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The Harp of Erin

Containing the Poetical Works of the Late Thomas Dermody. In Two Volumes

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250

EXCULPATORY LINES

TO ATTICUS.

Quo quisque est major, magis est placabilis ira;
Et faciles motus mens generosa capit.
Ovid.
By what strange fate great talents are allied
To greatest faults, whose judgment can decide?
Whether the finer fibres of the brain,
Intensely bent, and stretching ev'n to pain,
Relaxing, may too frequently require
Fresh fuel for the intellectual fire:
Or that rash genius, in its wild career,
All-devious visits each eccentric sphere;
And, conversant with fancied forms of air,
Mocks the cold caution of terrestrial care;—
Now, bravely borne on seraph-wing sublime,
List'ning th' eternal systems' choral chime ;
Now 'mid the gloom of central Hades hurl'd,
Groping the rayless dungeons of the world;

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Anon with more effulgent face to rise,
And sun-like travel through serener skies,
Till vile Intemperance, of hideous birth,
The struggling pinion chains to native earth,
And reason's spark, irregularly bright,
At length exhausted sinks in mournful night.
How sad the wreck, the triumph how malign,
When Vice allures the muses to her shrine;
Round her black brow when roses are entwin'd,
And demons revel o'er the ruin'd mind!
In vain for causes would stern prudence seek,
But of the dread effect all ages speak;
While on full many a minstrel's doom severe,
Relenting pardon streams th' eternal tear.
Though 'mid the guilty but illustrious band
My humble name unknown must never stand;
Though little praise, alas! to me is due;
Would I deserv'd so little censure too!
Deeply impress'd th' unpleasing theme I feel
Which conscious blushes, spite of pride, reveal:
Yet, sooth'd once more by thy absolving smile,
Enrag'd compunction's scorpion-sting beguile;
And find my soul from sensual bondage free,
Tutor'd by Virtue, Atticus, and thee.
 

This name, Dermody, in all his writings, applied to Mr. Addington.

“The music of the spheres.” Pope.