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Poems

Chiefly Written in Retirement, By John Thelwall; With Memoirs of the Life of the Author. Second Edition

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95

ELEGY On the death of a favourite Schoolfellow, Phillip Bonafous, who died of the small pox, in 1785.

[_]

(From the Author's first Poems.)

I GRIEVE to think how quick each blossom fades
That decorates the thorny road of life—
How Sorrow's worm the tender bud invades,
How oft 'tis blighted by Misfortune's strife.
I grieve to think how Disappointment's breath
Shrinks the young foliage of our budding hopes!
How oft the sudden hand of cruel Death
Each sweetest branch of young enjoyment lops.
I had a friend—O, Lucio, ever dear!
Still shall thy memory in my bosom live;
Thy virtues bloom in recollection here,
Dwell on my tongue, and in my theme survive.
I had a friend—tho Heav'n had snatch'd away
Each promis'd comfort of my tender age;
In him it seem'd my losses to repay—
My sweet companion on life's toilsome stage!
How fraught with tender feelings was his mind!
O'erflowing font of sensibility!
To friends how true! to relatives how kind!
In generous zeal, how boundless and how free!

96

But ah, Disease, with envious hand, assail'd
The vital stem of each remaining joy:
O'er his fair form the noxious pest prevail'd;
Prompt to deform, and powerful to destroy.
Who now shall sooth my sorrow-clouded mind?
Who now the sad reflection shall relieve?
Where shall my heart consoling friendship find?
Misfortune's children still unpity'd grieve.
The proud carnation, costly child of art,
Droops not unheeded on the cultur'd plain.
The florist's hand shall soon his aid impart,
With care to rear it, and with props sustain.
But if some hedge-row flower (of humbler worth)
By Erus torn, the wounded head recline,
The careless traveller treads it to the earth—
The herd, unpitying, to its fate resign.
Not so didst thou, my heart's elected friend!
You kindly courted when the world grew coy;
When bland civility was at an end,
And the cold kinsman turn'd the averted eye.
For this shall Memory oft, with glistening tear,
Thy form, thy friendship, and thy name renew—
Still Lucio dwell in recollection here,
And all his virtues blossom in my view.

97

Elegy, written during the Festival of Christmas, 1785.

[_]

(From the same.)

The time has been (but ah! farewell those days—
Those cheerful days of innocence and mirth!)
I bless'd the wained sun's convivial rays
That gave this day of joyous pastime birth.
Around the social hearth, at night, we throng'd,
Where humour much, but more good-nature shin'd;
While joke and song the cheerful feast prolong'd
Beyond the usual hour for rest assign'd.
Oft would our Sire the youthful train provoke;
Full oft incite to pastimes gay and bland;
Full oft himself revive the flagging joke,
And, in the comrade, lose the sire's command.
Good, gentle soul! who every soul could cheer!—
Of morals blameless, as of manners gay;
He scorn'd the stoick frown and tone severe,
And rather chose by love than fear to sway.
But he is gone; and gone the joys of life—
Now woes on woes roll thickening o'er my head;
While Penury, and keen domestic Strife,
And hopeless Love their mingled venom shed.

98

Pale Melancholy's first-born daughter, Spleen,
To my sick fancy paints a thousand ills:
Upholds her shadowy, woe-depictur'd screen,
Blasts every hope, and every prospect chills.
Ah why, to all the real woes of life,
Should sick Imagination add her store?—
Ideal blending with substantial strife,
To crush the feeble wretch oppress'd before?
Ye cheerful Hours, unhurt by gnawing Care!
Ye social Days of plenty, joy, and peace!
Say will ye e'er the wrongs of Fate repair?
Shall e'er the frowns of adverse Fortune cease?

Elegy, written in 1786, at a time when the subject of Imprisonment for Debt was much discussed.

Farewell thou last dim blush of fading day—
Ye busy scenes—ye bustling Cares, farewell:
Lo Contemplation watch the parting ray,
To lead the Votary to her pensive Cell!
Yes, power serene! your awful haunts I love,
What time, flow-pacing thro' the misty vale,
Wrapp'd in Night's sober mantle, sad you rove,
And breathe your precepts in the sullen gale,

99

And I have heard you, in the breezy sigh
Of Zephyrs moaning in the Moon's pale beam,
While scarce their humid pinnions, as they fly,
Shake the dark spray, or curl the spangled stream.
And I have heard and felt the solemn call,
What time, more awful, in the stormy blast,
Amid the ruins of some ivy'd wall,
You told of Earth's frail pomps, and follies past.
O! lead me then, sad moralizing pow'r!
To where thy Cavern fronts the raging main:
There will I think on life's tempestuous hour,
And human woe shall moralize the strain.
Ah me! how long the gaunt disastrous train
That croud with anguish Man's precarious day!
How Sickness, Sorrow, Penury, and Pain,
And Disappointment throng in dark array!
How perjur'd Friendship darts the treacherous sting—
How all the youthful Passions, gay to view,
Repentance, shame, and wild affliction bring—
While scorpion Furies all their paths pursue!
Where Pleasure courts us with her smiling train,
There Pain and Death prepare the hidden dart—
Where Wealth allures with hopes of promis'd gain,
There Ruin waits to rend the wasted heart.

100

How many from the golden dreams of life,
Has my sad soul seen wak'd to iron woe!
How many sunk in shame and hopeless strife,
Who grasp'd at fame with hope's aspiring glow.
From the high summit of well-founded hopes
(If ought were founded in this fragile world)
While each gay prospect round alluring opes,
To Want's abyss what crouds are headlong hurl'd!
To that abyss as, with imploring hands
And bleeding hearts, precipitate they fall,
Lo prosperous Avarice—fiend unfeeling! stands,
And points the iron door, and grated wall.
Is this the land where liberal feelings glow?
Is this the land where Justice holds the scale?
The felon's lot must pale Disaster know?
And freemen give Misfortune's sons a gaol?—
A gaol!—oh horror! what a sound is there
To jar the feeling nerve of Virtue's ear!
The dungeon's gloom must guiltless Sorrow share,
Its noxious terrors, and its pangs severe?
From scenes like these, let Contemplation soar,
Nor sink desponding in the cheerless gloom;
A better world, with better hopes, explore,
Mount to the skies, and peer beyond the tomb.

101

Sonnet to the Nightingale. 1788.

Sweet Bird of Sympathy! whose voice alone
Sooths the attentive ear of darkling Woe,
Whose strains, responsive to the Wretch's moan,
With softly melancholy influence flow,
As thy sweet note thus melts upon my ear,
I heave the sigh—I shed the starting tear.
For oh! of Lucio—dear, departed friend!—
The fond memorial in that note I find.
When Joy forbore her cheerful smile to lend,
When Fortune lour'd on my benighted mind,
Alone, with Friendship's sympathizing strain,
He sooth'd my soul, and lull'd my bosom's pain.
Sweet Bird of Sympathy! for this the tear
Still shall Remembrance shed on Friendship's early bier!

Lines presented by the Author, to his Mother, together with a crutch stick.

[_]

(Re-printed from the Imperial Magazine.)

Dear source of that life, which your kindness and care
Not only preserv'd, but persists to endear,
Who so oft o'er my infancy fondly would bend,
Protection to yield, and assistance to lend;
Ere yet my young limbs a firm fortitude knew,
Or could hope for a prop, but from love, and from you,
Whose solicitude prov'd (how incessantly tried!)
The strength of my weakness, my help, and my guide;

102

Since Providence will'd that, thro' infancy's cares,
The follies of childhood, and youth's early snares,
Your hand should conduct me to manhood's estate,
When the full-flowing spirits can combat with Fate;
And since that great Pow'r has now doom'd me to see
Your age want the aid you imparted to me,
O! let me (since mine it by nature appears)
Be the stay of your steps, and the strength of your years.
Meantime, at my hand, this small present accept;
Both as emblem (or type) and a pledge of respect.
What tho no quaint labour a polish impart,
Nor the varnisher's daub, nor the cunning of art;
Yet let not the roughness of Nature offend:
It will ever be ready its service to lend.
And the gift and the giver alike may you find,
The stay of your steps, and the crutch of your mind.

Stanzas On a clay candlestick, given to the Author by an esteemed and valuable friend.

[_]

(See Memoir, p. xix.)

[_]

(From the same.)

The smallest gift from Friendship's partial hand
To generous minds acquires extrinsic worth;
As homeliest scenes our fond respects command,
If, haply, honour'd by some valu'd birth.
But thou, neat present of well-moulded clay!
From still superior motives claim'st my love;
In thee her humble emblem I survey,
Whose worth you shadow, and whose friendship prove.

103

The gift, where oft the visual radiance plays,
The nightly studies of my Muse befriends;
The giver, beaming wisdom's mental rays,
My mind irradiates, and my judgment mends.
With thee, what time the garish day is fled,
And Noise and Folly quit the sombre scene,
When Contemplation's deepest mantle spread,
Bids passion sleep, and judgment reign serene—
Oft shall my toil explore the classic ground
Where never selfish Care, with heavy eye,
Presum'd to pace his dull unfeeling round,
Dead to the generous woe, or liberal joy—
The classic realms of Fancy, ever gay!
Where smile the Graces, and where haunts the Muse;
Or there where Truth directs the hallow'd way,
Or heav'n-taught Science the dark maze pursues.
Nor will I pass with light unheedful tread
The realm, where midst the hoary wrecks of time,
Eventful Histroy hails the mighty dead,
And graves intent the instructive lore sublime.
There too, with solemn Ethics by her side,
I'll rove where Sentiment refines the heart;
Nor shun, with frigid and fastidious pride,
Where sportive Humour wings the glittering dart.
Thus the lov'd scenes where Learning, Genius shine,
Aided by thee, kind gift, will I explore;
And oft the donor hail, in whom combine
The mingled merits of their varied lore.

104

O! thou, who blend'st in thy capacious thought,
With these, what these could never teach alone,
The useful lore from life's great drama caught,
To sons of Science but too seldom known;
Fain would digressive Friendship here display
The liberal feelings of thy letter'd soul,
Whose partial care directs my dubious way,
Prompts the bright race, and aids me to the goal.
To infant Genius who a fostering friend,
Can watch the dawning of the faintest ray,
With kindling zeal its influence extend,
And chace the clouds of prejudice away.
O! should that seeming dawn, you kindly hail,
Prove no false glow-worm's short delusive gleam—
Thro' fortune's low'ring mists at length prevail,
And dart the lustre of no feeble beam;
In Poesy's horizon should it shine
(Fond, flattering thought!) in full meridian glow,
Then shall it boast the fostering care of Cline,
And, Hawes's worth shall unborn Ages know.
From mortal view by hard Misfortune hurl'd,
Deep in oblivion's chaos hid I lay:
He found, and plac'd me in the letter'd world,
There bad my verse a moral light display.
Yet still deep shadows o'er my genius hung,
The clouds of error, and the mists of doubt;
Misguided Taste her veil obscuring flung,
Nor Critic-Friendship mark'd the dubious rout.

105

From quick extinction then you kindly rose
(A heav'n-sent gale) the infant beam to save;
Chas'd, from my clouded course, these envious foes,
And to my rays recruited vigour gave.
Nor shall my mind, while night succeeds to day,
The grateful memory of thy worth resign—
Or Muse forget—while Muse can pour the lay,
Her best, her earliest benefactor—Cline.

EXTEMPORE, On receiving a Rose from his Sister.

[_]

(From the same.)

Why, sever'd from its parent thorn,
Assumes the rose a brighter hue
Than when, impearl'd by dewy morn,
Among surrounding sweets it grew?
Why should it to the feasted sense,
Within a narrow room confin'd,
A richer perfume now dispense,
Than when it breath'd the fresh'ning wind?
Fraterna, hear the partial Muse
The mystery's pleasing cause proclaim:
More sweet its breath, more gay its hues,
Since from Affection's hand it came.

106

The Invitation.

To Stella.

July, 1789.
[_]

(From the same.)

Say, Stella, wilt thou rove with me,
Far from the cheerful native scene,
From smiling hill and valley flee,
From harvest fields and pasture green?
From these could'st thou contented range
The city's bustling cares to prove?
All, all these tranquil joys exchange—
The sole return thy Damon's love?
Yet hear me love, ere thou reply,
A youth that scorns deception hear;
No wealth is mine, the heart to buy;
My cot is poor; my fate severe:
Nor may'st thou look for pomp and shew,
Or hope in Pleasure's train to move.
Say, wilt thou, then, these joys forego?—
The sole return thy Damon's love!
Ah, think, what pain 'twill be to view
The splendid city's gay parade,
The festive dance, the public shew,
The costly dress with pride display'd—
These, these to view; yet ne'er to share—
Ah! would not this thy patience move?
All, all these trials couldst thou bear?—
The sole reward thy Damon's love.

107

If so, my Stella, come with me,
And quit the cheerful native scene;
From smiling hill and valley flee,
From harvest fields, and pasture green.
And if thou heav'st a parting sigh,
My bosom shall responsive move;
Or shouldst thou weep, my tearful eye
Shall well assure thy Damon's love.
Yet, think my Stella, could'st thou bear
To drudge those charms in ceaseless toil
While other forms, less sweetly fair,
In idle pomp around Thee smile.
And when Mischance, or frowning Care
My hasty ruffled temper move—
Say, can'st thou from reproach forbear,
And rest assur'd of Damon's love.
If so, my Stella, come with me,
Far from these rural scenes to stray:
No youth more blest, more fond shall be,
And none a truer heart display.
For pride or gold let others wed,
In scenes of noisy pomp to move;
While we, by pure affection led,
Will seek for nought but mutual love.

108

STANZAS written in 1790.

[_]

(From the same.)

In rural metaphor full oft my song
Hath sung the feverish pains of slighted love;
With artful aim to charm the list'ning throng,
More than the fair one's cruel heart to move.
Though dying sighs might melt through ev'ry strain,
Though tearful woe bedropt each murmur'd line,
Those sighs aspir'd a poet's name to gain,
Those tears impearl'd Ambition's darling shrine.
'Tis true, with Delia's sense and merit fir'd,
Strong throbb'd my heart to gain the wondrous maid;
Yet fond Ambition the proud wish inspir'd:
And when the substance fled, I woo'd the shade.
Nor less Melinda's philosophic mind,
Her fame wide sounded wak'd the glow-worm fire;
'Till what Ambition urg'd, and verse refin'd,
Reflection's beam bad silently expire.
Thus, though full many a radiant fair I sung,
My constant heart hath still remain'd the same;
What name soe'er might falter on my tongue,
Love was the theme, the wish'd-for guerdon—fame!

109

But now, Ambition's vain pursuit—farewell!
Weary, at length I see the proud deceit;
With plain Simplicity my heart shall dwell,
Nor haughty dreams my social pleasure's cheat.
And lo! Simplicity herself appears!
In semblance fair, a blooming village maid;
Her tender form my drooping fancy cheers,
Her artless charms my throbbing heart invade.
Soft on her youthful lip, a winning smile
(Not such as town-bred Affectation wears)
Speaks the mild temper, free from haughty guile,
And the gay innocence of soul declares.
Ye mincing daughters of fantastic Pride!—
Ye glittering flies who pant in Folly's chace!
Votaries of Fashion, lay your airs aside—
Come here, and learn the charms of real grace!
See, with an ease which Fashion ne'er could teach,
On steady foot she lightly glides along;
While Health's pure glow, which Art may never reach,
And untaught glances charm the gazing throng!
Lo! native modesty her charms pervade,
And with unconscious dignity adorn!
This Pride would imitate—But soon betray'd,
The stiffen'd mimic only claims our scorn.

110

O! sweet Simplicity! dear, rustic fair!
Hence shall my song thy worth, o'er all, approve!
Come—live with me; my pure affections share,
With native Honour, and with artless Love.
But ah! these soft desires, this fluttering heart,
Prove the dear form no allegoric shade!
Could fairy dreams such kindling hopes impart,
So charm the senses, and the soul invade?
And hark, how Admiration's raptur'd tale
Steals in soft whispers through the rustic throng,
'Tis she—my Stella! pride of Catmose vale,
Joy of each heart—and theme of every song!
Yet come Arcadian nymph, as Dryad fair,
Let the pure strain of artless passion move:
Come live with me, my fix'd affections share
With native Honour and with artless Love,

EPISTLE to MERCUTIO.

July, 1791.
[_]

(From the Peripatetic.)

While you, my friend, in London's giddy town,
With jest and song each grave reflection drown,
Flirt with gay belles, besiege fantastic wenches
Who fire Love's glances from their band-box trenches,
Whence, while their banners wave, they dauntless wield
The various arms of Love's triumphant field—

111

The high-plum'd helm that each fierce bosom awes,
And all the sacred panoply of gauze:
While cares like these your youthful heart detain
Far from the peaceful shade and rustic plain;
Me here, remov'd from scenes of bustling noise,
The town's lewd follies, and its sickly joys,
The Muse perchance, perchance some stronger power
Attracts to loiter in the rural bower.
Yet, truth to say, on Catmose' cheerful plains
No pensive gloom, no sombrous silence reigns;
No solemn saws of philosophic pride,
That bid the feelings of the heart subside!
'Tis transport all: the height of festive joy:
And jocund hours on wings of rapture fly.
Here (Iö Hymen!) Love triumphant dwells
With Jest and Glee, and sound of merry bells:
Mirth rules supreme o'er every friendly breast,
And yields reluctant e'en the dues of rest.
And yet, to hail fair Friendship's hallow'd pow'r,
From joys like these I steal a silent hour,
To thee, my lov'd Mercutio! to impart
The new sensations of a social heart:
—But let us here to preface bid adieu,
While I my journey's simple tale pursue.
Releas'd, at length, from Duty's iron chain,
Whose painful links the happier wish restrain,
Full light of heart sets forth the man of rhime,
For cheerful Catmose, Joy's triumphant clime—
Dear Land of Promise! for whose blissful groves
(Haunts of the Virtues! Muses! Graces! Loves!)

112

Long had I languish'd, thro' my drooping frame
While fond Impatience lanch'd the youthful flame!
And now, no more by angry Fate delay'd,
Eager I fly to clasp the blooming maid.
Tho Stamford's coach the Jewish sabbath kept,
And man and beast in pious malice slept,
My ardent soul disdain'd the feeble bar.
Winds thwart in vain when Love's the pilot star!
Up Highgate-hill, o'er Barnet's fatal heath,
Where factious Warwick breath'd his latest breath;
And hence to Hatfield, once of high renown
For royal domes and heaths of barren brown,
Thro' rain unwet, thro' dangerous roads serene,
With limbs unwearied, and with cheerful mien,
On foot I thrid. The turtle, from the glade,
Trills the sad note that echoes thro' the shade,
While glow-worms oft their amorous fires display,
To light the wandering lover on his way:
Like Hero's torch, that, thro' the midnight hour,
Blaz'd, long-expecting, from the sea-beat tower,
When bold Leander the impetuous tide
Stemm'd with fond arm,—and in the conflict died.
Ah, gentle worm! may no such fate assail
Thy vagrant bridegroom, to the ruthless gale
Who now, perhaps, his little wing displays,
With eye fast anchor'd on thy silver rays.
Swift to thy virgin bosom may the breeze
Bear him secure, and all thy terrors ease.
When now, at length, each cheerful hope was flown,
And round, full oft, the anxious eye was thrown,

113

Intent to seek (by angry Spleen opprest)
Some neighbouring Inn, for hospitable rest—
(Tho, these approach'd—impatient of delay—
I still pursu'd my solitary way!)
Advancing sounds my drooping spirits cheer,
And the loud lash rings music in my ear.
And lo! a coach, with steeds of fiery breed,
Thro Stamford bound towards the banks of Tweed.
No room within, I cheerly mount the roof,
Against the rain, by love, not cloathing, proof:
For, like a modern friend, so Fate decreed!
My good surtout lurk'd in the hour of need
Secure at home, together folded warm,
And left me fenceless to the pelting storm.
But short the storm: and now, with jocund lay
And vacant laughter we deceive the way,
While our stout guard, well soak'd with gin and ale,
Roar'd at my “Paddy Bull,” and “Sheering Tale;”
Then smoak'd his pipe, laid down his threat'ning gun,
And, while the steeds o'er darkling wild heaths run,
Flat on his belly, o'er the coaches eaves,
Snor'd out amain—to fright away the thieves.
But see!—What comet, with disastrous glare,
Thwarts the thick gloom, and frights the midnight air?
What flame infernal, by demoniac breath
Fann'd, on the confines of the lurid heath—
While haggard phantoms, with discordant yell,
Throng round, malign, to brew the fatal spell?
Such, to the fancy vers'd in Tales of Old,
Might seem the spectres whom we now behold:

114

But, truth to say, nor comet's hideous glare,
Nor flame infernal frights the midnight air;
Nor hags, nor demons, with discordant yell,
Dance round the cauldron o'er the direful spell;
But vagrant Gipsies, on the forest's bound,
Squat round their fire loquacious on the ground.
Poor harmless vagrants!—harmless when compar'd
With those whom crouds adore, and courts reward—
The price of fell ambition, and the meed
Of each oppressive, every ruthless deed:
Of cities sack'd, of empires overthrown,
And struggling millions doom'd in chains to groan.—
Poor harmless vagrants! whom the reeking knife,
Red with the midnight wanderer's ravish'd life,
Ne'er yet reproach'd; nor crimes of savage die,
That the sweet flumbers of the night defy:
Whose utmost want ne'er owns the stern appeal
To threaten'd fury, or the brandish'd steel:
Still rove secure; and may no beadle's thong
Remorseless drive your wandering groups along!
But still to ye may wood and heath supply
The darling boon of savage Liberty!—
Oft, harmless vagrants! as I lonely stray,
May your rude groups adorn the woody way;
And round your kettles, pendant o'er the fire,
The ruddy smoak and cheerful flame aspire,
While, loitering near, beneath the hawthorn shade,
The tawny lover wooes the willing maid.
Light wakes the Morn, in vail of fleecy clouds,
Whose meek disguise her glowing beauties shrouds:

115

The lark in air, the linnet on the spray,
All seem to hail me, gratulous, and gay;
The silver Ouze, as clear it winds along,
Murmurs, responsive to the cheerful song,
While its brisk tenants, as they sportive glide,
Leap from the stream, and shew the glossy side.
Thus pleas'd with all that Nature's stores display,
Auspicious omens cheer me on the way;
Till now, at length, in Stamford's ancient town,
Whose gates and spires four neighbouring counties own,
I light; nor idly linger to survey
Her ancient piles, or Wiland's wandering way;
But mount the steed, and fly before the gale,
With eager hopes, to Catmose' fertile vale.
But here the joys that wait what tongue can tell?
What tender transports in my bosom swell!
Nature's best boons my throbbing heart divide—
The tender mother, and the virgin bride.
Oh! thou canst never guess—canst ne'er conceive
What rapturous charms in love-warm'd Beauty live,
When the soft heart, unknown to practis'd guile,
Speaks in the tear, and sparkles in the smile.—
When the long-sever'd maid, whom passion warms,
With joy commutual, rushes to your arms,
Drops the fond head upon your throbbing breast,
And yields to feelings not to be supprest.
'Tis not the thrilling touch of sensual joys
(Which Nature's boon to lowest brutes supplies,)
The couch of Love—the extatic fond embrace
(Tho these from Virtue snatch a higher grace)

116

That wake (whate'er the vulgar mind may deem)
The richest transports of their pure esteem,
Whose flames, that glow from intellectual fire,
Give soul to Sense, and defecate Desire.
No: their best joys from nobler sources spring—
Joys saints might taste, and raptur'd seraphs sing:
Soul join'd with soul, the sympathizing mind,
Truth undefil'd—and feelings all refin'd;
One spirit guiding—by one will inform'd—
And two fond bosoms by one essence warm'd.

HARVEY.

An APOSTROPHE.

[_]

(The second and third Stanzas from the Peripatetic. 1792.)

Blest was the hour—if bliss, indeed, belong
To the high fervours of Poetic song—
Blest was the hour—if 'tis the bliss of youth
To thirst for knowledge, and to pant for truth—
From Academic shades when Harvey came,
Wak'd the first spark, and fann'd the etherial flame:
When, midst Bæotian fogs, his purer ray
Pour'd on mine eye the intellectual day;
And, sole instructor of my youthful mind,
Rous'd the fine thrill extatic and refin'd—
Touch'd the keen nerve, and taught the tear to flow
O'er Shenstone's moral page, and Jessey's artless woe.
But, ah! more blest had been that fairer day
(Why, why are proffer'd blessings spurn'd away?)

117

When, gay of heart (the Tutor's talk no more)
He proffer'd Friendship at my natal door:—
More blest had been—but their ill-judging fears
Who claim'd obedience from my tender years
(With prudent saws from Traffic's school imbu'd)
To check the cordial fires of youth intrude:
Whence oft my Muse bewails, in pensive strain,
That hearts for Friendship form'd, are form'd in vain.
But, oh! that, Harvey! to thy classic ear
Some friendly chance these artless lines might bear!
That she, the Muse (each sordid care aloof)
Who weaves, with feeling hand, the airy woof,
From the wrought web a magic clue might lend,
Once more to guide thee to thy sorrowing friend,
Who loves thy merits, and in memory bears
Thy mirth instructive, and thy friendly cares;
And with this burthen saddens of the strain,
That hearts for Friendship form'd, are form'd in vain.
For ah! what pity—since too truly known
How thin the flowers of genuine bliss are strown,
In this low vale of sorrows and of cares,
How small the harvest, and how throng'd the tares;
Along Life's road, how many a bramble grows,
How many a nettle, for one fragrant rose,—
What pity 'tis that Friendship's boon refin'd
(Pleasure and food of every virtuous mind!)
Should thus be cast with heedless scorn away,
Smile unadmir'd, and unenjoy'd decay!
Come, Harvey, come! nor let me more complain,
That hearts for Friendship form'd, are form'd in vain.

118

[_]

The above form a sort of series of the juvenile productions of the author; and as such merely they are presented. The volumes in which they appeared have fallen into meritted oblivion; from which few of the articles, it is hoped, will ever be revived. In the wide chasm that separates these from the ensuing poems, the following is introduced, from another pen.