Memory, be still! why throng upon
the thought
These scenes so deeply stained with sorrow’s
dye?
Is there in all thy stores no cheerful draught,
To brighten yet once more in Fancy’s eye?
Yes from afar a landscape
seems to rise,
Embellished by the lavish hand of spring;
Thin gilded clouds float lightly through the skies,
And laughing loves disport on fluttering wing.
How blest the youth in yonder
valley laid!
What smiles in
every conscious feature play!
While, to the murmurs of the
breezy glade,
His merry pipe
attunes the rural lay.
Hail, Innocence! whose bosom
all serene,
Feels not, as
yet, the internal tempest roll.
Oh, ne’er may care distract
thy placid mein!
Ne’er may
the shades of doubt o’erwhelm thy soul!
Vain wish! for lo, in gay
attire concealed,
Yonder she comes!
the heart-inflaming fiend!
(Will no kind power the helpless
stripling shield!)
Swift to her destined
prey see Passion bend!
O smile accurst, to hide the
worst designs!
Now with blithe
eye she wooes him to be blest;
While round her arm, unseen,
a serpent twines
And lo, she hurls
it hissing at his breast!
And, instant, lo, his dizzy
eyeball swims
Ghastly, and reddening
darts a frantic glare;
Pain, with strong grasp, distorts
his writhing limbs,
And Fear’s
cold hand erects his frozen hair.
Is this, O life, is this thy
boasted prime!
And does thy spring
no happier prospect yield!
Why should the sunbeam paint
thy glittering clime,
When the keen
mildew desolates the field!
How memory pains! Let
some gay theme beguile
The musing mind,
and sooth to soft delight.
Ye images of woe, no more
recoil!
Be life’s
past scenes wrapt in oblivious night.
Now when fierce Winter, armed
with wasteful power,
Heaves the wild
deep that thunders from afar;
How sweet to sit in this sequestered
bower,
To hear, and but
to hear, the mingling war!
Ambition here displays no
gilded toy,
That tempts on
desperate wing the soul to rise;
Nor Pleasure’s paths
to wilds of woe decoy,
Nor Anguish lurks
in Grandeur’s proud disguise.
Oft has Contentment cheered
this lone abode,
With the mild
languish of her smiling eye;
Here Health in rosy bloom
has often glowed,
While loose-robed
Quiet stood enamoured by.
Even the storm lulls to more
profound repose;
The storm these
humble walls assails in vain.
The shrub is sheltered, when
the whirlwind blows,
While the oak’s
mighty ruin strows the plain.
Blow on, ye winds! Thine,
Winter, be the skies;
And toss the infuriate
surge, and vales lay waste.
Nature thy temporary rage
defies;
To her relief
the gentler Seasons haste.
Throned in her emerald car,
see Spring appear!
(As Fancy wills,
the landscape starts to view.)
Her emerald car the youthful
Zéphyrs bear,
Fanning her bosom
with their pinions blue.
Around the jocund Hours are
fluttering seen,
And lo, her rod
the rose-lip’d Power extends!
And lo, the lawns are decked
in living green,
And Beauty’s
bright-eyed train from Heaven descends!
Haste, happy days, and make
all Nature glad
But will all Nature
joy at your return?
O, can ye cheer pale Sickness’
gloomy bed,
Or dry the tears
that bathe the untimely urn?
Will ye one transient ray
of gladness dart,
Where groans the
dungeon to the captive’s wail?
To ease tired Disappointment’s
bleeding heart,
Will all your
stores of softening balm avail!
When stern Oppression, in
his harpy fangs,
From Want’s
weak grasp the last sad morsel bears,
Can ye allay the dying parent’s
pangs,
Whose infant craves
relief with fruitless tears?
For ah! thy reign, Oppression,
is not past.
Who from the shivering
limbs the vestment rends?
Who lays the once rejoicing
village waste,
Bursting the ties
of lovers and of friends!
But hope not, Muse, vain-glorious
as thou art,
With the weak
impulse of thy humble strain,
Hope not to soften Pride’s
obdurate heart,
When ERROL’s
bright example shines in vain.
Then cease the theme.
Turn, Fancy, turn thine eye,
Thy weeping eye,
nor further urge thy flight.
Thy haunts, alas! no gleams
of joy supply,
Or transient gleams,
that flash and sink in night.
Yet fain the mind its anguish
would forego:
Spread, then,
Historic Muse, thy pictured scroll;
Bid the great scenes in all
their splendour glow,
And rouse to thought
sublime the exulting soul.
What mingling pomps rush on
the enraptured gaze!
Lo, where the
gallant navy rides the deep!
Here, glittering towns their
spiry turrets raise,
There, bulwarks
overhang the shaggy steep.
Bristling with spears, and
bright with burnished shields,
The embattled
legions stretch their long array;
Discord’s red torch,
as fierce she scours the fields,
With bloody tincture
stains the face of day.
And now the hosts in silence
wait the sign.
Keen are their
looks whom Liberty inspires!
Quick as the goddess darts
along the line,
Each breast impatient
burns with noble fires.
Her form how graceful!
In her lofty mien
The smiles of
love stern Wisdom’s frown controul;
Her fearless eye, determined
though serene,
Speaks the great
purpose, and the unconquered soul.
Mark, where Ambition leads
the adverse band,
Each feature fierce
and hagard, as with pain!
With menace loud he cries,
while from his hand
He vainly strives
to wipe the crimson stain.
Lo, at his call, impetuous
as the storms,
Headlong to deeds
of death the hosts are driven;
Hatred, to madness wrought,
each face deforms,
Mounts the black
whirlwind, and involves the heaven.
Now, Virtue, now thy powerful
succour lend,
Shield them, for
Liberty who dare to die
Ah, Liberty! will none thy
cause befriend!
Are those thy
sons, thy generous sons, that fly!
Not Virtue’s self, when
Heaven its aid denies,
Can brace the
loosened nerves, or warm the heart;
Not Virtue’s self can
still the burst of sighs,
When festers in
the soul misfortune’s dart.
See, where by terror and despair
dismayed,
The scattering
legions pour along the plain!
Ambition’s car, in bloody
spoils arrayed,
Hews its broad
way, as Vengeance guides the rein.
But who is He, that, by yon
lonely brook,
With woods o’erhung,
and precipices rude,
Lies all abandoned, yet, with
dauntless look,
Sees streaming
from his breast the purple flood?
Ah, Brutus! ever thine
be Virtue’s tear!
Lo, his dim eyes
to Liberty he turns,
As, scarce supported on her
broken spear,
O’er her
expiring son the goddess mourns.
Loose to the wind her azure
mantle flies;
From her dishevelled
locks she rends the plume;
No lustre lightens in her
weeping eyes,
And on her tear-stained
cheek no roses bloom.
Meanwhile the world, Ambition,
owns thy sway;
Fame’s loudest
trumpet labours with thy name;
For thee the Muse awakes her
sweetest lay,
And Flattery bids
for thee her altars flame.
Nor in life’s lofty
bustling sphere alone,
The sphere where
monarchs and where heroes toil,
Sink Virtue’s sons beneath
Misfortune’s frown,
While Guilt’s
thrilled bosom leaps at Pleasure’s smile:
Full oft, where Solitude and
Silence dwell,
Far, far remote,
amid the lowly plain,
Resounds the voice of Woe
from Virtue’s cell:
Such is man’s
doom; and Pity weeps in vain.
Still grief recoils How
vainly have I strove,
Thy power, O Melancholy,
to withstand!
Tired I submit; but yet, O
yet remove,
Or ease the pressure
of thy heavy hand.
Yet, for a while, let the
bewildered soul
Find in society
relief from woe;
O yield, a while, to Friendship’s
soft controul;
Some respite,
Friendship, wilt thou not bestow?
Come then, Philander!
whose exalted mind
Looks down from
far on all that charms the great;
For thou canst bear, unshaken
and resigned,
The brightest
smiles, the blackest frowns of Fate!
Come thou, whose love unlimited,
sincere,
Nor faction cools,
nor injury destroys;
Who lend’st to Misery’s
moan a pitying ear,
And feel’st
with ecstasy another’s joys:
Who know’st man’s
frailty, with a favouring eye
And melting heart,
behold’st a brother’s fall;
Who, unenslaved by Fashion’s
narrow tye,
With manly freedom
follow’st Nature’s call.
And bring thy Delia,
sweetly-smiling fair,
Whose spotless
soul no rankling thoughts deform;
Her gentle accents calm each
throbbing care,
And harmonize
the thunder of the storm.
Though blest with wisdom,
and with wit refined,
She courts no
homage, nor desires to shine;
In her each sentiment sublime
is joined
To female softness,
and a form divine.
Come, and disperse the involving
shadows drear;
Let chastened
mirth the social hours employ.
O catch the swift-winged moment
while ’tis near
On swiftest wing
the moment flies of joy.
Even while the careless disencumbered
soul
Sinks, all dissolving,
into pleasure’s dream,
Even then to time’s
tremendous verge we roll,
With headlong
haste, along life’s surgey stream.
Can gaiety the vanished years
restore,
Or on the withering
limbs fresh beauty shed,
Or soothe the sad inevitable
hour,
Or cheer the dark,
dark mansions of the dead?
Still sounds the solemn knell,
in Fancy’s ear,
That called Eliza
to the silent tomb;
With her how jocund rolled
the sprightly year!
How shone the
nymph in beauty’s brightest bloom!
Ah! Beauty’s bloom
avails not in the grave!
Youth’s
lofty mien, nor Age’s awful grace.
Moulder alike unknown the
prince and slave,
Whelmed in the
enormous wreck of human race.
The thought-fixed portraiture,
the breathing bust,
The arch with
proud memorials arrayed,
The long-lived pyramid shall
sink in dust,
To dumb Oblivion’s
ever desert shade.
Fancy from joy still wanders
far astray.
Ah Melancholy,
how I feel thy power!
Long have I laboured to elude
thy sway
But ’tis
enough, for I resist no more.
The traveller thus, that o’er
the midnight waste,
Through many a
lonesome path is doomed to roam,
Wildered and weary sits him
down at last;
For long the night,
and distant far his home.