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Poems by the Late Reverend Dr. Thomas Blacklock

Together with an Essay on the Education of the Blind. To Which is Prefixed A New Account of the Life and Writings of the Author

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EXTEMPORE VERSES,
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  


187

EXTEMPORE VERSES,

Spoken at the Desire of a Gentleman.

Thou, genius of connubial love, attend;
Let silent wonder all thy powers suspend;
Whilst to thy glory I devote my lays,
And pour forth all my grateful heart in praise.
In lifeless strains let vulgar satire tell,
That marriage oft is mixt with heav'n and hell,
That conjugal delight is sour'd with spleen,
And peace and war compose the varied scene;
My muse a truth sublimer can assert,
And sing the triumphs of a mutual heart.
Thrice happy they, who through life's varied tide,
With equal peace and gentler motion glide;
Whom tho' the wave of fortune sinks or swells,
One reason governs, and one with impels;
Whose emulation is to love the best;
Who feel no bliss, but in each other blest;
Who know no pleasure but the joys they give,
Nor cease to love, but when they cease to live:
If fate these blessings in one lot combine,
Then let th' eternal page record them mine.