Memoir of Robert, Earl Nugent With Letters, Poems, and Appendices: By Claud Nugent: With Twelve Reproductions from Family Portraits by Sir Godfrey Kneller, Sir Joshua Reynolds, Gainsborough and Others |
Memoir of Robert, Earl Nugent | ||
TO MANKIND: AN ODE.
I
Is there, or do the schoolmen dream?Is there on earth a pow'r supreme,
The delegate of heav'n,
To whom an uncontroul'd command,
In every realm o'er sea and land,
By special grace is giv'n?
II
Then say, what signs this god proclaim?Dwells he amidst the diamond's flame,
A throne his hallow'd shrine?
The borrow'd pomp, the arm'd array,
Want, fear, and impotence betray:
Strange proofs of pow'r divine!
III
If service due from human kind,To men in slothful ease reclin'd,
Can form a sov'reign's claim:
Hail monarchs! ye, whom heav'n ordains,
Our toils unshar'd, to share our gains,
Ye ideots, blind and lame!
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IV
Superior virtue, wisdom, might,Create and mark the ruler's right,
So reason must conclude:
Then thine it is, to whom belong
The wise, the virtuous, and the strong,
Thrice sacred multitude!
V
In thee, vast ALL! are these contain'd,For thee are those, thy parts ordain'd,
So nature's systems roll:
The scepter's thine if such there be;
If none there is, then thou art free,
Great monarch! mighty whole!
VI
Let the proud tyrant rest his causeOn faith, prescription, force or laws,
An host's or senate's voice!
His voice affirms thy stronger due,
Who for the many made the few,
And gave the species choice.
VII
Unsanctify'd by thy command,Unown'd by thee, the scepter'd hand
The trembling slave may bind.
But loose from nature's moral ties,
The oath by force impos'd belies
The unassenting mind.
VIII
Thy will's thy rule, thy good its end;You punish only to defend
What parent nature gave:
And he who dares her gifts invade,
By nature's oldest law is made
Thy victim or thy slave.
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IX
Thus reason founds the just decreeOn universal liberty,
Not private rights resign'd:
Through various nature's wide extent,
No private beings e'er were meant
To hurt the gen'ral kind.
X
Thee justice guides, thee right maintains,Th' oppressor's wrongs, the pilr'rer's gains,
Thy injur'd weal impair.
Thy warmest passions soon subside,
Nor partial envy, hate, nor pride,
Thy temper'd counsels share.
XI
Each instance of thy vengeful rage,Collected from each clime and age,
Though malice swell the sum,
Would seem a spotless scanty scroll,
Compar'd with Marius' bloody roll,
Or Sylla's hippodrome.
XII
But thine has been imputed blame,Th' unworthy few assume thy name,
The rabble weak and loud;
Or those who on thy ruins feast,
The lord, the lawyer and the priest;
A more ignoble crowd.
XIII
Avails it thee, if one devours,Or lesser spoilers share his pow'rs,
While both thy claim oppose?
Monsters who wore thy sully'd crown,
Tyrants who pull'd those monsters down,
Alike to thee were foes.
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XIV
Far other shone fair Freedom's hand,Far other was th' immortal stand,
When Hampden fought for thee:
They snatch'd from rapine's gripe thy spoils,
The fruits and prize of glorious toils,
Of arts and industry.
XV
On thee yet foams the preacher's rage,On thee fierce frowns th' historian's page
A false apostate train:
Tears stream adown the martyr's tomb;
Unpity'd in their harder doom,
Thy thousands strow the plain.
XVI
These had no charms to please the sense,No graceful port, no eloquence,
To win the Muse's throng:
Unknown, unsung, unmark'd they lie;
But Caesar's fate o'ercasts the sky,
And Nature mourns his wrong.
XVII
Thy foes, a frontless band, invade;Thy friends afford a timid aid,
And yield up half thy right.
Ev'n Locke beams forth a mingled ray,
Afraid to pour the flood of day
On man's too feeble sight.
XVIII
Hence are the motley systems fram'd,Of right transfer'd, of pow'r reclaim'd;
Distinctions weak and vain.
Wise nature mocks th' wrangling herd;
For unreclaim'd, and untransfer'd,
Her pow'rs and rights remain.
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XIX
While law the royal agent moves,The instrument thy choice approves,
We bow through him to you.
But change, or cease th' inspiring choice,
The sov'reign sinks a private voice,
Alike in one, or few!
XX
Shall then the wretch, whose dastard heartShrinks at a tyrant's nobler part,
And only dares betray;
With reptile wiles, alas! prevail,
Where force, and rage, and priest-craft fail,
To pilfer pow'r away?
XXI
O! shall the bought, and buying tribe,The slaves who take, and deal the bribe,
A people's claims enjoy!
So Indian murd'rers hope to gain
The pow'rs and virtues of the slain,
Of wretches they destroy.
XXII
“Avert it, heav'n! you love the brave,“You hate the treach'rous, willing slave,
“The self-devoted head.
“Nor shall an hireling's voice convey
“That sacred prize to lawless sway,
“For which a nation bled.”
XXIII
Vain pray'r, the coward's weak resource!Directing reason, active force,
Propitious heaven bestows.
But ne'er shall flame the thund'ring sky,
To aid the trembling herd that fly
Before their weaker foes.
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XXIV
In names there dwell no magic charms,The British virtues, British arms
Unloos'd our fathers' band:
Say, Greece and Rome! if these should fail,
What names, what ancestors avail,
To save a sinking land?
XXV
Far, far from us such ills shall be,Mankind shall boast one nation free,
One monarch truly great:
Whose title speaks a people's choice,
Whose sovereign will a people's voice,
Whose strength a prosp'rous state.
Memoir of Robert, Earl Nugent | ||