Imágenes de páginas
PDF
EPUB

"Mere luft of change compell'd her to cashier "Her beft lov'd Pompey in his fiftieth year. "The frowns of a capricious jilt you mourn, "Who's thine, or mine, and ev'ry man's by turn: "Were Fortune conftant, fhe's no more the fame, "But, chang'd in fpecies, takes another name.

[ocr errors]

66

Say, when that prodigy of falfchood fmil'd, "And all the forceress thy heart beguil'd; "When ev'ry joy that full poffeffion gave "Rofe to the higheft relifh man can crave; "Waft thou then happy to thy foul's defire ?-Something to feek, and fomething to require, "Still, ftill perplex'd thee, unforeseen before."Thy draughts were mighty, but thy dropfy more t. [then? "Tis granted, fortune's vanifh'd--and what "Thou'rt ftill as truely rich as all good men : "Thy minds thy own (if that be calm and ev'n); Thy faith in providence, thy funds in heav'n The Indian only took her jingling bells, "Her rags of filk, and trumpery of shells: "Virtue's a plunder of a cumb'rous make "She cannot, and the does not choofe to take ‡. Accept th' inconftant, if the deigns to stay ; "And, if the leaves thee, fpeed her on the way;

[ocr errors]

"For where's the diff 'rence, mighty reas'ner, S

jay,

"When man by death of all things is bereft, "If he leaves fortune, or by fortune's left § ? "Fortune to Galba's door the diadem brought; "The door was clos'd and other fons the fought: "Fortune's a woman, over fond or blind; "A step dame now, and now a mother kind.

"Eichew the luft of pow'r, and pride of life; "One jarring mafs of counter-working ftrife! "Vain hopes, which only idiot minds employ; "And fancy builds, for fancy to destroy! "All must be wretched who expect too much; "Life's chemic gold proves recreant to the touch. The man who fears, nor hopes for earthly things,

[ocr errors]
[ocr errors]

"Difarms the tyrant, and looks down on kings: "Whilst the depending, craving, flatt'ring flave "Makes his own chain that drags him to the

66

grave."

The goddess now, with mild and fober grace Inclining, look'd me fteafaft in the face.

46

Thy exile next fits heavy on thy mind; "Thy pomp, thy wealth, thy villas, left behind. "Ah, quit thefe nothings to the hungry tribe; "States cannot banish thee; they may profcribe. "The good man's country is is in ev'ry clime, "His God in ev'ry place, at ev'ry time;

[blocks in formation]

"In civiliz'd, or in barbarian lands, "Wherever virtue breathes, an altar ftands *.

"A farther weakness in thy heart I read : "Thy prifon fhocks thee with unusual dread: "Dark folitude thy wav'ring mind appalls,

[ocr errors]
[ocr errors]

Damp floors, and low hung roofs, and naked "walls.

"Yet here the mind of Socrates could foar; And, being less than man, he rose to more. "With not to fee new hofts of clients wait "In rows fubmiffive through vaft rooms of ftate; "Nor, on the litter of coarie rushes spread, "Lament the abience of thy downy bed: "Nor grieve thou, that thy plunder'd books af "No confolation to their exil'd lord: [ford "Read thy own heart f; its motions nicely scan; "There's a fufficient library for man ‡. "And yet a nobler volume still remains; "The book of providence all truths contains: "For ever ufeful, and forever clear,

"To all men open, and to all men near:

[merged small][ocr errors]

By tyrants unfupprefs'd, untouch'd by fire; "Old as mankind, and with mankind t' expire f. "Next, what aggrieves thee moft, is lofs of fame, "And the chafte pride of a once spotless name: "Bat mark, my fon, the truths I fhall impart, "And give them on the tablets of thy heart: "The first keen ftroke th' unfortunate fhall find, "Is lofing the opinion of mankind || :

[ocr errors][ocr errors]

Slander and accufation take their rife From thy declining fortunes, not thy vice. "How rarely is a poor man highly deem'd; "Or a rich upftart villain difefteem'd?"From chilly fhades the gnats of fortune run "To buz in heat, and twinkle in the fun; "Till heav'n (at heav'n's appointed feafon "kind,) [wind, "Sweeps off th' Egyptian plague with fuch at "That not one blood-fucker is left behind.

"Boaft not, nor grieve at good or evit fame ¶: "Be true to God, and thou art ftill the fame. "Man cannot give thee virtues thou haft not, "Nor fteal the virtues thou haft truely got.

"And what's th' applaufe of learning or of wit? Critis unwrite whate'er the author writ

[blocks in formation]

There are two lessons which God inftills every day into the faithful: The one is, to fee their own faults: The other is, to comprehend the Divine goodness. THOM. A KEMP. The best looking glafs wherein to fee thy God, is perfectly to fee thyjelf. Huco de Anima.

§ L. I. Prof. 4. BOETIUS.

At vero bic etiam noftris malis cumulus accedit, quod exiflimatio plurimorum non rerum merita, fed fortunæ fectat eventum: eaque tantum judicat effe provifa, que felicitas commendaverit. Quo fit, ut exiftimatio bona, prima omnium deferat infelices." BOETIUS, Ibid. Si vis beatus effe, cogi a boc primum, contemnere ei contemni, nondum es felix, fi te turba non deriferit. ANTISTHENES DiЯum,

"To a new fate this fecond life muft yield, "And death will twice be master of the field *.

[ocr errors]

Nor grieve, nor murmur, nor indulge despair, "To fee the villain cloth'd, and good man bare; "To fee impiety with pomp enthron'd; "Virtue unfought for, honefty unown'd :) "Heav'ns difpenfations no man can explore; "In this, to fathom God, is to be more! "Mere man but gueffes the divine decree; "The moft the Stagyrite himself could fee, "Was the faint glimm'ring of contingency. "Yet deem not rich men happy, nor the poor Unprofp'rous; wait th' event, and judge no

[ocr errors]

"more.

"True fafety to heav'n's children must belong : "With God the rich are weak, the poor are ftrong. "Th' irrevocable fanction ftands prepar'd; "Vice has its curfe, and virtue its reward t. "Confcience, man's centinel, forbids to ftray, "Nor fhows us the great gulph for heav'n's high 66 way.

[ocr errors]

"To ferve the great, and aggrandife our pride, We barter honour, and our faith befide; "Mindlefs of future blifs, and heav'nly fame, "We ftrip and fell the Chriftian to the name. Ambition, like the fea, by tempefts toft, "Still makes new conquefts for old conquefts loft: "Court favours lie above the common road "By modefty and humble virtue trod; "Like trees on precipices, they display "Fair fruit, which none can reach but birds of (" prey.

"All men from want, as from contagion, fly; "They weary earth, and importune the iky; "Gain riches, and yet 'fcape not poverty: "The once mean foul preferves its earthly part, "The beggar's flatt'ry, and the beggar's heart. "In fpite of titles, glory, kindred, pelf, "Lov'st thou an object better than thyfelf? "You answer, no.--If that, my fon, be true, "Then give to God the thanks to God are due. "No man is crown'd the fav'rite of the fkies "Till Heav'n his faith by fharp affliction tries: "Nor chains, difgrace, nor tyrants can controul "Th' ability to fave th' immortal fonl. "How oft did Seneca deplore his fate, "Debarr'd that recollection which you hate? "How often did Papinian wafte his breath

* Cum fera vobis rapiet hoc etiam dies, Jam vos fecunda mors manet.

BOETIUS, L. II. Metr. 7. ↑ Si ea quæ paulo ante conclufa funt, inconvulfa fequantur, ipfo, de cujus nunc regno loquimur, Auctore cognofces, femper quidem potentes bonos effe malos vero abjectos femper imbecilles; nec c fine pana unquam effe vitia, nec fine pramio virtutes; bonis felicia, malis femper infortunata contingere.

BOETIUS L. IV. Prof 1. De Confolat. Philofoph. "Qui femina virtu, fama raccoglie"

"Timplore, like your's, a pausing time for death?

"Place in thy fight Heav'n's confeffors refign'd, "And fuffer with humility of mind:

[ocr errors]
[ocr errors]

As thy profperities pafs'd swift away,

Juft to thy grief fhall make a tranfient ftay t "Thy life's laft hour (nor is it far from thee) "Is the laft hour of human mifery. "Extremes of grief or joy are rarely giv'n, "And last as rarely, by the will of Heav'n." So fpake philofophy, and upwards flew, Infpiring confidence as the withdrew.

Here let my juft refentments cease to flow, Here let me clofe my elegies of woe.

Rufticiana, fairest of the fair,

My prefent object, and my future care;
Be mindful of my children, and thy vows:-
And ('gainst thy judgment) O defend thy spouse,
My children are my other felf to thee :-
Heav'n you diftruft if you lament for me.

Weep not my fate: is man to be deplor'd,
From a dark prifon to free air reftor'd?
Admir'd by friends, and envy'd by my foes,
I die, when glory to the highest rose.
I've mounted to the fummit of a ball;
If I go further, I defcend, or fall.
Hail death, thou lenient cordial of relief;
Preventive of my fhame and of my grief!
Kind nature crops me in full virtue's bloom †,
Not left to fhrink and wither for the tomb.
Shed not a tear, but vindicate thy pow'r,
Enrich'd like Egypt's foil without a show'r.
Fortune, which gave too much, did foon repine,
There was no Solftice in a courfe like mine.
With calmness I my bleeding death behold;
Suns fet in crimson ftreams to rife in gold.

Farewell, and may Heav'n's bounty heap on thee,

(As more deferving) what it takes from me! That peace, which made thy focial virtues fhine," The peace of confcience, and the peace divine, Be ever, O thou beft of women, thine!

Forgive, Almighty Pow'r, this worldly part; These laft convulfions of an husband's heart: Give us thy felf; and teach our minds to fee The Saviour and the Paraclete in thee.!

[merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small]
[blocks in formation]

IT is to be hoped the reader will pardon me, if I take the liberty of prefixing to this elegy a flight advertisement, inftead of inferting what might feem too long for a note in the body of the poem

Having ventured (and I am fure it is licentia fumpta prudenter *) to introduce three or four new expreffions in a volume of near five thoufand lines, and one, namely, dew-ting'd ray, in the 279th page of the present elegy, I thought myself obliged to make fome apology on that fubject; fince all innovations in poets like me, (who can only pretend to a certain degree of mediocrity) are more or less of an affected caft, and rarely to be excufed; inafmuch as we have the vanity to teach others what we do not thoroughly underftand ourtelves.

And here permit me to call that language of ours Claffical English, which is to be found in a few chofen writers inclufively, from the times of Spencer till the death of Mr. Pope; for falfe refinements, after a language has arifen to a certain degree of perfection, give reafons to fufpect that a language is upon the decline. The fame circumftances have happened formerly, and the event has been almost invariably the fame. Compare Statins and Claudian with Virgil and Horace: and yet the former was, if one may fo fpeak, im. mediate heir at law to the latter.

I have known fome of my contemporary Poets (and thofe not very voluminous writers) who have coined their one or two hundred words a man; whereas Dryden and Pope devifed only about threescore words between them; many of which were compound epithets: But moft of the words which they introduced into our language, proved in the event to be vigorous and perennial plants, being chofen and raifed from excellent offsets f. -Indeed the former author revived alfo a great number of ancient words and exprellions; and this he did (beginning at Chaucer) with fo much delicacy of choice, and in a manner fo comprehentive, that he left the latter author (who was in that point equally judicious and fagacious) very little to do, or next to nothing.

* HORAT.

I must bere make one exception. Dryden fbowed jome weakness, in anglicizing common French words, and those not over elegant, when at the fame time we had fynonymous words of our own growth. Thus, for example, he introduced

Some few of Dryden's revived words I have prefumed to contine; of which take the following inftances; as gridelien, filamot, and carmine, (with reference to colours, and mixtures of colours;) mar, eygre, trine, ETPHKA, Paraclete, panoply, rood, dorp, eglantine, orijens, fpirations, &c. I mention this, left any one thould be angry with me, or pleafed with me in particular places, where I difcover neither boldnefs nor invention. der'd; and to Sir W. Davenant the Latinism of --I owe alfo to Fenton the participle meanfuneral Illicet.

menta

As to compound epithets, thofe ambitiosse orna* of modern poetry, Dryden has deviled a few of them, with equal diffidence and caution; but those few are exquifitely beautiful. Mr. Pope feized on them as family diamonds, and added thereto an equal number, dug from his own mines, and heightened by his own polifhing.

era.

Compound epithets first came into their great vogue about the year 1598. Shakspeare and Ben. Johnfon both ridiculed the oftentatious and immoderate ufe of them, in their prologues to Troilus and Creffida, and to Every Man in his Humour. By the above named prologues it also appears, that Bombaft grew fashionable about the fame Now in both inftances an affected tafte is the fame as a falfe taite. The author of Hieroni. mo (who, as I may venture to affure the reader, was one John Sinith †) first led up the dance. Then came the bold and felf-fufficient tranflator of Du Bartas, who broke down all the floodmerly preferved the river clear, within due bounds, gates of the true stream of eloquence (which for and full to its banks) and like, the rat in the low country dikes, mifchieviously or wantonly deluged

the whole land.

Of innovated phrafes and words; of words re vived; of compound epithets, &c. I may one day or other fay more, in a distinct criticilin on Dryden's poetry. It fhall therefore only fuffice to obferve here, that our two great poetical mafters never thought that the interpofition of an hyphen, without juft grounds and reafons, made a compound epithet. On the contrary, it was their opinion, (and to this opinion their practice was conformable) that fuch union should only be made

between

two nouns, as patriot-king, ideotlaugh, &c. or between an adjective and noun, or noun and adjective, vice verja, or an adjective and participle; as laughter-loving, cloud compel levee, couchée, boutefeu, fimagres, fraicheur, ling, rofy-finger'd, &c.- -As alio by an adverb

levé, couché, bouteleu, fimagres, fraicheur, fongue, &c Nor was he more lucky in the Italian fallaré

bis fhield Was fulfify d, and round with jav'lins fill'd." DRYDEN'S Virg

uied as part of an adjective, as you may fee in the words well-concocted, well-digested, &c.—But

HORAT.

t John Smith writ also the Hector of Germany. + Joshua Sylvefter.

of

never by a full reai adverb and adjective, as inly-
pining, fadly-mufing, and, to make free with my-
felt, (though, I only did it by way of irony)
my expreflion of fimply-marry'd epithets;
which fort of novelties modern poetry chiefly
confifts. Nor should fuch compound epithets be
looked upon as the poets making; for they owe
their existence to the compofitor of the prefs, and
the intervention of an hyphen.

Much of the fame analogy by which Dryden
and Pope guided themfelves in the prefent cale,
may be feen in the purer Greek and Roman lan-
guages: but all the hyphens in the world (fup-
pofing hyphens had been then known), would not
have truly joined together the dulce ridentem, or
dule loquentem, of Horace.

Th' aerial choir, which fung fo foft and clear,
Now grates harth mufic to the froward ear:
The gently murm'ring rills offend from far,
And emulate the clangour of a war:
Books have no wit, the liveliet wits have none;
And hope, the last of ev'ry friend, is gone!
Nor reft nor joy to virtue's felt are giv'n,
Till the difeafe is rectity'd by heav'n.
And yet this Iliad of inteftine woes
(So trail is man) from feeming nothings rofe:
A drop of acrid juice, a blait of air,
Th' obftruction of a tube as fine as hair;
Or (palm within a labyrinth of threads.
More fubtle far than thofe the fpider Spreads
What fullen planet rui'd our hap lefs birth,
Averie from joys, and enemy of mirth?
Wat'ry Arcturus in a luckleis place

In a word, fome few precautions of the prefent
kind are not unneceffary: English poetry begin-South'd †, and portended tears to all our race:
to grow capricious, fanta lical, and affectedly luxu-
riant; and therefore (as Auguftus faid of Hate-
rius) fuflaminari paululum debet.

Shall not every one mourn that dwelleth therein?
AMOS viii. 8.

I did mourn as a dove; mine eyes tailed with
looking upwards.

ISAIAH XXXviii. 14.
Fear not thou, my fervant, faith the Lord; for I
am with thee. I will not make a full end of
thee; but correct thee in measure.

JER. xlvi. 46.
PAINS and difeafes; ftripes and labour too!
"What more could Edom and proud Afhur do?"
Scourge after icourge, and blows fucceeding
blows?-

Lord, has thy hand no mercy, and our woes
No intermiffion? Gracious Being, pleate
To calm our fears, and give the body eale!
The poor man, and the ilave of ev'ry kind,
'Midit pains and toils may gleams of comfort
find;

But who can bear the ficknefs of the mind?
The pow'r of melancholy mounts the throne,
And inakes the realms of wildom half her own†:
Not David's lyre, with David's voice conjoin'd,
Can drive th' oppreflive phantom from the mind?
No more the fun delights, nor lawns, nor trees;
The vernal blooms, or the fummer's breeze.
No longer echo makes the dales rejoice
With fportive founds, and pictures of a voice :

The bint of this emblem is taken from our venera-
ble and religious post, F. Quarles, L. III. Embl. 4.
Mr. Dryden ufed to fay, that Quarles exceeded him in
the facility of rhyming.

Quarles's book, and the em lematical prints therein
contained, are chiefly taken from the Pia Defideria of
Hugo Hermannus. The engravings were originally
defigned by that elibrated artist C. Van Sichem.
I Sam. xvi. 23.

+ Dan. iv. 34.

Agreeably to this is a lovely piece of imagery in the
boly Scriptures:

"The earth mourneth and languifeeth; Lebanon is
afbamed, and bewn down; Sharon is like a wilderness;
Baban and Carmel fa e off their fruits."

[ocr errors]

With him the weeping Pleiades conjoin,
And Mazzaroth made up the mournful trine ‡ :
Orion added none to dumb defpair,
And rent with hurricanes the duving air;
And latt Abfiathion || his dire influence thed
Full on the heart, and fuller on the head.
Oft have we fought (and fruitiefs oft) to gain
A fhort parenthefis 'twixt pain and pain;
But, fick'ning at the cheerfulnefs of light,
The foul has languith'd for th' approach of night:
Again, immerft in fhades, we feem to say,
O day-fpring ! gleam thy promife of a day f.
On this fide death th' unhappy fure are curit,
Who figh for change, and think the prefent worst:
Who weep unpity'd, grean without relief;
"There is no end nor meafure of their grief!"
The happy have wafte twelvemonths to bestow;
But those can ipare all time, who live in woe!
Whole livelieft hours are mifery and thrall;
Whole food is wormwood, and whofe drink is
gali **.

Banish their grief, or eafe their irksome load;
Ephraim at length was favour'd by his God ff.
Ab, what is man, that demigod on earth?
Proud of his knowledge, giorying in his birth;
Profane corrector of th' Almighty laws,
Full of th' effect, forgetful of the cause!

* Ifaiah lix. 5.

+ South'd, a received term in aftrology.

Job xxxviii. 31, 32. According to Scripture-
Aftronomy, these three were al watery figns, and em→
blematical of gruf. The fourth corfiellation, named
Orion, threatened mankind with hurricanes and tempefls.
Sandys underflood the paffage in the fame manner as I
do. Sec bis excellent paraphrase on Job, folio, page
49, London 1637. Mention is again made of the
Seven Stars (Pleiades), and of Orion, Amos v. 8.-
and Job ix. 9.

The Star of bitterness, called Wormwood, Rev.

vii. 10.

Job xxxviii. 12. Luke i. 78. Avacoλh 15 0x85.
This poetical word, day-ipring, exprejing the dawon
of morning, bas Leen never adopted by our poets, as far

as we can recollect.

§ Deut. xxviii. 66, 67.
Jerem. xxiii. 15.
†† Ïbid. xxxi. 20.

Why boat of reafon, and yet reafon ill?
Why talk of choice, yet follow erring will?
Why yaunt our liberty, and prove the flave
Of all ambition wants, or follies crave?
This is the lot of him, futnam'd the wife,
Who lives mistaken, and mistaken dies!

The fick lets happy, and yet happier live;
For pains and maladies are God's reprieve:
This refpite 'twixt the grave and cradle gav'n,
Is th' interpos'd parenthesis of heav'n!

Too often we complain-but flesh is weak; Silence would wafte us, and the heart would break.

Behold yon rofe, the poor defpondent cries,
(I'ain on his brow, and anguish in his eyes)
What healthy verdure paints its juicy thoots,
What equal circulation feeds the roots:
At morning-dawn it feels the dew-ting'd ray,
But opers all its bofom to the day.
No art aflifts it, and no toil it takes
Slumbers at ev'ning, and with morning wakes f.

Why was I born? Or wherefore born a man?
Immenfe my wifh; yet tether'd to a span!
The flave, that groans beneath the toilfome oar,
"Cbtains the fabbath of a welcome fhore :"
His captive tripes are heal'd; his native foil
Sweetens the memory of foreign toil.
"Alas my forrows are not half fo bleft;"
My labours know no end, my pains no rest!
Tell me, vain-glorious Newtons, if you can,
What heterogeneous mixtures for the man?"
Pleafure and anguish, ignorance and fkill,
Nature and spirit, flav'ry and free-will:
Weakness and ftrength, old-age and youthful
prime;

Frror and truth; eternity and time!-
What contradictions have for ever ran
Betwixt the nether brute and upper man ‡ ?
Ah! what are men, who God's creation fcorn?
The worm their brother; § brother elder-born!
Plants live like them, in fairer robes array'd,
Alike they fionrith, and alike they fade.
The lab'ring fteer fleeps lefs difcurb'd at night,
And eats and drinks with keener appetite,-
Refrain'd by nature jut t' enjoy his fill;
Ufeful, and yet incapable of ill.

Say, man, what vain pre-eminence is thine?
Each fenfe impair'd by gluttony and wine :
Thou art the beaft, except thy foaring mind
Afpires to pleatures of inmortal kind:

Elfe, boafted knowledge, haplefs is thy curfe,
T'approve the better, and embrace the worfe!

Matth. vi. 28.

+ Concerning the cep of plants, fee an ingenious Lan treatif lately publifhed in Sweden.

Pretical defiallion of a centaur.

[ocr errors]

§ Fob xvii. 14.-There is a remarkable poffage in the Palms upon this occafion, where the vorm takes place of the monarch: “O praife the Lord, ye mountains and all bills; fruitful trees and all cedars; beafts and ail cattle; worms and feathered frols; kings of the earth and all people; princes and judges of the world." PSALM cxlvii. 10. S plungint verfion. If we barber the flesh too much, we nourife an entry, if we defraud it of lare ful fernance, we defroy ST. GREGOR, Iloil

good citizen.

So Annas owns the miracle, and then (Wilfully blinded) perfecutes again *.

To minds afflicted ever has been given A claim upon the patronage of Heav'n: (Whilt the world's idiots ev'ry thought employ With hopes to live and die without annoy). In the firft agonies of heart-ftruck grief, Heav'n to our parents typify'd relieft. Th' Almighty lent an car to Hannah's pray'rt, And blefs'd her with each blefling, in an heir: Whilft Hezekiah §, carneft in his caufe, Gain'd a fufpenfion of great nature's laws, And permaience to tinie;-For lo! the fun Retrac'd the journey he had lately run.

Bu moft th' unhappy wretch, aggriev'd in Rais'd pity in the Saviour of mankind. [mind, He afk'd for peace; heav'n gave him its own red; Demons were dumb. and Legion difpoffeft. Wither'd with palfy'd blairs, the limbs refame Thy ftrength. O manhood, and, O youth, thy Syro-Phenicia's maiden re-enjoy'd [bloom! That equal mind, which Satan once deflroy'd "*. And, when the heav'nly Ephphathatt was spoke, The deaf-born heard, the dunib-born filence broke. Th' ethereal fluid mov'd, the fpeech return'd; No fpafms were dreaded, no defpondence mourn'. Then roufe, my foul, and bid the world adieu,

Its maxims, wifdom, joys and glory too;
The mighty ETPHKA ‡‡ appears in view.

SS Juft fo, the gen'rous falcon, long immur'd
In doleful cell by ofier-bars fecur'd,
Laments her fate; till, flitting fwiftly by,
Th' aerial prize attracts her eager eye:
Inftant the fummons all her ftrength and fire;
Her afped kindles fierce with keen defire:
She prunes her tatter'd plumes in confcious pride,
And bounds from perch to perch, and fide to fide
Impatient of her jail, and long detain'd.
She breaks the bounds her liberty refirain'd:
Then, having gain'd the point by heav'n defign'd,
Soars 'midit the clouds, and proves her high-bor

kind.

[blocks in formation]
« AnteriorContinuar »