Or upwards dart with soaring force, And tempt some more ambitious course? Obedient now to Hope's command, I bid each humble wish expand,
And fair and bright Life's prospects seem, While Hope displays her cheering beam, And Fancy's vivid colorings stream, While Emulation stands me nigh The Goddess of the eager eye.
With foot advanc'd and anxious heart Now for the fancied goal I start :— Ah! why will Reason intervene Me and my promised joys between! She stops my course, she chains my speed, While thus her forceful words proceed. "Ah! listen, youth, ere yet too late, What evils on thy course may wait! To bow the head, to bend the knee A minion of Servility,
At low Pride's frequent frowns to sigh, And watch the glance in Folly's eye; To toil intense, yet toil in vain, And feel with what a hollow pain
Pale Disappointment hangs her head
O'er darling Expectation dead!
"The scene is changed and Fortune's gale
Shall belly out each prosperous sail.
Yet sudden wealth full well I know
Did never Happiness bestow.
That wealth, to which we were not born
Dooms us to sorrow or to scorn.
Behold yon flock which long had trod O'er the short grass of Devon's sod, To Lincoln's rank rich meads transferr'd, And in their fate thy own be fear'd; Through every limb contagions fly, Deform'd and chok'd they burst and die. "When Luxury opens wide her arms, And smiling woos thee to those charms,
Whose fascination thousands own,
Shall thy brows wear the stoic frown? And when her goblet she extends Which madd'ning myriads press around, What power divine thy soul befriends That thou shouldst dash it to the ground?- No, thou shalt drink, and thou shalt know Her transient bliss, her lasting woe,
Her maniac joys, that know no measure, And riot rude and painted pleasure ;— Till (sad reverse!) the Enchantress vile To frowns converts her magic smile; Her train impatient to destroy, Observe her frown with gloomy joy ; On thee with harpy fangs they seize The hideous offspring of Disease, Swoll'n Dropsy ignorant of Rest, And Fever garb'd in scarlet vest, Consumption driving the quick hearse, And Gout that howls the frequent curse, With Apoplex of heavy head
That surely aims his dart of lead.
"But say, Life's joys unmix'd were given
To thee some favorite of Heaven:
Within, without, tho' all were health- Yet what e'en thus are Fame, Power, Wealth, But sounds that variously express, What's thine already-Happiness! 'Tis thine the converse deep to hold With all the famous sons of old; And thine the happy waking dream While Hope pursues some favorite theme, As oft when Night o'er Heaven is spread, Round this maternal seat you tread, Where far from splendor, far from riot, In silence wrapt sleeps careless quiet. 'Tis thine with fancy oft to talk, And thine the peaceful evening walk; And what to thee the sweetest are- The setting sun, the evening star-
The tints, which live along the sky, And Moon that meets thy raptur'd eye, Where oft the tear shall grateful start, Dear silent pleasures of the Heart! Ah! Being blest, for Heaven shall lend To share thy simple joys a friend! Ah! doubly blest, if Love supply His influence to complete thy joy, If chance some lovely maid thou find To read thy visage in thy mind.
"One blessing more demands thy care:- Once more to Heaven address the prayer: For humble independence pray The guardian genius of thy way; Whom (sages say) in days of yore Meek competence to wisdom bore, So shall thy little vessel glide With a fair breeze adown the tide, And Hope, if e'er thou 'ginst to sorrow Remind thee of some fair to-morrow, Till death shall close thy tranquil eye While Faith proclaims 'thou shalt not die!'"
TELL me, on what holy ground May Domestic Peace be found- Halcyon Daughter of the skies! Far on fearful wings she flies, From the pomp of sceptered State, From the Rebel's noisy hate, In a cottaged vale She dwells Listening to the Sabbath bells! Still around her steps are seen Spotless Honor's meeker mien, Love, the sire of pleasing fears, Sorrow smiling through her tears, And conscious of the past employ Memory, bosom-spring of joy.
WHEN Youth his faery reign began Ere sorrow had proclaimed me man; While Peace the present hour beguiled, And all the lovely Prospect smiled; Then Mary! 'mid my lightsome glee I heav'd the painless Sigh for thee.
And when, along the waves of woe, My harassed Heart was doomed to know The frantic burst of Orage keen, And the slow Pang that gnaws unseen; Then shipwrecked on Life's stormy sea I heaved an anguished Sigh for thee!
But soon Reflection's power imprest A stiller sadness on my breast; And sickly hope with waning eye · Was well content to droop and die : I yielded to the stern decree,
ALL are not born to soar-and ah! how few In tracks, where Wisdom leads, their paths pursue! Contagious when to wit or wealth allied, Folly and Vice diffuse their venom wide. On Folly every fool his talent tries;
It asks some toil to imitate the wise;
Tho' few like Fox can speak-like Pitt can think— Yet all like Fox can game-like Pitt can drink.
O, Curas hominum! O, quantum est in rebus inane!
THE fervid Sun had more than halv'd the day, When gloomy on his couch Philedon lay; His feeble frame consumptive as his purse, His aching head did wine and women curse; His fortune ruin'd and his wealth decay'd, Clamorous his Duns, his gaming debts unpaid, The youth indignant seiz'd his tailor's bill, And on its back thus wrote with moral quill : "Various as colors in the rainbow shown, Or similar in emptiness alone,
How false, how vain are Man's pursuits below! Wealth, Honor, Pleasure—what can ye bestow? Yet see, how high and low, and young and old Pursue the all delusive power of Gold. Fond man should all Peru thy empire own, For thee tho' all Golconda's jewels shone, What greater bliss could all this wealth supply? What, but to eat and drink and sleep and die? Go, tempt the stormy sea, the burning soil- Go, waste the night in thought, the day in toil, Dark frowns the rock, and fierce the tempests rave- Thy ingots go the unconscious deep to pave ! Or thunder at thy door the midnight train, Or death shall knock that never knocks in vain. Next Honor's sons come bustling on amain; I laugh with pity at the idle train.
« AnkstesnisTęsti » |