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XVII.

CAPTIVITY.

"As the cold aspect of a sunless way

Strikes through the Traveller's frame with deadlier chill, Oft as appears a grove, or obvious hill,

Glistening with unparticipated ray,

Or shining slope where he must never stray;
So joys, remembered without wish or will,
Sharpen the keenest edge of present ill,

On the crushed heart a heavier burthen lay.
Just Heaven, contract the compass of my mind
To fit proportion with my altered state!
Quench those felicities whose light I find
Reflected in my bosom all too late!

O be my spirit, like my thraldom, strait;

And, like mine eyes that stream with sorrow, blind!"

XVIII.

BROOK! whose society the Poet seeks
Intent his wasted spirits to renew ;

And whom the curious Painter doth pursue
Through rocky passes, among flowery creeks,
And tracks thee dancing down thy water-breaks;
If wish were mine some type of thee to view,

Thee, and not thee thyself, I would not do

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Like Grecian Artists, give thee human cheeks,
Channels for tears; no Naiad should'st thou be,"
Have neither limbs, feet, feathers, joints nor hairs;
It seems the Eternal Soul is clothed in thee

With purer robes than those of flesh and blood,
And hath bestowed on thee a better good;

Unwearied joy, and life without its cares.

XIX.

COMPOSED ON THE BANKS OF A ROCKY STREAM.

DOGMATIC Teachers, of the snow-white fur!
Ye wrangling Schoolmen, of the scarlet hood!
Who, with a keenness not to be withstood,
Press the point home, or falter and demur,
Checked in your course by many a teasing burr;
These natural council-seats your acrid blood

Might cool; and, as the Genius of the flood

Stoops willingly to animate and spur

Each lighter function slumbering in the brain,
Yon eddying balls of foam - these arrowy gleams,
That o'er the pavement of the surging streams
Welter and flash-a synod might detain

With subtle speculations, haply vain,

But surely less so than your far-fetched themes!

XX.

THIS, AND THE TWO FOLLOWING, WERE SUGGESTED BY MR. W.
WESTALL'S VIEWS OF THE CAVES, ETC. IN YORKSHIRE.
XXX

PURE element of waters! wheresoe'er
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Thou dost forsake thy subterranean haunts,

Green herbs, bright flowers, and berry-bearing plants,
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Rise into life and in thy train appear

And, through the sunny portion of the year,

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Swift insects shine, thy hovering pursuivants :
And, if thy bounty fail, the forest pants;
And hart and hind and hunter with his spear,"
Languish and droop together. Nor unfelt

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In man's perturbed soul thy sway benign; ***
And, haply, far within the marble belte

Of central earth, where tortured Spirits pine

For grace and goodness lost, thy murmurs melt

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Their anguish, and they blend sweet songs with thine.* nasit mm. 1on W

* Waters (as Mr. Westall informs us in the letter-press prefixed to his admirable views) are invariably found to flow through these caverns. Doufoushetik tuo nulis va dest Cistne Juti

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XXI.

-ROO

MALHAM COVE.

WAS the aim frustrated by force or guile, TË When giants scooped from out the rocky ground

-Tier under tier this semicirque profound? (Giants the same who built in Erin's isles asT That Causeway with incomparable toil bio T O, had this vast theatric structure wounds of W With finished sweep into a perfect round,on, sd 10 No mightier work had gained the plausive smiles. (T Of all-beholding Phoebus ! But, alas, uni bab Vain earth!false world! Foundations must be laid In Heaven; for, mid the wreck of is and was, fí Things incomplete and purposes betrayed gnoT Make sadder transits o'er truth's mystic glass

Than noblest objects utterly decayed of sono bat.

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