Miscellanies in Prose and Verse By Mrs. Catherine Jemmat |
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On the Death of a Promising Young Gentleman.
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![]() | Miscellanies in Prose and Verse | ![]() |
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On the Death of a Promising Young Gentleman.
Here native worth, and honest love of good,Beam'd in the dawn, and flourish'd in the bud,
Anticipated manhood, early prime,
Out-stripp'd the lingering influence of time.
As Sol's strong beams, and zephyr's genial wing,
In happy soils graft autumn on the spring;
In innocence a child, a youth in age,
In sense a man, in fortitude a sage;
In him no solitary Virtue shin'd;
But all in social harmony combin'd,
A glorious constellation of the mind.
While fell disease his outward beauty raz'd
His soul with more distinguish'd lustre blaz'd:
So growling shocks, that earth's rent womb explore,
Display the radiance of the imprison'd ore.
For him the old, the young, the grave, the gay,
With undistinguish'd moans their woe betray.
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Each friend laments him with a brother's tears;
The charming object of our grief and pride,
Liv'd to be lov'd, to be lamented dy'd!
![]() | Miscellanies in Prose and Verse | ![]() |