
The native of this happy spot
No cares of vain ambition haunt:
Pleased with the partner of his nest,
Life flows—and when the dream is out,
The earth, which once supplied each want,
Receives him-fainting—to her breast.
-
THE PRUDENT philosopher.
(occasioned by THE confi. Agnation of THE starr
House AT chanieston, 1786.)
WHEN from a Dome, where lawyers ºftoke,
Issued the mingled flame and smoke,
Florella at her window sate,
Gazing towards the House of state-
That cost the labourer many a tear-
That would not be rebuilt, that's clear-
And thrice she sighed, and smote her breas:
To see their squireships so distrest;
To see in such a little while
To ashes turned so fine a pile !
Meanwhile, avoiding pump and pail,
(For what could one man’s help avail?)
Fearing to hurt his tender hand
Should he amongst the vulgar stand,
Where buckets fly and engines play,
Where slaves must work, and masters may:
Rinaldo to her chamber came,
Thus comforting the tearful dame:
“Behold, (said he] my lady fair,
How vain these mortal buildings are:
'Tis madness—madness—all things shew
To set our hearts on things below;
(Thank heaven for allits stores of grace.
My Tarasunº's in a safer ſºlace:)
But thus the pride of man shall bend;
The ſates such fabrics only ſend;

SEVERAL, OCCASIONS. 245
Whether contrived of brick or stone,
They hardly can be called our own :
What time might spare the flame destroys,
To them such castles are but toys;
In vain to heaven our spires we raise :
Sooner or later, all must blaze;
And we ourselves, with years oppressed,
Intime, will sink among the rest.
“Ah! lovely nymph—no longer sigh-
Tis true, the flames are mounting high-
Butoh –forbear that trickling tear,
For thus the world will disappear;
And temples of stupendous size,
In empty vapour thus shall rise,
When Nature droops her weary wings
To give a sad account of things;
When time has run his idle round,
And you and I are—underground.
“In such a view, Florella fair,
How beautiful these blazes are:
From such a view of human things
Philosophy her comfort brings,
instructing us when mischiefs come,
When folks are burnt from house and home;
When public buildings burn, or fall,
To bear it with—no grief at all tº
“Kind moralist (the nymph replied)
Tour doctrines shall not be denied º
And though you make things mighty clear.
ºn almost vexed to see you here:
A late like this impends o'er all–
(Even high-heeled shoes at last must fall)
* whether preached in prose or rhyme:
would better ºf another time. -
“How can we justly blame the fire
That gives us so much tº admire.
ºf people skull, when temples burn,
* can they but to ashes turn –
Such fire as his... ... claims—
hese are, indeed, no common flames–
leave me, Love, to sign and pout–
*-run—and help to ºut them out"


246 POEMS ON
MARYLAND.
LAVED by vast depths that swell on either side
Where Chesapeake intrudes his midway tide,
Gay MARYLAND attracts the admiring eye,
A fertile region with a temperate sky.
In years elapsed, her heroes of renown
From British Anna named one favourite town : *
But, lost her commerce, though she guards their laws,
Proud Batºnione that envied commerce draws.
Few are the years since there, at random placed
Some wretched huts her quiet-port disgraced; -
Safe from all winds, and covered from the Bay,
There, at his ease, the thoughtless native lay.
Now, rich and great, no more a slave to sloth,
She claims importance from her towering growth-
High in renown, her streets and domes arranged,
A groupe of cabins to a city changed.
Though rich at home, to foreign lands they strº
For foreign trappings trade the wealth away.
Politest manners through their towns prevail,
And pleasure revels, though their funds should fail:
In each gay dome, soft music charms its lord.
where female beauty strikes the trembling chord;
On the fine air with nicest touches dwells, -
while from the tongue the according ditty swells:
Proud to be seen, 'tis their's to place delight
In dances measured by the winter's night,
The evening feast, that wine and mirth prolong
The lamp of splendor, and the midnight song:
Religion here no gloomy garb assumes,
Exchanged her tears for patches and for plumes
The blooming belle (untaught heaven's beaus tº will
Talks not of semaphs, but the world she's in :
Attached to earth, here born, and to decay,
She leaves to better worlds all finer clay.
In those, whom choice or different fortunes p
On rural scenes, a different mind we trace;
act
-
* ANNAP olis.
SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 247
|
There solitude, that still to dullness tends,
To rustic forms no sprightly action lends;
Heeds not the garb, mopes o'er the evening fire;
And bids the maiden from the man retire.
On winding floods the lofty mansion stands,
That casts a mournful view o'er neighbouring lands;
There the sad master strays amidst his grounds,
Directs his negroes, or reviews his hounds;
Then home returning, plies his pasteboard play,
Or dreams o'er wine, that hardly makes him gay :
If some chance guest arrive in weary plight,
He more than bids him welcome for the night;
Kind to profusion, spares no pains to please,
Gives him the product of his fields and trees;
On his rich board shines plenty from her source.
-The meanest dish of all his own discourse.
THE HAPPY PROSPECT.
THOUGH clad in winter's gloomy dress all Nature's
works appear,
Vetother prospects rise to bless the new returning
year -
The active sail again is seen to greet our western
shore,
Gay plenty smiles with browserene, and wars distract
no more.
Nomore the vales, no more the plains an iron harvest
yield;
Peace guards our doors, impels our swains to till the
grateful field :
rom distant climes, no longer foes (their years of
misery past)
Nations arrive, to find repose in these domains at last.
And if a more delightful scene attracts the mortaleye,
Where clouds nor darkness intervene, behold, aspin-
ing high,
Vol. II. y 2

248 POEMS ON
On FREEdom's soil those FABRics planned, on virtue
basis laid,
That make secure our native land, and prove our toils
repaid.
AMBrrious Arms and pride severe, would you at dis-
tance keep,
What wanderer would not tarry here, here charm his
cares to sleep -
O, still may health her balmy wings o'er these fair
fields expand,
While commerce from all climates brings the prº-
ducts of each land.
Through toiling care and lengthened views, that share
alike our span,
Gay, smiling hope her heaven pursues, the eternal
friend of man: -
The darkness of the days to come she brightens with
her ray,
And smiles o'er Nature’s gaping tomb, when sicken-
ing to decay:
THE ORIGIN OF WARS,
Nearly time, when man was blest
With constant spring and summer joined,
Nature his simple banquet drest;
Long life was his with health combined.
in innocence (their sole defence)
They spent their days, and passed their nights:
In rural haunts they pitched their tents—
None stole their sweets, or seized their rights.
From such ascene, no care, no pain.
O'erlands, o'er seas, through woods they spread
No place was found on earth's vast round
Where men were not, by millions, bred.





SEVERAL OCCASIONS º
Jovº saw the vast abounding race,
And feared a change in Nature's plan,
That the wide world would find a place,
In one age more, for nought but mas.
Then thus of gods and men the sire
In Vulcan’s ear his mind expressed-
* Wars must be had—go, fetch that fire
Which kindles rancour in the breas: :
* This once infused, the seeds of shite,
4nd rage, and hate, to strength shall grow,
Man shall no more with man unite;
But each shall be to each a foe.
* Yon' oaks, which now their boughs dºnay,
To shield his race from winds and rain,
When touched, shall shrink–make haste away,
And waſ his thunders o'er the main.
* Those stores ºf death, which now, at rest,
In caves firgſband unnoticed lie,
ºnlored, shall burst, create a blast,
4nd bid contending nations die!”
The god supreme then seized the flame
That Vulcan brought, at his command;
Deep in the breast
This curse impressed,
And slumbering manthrough all his frame
First felt the fatal, feverish brand.
-
sº Nº.
-> = | -
-- - | º
% * * *
-
-
º
-






250 POEMS ON
.
.
OCC Asio N.E.D. By
A LEGISLATION BILL,
- -
Pro Posrºc. A 7-1-A ºrd N. U.P.O.N. NE ºs P.A.P.E.Iº.
'Tis time to tax the News, (Sangrado cries)
Subjects were never good that were too wise:
In every hamlet, every trifling town,
Some sly, designing fellow sits him down,
On spacious folio prints his weekly mess,
And spreads around the poison of his Press.
Hence, to the world the streams of scandal flow,
Disclosing secrets, that it should not know,
Hence courtiers strut with libels on their backs:-
---
And shall not news be humbled by a tax :
Once ('tis most true) such papers did some good
When British chiefs arrived in angry mood:
By them enkindled, every heart grew warm,
By them excited, all were taught to arm,
When some, retiring to Britannia's clime,
Satbrooding o'er the vast events of time;
Doubtful which side to take, or what to say,
Or who would win, or who would lose the day.
* Those times are past, (and past experienceshews
The well-born sort alone, should read the news,
No common herds should get behind the scene
To view the movements of the state machine:
One paper only, filled with courtly stuff,
One paper, for one country is enough,
Where incense offered at Pomposo's shrine
Shall prove his house-dog and himself divine
SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 251
THE FOREST BEAU.
LA Picºwºc From Rearrºr.]
WHEN first to feel Love's fire Jacksºn aw begins,
He combs his hair, and cocks his hat with pins,
Views in some stream, his face, with fond regard,
Plucks from his upper lip the bristly beard,
With soap and sand his homely visage scours
(Rough from the joint attacks of sun and showers)
The sheepskin breeches decorate his thighs—
Next on his back the homespun coat he tries;
Round his broad breast he wraps the jerkin blue,
And sews a spacious soat on either shoe. -
Thus, all prepared, the fond adoring swain
Cuts from his groves of pine a ponderous cane;
In thought a beau, a savage to the eye,
Forth, from his mighty bosom, heaves the sigh;
Tºbacco is the present for his fair,
This he admires, and this best pleases her—
The bargain struck—few cares his bosom move
How to maintain, or how to lodge his love;
Close at his hand the piny forest grows,
Thence for his hut a slender frame he hews,
With art, (not copied from Palladio's rules)
A hammer and an axe, his only tools,
By Nature taught, a hasty hut he forms
Safe in the woods, to shelter from the storms;–
here sees the summer pass and winter come.
Nor envies Britain's king his loftier home.
TO CYNTHILA.
| THROUGH Jersey groves, a wandering stream
That still its wonted music keeps,
Inspires no more my evening dream,
Where Cynthia, in retirement, sleeps.

252 POEMS ON
Sweet murmuring stream how blest art thou
To kiss the bank where she resides,
Where Nature decks the beechen bough
That trembles o'er your shallow tides.
The cypress-tree on Hermit’s height,
Where Love his soft addresses paid
By Luna's pale reflected light-
No longer charms me to its shade
To me, alas! so far removed,
What raptures, once, that scenery gave,
Ere wandering yet from all I loved,
I sought a deeper, drearier wave.
Your absent charms my thoughts employ:
sigh to think how sweet you sung,
And half adore the painted toy
That near my careless heart you hung.
Now, fettered fastin icy fields,
In vain we loose the sleeping sail;
The frozen wave no longer yields,
And uselessblows the favouring gale.
Yet, still in hopes of vernal showers,
And breezes, moist with morning dew,
I pass the lingering, lazy hours,
Reflecting on the spring—and you.



SEVERAL, OCCASIONS. 253,
THE AMERICAN SOLDIER,
[A Prºrure from ºne Life.]
* To serve with love,
And shed your blood,
ºffiroved may be above,
But here below
(Examples shew,)
*The dangerous to be good.”
- Lond Oxfoºp.
DEEP in a vale, a stranger now to arms,
Too poor to shine in courts, too proud to beg,
He, who once warred on Saratoga's plains,
Sits musing o'er his scars, and wooden leg.
Remembering still the toil of former days,
Toother hands he sees his earnings paid :-
They share the due reward—he feeds on praise,
Lost in the abyss of want, misfortune's shade.
Far, far from domes where splendid tapers glare,
Tis his from dear bought heace no wealth to win,
Removed alike from courtly cringing 'squires,
he great-man’s Levee, and the proud man’s grin.
Sold are those arms which once on Britons blazed,
When, flushed with conquest, to the charge they
Canne :
That º repelled, and Freedom's fabrick raised,
She leaves her soldier—ſºme and a nameſ L1790.
OLD VIRGINIA.
VAST in extent, Virginia meets our view,
With streams immense, dark groves, and mountains
blue;
First in provincial rank she long was seen,
Built the first town, and first subdued the plain:

254 POEMS ON
This was her praise—but what can years avail,
When times succeeding see her efforts fail!
On northern fields more vigorous arts display,
Where pleasure holds no universal sway;
No herds of slaves parade their sooty band
From the rough plough to save the ſopling's hand,
Where urgent wants the daily pittance asks
Compel to labour, and complete the task.
A race of slaves, throughout their country spread
From different soils extort the owner's bread:
Averse to toil, the natives still rely
On the sad negro for the year's supply;
He, patient, early quits his poor abode,
Toils at the hoe, or rotes some ponderous load.
Sweats at the axe, or, pensive and forlorn,
Sighs for the eve, to parch his stinted corn
With watchful eye maintains his much-loved fire.
Nor even in summer lets its sparks expire–
At night returns, his evening toils to share,
Lament his rags, or sleep away his care,
Bind up the recent wound, with many a groan:
Or thank his gods that Sunnay is his own.
To these far climes the scheming Scotchman flies
Quits his bleak hills to court Virginian skies;
Removed from oat-meal, sour-crout, debts, and duns.
Prudent, he hastes to bask in kinder suns;
Marks well the native—views his weaker side,
And heaps up wealth from luxury and pride,
Exports the produce of a thousand plains,
Nor fears a rival, to divide his gains.
Deep in their beds, as distant to their source
Here many a river winds its wandering course:
Proud of her bulky freight, through plains and woods
Moves the tall ship, majestic, o'er the floods,
Where James's strength the ocean brine repels,
Or, like a sea, the deep Potowmack swells:
Yet here the sailor views with wondering eye
Impoverished fields that near their margins lie.
Mercantile towns, where languor holds her reign
And boors inactive, on the exhausted plain.
SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 255
CONSTANTIA.
(oN A. PRouect of RETIRING to BETHLEHEM.)
SICK of the world, in prime of days
Constantia took a serious fit—
Resolved to shun all balls and plays
And only read what saints had writ—
To Convent Hall she would repair
And be a pensive sister there.
“What are they all—this glare of things,
These insects that around me shine;
These beaux and belles on silken wings–
Indeed their pleasures make not mine
My happiness is all delayed—
I'll go, and find it in the shade.”
A sailor, loitering from his crew,
As chance would have it, passed along
She told him what she had in view,
And he replied—“Fair maid you're wrong,
"Let faded nymphs to cloisters go,
* Where kisses freeze and love is snow.
The druids' oak and hermits' pine
Afford a gloomy, sad delight;
But why that blush of health resign,
The mingled tint of red and white :
In moistening cells the flowers expire
"That, on the plain, all eyes admire.
With such a pensive, pious train
Who, but a hermit, could agree—
Ah, rather stay to grace the plain,
"Or wander on the wave with me:
“For you the painted barque shall wait
“And I would die for such a freight.”
No wandering stranger (she replied)
Can tempt me to forego my plan;
No barque that waſts him o'er the tide,
* many a better looking man :
Vol. II. Z




250 POEMS ON
Go, wanderer, plough your gloomy sea,
Constantia must a sister be.
* To gain so fair a flower as you,
(The Tar returned) who would not plead
Nor shall you, nymph, to convents go
While love can write what you must read:
Come, to yon’ meadow let us stray,
I have some handsomethings to say.”
Love has his wish when reason fails-
in vain he sighed, in vain he strove :
* Forsake (said she) those swelling sails
If you would have me—think of love :
Great merit has your sailing art,
But absence would distract my heart.”
what else was said, we secret keep ;
The Tar, grown fonder of the shore, *
Neglects his prospects on the deep,
And she of convents talks no more :
He slyly quits the coasting trade
She pities her—who seeks the shade.
MASS ACHUSETTS,
HERE, in vast flocks, the fleecy nation strays.
Here, endless herds the upland meadow grazº
Here smiling plenty crowns the labourer's Palº
And blooming beauty weds the industrious swal”
were this thy Ali, what happier state could be ºr
But avarice drives the native to the sea,
Fictitious wants all thoughts of ease controul,
Proud Independence sways the aspiring soul.
Midst foreign waves, a stranger to reposes -
Through the moist world the keen adventurer ºf
Not India’s seas restrain his daring sail,
Far to the south he seeks the polar whales

SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 257
From those vast banks where frequent tempests rave,
And fogs eternal brood upon the wave,
There (furled his sail) his daring hold he keeps,
Drags from their depths the natives of those deeps;
Then to some distant clime explores his way,
Boldavarice spurs him on—he must obey.
Yet from such aims one great effect we trace
That holds in happier bonds this restless race;
Like some deep lake, by circling shores comprest,
Man's nature tends to universal rest :
Unted by springs, that find some secret pass
To mix their current with the mightier mass,
Unmoved by moons, that some strange impulse
guides - -
To lift its waters, and propel its tides,
Unvext by winds, that scow across its waste,
Tear up the wave, and discompose its breast,
Soon would that lake (a putrid nuisance grown)
Lose all its virtue, praised or prized by none:
Thus, avarice lends new vigour to mankind,
Not vainly planted in the unsteady mind;
With her, Amarºos linked, they proudly drive,
Rule all our race, and keep the world alive.
Here, first, to quench her once loved Freedom's
flame,
With their proud fleets, Britannia's warriors came ,
Here, sure to conquer, she began her fires,
** sent her lords, her admirals, and her squires:
All all too weak to effect the vast design
For which we saw half Europe’s arms combine,
ºncounted navies rove from main to main,
Threats, bribery, treachery–tried and tried again;
Andate on mandate, edict, and decree,
ºrivet ſetters, and enslave the free
nº long from Boston's hills shall strangers
gaze
ºn those vast mounds that magic seemed to raise;
Stupendous piles that hastened Britain's flight,
Extended hills, the offspring of a night— -
* that devoted town they hoped to stay
And, fed by rapine, sleep soft years away:

258 POEMS ON
Vain hopes, vain schemes—the unconquered spirit
rose
That still survived through all succeeding woes;
Imprisoned crowds, in cruel durance held,
Disarmed, restrained from honour’s earliest field;
Imprisoned thousands, worn with poignant grief
Now, half adoring, met their guardian chief.”
Whose thundering cannon bade the foe retreat,
Disgrace their portion, and their rout complete.
CONGRESS HALL, N. Y.
WITH eager step and wrinkled brow,
The busy sons of care
(Disgusted with less splendid scenes)
To Congress HALL repair.
In order placed, they patient wait
To seize each word that flies,
From what they hear, they sigh or smile,
Look cheerful, grave, or wise.
Within these walls the doctrines taught
Are of such vast concern,
That all the world, with one consent,
Here strives to live-and learn.
The timorous heart, that cautious shuns
All churches, but its own,
No more observes its wonted rules;
But ventures here, alone.
Four hours a day each rank alike,
(They that can walk or crawl)
Leave children, business, shop, and wife,
And steer for Congress Hall.
From morning tasks of mending soals
The cobler hastes away;
At three returns, and tells to Kate
The business of the day.
* Washington.
SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 250
The debtor, vext with early duns,
Avoids his hated home;
And here and there dejected roves
Till hours of Congress come.
The barber, at the well-known time
Forsakes his bearded man,
And leaves him with his lathered jaws,
To trim them as he ean.
The tailor, plagued with suits on suits,
Neglects Sir Fopling's call,
| Throws by his goose—ºps from his board,
And trots to co-crºss Hall.
THE IMPERTINENT:
apparassed to a cºntain European poem.
TIS nonsense (said I) to be wasting my time,
When Sawney, as well, may amuse them with
rhyme,
Spectators, new poems, and essays sublime:
His jibes and his jeers, his satires and sneers,
Histricks, and his fancies are so very fine,
By the soul of Saint Andrew, I wish they were mine:
Now, mend me a pen, and I'll shew you some fun:
Tisa folly to dance when the music is done;
here nothing is ventured no laurels are won;
Though Sawney is dead, as the newspaper said,
It was folly to pay for his funeral bell,
For here he returns, to insult us, from hell.
hectºr he gave us, by way of new lecture,
But it vanished so quick, we are apt to conjecture
instead of Shectator it should have been sheetre.
Its life was a day, and it vanished away
To those horrid retreats that dishonour the ground,
Where sºme and ſºuld, and Blackmore are found.
Vol II. Z-2



260 POEMS ON."
What a splutter he makes with a dash of his quillº
What a grinding he keeps on his poetry mill!
From morning to midnight it never stands still:
Lord bless us-said I (with a sob and a sigh)
This poet of poets, imported so late,
Willkill his dear self for the good of our state
Yemen of assembly his Lectures attend,
Your wisest proceedings he knows how to mend,
He'll give his advice, like a true-hearted friend;
Young widows he'll kill, with a stroke of your BiLL;
For the sake of yourselves, let it never be said
You slighted his counsels for three-ſence a head.
Now a war with the Spaniards he threatens–0 yes!”
Here! beat up to arms and relieve his distress,
In a month we shall end it, and who knows but less?
By the aid of his song we'll muster so strong
That Congress shall own their Remonstrance is vain,
And make him their captain to conquer New-Spain.
I never would charge my artillery high
When there's nothing to vex but the buzz of a fly,
When monkies and puppies are only to die:
His head and his hand are both at a stand
What trashto invent that may drive me away,
What satireto write, or what engine to play.
So often attacked, shall I never reply
Must Sawney forever all satire defy
Away with your comfort, and leave me to sigh!
The sun's in the west, and I am opprest
With a creature attempting to blacken my muse
Who hardly has genius to blacken my shoes.
But when I reflect that I have for foe,
A shadow departed full twelve days ago,
With a letter of licence returned from below:
To his screeches and bawling, and such catterwaul"
º -
Indeed it were madness in me to reply;
And so my good Saunders, we bid you-goodbye.
* A corruption, from the French verb wer, hear ye.
SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 251
A MATRIMONIAL DIALOGUE -
HUMBLY
INSCRIBED TO MY LORD SNAKE.
| ONE Sabbath-day morning said Sampson to Sue
I have thought and have thought that a title will do;
Believe me, my dear, it is sweeter than syrup
To taste of a title, as cooked up in Europe;
"Your ladyship” here and “your ladyship” there,
*Sir knight,” and “your grace,” and “his worship
“the mayor "
But here, we are nothing but vulgar all over,
And the wife of a coºler scarce thinks you above her;
What a country is this, where madam and miss
Is the highest address from each vulgar-born cur,
And I-even I–am but mºst ºn and sin .
Your equal-arear gentry I ne'er could abide
That all are born equal, by ME is denied :
And Barlow and Paine shall preach it in vain ;
Look even at brutes, and you’ll see it confest
That some are intended to manage the rest;
Yon' dog ºf the manger, how stately he struts.
You may swear him well-born, from the size of his
guts;
Not a better-bornwhelp ever snapped at his foes,
All he wants, is a giass to be stuck on his nose :
And then, my dear Sue, between me and you,
He would look like the gemman whose name I for-
get,
Who lives in a castle and never pays debt.”
“My dear (answered Susan)'tis said, in reproach,
That you climb like a bear when you get in a coach:
Now, your nobles that spring from the nobles of old,
Your earls, and your knights, and your barons, so bold
From Nature inheritso handsome an air
They are noblemen born, at first glance we may
ºal -
-



362 POEMS ON
But you, that have cobbled, and I, that have spun,
'Tis wrong for our noddles on titles to run :
Moreover, you know, that to make a fine show,
Your people of note, of arms get a coat;
A boot or a shoe would but sneakingly do,
And would certainly prove our nobility New.”
No matter (said Sampson) a coach shall be bought :
Though the low-born may chatter, I care not a groat;
Around it a group of devices shall shine,
And mottoes, and emblems—to prove it is mine;
Fair liberty’s cap, and a stan, and a strap;
A pass ER, that somewhat resembles an Awl,
A pumpkin-faced Gopoess sufforting a sºr ALL :
All these shall be there-how people will stare:
And envy herself, that our Title would blast
May smile at the motto—the first shall be tas?"
STANZAS,
occasioned by Loºp Bell amont's, Lapy hay's
AND or HER SRELETows, BEING DUG up in Foº
GeoReº (N. Y.) 1790.
TO sleep in peace when life is fled,
Where shall our mouldering bones belaid–
What care can shun—(I ask with tears)
The shovels of succeeding years!
Some have maintained, when life is gone,
This frame no longer is our own:
Hence doctors to our tombs repair,
And seize death's slumbering victims there.
Alas! what griefs must ºn endure :
Not even in roºts he rests secure :-
* Qui primus fuit nuncultimus-Motto on a certain cº-

SEVERAL OCCASIONS.
263
Time dims the splendours of a crown,
And brings the loftiest rampart down.
The breath, once gone, no art recalls.
Away we haste to vaulted walls:
Some future whim inverts the plain,
And stars behold our bones again.
Those teeth, dear girls—so much your care-
(With which noivory can compare)
Like these (that once were lady Hay's)
May serve the belles of future days.
Then take advice from yonder scull;
And, when the flames of life grow dull,
Leave not a rooth in either jaw,
Since dentists steal—and fear no law.
He that would court a sound repose,
To barren hills and deserts goes:
Where busy hands admit no sun,
Where he may doze, till all is done.
Yet there, even there tho' slyly laid,
Tisſolly to defy the spade :
Posterity invades the hill,
And plants our relics where she will.
But O' forbear the rising sight -
All care is past with them that die:
love gave, when they to fate resigned,
An opiate of the strongest kind:
Death is a sleep, that has no dreams:
In which all time a moment seems–
And skeletons perceive no pain
Till Nature bids them wake again.

264. POEMS ON
LINES,
occASIONED BY A LAW PASSED BY THE CORPORA-
TIox of New-York, EARLY IN 1790, FoR cutting
now N THE TREES IN THE STREETS or THAT CITY,
PREvious to JUNE 10, Following.
ºne crºrzew’s soºrtogur.
A MAN that owned some trees in town,
(And much averse to cut them down)
Finding the Law was full and plain,
No trees should in the streets remain,
One evening seated at his door,
Thus gravely talked the matter o’er:
* The fatal pay, dear trees, draws nigh,
When you must, like your betters, die,
Must die!—and every leaf will fade
That many a season lent its shade,
To drive from hence the summer's heat,
And make my porch a favourite seat.
* Thrice happy age, when all was new,
And trees untouched, unenvied grew,
When yet regardless of the axe.
They feared no law, and paid no tax.
The shepherd then at ease was laid,
Or walked beneath their cooling shade;
From slender twigs a garland wove,
Or traced his god within the grove;
Alas! those times are now forgot,
An iron age is all our lot:
Men are not now what once they were,
To hoard up gold is all their care:
The busy tribe old Plutus calls
Topepbled streets and painted walls;
Trees now to grow, is held a crime,
And these must perish in their prime:
* The trees that once our fathers reared.
And even the plundering Briton spared,

several occasions 265
When shivering herefull ofthe stood,
Or kept his bed for want of wood–
These trees, whose gently bending boughs
Have witnessed many a lover's vows,
When half afraid, and half in jest,
With Nature busy in his breast,
With many a sigh, he did not feign,
Beneath these boughs he told his pain,
Or coaxing here his nymph by night,
Forsook the parlour and the light,
In talking love, his greatest bliss
Tosqueeze her hand or steal a kiss–
These trees that thus have lent their shade,
And many a happy couple made,
These old companions, thus endeared,
Who never tattled what they heard,
Must these, indeed, be killed so soon—
Bemurdered by the tenth of June :
* But if my harmless trees must fall,
A fortune that awaits us all,
(All, all must yield to Nature's stroke,
And now a man, and now an oak)
Are those that round the churches grow
In this decree included too?
Must these, like common trees, be bled?
isit a crime to shade the dead?
Review the law, I pray, at least,
And have some mercy on the priest
Whoevery Sunday sweats in black
To make us steer the skyward track:
The church has lost enough, God knows
Plundered alike by friends and foes—
I hate such mean attempts as these–
Come—let the parson keep his trees.
* Yet things, perhaps are not so bad–
Perhaps, a reºnite may be had:
The vilest rogues that cut our throats.
Or knaves that counterfeit our notes,
When, by the judge their sentence passed.
The gallows proves their doom atlasts

266 POEMS ON
Swindlers and pests of every kind,
For weeks and months a res/lite find;
And shall such nuisances as they,
Who make all honest men their prey
Shall they for months avoid their doom.
And you, my trees, in all your bloom,
Who never injured small or great,
Be murdered at so short a date.
* Ye men of law, the occasion seize,
And name a counsel for the trees–
Arrest of judgment, sirs, I pray;
Excuse them till some future day:
These trees that such a nuisance are,
Next New-YEAR we can better spare,
To warm our shins, or boil the pot–
The Law, by then, will be forgot.”
ON THE
DEMOLITION OF FORT GEORGE.
ºw Neº-roºk—(1790.)
AS giants once, in hopes to rise,
Heaped up their mountains to the skies;
With Pelion piled on Ossa, strove
To reach the eternal throne of Jove;
So here the hands of ancient days
Their fortress from the earth did raise,
On whose proud heights, proud men to please.
They mounted guns and planted trees.
Those trees to lofty stature grown-
All is not right-they must come down.
Nor longer waste their wonted shade
Where Calden slept, or Tryon strayed

SEVERAL OCCASION.S.
Let him be sad that placed them there-
We shall a youthful race prepare;
Another grove shall bloom, we trust,
When this lies prostrate in the dust.
Where Dutchmen once, in ages past,
Huge walls and ramparts round them cast,
New fabrics raised, on new design,
Gay streets and halaces shall shine.
To foreign kings no more a slave
(Disgrace to Freedom's passing wave)
No flags we rear, we feign no mirth,
Nor prize the day that gave them birth.
While time degrades Palmyralow,
Augusta lifts her lofty brow—
While Europe falls to wars a prey,
Her monarchs here, should have no sway.
Another GEORGE shall here reside,
While Hudson's bold, unfettered tide
Well pleased to see this chief so nigh,
With livelier aspect passes by.
Along his margin, fresh and clean,
ºre long shall belies and beaux be seen,
Through moon-lightshades, delighted, stray,
To view the islands and the bay.
ºf evening dews no more afraid,
eclining in some favourite shade,
Each nymph, in rapture with her trees,
Shall sigh to quit the western breeze.
To barren his far southward showed,
hese noisy guns shall be removed,
No longer here a vain expense,
Where time has proved them no defence—
Advance, bright days make haste to crown
ith such fair scenes this honoured town.—
reedom shall find her charter clear,
ºnd ſilant her seat ºf commerce here.
Vol. II. A a

25s POEMS ON
NANNY,
"HE PHILADELPHIA HOUSE-KEEPER,
TO NABBY,
men ºriend in New-york.”
SIX weeks my dear mistress has been in a fret
And nothing but Congress will do for her yet:
She says they must come, or her senses she'll lose,
From morning till night she is reading the news,
And loves the dear fellows that vote for own town
(Since no one can relish New-York but a clown,
Where your beef is as lean, as if fattened on chaft,
And folks are too haughty to worship—a cALF)
She tells us as how she has read in her books
That God gives them meat, but the devil sends cooks:
And Grumbleton told us (who often shoots flying)
That fish you have plenty—but spoil them in frying;
That your streets are as crooked, as crooked can be,
Rightforward three perches he never could see
But his view was cut short with a house or a shop,
That stood in his way—and obliged him to stop.
Those speakers that wish for New-York to decide,
'Tis a pity that talents are so misapplied
My mistress declares she is vext to the heart
That genius should take such a pitiful part:
For the question, indeed, she is daily distrest,
And Geºry, I think, she will ever detest,
Who did all he could, with his tongue and his pen
To keep the dear Congress shut up in your prºx.
She insists, the expense of removing is small,
And that two or three thousands will answerit all,
If that is too much, and we're so very poor-
The passage by water is cheaper, be sure;
* Occasioned by the intended removal of the Supreme Legisle.
ture of the United States from New-York to Philadelphia–ame-
sure much agitated at the time the alºus written-1790,
SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 23.9
If people object the expence of a team,
Here's Fitch with his wherry, will bring them by
steam :
And, Nabby 1–if once he should take them on board,
The honour will be a sufficient reward.
But, as to myself. I vow and declare
I wish it would suit them to stay where they are;
I plainly foresee, that if once they remove
Throughout the long day, we shall drive, and be drove,
My madam’s red rag will ring like a bell,
And the hall and the parlour will never look well;
Such scouring will be as has never been seen,
We shall always be cleaning, and never be clean,
And threats in abundance will work on my fears,
Of blows on the back, and of cuffs on the ears-
Two trifles, at present, discourage her paw,
The fear of the Lord, and the fear of the law–
But if Congress arrive, she will have such a sway,
That gospel and law will be both done away;-
For the sake of a place I must bear all her din,
And if ever so angry, do nothing but grin:
So Congress, 1 home in your town will remain,
*dºnny will thank them again and again.
NABBY,
rºº ºr roºr novº ºper,
TO NANNY,
HER FRIEND IN PHILADELPHIA-
WELL, Nanny, I am sorry to find, since you writ
us, -
The Congress at last has determined to quitus;
sunow may begin with your dish-clouts and brooms,
To be scouting your knockers and scrubbing your -
Tooms;





240 POEMIS ON
As for us, my dear Nanny, we’re much in a pet,
And hundreds of houses will be to be let;
Our streets, that were justin a way to look clever,
Will now be neglected and nasty as ever;
Again we must fret at the Dutchified gutters
And pebble-stone pavements, that wear out our trot-
ters.-
My masterlooks dull, and his spirits are sinking,
From morning till night he is smoking and thinking
Laments the expence of destroying the fort,
And says, your great people are all of a sort-
He hopes and he prays they may die in a stall,
If they leave us in debt–for FEDERAL HALL-
And STRAP has declared, he has such regards,
He will go, if they go, for the sake of their beardº
Miss Letty, poor lady, is so in the pouts,
She values no longer our dances and routs,
And sits in a corner, dejected and pale,
As dull as a cat, and as lean as a rail –
Poor thing, I'm certain she's in a decay, -
Andall—because Congress Resolve—not to stay -
This Congress unsettled is, sure, a sad thing,
Seven years, my dear Nanny, they’ve been on the
wing:
My master would rather saw timber, or dig,
Than see them removing to Conegocheague,
Where the houses and kitchens are yet to be framed,
The trees to be felled, and the streets to be named:
Of the two, we had rather your town should rece”
'em-
So here, my dear Nanny, in haste I must leave 'em
I'm a dunce at inditing—and as I’m a sinner,
The beef is half raw—and the bell rings for dinnº-
SEVERAL, OCCASIONS. º
ON THE DEATH OF
DR. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN.
THUS, some tall tree that long hath stood
The glory of its native wood,
By storms destroyed, or length of years.
Demands the tribute of our tears.
The pile, that took long time to raise,
To dust returnsby slow decays:
But, when its destined years are o'er,
We must regret the loss the more.
So long accustomed to your aid,
The world laments your exit made;
So long befriended by your art,
Philosopher, 'tis hard to part.
When monarchs tumble to the ground,
Successors easily are found:
But, matchless FRANKLIN what a few
Can hope to rival such as you,
Who seized from kings their sceptred pride,
And turned the lightning's darts asideſ ".
EPISTLE
*Ron Dr. Franklin (prºceasºn) to His Poetical
PANEG Y RISTs, on SOME OF THEIR ABSUIRD COMPLI-
MENTS.
* GOOD Poets, why so full of pain,
Are you sincere—or do you feign?
Love for your tribe I never had.
Nor penned three stanzas, good or bad.
Erinuit cºlo fulmen, sceptrumque tyrannis
Vol. II. A. A 2.



272 POEMS ON
At funerals, sometimes, grief appears,
Where legacies have purchased tears:
'Tis folly to be sad for nought,
From me you never gained a groat.
To better trades I turned my views,
And never meddled with the muse;
Great things I did for rising States,
And kept the lightning from some pates.
This grand discovery, you adore it,
But ne'er will be the better for it:
You still are subject to those fires,
For poets' houses have no spires.
Philosophers are famed for pride;
But, pray, be modest—when I died,
No “sighs disturbed old ocean's bed,”
No “Nature wept” for Franklin dead!
That day, on which I left the coast,
A beggar-man was also lost:
If “Nature wept,” you must agree
She wept for him—as well as me.
There's reason even in telling lies–
In such profusion of her “sighs,”
She was too sparing of a tear-
In Carolina, all was clear:
And, if there fell some snow and sleet,
Why must it be my winding sheet?
Snows of have cloathed the Afrit plain,
Have melted, and will melt again.
Poets, I pray you, say no more,
Orsay what Nature said before;
That reason should your pens direct,
Or else you pay me no respect.
Letreason be your constant rule,
And Nature, trust me, is no fool-
When to the dust great men she brings,
Make ºn no-soº uncoºds things
SEVERAL, OCCASIONS. 273
THE BERGEN PLANTER.
ATTACHED to lands that ne'er deceived his hopes,
This rustic sees the seasons come and go,
His autumn's toils returned in summer's crops,
While limpid streams, to cool his herbage, flow;
And, if some cares intrude upon his mind,
They are such cares as heaven for man designed.
He to no pompous dome comes, cap in hand,
Where new-made 'squires affect the courtly smiles
Nor where Pomposo, midst his foreign band,
Extols the sway of kings, in swelling style,
With tongue that babbled when it should have hushed,
A head that never thought—a face that never blushed.
He on no party hangs his hopes or fears,
Nor seeks the vote that baseness must procure;
Nostall-fed Mammon, for his gold, reveres,
No splendid offers from his chests allure.
While showers descend, and suns their beams display,
The same to him, if Congress go or stay.
He at no levees watches for a glance,
Slave to disgusting, distant forms and modes)
Heeds not the herd at Buſo’s midnight dance,
Dullman’s mean rhymes, or Sawny's birth-day odes:
Follies, like these, he deems beneath his care,
And titles leaves for simpletons to wear.
Where wandering brooks from mountain sources roll.
He seeks at noon the waters of the shade,
Drinks deep, and fears no poison in the bowl
That Nature for her happiest children made:
And from whose clear and gently-passing wave
All drink alike—the master and the slave.
The scheming statesman shuns his homely door,
Who, on the miseries of his country fed,
Ne'er gianced his eye from that base pilfered store,
To view the sword, suspended by a thread–
Nor that “hand-writing,” graved upon the wall,
Which tells him—butin vain—º the sword may falº


274 POEMS ON
He ne'er was made a holiday machine,
Wheeled here and there by 'squires in livery clad,
Nor dreads the sons of legislation keen,
Hard-hearted laws, and penalties most sad–
In humble hope his littlefields were sown,
A trifle, in your eye—but all his own.
TO THE
DEMOCRATIC COUNTRY EDITORS,
ON A CHARGE OF ERIEER1-
YOU, Journalists, are bribed—that's clear,
And paid French millions by the year;
We see it in the coats you wear;
Such damning, such convincing proof
Of such a charge, is strong enough—
Your suits are made of costly stuff.
Dear boys' you lodge in mansions grand-
In time you’ll own six feet of land,
Where now the sexton has command.
Your lodging is in garret high;
But where your best possessions lie,
Yourselves know best—and HIM on high.
And have you had a foreign bribe –
Then, why so lean –shall we describe
The leanness of your honest tribe
Why did you not with Tories join
To hold the British king divine—
And all his mandates very ºne 2
Then had your faces shined with fat-
Then had you worn the gold-laced hat-
And-said your ſeasons—very ſº-
SEVERAL OCCASIONS, 275
Your lives are, now, continual trial,
Existence, constant self-denial,
To keep down some, who would be royal
For public good you wear out types,
For public good you get dry wines–
for public good you may get-strines.
one half your time in Federal court,
On libel charge—you're made a sport–
You pay your fees—nor dare retort.
All pleasure you are sworn to shun;
Are always cloistered, like a nun,
And glad to hide from Ragman's dun—
All night you sit by glare of lamp,
Like Willo’ Wisp in vapoury swamp,
To write of armies and the camp.
You write—compile—compile and write,
Till you have nearly lost your sight-
Then off to jail; and so, good night.
-
Turned out as poor as Christ-church rat,
Once more the trade you would be at
Which never yet made lean man fat.
You send your journals far and wide,
And though undone, and though belied;
You choose to take the patriot side.
Your works are in Kentucky found;
And there your politics go round–
And there you trust them many a pound.
At home, to folks residing near,
ou grant a credit, half a year;
And pine, meanwhile, on cakes and beer.
The time elapsed when friends should pay,
ou urge your dun from day to day;
And so you must—and so you may
ºne customer begins to fret,
And tells the dunner in a pet,
* Plague take the Printer and his debt:




276 POEMS ON
“ Ungrateful man—go hang-go burn-
* I read his paper night and morn.
* And now experience this return
* Sir! was I not among the first
* Who did my name on paper trust,
* To help this Journalist accursed?
* Thus am I used for having signed :
* But I have spirit, he shall find
* Ah me! the baseness of mankind ºf
Thus, on you strive with constant pain,
The kindest tell you, call again º-
And you their humble dupe remain.
Who aims to firosher–should be sold-
If bribes are offered, take the gold,
Mºor lºve to be forever fooled.
Salºº.
THE DEPARTURE :
ºccasion ºn By nº R.E.Mov AL or coxcº ES5
From New-roºrºo Prºper Para-ſlºgo.
FROM Hupson's banks, in proud array,
(Too mean to claim alonger stay)
Their new ideas to improve,
Behold the generous Congress move
Such thankless conduct much we feared,
When Timon's coach stood ready geered.
And HE-the foremost on the floor,
Stood pointing to the Delaware shore.
So long confined to little things,
They sighto be where Bavius sings.
Where Shorus builds his splendid pile.
And Bº's tawdry Seasons smile.

SEVERAL OCCASIONS. º
New chaplains, now, shallope their jaws,
New salaries grease unworthy paws :
Some reverend man, that turtle carves,
Will fatten, while the soldier starves.
The Yonken asks—but asks in vain-
“What demon bids them move again
“Whoever moves must suffer loss,
“And rolling stones collectino moss.
“ Have we not paid for chaplains' prayers,
“ That heaven might smile on state affairs?—
“Put some things up, pulled others down,
“And raised our streets through half the town?
tº Have we not, to our utmost, strove
“ That Congress might nothence remove—
“ At dull debates no silence broke,
“And walked on tip-toe while they spoke
tº Have we not toiled through cold and heat,
“ To make the FEDERAL PILE complete—
“ Thrown down our Fort, to give them air,
* And sent our guns, the devil knows where?
* Times change but Memory still recalls
* The DAY, when ruſhans scaled their walls—
* Sovereigns besieged by angry men,
* Mere prisoners in the town of PENNº
* Can they forget when, half afraid,
* The timorous Council, *lentino aid;
* But left them to the rogues that rob,
* The tender mercies of the mob
* Oh! if they can, their lot is cast;
* One hundred miles will soon be passed-
* THIS DAY the FEDERAL Doºre is cleared,
* To Paulus'-Hook the barge is steered,
* Where Timon's coach stands ready geered ſº
[1790.]
* See the history of those times.



373 POEMS ON
TO SYLVIUS :
oy THE Foºty of pyrrºwº Pozzº
OF all the fools that haunt our coast
The scribbling tribe I pity most:
Their's is a standing scene of woes.
And their's no prospect of repose.
Then, Sylvius, why this eager claim
To light your torch at Ciro’s flame?
To few she shews sincere regard,
And none, from her, should hope reward.
A garret high, dark dismal room,
Is still the pensive poets' doom:
Hopes raised to heaven must be their lot,
Yet bear the curse, to be forgot.
Hourly they deal with Grecian Jove,
And draw their bills on banks above:
Yet stand abashed, with all their fire,
When brought to face some country squire.
To mend the world, is still their aim :
The world, alas! remains the same,
And so must stand to every age,
Proofto the morals of the page:
The knave that keeps a tippling inn,
The red-nosed boy that deals out gin,
If aided by some paltry skill
May both be statesmen when they will.
The man that mends a beggar's shoes,
The quack that heals your negro's bruise,
The wretch that turns a cutler's stone,
Ilave wages they can call their own:
The head, that plods in trade's domains.
Gets something to reward its pains:
But win-that does the world beguile,
Takes for its pay-an empty smile.

SEVERAL, OCCASIONS. 2rº
Yet each presumes his works will rise,
And gain a name that never dies;
From earth, and cold oblivion freed,
Immortal, in the poets' creed .
Can Reason in that bosom reign
Which fondly feeds a hope so vain,
Whenevery age that passes by
Beholds a crowd of poets die!
Poor Sappho’s fate shall Milton know–
His scenes of grief and tales of woe
No honours, that all Europe gave
No merit—shall from ruin save.
To all that write and all that read
Fate shall, with hasty step, succeed! -
Even Shakespeake's page, his mirth, his tears
May sink beneath this weight of years.
Old Spºnsºn’s doom shall Pope, be thine
The music of each moving line
Scarce bribes an age or two to stay,
Admire your strain—then flit away.
The people of old Chaucer’s times
Were once in raptures with his rhymes
But Time—that over verse prevails,
To other ears tells other tales.
Why then so sad, dear rhyming friends-
One common fate on both attends,
The bards, that sooth the statesman's ear,
And him—who finds no audience there.
Mere structures formed of common earth,
Not they from heaven derive their birth,
Or why through life, like vagrants, pass
ºmingle with the mouldering mass-
Of all the souls, from Jove that came
o animate this mortal frame,
ºf all the myriads, on the wing,
ow few can taste the Muses spring
º Anus, of mercantile skill,
Withou, whose aid the world stands still,
Vol. II. B. b.

280 POEMS ON
And by whose wonder-working play
The sun goes round–Ohis flatterers say)
Sejanus has in house declared
“These States, as yet, can boast no bard,
And all the sing-song of our clime
is merely nonsense, fringed with rhyme.”
With such a bold, conceited air
When such assume the critic’s chair,
Low in the dust is genius laid,
The muses with the man in trade.
Then, Sylvius, come-let you and I
On Neptune's aid, once more rely :
Perhaps the muse may still impart
Her balm to ease the aching heart.
Though cold might chill and storms dismay.
Yet Zoilus will be far away :
With us at least, depart and share
No garret—but resentment there.
ON
A TRAVELLING SPECULATOR.
ON scent of game, from town to town he flew.
The soldier's curse pursued him on his way:
Care in his eye, and anguish on his brow,
He seemed a sea-hawk, watching for his prey.
with soothing words the widow’s mite he gained.
with piercing giance watched misery’s dark abode.
Filched paper scraps while yet a scrap remained
Bought where he must, and cheated where he could
vast loads amassed of scrip, and who knows what
Potosi's wealth seemed lodged within his clutch-
But wealth has wings (he knew) and instant boug”
The prancing steed, gay harness, and gilt coach:
SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 251
- -
One Sunday morn, to church we saw him ride
In glittering state—alack and who but he-
The following week, with Madam at his side,
Toroutes they drove—and drank Imperial tea!
In cards and fun the live-long day they spent,
With songs and smut prolonged the midnight feast.
If plays were had, to plays they constant went
Where Madam’s top-knot rose a foot at least.
Three weeks, and more, thus passed in airs of state,
The fourth beheld the mighty bubble fail—
And he, who countless millions owned so late
Stopt short—and closed his triumphs in a ºn
ELEGIAC LINES
ON
A THEological scrip. Mongº.
NScripº (not scºrerunt) he was fond to pod,
Scrºft was his prayer-book, scrºft his word of God:
ºrth was his joy, and scrin his dear delight
ºudied by day, and this he read by night:
When dames for comfºrt came, with hanging lip,
Them he consoled, and took his text from sººn.
If parties raged, and deacons catched the pip,
He stood secure, and put his trustin scriº.
If he to heaven, by chance, should find his way,
hus to some sprite, methinks, I hear him say
ºn hopes his ghostship might be led to dip)
"Come, Mister Gabriel, will you buy some script
Now gloomy death confines him, to the dust,
she resigns, as all his brethren must -
And priests shall sing (when they entomb old Grº
Striking their pensive bosoms–Here lies Scrºl
-
* Serip (or script a kind of paper security so called—an ºbject
ºf great speculation at the time the above was written.-1700.





Q92 POEMS ON
A WARNING TO AMERICA.
REMOVED from Europe’s feuds, a hateful scene
(Thank heaven, such wastes of ocean roll between)
Where tyrant kings in bloody schemes combine,
And each forebodes in tears, Man is no longer mine!
Glad we recall the pay that bade us first
Spurn at their power, and shun their wars accurst;
Pitted and gaffed no more for England’s glory
Nor made the tag-rag-bobtail of their story.
Something still wrong in every system lurks,
Something imperfect haunts all human works-
Wars must be hatched, unthinking men to fleece,
Or we, this day, had been in perfect peace,
With double bolts our Janus' temple shut,
Not terror reigned through each back-woods-man's
hut,
No rattling drums assailed the peasant’s ear
Nor Indian yells disturbed our sad frontier,
Nor gallant chiefs, gainst Indian hosts combined
Scaped from the trap—to leave their tails behind
Peace to all feuds –and come the happier day
When Reason's sun shall light us on our way :
When erring man shall all his RIGHTS retrieve
No despots rule him, and no priests deceive,
*Till then, Columbia —watch each stretch of power
Nor sleep too soundly at the midnight hour,
By flattery won, and lulled by soothing strains,
Silenus took his map—and waked in chains-
In a soft dream of smooth delusion led
Unthinking Gallia bowed her dropping head
To tyrants' yokes—and met such bruises there.
As now must take three ages to repair;
Then keep the paths of dear-bought freedom clea".
Nor slavish systems grant admittance here ſlº.
SEVERAL OCCASIONS 285.
TO SYLVIUS,
ON
HIS PREP, ARIA/G TO LEAVE THE TO WA".
CAN love of fame the gentle muse inspire
Where he that hoards the most has all the praise;
Where avarice, and her tribe, each bosom fire,
All heap the enormous store for rainy days;
Proving by such perpetual round of toil
That man was born to grovel on the soil?
Expect not, in these times of rude renown
That verse, like your’s, will have the chance to please:
-No taste for plaintive elegy is known,
Nor lyric ode—none care for things like these-
Gold, only gold, this niggard age delights,
That honours none but money-catching wights.
Sink not beneath the mean abusive strain
Of puny wits, dull sycophants in song,
Who, post, or place, or one poor smile to gain,
Besiege Mambrino's door, and round him throng
Like insects creeping to the morning sun
To enjoy his heat—themselves possessing none.
All must applaud your choice, to quit a stage
Where knaves and fools in every scene abound;
Where modest worth no patron can engage—
ºutboisterous folly walks her noisy round;
ºme narrow-hearted demi-god adores,
And Fortune's path with servile step explores.
Vol. II. B. b. 2.



284 POEMs ON
THE PXE.A.MID
OF THE
FIFTEEN AMERICAN STATES.
BARBARA Pyramidum sileat miracula Memphis ;-
Heu, male servili marmora structa manuſ
Liberajam, ruſhtis, Milantias ora, catenis,
Jacºat of us Phario marmore nobilius:
Vangue Columbiade, fact monumenta harantes,
Vulgarem ºfternunt sºmere materiam :
Magnanim: . coelum scandant, ferºurague sawa
Quodvincat, celsa de Jovi's arce ſet unt.
Audaic inde cohors stellis E plurusus unum
ºrdua Pyramidos tolli ad astra caſhut.
Ergo, Temſins edar, quamvis duriºsima sava
Sara domas morsº, miliº juris hates :
Dumque ſolo solitis cognata mitoriºus arden:
Sidera fulgebit Pyramis illa suis'
LIN IMITATION OF THE PRECEIDING Lines.
NO more let barbarous MEMPHis boast
Huge structures reared by servile hands-
A nation on the Atlantic coast
Fettered no more in foreign bands,
A nobler Pyn AMID displays
Than Egypt's tyranny could raise.
* The latin verses were written by Mr. John Cºry-ſur-
merly of Philadelphia.
SEVERAL OCCASIONS. º
Columbia’s sons, to extend the fame
Of their exploits to future years,
No marble from the quarry claim,
But, soaring to the starry spheres,
Materials seek in Jove's blue sky
To endure when brass and marble die!
Arrived among the shining host,
Fearless, the proud invaders spoil
From countless gems, in ºther lost,
These stans, to crown their mighty toil :
To heaven a pyramip they rear
And point the summit with a star.
Old wasteful Time though still you gain
Dominion o'er the brazen tower, -
On THIS your teeth will gnaw in vain,
Finding its strength beyond their power .
While kindred stars in ºther glow,
This Pynamid will saint pºlow . [1792;
on THE
APPROACHING DISSOLUTION
or ºr AMSA ºr A wººd ººrs Dicºſov ºn Mººrcº.
FROM Britain's grasp forever freed,
Columbia glories in the deed:
From her rich soil, each tyrant flown,
She finds this fair estate her own.
But still o'er tracts of vast extent
European sway she must resent:
Whence came their right—what do they here
But force old laws, to tyrants dear?
How small a part of that domain
is yet unbound from Europe's chain!



286 POEMS ON
Penu beneath a monarch sighs,
And Mexico in fetters lies'
Throughout the wide Canadian waste
(In British bondage still embraced)
The native finds his vigour broke,
And bends beneath the galling yoke.
To abridge the sway of foreign lands,
Time, with his years, leads up new bands:
To annul the power of Europe's kings,
To life, once more, some WAR ºn springs:
Once more, to ARMs –Fate's herald cries—
And other Washingtons may rise!
TO MR. BLANCHARD,
*HE CEL enraº D A E Row Auº-
ON HIS ASCENT IN A BALLOON
show THE JAIL-y AR p in PHILADELPHIA : JAN tº
Ry 9TH, 1793.
BY Science taught, on silken wings
Beyond our grovelling race you rise,
And, soaring from terrestrial things,
Explore a passage to the skies-
Who would not thus exalted sail,
And rise, with you, beyond the Air .
Ah! when you rose, impelled by fear,
Each bosom heaved a thousand sighs;
To you each female lent a tear,
And held the kerchief to her eyes:
All hearts still followed, as you flew,
All eyes admired a sight so new.
Whoe'er shall thus presume to fly,
While downward with disdain they look.
SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 287
Will own this journey, through the sky,
The dearest jaunt they ever took ;
And choose, next time, without reproach,
A humbler seat in Inskeep’s coach.
The birds, that cleave the expanse of air,
Admiring, view your globe full-blown,
And, chattering round the painted car,
Complain your flight out-does their own :
Beyond their track you proudly swim,
Nor fear the loss of life or limb.
The geese, that from Acadia” fly
To seek some southern warm abode,
Ask, what new brother of the sky
Attempts, with them, the aerial road –
Although they gabble, toil, and strain
To catch you—they will strive-in vain.
How vast the height, how grand the scene,
That your enraptured eye surveys,
When, towering in your gay machine,
You leave the astonished world to gaze.
And, wandering in the aetherial blue,
Our eyes, in vain, your course pursue.
The one of pay, how dazzling bright!
In paler radiance gleams the Moos,
And TERRA, whence you took your flight,
Appears to you—a mere balloon:
Its noisy crew no longer heard,
Towns, cities, forests, disappeared.
Yet, travelling through the azure road,
On art's sublimest, noblest plan,
Reflect, our humble, safe abode
is all that Nature meant for man :
Take in your sails before you freeze.
And sink again among the trees.
Acadie or Acadia, so called by the French while they possessed
the Peninsula of Nºva Scotia.


288 POEMS ON
ON
DR. SANGRADO’S FLIGHT
From PHILADELPHIA, IN THE TIME of The rºl. Loº.
reper-1793.
ON prancing steed, with spunge at nose,
From town behold Sangrado fly ,
Camphor and Tar where'er he goes
Th’ infected shafts of death defy–
Safe in an atmosphere of scents.
He leaves us to our own defence.
‘Twas right to fly! for well, Iºween,
In Stygian worlds, all scribes agree,
No blushing blossom ever was seen,
Or running brook, or budding tree:
No splendid meats, no flowing bowls,
Smile on the meagre feast of souls:
No sprightly songs, to banish grief,
No balls the Elysian beaus prepare,
And he that throve on rounds of beef,
On onion shells shall famish there—
Monarchs are there of little note,
And Caesar wears a shabby coat.
Chloes on earth, of air and shape, -
Whose eyes destroyed poor love-lorn wights,
There lower their topsails to the cap,
Rigin their booms and furl their kites:-
Where Cupid’s bow was never bent,
What lover asks a maid’s consent?
All this, and more, Sangrado knew,
(In Lucian is the story told)
Took horse-clapped spurs—and of he flew
Leaving his sick to fret and scold;
Some soldiers, thus, to honour lost, -
In day of battle quit their post.
SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 289
THOUGHTS ON THE
EUROPEAN WAR SYSTEM .
By H. SALEM.
THE People in Europe are much to be praised,
That in fighting they choose to be passing their days;
If their wars were abolished, there's room to suppose
Our Printers would growl, for the want of New-News.
May our tidings of warfare be ever from thence,
Nor that flage be supplied at Columbia’s expence:
No kings shall rise here, at the nod of a court,
4mbition, or Pride, with men's lives for to sport.
In such a display of the taste of the times-
The murder of millions—their quarrels and crimes,
A horrible system of ruin we scan,
ºf history, truly descriptive of man :
A BEING, that Nature designed to be blest-
With abundance around him—yet rarely at rest
A Being, that lives but a moment in years,
Yet wasting his life in contention and wars;
A Being, sent hither all good to bestow,
Yet filling the world with oppression and woe:
But, consider, ye sages, (and pray be resigned)
What ills would attend a reform of mankind–
Were wars at an end, and no nation made thinner,
My neighbour, the gun-sºº, would go without din-
ner -
The Printers, themselves, for employment would fail.
And soldiers, by thousands, be starving in jail.





290 POEMS ON
ELEGY
O.M." THE DEMTH OF A BLACKSMITH.
WITH the nerves of a Sampson, this son of the
sledge,
By the anvil his livelihood got;
With the skill of old Vulcan could temper an edge;
And struck—while his iron was hot. -
By forging he lived, yet never was tried,
Or condemned by the laws of the land;
But still it is certain, and can’t be denied,
He often was burnt in the hand.
With the sons of St. Crispin no kindred he claimed.
With the last he had nothing to do;
He handled no awl, and yet in his time
Made many an excellent shoe.
He blew up no coals of sedition, but still
His bellows was always in blast;
And we will acknowledge (deny it who will)
That one Vice, and but one, he possessed.
No actor was he, or concerned with the stage,
No audience, to awe him, appeared; -
Yet oft in his shop (like a crowd in a rage)
The voice of a hissing was heard.
Tho' steelºng was certainly part of his cares,
In thieving he never was fºund;
And, tho’ he was constantly beating on bars,
No vessel he e'er ran aground.
Alas and alack and what more can I say
Of Vulcanº's unfortunate son º
The priestand the sexton have bore him away,
And the sound of his hammer is done.
SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 291
ON THE DEMOLITION
OF THE FRENCH MONARCHY.
FROM Bourbon's brow the crown removed,
Low in the dust is laid;
And, parted now from all she loved,
Maria’s” beauties fade:
What shall relieve her sad distress,
What power recall that former state
When drinking deep her seas of bliss,
She smiled, and looked so sweet!
With aching heart and haggard eye
She views the palace, towering high,
Where, once, were passed her brightest days,
And nations stood, in wild amaze,
Louis' to see you eat.
This gaudy vision to restore
Will fate its laws repeal,
Or, cruel despots rise once more
To plan a new Bastille
Will, from their sheathes, ten thousand blades;
In glittering vengeance start
“To mow down slaves, and slice off heads,
Taking a monarch’s part?–
Ah no –the heavens this hope refuse;
Despots: they send you no such news—
Nor Conde, fierce, nor Frederick, stout,
Nor Catharine brings this work about
Nor Brunswick’s warlike art:
Not sell that once, with fire and sword,
This western world alarmed:
Throughout ourlands whose thunders roared,
Whose legions round us swarmed—
* Maria Antoinette, late queen of France.
† Thuilleries—within view of which the royal family of France
were at this time imprisoned. 1792.
* Alluding to Mr. Edmund Burke's rant upon this subject
George III.
Vol II. C. c.



292 POEMS ON
Once more his tyrant arm invades
A race* that dare be free :
His Myrmidons, with murdering blades,
In one base cause agree –
Ill fate attend on every scheme
That tends to darken Reason’s beam :
And, rising with gigantic might
In Virtue’s cause, I see unite
Worlds under FREEdom’s rºute
Valour, at length, by Fortune led,
The Rights of Man restores;
And GALLIA, now from bondage freed,
Her rising sun adores:
On EQUAL RIGHTS, her fabric planned,
Storms idly round it rave,
Nor longer breathes in Gallic land
A monarch, or a slave
At distance far, and self-removed
From all he owned and all he loved,
See —turned his back on Freedom’s blaze,
In foreign lands the emigrant strays,
Or finds an early grave!
Enrolled with these—and close immured,
The gallant chief is found,
He, whom admiring crowds adored,
Through either world renowned,
Here, bold in arms, and firm in heart,
He helped to gain our cause,
Yet could not from a tyrant part,
But, turned to embrace his laws –
Ah! hadst thou stayed in fair Auveness ºf
And Tºurn from PAINE wouchsafed to learn;
There happy, honoured, and retired,
Both hemispheres had still admired,
Still hailed you, all applause:
Seel-doomed to fare on famished steeds.
The rude Hungarians fly;
Brunswick, with drooping courage leads
Death’s meagre family:
* The French Republicans. - -
+ La Fayette; at this time in the Prussian prison of Spandº
The province ºf France, where the Marquis’s family-estate º

SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 29s
-
In dismal groups, o'er hosts of dead,
Their madness they bemoan,
No friendly hand to give them bread,
No Thionville their own
The Gaul, enraged, as they retire
Hurls at their heads his blaze of fire–
What hosts of Frederick's reeking crew
Dying, have bid the world adieu,
To dogs their flesh been thrown!
Escaped from death, a mangled train
In scattered bands retreat:
Where bounding on Silesia's plain,
The Despot” holds his seat;
With feeble step, I see them go
The heavy news to tell
Where Oder's lazy waters flow,
Or glides the swift Moselle;
Where Rhine his various journey moves
Through marshy lands and ruined groves,
Or, where the vast Danubian flood
(So often stained by Austrian blood)
Foams with the autumnal swell.
But will they not some tidings bear
Of Freedom’s sacred flame,
And will not groaning millions hear
The long abandoned name?–
Through ages past, their spirits broke,
I see them spurn old laws,
Indignant, burst the Austrian yoke,
And clip the Eagle's claws:
From shore to shore, from sea to sea
They join, to set the wretched free,
And, driving from the servile court
Each titled slave—they help support
The Democratic Cause
O. Falance the world to thee must owe
A debt they ne'er can pay:
The RIGHTs of MAs you bid them know,
And kindle Reason's Day!
* The Monarch of Prussia.
† The imperial standard of Germany.

2.94. POEMS ON
-
Columbia, in your friendship blest,
Your gallant deeds will hail-
On the same ground our fortunes rest,
Must flourish, or must fail:
But—should all Europe's slaves combine
Against a cause so fair as thine,
And Asia aid a league so base-
Defeat would all their aims disgrace,
AND LIBERTy PREvail.
First ſublished in the ºvational Gazette, Philadelphia,
December 19, 1792.
ON
MR, PAINE'S RIGHTS OF MAN.
THUS briefly sketched the sacred Rights of Max,
How inconsistent with the Royal plan
Which for itself exclusive honour craves,
Where some are masters born, and millions slaves.
With what contempt must every eye look down
On that base, childish bauble called a crown,
The gilded bait, that lures the crowd, to come,
Bow down their necks, and meet a slavish doom;
The source of half the miseries men endure,
The quack that kills them, while it seems to cure.
Roused by the REason of his manly page,
Once more shall PAINE a listening world engage:
From Reason's source, a bold reform he brings,
In raising up mankind, he pulls down kings,
Who, source of discord, patrons of all wrong,
On blood and murder have been fed too long :
Hid from the world, and tutored to be base,
The curse, the scourge, the ruin of our race,
Their's was the task, a dull designing few,
To shackle beings that they scarcely knew,
Who made this globe the residence of slaves.
And built their thrones on systems formed by knaves
-Advance, bright years, to work their final fall.
And haste the period that shall crush them all-

SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 295
Who, that has read and scanned the historic page
But glows, at every line, with kindling rage,
To see by them the rights of men aspersed,
Freedom restrained, and Nature's law reversed,
Men, ranked with beasts, by monarchs willed away;
And bound young fools, or madmen to obey:
Now driven to wars, and now oppressed at home,
Compelled in crowds o'er distant seas to roam,
From India’s climes the plundered prize to bring
To glad the strumpet, or to glut the king.
Columbia, hail! immortal be thy reign:
Without a king, we till the smiling plain;
Without a king, we trace the unbounded sea,
And traffic round the globe, through each degree;
Each foreign clime our honoured flag reveres,
Which asks no monarch, to support the stars:
Without a king, the laws maintain their sway,
While honour bids each generous heart obey.
Be our's the task the ambitious to restrain,
And this great lesson teach—that kings are vain;
That warring realms to certain ruin haste,
That kings subsist by war, and wars are waste:
So shall our nation, formed on Virtue’s plan,
Remain the guardian of the Rights of Man,
A vast Republic, famed through every clime,
Without a king, to see the end of time. [1792.
--
-
Vol. II. C. c 2

296 POEMS ON
ON THE MEMORABLE
NAVAL ENGAGEMENT
Between THE REPUBLIcAN FRIGATE L'AMBUS-
CADE, captain Bompano ; AND THE BRIrish
Roy AL FRIGATE BOSTON, captain Countsev,
off this coast of New-JER sex.- 1792.1
RESOLVED for a chace,
All Frenchmen to face,
Bold Boston from Halifax sailed,
With a full flowing sheet,
The pride of the fleet,
Not a vessel she saw, but she hailed;
With Courtney, commander, who never did fear,
Nor returned from a fight with “a flea in his ear.”
As they steered for the Hook,
Each swore by his book,
* No prayers should their vengeance retard;
* They would plunder and burn,
* They would never return
“ Unattended by CAPTAIN Bowie and .
* No Gaul can resist us, when once we arouse,
* We’ll drown the monsieurs in the wash of our
---
bows.
A sail now appeared,
When toward her they steered,
Each crowned with his Liberty-Caft ;
Under colours of France did they boldly advance,
And a small privateer did entrap-
The time may have been when their nation was bravº
But now, their best play is to cheat and deceive.
Arrived at the spot
Where they meant to dispute,
Thus Courtney sent word, in a heat:
* Since fighting's our trade.

several occasions. 297
º
Their bold Ambuscade
Must be sunk, or compelled to retreat:
Tell captain Bompard, if his stomach’s for war,
To advance from his port, and engage a bold tarº
-
-
--
Brave captain Bompard
When this challenge he heard,
Though his sails were unbent from the yards,
Histopmasts struck down,
And his men half in town;
Yet sent back his humble regards–
The challenge accepted; all hands warned on board,
Bent, their sails, swore revenge, and the frigate un-
moored.
The Boston, at sea,
Being under their lee,
For windward manoeuvred in vain;
*Till night coming on,
Both lay by till dawn,
Then met on the watery plain,
The wind at north-east, and a beautiful day,
And the hearts of the Frenchmen in trim for the fray.
So, to it they went,
With determined intent
The fate of the day to decide
By the virtues of powder;
(No argument louder
Was ever to a subject applied)
A Gaul with a Briton in battle contends,
Let them stand to their guns, and we’ll see how it ends
As the Frenchman sailed past,
Boston gave him a blast,
Glass bottles, case knives, and old nails,
A score of round shot,
And the devil knows what,
To cripple his masts and his sails.
The Boston supposed it the best of her play
To prevent him from charing—if she ran away.
The Frenchman most cool.
(No hot-headed fool)

298 - POEMS ON
Returned the broadside in a trice;
So hot was the blast,
He disabled one mast,
And gave them some rigging to splice,
Some holes for to plug, where the bullets had gone,
Some yards to replace, and some heads to put on.
Three glasses, and more,
Their cannons did roar,
Shot flying in horrible squads;
*Midst torrents of smoke,
The Republic As spoke,
And frightened the Anglican gods:
Their frigate so mauled, they no longer defend her,
And, Courtney shot down—they bawled out to surren-
der .
* O. la what a blunder
* To provoke this French thunder .
* We think with the devil he deals-
* But since we dislike
* To surrender and strike,
* Letus try the success of our heels:
* We may save the king's frigate by running away,
* The Frenchman will have us—all hands-if we
-->
* stay :
So, squaring their yards.
On all captain Bompards
A volley of curses they shed—
Having got their piscº ARGE,
They bore away large,
While the Frenchman pursued, as they fled.
But vain was his haste—while his sails he repaired.
He ended the fray in a chace–
The Gaul got the best of the fight, 'tis declared:
The Briton—the best of the race.

SEVERAL OCCASIONS. 2.99
LINES,
ºr H. Salem, on his rerunn from calcuºrºa.
YOUR men of the land, from the king to Jack Ketch,
All join in supposing the sailor a wretch,
That his life is a round of vexation and woe,
With always too much or too little to do:
In the dead of the night, when other men sleep,
He starboard and larboard, his watches must keep;
Imprisoned by Neptune, he lives like a dog,
And to know where he is, must depend on a Log,
Must fret in a calm, and be sad in a storm ;
In winter much trouble to keep himself warm :
Through the heat of the summer pursuing his trade.
No trees, but his topmasts, to yield him a shade:
Then, add to the list of the mariner's evils,
The water corrupted the bread full of weevils,
Salt junk to be eat, be it better or worse,
And, often bull beef of an Irishman’s horse:
Whosoever is free, he must still be a slave,
(Despotic is always the rule on the wave ;)
Not relished on water, your lords of the main
Abhor the republican doctrines of PAINE,
And each, like the despot of Prussia, may say
That his crew has no right, but the right to obey.
Such things say the lubbers, and sigh when they’ve
said 'em,
But things are not so bad as their fancies persuade'em-
There ne'er was a task but afforded some ease,
Nora calling in life, but had something to please.
If the sea has its storms, it has also its calms,
A time to sing songs and a time to sing psalms-
Yes—give me a vessel well timbered and sound,
Her bottom good plank, and in rigging well-found,
If her spars are but staunch, and her oakham swelled
tight,
From tempests and storms I'll extract some delight-
At sea I would rather have Neptune my jailor,
Than alubber on shore, that despises a sailor.

300 POEMS ON
Do they ask me what pleasure I find on the sea?–
Why, absence from landis a pleasure to me:
A hamper of porter, and plenty of grog,
A friend, when too sleepy, to give me a jog,
A coop that will always some poulty afford,
Some bottles of gin, and no parson on board,
A crew that is brisk when it happens to blow,
One compass on deck and another below,
A girl, with more sense than the girl at the head,
To read me a novel, or make up my bed- -
The man that has these, has a treasure in store
That millions possess not, who live upon shore:
But if it should happen that commerce grew dull,
Or Neptune, ill-humoured, should batter our hull,
Should damage my cargo, or heave me aground,
Or pay me with farthings instead of a pound:
Should I always be left in the rear of the race,
And this beforever—forever the case;
Why then, if the honest plain truth I may tell,
I would clew up my topsails, and bid him farewell.
STANZAS,
PUBLISHED AT THE PROCESSION
TO THE TOMB OF THE PATRIOTS,
*N THE vicinity of The For MER stations of TH+.
PRISON SHIPS, AT NEW-YORK-
BENEATH these banks, along this shore,
And underneath the waters, more
Forgotten corpses rest;
More bones by cruelty consigned
To death, than shall be told mankind
To chill the feeling breast:

SEVERAL OCCASIONS, 301
More bones of those who, dying here
In floating dungeons, anchored near,
A prey to fierce disease,
Than fame in her recording page
Will tell some late enquiring age,
When telling things like these,
Ah me! whatills, what sighs, what groans,
What spectre forms, what moving moans,
What woes on woes were found;
When here oppressed, insulted, crossed,
The vigour of the soul was lost
In miseries thickening round.
The youths of firm undaunted mind,
To climate nor to coast confined,
All misery taught to bear-
I saw them, as the sail they spread,
I saw them by misfortune led
To capture, and to care.
Though night and storms were round them cast,
They climbed the well-supported mast,
And reefed the fluttering sail;
Though thunders roared and lightnings glared,
They toil, nor death, nor danger feared,
They braved the loudest gale.
GREAT Cause, that brought them all their woe:
Thou, Freedom!—bade their spirits glow;
But forced, at last, to yield,
Died in despair each sickening crew :
They vanished from the world—but you,
Columbia, kept the field.
They sunk, unpitied, in their bloomy-
They scarcely found a shallow tomb
To hide the naked bones:
For, feeble was the nervous hand
That once could toil, or once command
The force of Neptune’s sons.
In aid of that immortal cause
Which spurned at England's tyrant laws, -

302 POEMS, &c.
These passed the troubled main;
They dared the seas she called her own,
To meet the ruffians of a throne,
And honour's purpose gain.
All generous—while that power was proved,
To war the brave adventurers moved,
And catched the seaman’s art,
Met on their own domain, the crew
Of foreign slaves, that never knew
The indefendent heart.
Thou, INDEPEN prºce, vast design;
The efforts of the brave were thine,
When doubtful all, and dark ;
It was a chaos to explore :
It seemed all sea, without a shore,
Not on that sea anark.
For you, the young, the firm, the brave,
Too often met an early grave,
- Unnoticed and unknown:
On naked shores were seen to lie,
In scorching heats were doomed to die
With agonizing groan.
By strength, or chance, if some survived
Disease, which hosts of life deprived,
That life they should devote,
To venture all in Freedom's cause:
To combat tyrants, and their laws,
So felt near this sad spot.
Yes—and the spirit which began,
(We swear by all that’s greatin man)
That spirit shall go on,
To brighten and illume the mind,
Till tyrants vanish from mankind,
Ann Tynanny is none.
Exp or the sº cond volunº-
CONTENTS OF VOL. II.
ADDRESS to the Americans of the United
States, - - - -
Capt. Joshua Barney’s Invitation, . -
Song, on Capt. Barney’s victory over the Ge-
neral Monk, - - -
The Crows and the Carrion, a medical story,
Lines written in a very small garden,
To a Democratic Editor, -
George the Third's Soliloquy, -
A Dialogue between George and Foº,
Address to Crispin O'Conner, a back-woods-
many - - - - -
Crispin O'Conner's Answer, - -
A Satire, in answer to a hostile attack,
To Myrtalis, on her lightning wires,
Nereus and Thetis—real characters,
Megara and Altavola, - - -
On the Death of a Masonic Master Builder,
The British Prison Ship, - -
On Capt. J. P. Jones’s Victory over the Sera-
phis, - - - - -
An Ancient Prophecy
A Usurer's Prayer, . . -
Address to the commander in chief officers,
and soldiers of the American army, 1781.
A New-York Tory to his friend in Philadel-
phia, - - - -
To Lord Cornwallis, at York, Virginia, -
Dunmore and Germaine's Dialogue at Lon-
don, -
Vol II. D. p.
Page.
10
12
13
14.
16
20
22
º
27.
28
29
-
-
º




li CONTENTS.
Lord Cornwallis to Sir Henry Clinton, -
On the fall of Lord Cornwallis and his army,
On the Americans who fell in the battle of the
Eutaw Springs, . - -
To an Old Man, - - - -
Prologue to a theatrical Entertainment, -
Stanzas on the Ruins of a Country inn,
Prince William Henry, the Royal Adven-
turer, - - - - -
Lord Dunmore's Petition to the Virginians,
On the Title of Rivington's Royal Gazette be-
ing scarcely legible, - -
On his new, and more elegant titular types.
On his newly engraved king's arms for the
Royal Gazette, . . - -
A Speech that should have been spoken by
the British King, - -
Rivington's last Will and Testament
Suicide: the imbecility of the human mind,
The Political Balance ; or, Fates of Britain
and America compared. . - -
On a Honey Bee, drinking from a glass of
willº- - - - -
To the Gougers; in some of the Southern
States. . - -
Address to a Scientific Pig,
Sir Henry Clinton's Invitation, - -
A Dialogue at Hyde-Park Corner, in London,
On the royal sloop of war, General Monk,
Truth anticipated, a Rivingtonian Dialogue,
On Sir Henry Clinton's Recall, - -
Sir Guy Carlton's Address to the Americans
Modern Idolatry, or English Quixotism, -
The Projectors. - - - -
On General Robertson's Proclamation, 1782.
Gen. Arnold's Departure,
A Picture of the Times,
Prince William Henry's Soliloquy,
The Political Weathercock,
Beelzebub's Remonstrance.
Page.
64.
65
70
71
74.
75
77
79
80
8
92



CONTENTS.
iii.
The Refugee's Petition to Sir Guy Carlton,
Sir Guy’s Answer, - -
Rivington's Reflections, - - -
Political Biography; or, Hugh Gaine's Life,
On the Departure of the British from Charles-
ton, 1782, - - - -
On the Equestrian feats at Rickett's Circus,
On the British king's speech, recommending
peace with America,
Manhattan City, a Picture, . - -
A Renegado Epistle, - -
Rivington’s Confessions, . . -
The American Siberia, - -
On General Washington’s Arrival in Phila-
delphia, 1783, . - - -
A Newsman’s Address, - - -
The Triumphal Arch, -
A Scandinavian war song, -
Mars and Venus, - - -
Pewter Platter Alley, in Philadelphia,
The Hurricane, - - - -
On the Death of General Joseph Rºo, -
The Five Ages. - - - -
A Renegado Epistle to the Independent Ame-
ricans, - - -
On the Emigration to America, and peopling
the western country, -
On the death of Colonel Laurens of South
Carolina, - . -
Lines to a Disconsolate Lower, - -
On the Vicissitudes of Things. -
On the first Ship of Independent America,
that sailed to China, -
Esperanza’s March, - -
The Newsmonger, a real character,
To a concealed Royalist on a Malevolent ºt-
tack, - - - -
To the concealed Royalist, ºn his second at-
tack, - - - - -
To the Concealed Royalist, on his Farewell,
To an Unveiled Royalist, - -
Page.
123
124
125
Cº.
11
11.3
144.
14.6
147
50
sº
158
16.
16-
lºº,
º,
60
Gº
169
170
17




w CONTENTS.
To the Keeper of the King's Water Works,
near Kingston, in Jamaica, -
To Sir Toby, a Jamaica Sugar Planter, -
Lines written at Port Royal, Jamaica, -
The American Demosthenes,
To Lydia, a Quaker Lady,
The Argonaut or lost Adventurer,
Log Town Tavern, - - -
On the British Legislature prohibiting the
sale of Dr. David Ramsay’s History of
the Revolution in South Carolina, in
London, - - - -
Literary Importation, - - -
The Englishman’s Complaint, - -
Elegiac Lines on Robert Bell, the philanthro-
pic Bookseller, -
Terra Vulpina; or, the Land of Foxes, -
The Invalid: occasioned by his visit to Paco-
let springs in South Carolina . -
Mercantile charity; a genuine story, -
Stanzas written near Bassaterre, Guadaloupe
On the Prospect of a Revolution in France,
To the patriotic Farmer (Dickinson)
The Pilgrim’s Progress, - -
On a Deceased Dog. - - -
Epitaph on Frederick the Second, king of
Prussia, -
A Dialogue between Shadrach and Whiffle,
To the memory of a Lady of New-Jersey,
To a dog, on putting him on shore for theft,
on a desolate Island, - - -
To Clarissa, a handsome shop keeper -
To Cynthia, - - - -
To a very little man, fond of walking with a
long cane, - - .
The Rural Bachelor,
Stanzas on Balloons, - - -
Pestilence: written during the Prevalence of
a yellow fever, -
Jeffery, or the Soldier's progress, -
-
Page.
191
192
194
197.
198
20.1
203
205
2O7
208
CONTENTS.
To a writer of Panegyric; on his Birth Day
odes, . - -
Fancy's Ramble, . - - -
On the Demolition of an ancient New-Eng-
land College, . - - -
A Descriptive Sketch of Pennsylvania,
Advice to an Author, - -
The Preposterous Nuptials,
The Distrest. Theatre,
The Nova Scotia Menace, . - -
Hermit's Valleys a rural scene on the Schuyl-
kill, - -
The Prudent Philosopher, - -
Descriptive Sketch of Maryland, and its man-
Incºs, - - - -
The Happy Prospect, - -
On the Origin of Wars, - - -
On the Newspaper Tax Bill, (1792) -
The Forest Beau, (a copy from life.)
To Cynthia, during a long absence,
Old Virginia; a descriptive sketch, -
The American Soldier, (1790,) - -
To Constantia, on her project of retiring to
Bethlehem, - - -
Lines on the old patriotic state, Massachu-
setts, - - - -
On the immense concourse at Federal Hall,
in 1790, while the Funding System was in
agitation, - - - -
The Impertinent—to a certain European
Poet, - - - -
A Matrimonial Dialogue; inscribed to Lord
Snake,
On the Skeletons dug up in Fort George, N. Y.
On the Corporation Law for cutting down
trees in New-York. - -
On the Demolition of Fort George, in N. Y.
(1790,) - - - -
Nanny to Nabby, a female correspondence,
D. p 2.
Page.
232
233
2.35
237.
2.38
240
º.
242
24-
244.
246
2.47
249
250
251
º,
º
255
25s






- CONTENTS,
Page.
Nabby to Nanny, the answer, - - 269
On the Death of Dr. FRANKLIN, - 27.
On the silly effusions of certain Panegyrists,
(1790) in memory of Dr. Franklin, - 273
To certain Democratic Editors of Public Jour-
nals, on a charge of Bribery, - - 27.4
On the Removal of Congress from New-York
to Philadelphia, (1790) . - - 276
To Sylvius, on the folly of writing Poetry, . 278
On a Travelling Speculator, - - 280
Elegy on a Theological Scrip-monger, . 28
A warning to America, - - - 2.82.
To Sylvius, on his leaving the Town, - 283
The Pyramid of the Fifteen States, - 284.
On the approaching Dissolution of Transat-
lantic jurisdiction in America, - 285
To Mr. Blanchard, on his ascent in a Balloon, 2.85
On Dr. Sangrado's Flight, . - - 288
On the European War System, - - 289
Elegy on the Death of a Blacksmith, - 290
On the Demolition of the French Monarchy, 29 |
On Mr. Paine's Rights of Man, . - 2.94.
On Bompard and Courtney’s Sea Fight, 2.96
Salem's Lines on his Return from Calcutta, 2.99
Stanzas at the Tomb of the Patriots, near
New-York, . - - 300
Enn at A.
Vol. I. page 206, line 24, for lºft, read lost.
II page 178, line 22, for s, read a
-
* From many places to which Subscription Pa-
pers had been requested to be forwarded, no returns
ºf names have been yet made. Subscribers in such
places, however, are informed, that they will be sup-
plied with these volumes on the same terms as Sub-
scribers in the following List, provided they make a
speedy application at this office; as the present ed-
tion is small, and in great part engaged.
No. 10, North-Allºy, ºn Mººr ºn
Furth-sºrs, Philanºia.
10 copies.
SUBSCRIBERS’ MAMES.
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Thomas Jefferson, Monticello, near Milton, Virginia, 10.
Library committee of Congress, Washington, 2
PEMWSYLVANIA,
City and County ºf Phila-
del/thia.
Mathew Carey, Booksel-
Ier, 200 copies,
Johnson & Warner, 200
General John Steele, col-
lector of the port of
Philadelphia,
John Connelly, Lieute-
nant-Colonel of Artille-
ry;
James Ross, professor of
ancient languages,
John Barker, Esq.
William T. Donaldson,
Esq. 2 cop.
William J. Duane,
Dr. Samuel F. Conover,
W. H. Woodside,
Samuel Buyers.
John MºMullin,
Samuel Keith,
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Mary Stille,
John S. Henry,
M. B. Galbraith,
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Capt. James Moor,
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John Jennings,
W. Fox,
John R. Veight,
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Henry J. Stuchert,
S. W. Stevenson,
John Springer,
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viii. subscribers’ names.
George Blackwell,
Joseph Plumb,
John Lohra,
Michael Duffey,
Geo. H. Berkenbine,
Joseph Lloyd,
Rees H. Peters,
Joseph Milnor,
J. Hunt, -
Benjamin Hobson,
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Geo. W. Murray,
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John Markland,
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Joseph Strong,
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John Miller,
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J. Stuart, M. D.
L. P. Frank,
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John Eberle.
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John Douglass, junior,
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Eleazer Oswald.
John Thompson,
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John Bennet.








subscrubens' Names. ix.
Lancaster, and Lancaster
County.
William Dickson, 150.
Samuel Perdly,
John Gilmore,
Robert Anderson,
Elijah Reynolds,
James Jackson,
Joseph Andrews,
John Binner,
Patterson Bell, jun.
Hannah Black,
Joseph Kinsey,
James Clendinin,
James Wallace,
John Clendinin,
Thomas Clendinin,
Nathan Thompson, jun.
Paul Ralston, jun,
Samuel M*Afee,
Samuel Ferguson,
Henry M*Cord,
William Barcklay,
Abraham Whiteside,
John Andrews,
Daniel Penington,
Isaac Walker,
Hugh MºConnel,
Robert MºCalmont,
John Strachan,
Jesse Davis,
William Hatton,
Thomas Moore
Nathaniel Walker,
William Steele,
James Porter,
William W. Steele,
David Scott,
James Paxton,
William Anderson,
Mrs. Harriot Haxwell,
Mrs. Rachel Ancrum,
Miss Rachel Steele,
Miss Margaret Steele,
Robert A. Buyers,
Patton Buyers,
Andrew Caldwell,
Jehu Murray,
Matthias Brookes,
H. Davis,
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Stephen C. Henry,
Thomas Crabb,
Joseph Barnett,
John Burnside,
John Whiteside,
Thomas Wentz,
Joseph Clendenin,
Jacob Slough,
George White,
Jonathan Miller,
Charles M*Clung,
Samuel Hasson,
Daniel Gibbons,
Thomas Sheldon,
Walter Lowrey,
John Frazer,
John E. Scott,
Henry Hufnagle,
Mrs. Catharine Rohrer,
Robert Ramsay, -
John Jamison,
Alexander Ferguson,
Thomas Cooper,
Alexander Ewing,
James M*Cullough,
Samuel Whiteside.
David Thomas,
Daniel Milner,
Alexander Bailey,
James Johnson,
William Ewing,



- subscaisºns' names.
Benjamin Dickey,
Richard Argus,
Robert Milligan,
James Wilson,
George Hess,
James Mºinness
John Clark,
Adam Moderwell,
James Caldwell,
John Steele, jun.
John Eckles,
John Taggart,
John Russel,
James Johnston,
James M*Guin-
Thomas Gillespie,
Isaac Smith,
Sarah Free,
J. Green,
Andrew M. Bailey,
Miss Eliza Steele,
Joseph Miller,
John Eckman.
John MºCorº
Henry Millar,
Meadº
D. Le Fevre,
Charles Pinckney, Esq.
late governor of S. C.
David Ramsay, M. D.
Daniel Mazyck, late cap-
tain ºd regiment of
South Carolina.
Peter Freneau, and Co. 25
cop.
General Read,
Alexander Marks.
Jeremiah Paschal.
Reading.
Matthias Richards,
Curtis Lewis,
Frankfºrt.
Joshua Sullivan,
Blockley.
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John Morgan,
ºn-
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Easton.
John Ross, Esquire,
Thomas Hunn,
Washington.
A. Ly le, -
Pºstchester.
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Lycoming.
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Mºville, (Bucks County.
Rev. Nathaniel Erwin,
Tºcº.
David Rose,
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Chester County.
James Steele,
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Stephen West Moore.
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James Browne,
Andrew P. Gready.
Thomas Harvie,
James MºClush,
Edmund Green,
John Mushett,
John G. Mayer.








ºscºnsº Naxºs.
º:
Richard MºCormick,
John Langton,
John Smith Darrell,
Joseph Baker,
Thomas Shorthouse, esq.
Joseph Sandford Barker,
Esq.
John MºMamara,
James D. Snowden,
William Elliott,
Julius Petsch,
John R. Witherspoon,
Esq.
William Bingley,
John B. Guillard,
Jacob W. Kelly,
John Hoff, bookseller, 12.
John H. Sargent,
Dr S. Gardette,
R. MºCormick,
Thomas H. Forrest,
Jabez W. Johnson,
Charles Bradly.
William Kincaid, Esq.
Edward Phelen, Esq.
William Cato,
ºrge Kennedy, Esq.
Gol. Sam Warren,
John M. Calla, 15.
WEW-JERSEY.
lººseº.
General James Morgan,
Robert M'Chesney, Esq.
lºoººº.
Jehu Patterson, Esq.
Capt. Hendrick Hendrick-
SOI.
James Mott, Esq.
Col Jarrett Stilwell,
Capt. Isaac Van Dorn.
George Kennedy, Esq.
Henry Bradley,
William Pagan,
John M. Kee,
Alexander Quay,
James Robinson,
John C. Clark,
Hugh Knox, Esq. 2
James MºClintock,
William Graham,
Samuel Wilson,
Joseph M. Cash,
Greene B. Montgomery.
John Evans,
William Curry,
Daniel Mººiel,
William Pinchbeck,
Henry Fox,
James Kennedy,
Bartholomew Carroll Esq.
William MºElmoyle,
Charleston Library, 2
Dr. Joseph Kirkland.
C. J. Evans, (Savannah.)
Richmond, ºrg.)
Robert L. Edmonds,
Baltimore.
Robert P ºn
Capt. Denise Hendrick-
Sony
B. Gen. Richard Poole,
Middletº-ºoººº.
Cornelius P. Vanderhoof,
Esq.
Dr. William Reynolds,
Capt. John Hall,
ºr Mººn-Pº.
John P. Van Pelt, merch.










º:
subscrubens' Namºrºs.
Peter Johnson,
William Walton,
vºlentown.
Richard Stout, merchant,
Freehold.
John Quay, Esq.
Mr. David Cook,
Mount-Holly.
Hon. William Rossel,
Tuckertoºn.
Ebenezer Tucker, Esq.
Worthamſton.
Joseph Budd,
Moore's Town.
George French, for Li-
brary,
Tººnton.
Isaac Jennings,
Lucius Horatio Stockton,
Esq.
Hon. Benj. Smith,
Capt. James J. Wilson,
2 copies,
William Hyer, Esq.
John L. Hoppock,
Bordenºon.
Mr. Anthony Taylor, mer-
chant,
Monmouth.
Hon. James Cox,
fºunderdon.
Hon. John Lambert, 3 co.
º
John Condit, Esq.
ºn.
Robert MºMillan,
Wºº-Yo ſº.
Benjamin Romaine, Esq.
Dr Samuel L. Mitchell,
Thomas Nixon, mercht.
Garret Bleecker, Esq.
John Gardner.
Burlington.
Thomas Adams,
Woodbury.
John-Moore White,
-Mºº-ºº-unsºuzcº.
John Keyworth,
A. Hassert,
William Elliott,
John Cleeteall,
James Swift,
H. V. Low,
Th. Eastburn.
Jacob Klady,
William Lupp.
Thomas Hill, Esq.
J. R. Hardenbergh,
John Phillips,
James B. Low,
William Ryder, junior,
Perth-Amboy.
D. Perrine,
South-ſmºoy.
Obadiah Herbert,
William Lamberson.
Woodbridge.
Robert Ross, Esq.
Robert Kearney,
Henry Osborne,
Somersey.
Elbert Dumont,
Caleb Brockow,
Cranberry.
Clark Chambers.
ºn.
E. H. Smith,
John S. Hunn, Esq.
James Hardie, Esq.
Charles Richardson, Esq.
Frank. White & Co.
Rome Ryker,