ODE
ON
LORD HAY'S BIRTH-DAY
13Th may,
1767.
A muse, unskilled in venal praise,
Unstained with flattery’s art;
Who loves simplicity of lays
Breathed ardent from the heart;
While gratitude and joy inspire,
Resumes the long-unpractised lyre,
To hail, O Hay, thy natal Morn;
No gaudy wreath of flowers she weaves,
But twines with oak the laurel leaves,
Thy cradle to adorn.
For, not on beds of gaudy flowers
Thine ancestors reclined,
Where sloth dissolves, and spleen devours,
All energy of mind;
To hurl the dart, to ride the car,
To stem the deluges of war,
And snatch from Fate a sinking land;
Trample the invader’s lofty crest,
And from his grasp the dagger wrest,
And desolating brand:
’Twas this that raised
the illustrious line,
To match the first in fame;
A thousand years have seen
it shine
With unabated flame:
Have seen thy mighty sires
appear
Foremost in Glory’s
high career,
The pride and pattern of the
brave.
Yet, pure from lust of blood
their fire,
And from Ambition’s
wild desire,
They triumphed but to save.
The Muse with joy attends
their way
The vales of peace along;
There, to its Lord the village
gay
Renews the grateful song.
Yon castle’s glittering
towers contain
No pit of woe, nor clanking
chain,
Nor to the suppliant’s
wail resound:
The open doors the needy bless.
The unfriended hail their
calm recess,
And gladness smiles around.
There, to the sympathetic
heart
Life’s best delights
belong,
To mitigate the mourner’s
smart,
To guard the weak from wrong.
Ye sons of luxury, be wise;
Know, happiness for ever flies
The cold and solitary breast;
Then let the social instinct
glow,
And learn to feel another’s
woe,
And in his joy be blessed.
O yet, ere Pleasure plant
her snare
For unsuspecting youth;
Ere Flattery her song prepare
To check the voice of Truth;
O may his country’s
guardian power
Attend the slumbering Infant’s
bower,
And bright, inspiring dreams
impart;
To rouse the hereditary fire,
To kindle each sublime desire,
Exalt, and warm the heart.
Swift to reward a parent’s
fears,
A parent’s hopes to
crown,
Roll on in peace, ye blooming
years,
That rear him to renown;
When, in his finished form
and face,
Admiring multitudes shall
trace
Each patrimonial charm combined;
The courteous yet majestic
mien,
The liberal smile, the look
serene,
The great and gentle mind.
Yet, though thou draw a nation’s
eyes,
And win a nation’s love,
Let not thy towering mind
despise
The village and the grove.
No slander there shall wound
thy fame,
No ruffian take his deadly
aim,
No rival weave the secret
snare:
For Innocence, with angel
smile,
Simplicity, that knows not
guile,
And Love and Peace are there.
When winds the mountain oak
assail,
And lay its glories waste,
Content may slumber in the
vale,
Unconscious of the blast.
Through scenes of tumult while
we roam,
The heart, alas! is ne’er
at home;
It hopes in time to roam no
more:
The mariner, not vainly brave,
Combats the storm, and rides
the wave,
To rest, at last, on shore.
Ye proud, ye selfish, ye severe,
How vain your mask of state!
The good alone have joy sincere,
The good alone are great:
Great, when, amid the vale
of peace,
They bid the plaint of sorrow
cease,
And hear the voice of artless
praise;
As, when along the trophied
plain,
Sublime they lead the victor
train,
While shouting nations gaze.