A NE LEGY By Gray. A POEM, By Bishop Porteus. AND IN A COUNTRY CHURCH.YARD, OF CORNWALL. When self-esteem, or others' adulation, Vide Blair's Grave. Plymouth-Dock: (1804) WHILST some affect the sun, and some the shade, The keys of hell and death. The Grave, dread thing! | Men shiver when thou'rt nam'd: Nature appa!'d Shakes off her wonted firmness. Ah ! how dark Cheerless, unsocial plant! that loves to dwell See yonder hallow'd fane! the pious work . The wind is up; hark! how it howls! methinks, Quite round the pile, a row of reverend elms, Cozval near with all that ragged shew, Long lash'd by the rude winds: some rift half down Their branchless trunks: Others so thin a-top, That scarce two crows could lodge in the same tree. Strange things, the neighbours say, have happen'd here: Wild shrieks have issued from the hollow tombs; Dead men have come again and walk'd about; And the great bell has toll'd, unrung, untouchd. |