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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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148

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.

149

Each brow a cloud of kindred sorrow wears,
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!