The Petition of An Old Uninhabited House in Penzance to its Master in Town With Hints to the Author of John Bull, A Comedy. To which is added an Appendix. Embellished with a View of the Old House. Second Edition [by C. V. Le Grice] |
INSCRIPTION FOR LANYON CROMLECH
IN ITS FALLEN STATE.
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The Petition of An Old Uninhabited House in Penzance to its Master in Town | ||
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INSCRIPTION FOR LANYON CROMLECH IN ITS FALLEN STATE.
And Thou at last art fall'n: Thou, who hast seenThe storms and calms of twice ten hundred years.
The naked Briton here has paused to gaze
Upon thy pond'rous mass, ere bells were chimed,
Or the throng'd hamlet smok'd with social fires.
Whilst thou hast here repos'd, what numerous tribes,
That breath'd the breath of life, have pass'd away.—
What wond'rous changes in th' affairs of men!
Their proudest cities lowly ruins made;
Battles, and sieges, empires lost and won;
Whilst thou hast stood upon the silent hill
A lonely monument of times that were.—
Lie, where thou art. Let no rude hand remove,
Or spoil thee; for the spot is consecrate
To thee, and Thou to it: and as the heart
Aching with thoughts of human littleness
Asks, without hope of knowing, whose the strength
That poised thee here; so ages yet unborn
(O! humbling, humbling thought!) may vainly seek,
What were the race of men, that saw thee fall.
The Petition of An Old Uninhabited House in Penzance to its Master in Town | ||