The Project Gutenberg eBook ofPoems (1828)

The Project Gutenberg eBook ofPoems (1828)This ebook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this ebook or online atwww.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this eBook.Title: Poems (1828)Author: Thomas GentRelease date: February 1, 2004 [eBook #11215]Most recently updated: December 25, 2020Language: EnglishCredits: Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Virginia Paque and PG Distributed Proofreaders*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK POEMS (1828) ***

This ebook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this ebook or online atwww.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this eBook.

Title: Poems (1828)Author: Thomas GentRelease date: February 1, 2004 [eBook #11215]Most recently updated: December 25, 2020Language: EnglishCredits: Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Virginia Paque and PG Distributed Proofreaders

Title: Poems (1828)

Author: Thomas Gent

Author: Thomas Gent

Release date: February 1, 2004 [eBook #11215]Most recently updated: December 25, 2020

Language: English

Credits: Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Virginia Paque and PG Distributed Proofreaders

*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK POEMS (1828) ***

Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Virginia Paque and PG Distributed

Proofreaders

1828.

Some of the Pieces in this volume have been separately published, at different times; the indulgence, I may say favour, with which they were individually received, has encouraged me to collect and re-publish them. I have added many others, which are now first printed. I shall be well satisfied, if they find as favourable a reception as their precursors; and are thought not to have increased the size, without at all increasing the merit, of the book.

I cannot omit this opportunity of thanking those Critics, who have honoured me by reviewing my verses. I owe them my warm acknowledgments for candidly measuring my Poems by their pretensions. They have looked at them as they really were;—as the amusements of the leisure hours of a man whose fortune will not favour his inclination to devote himself to poetry; and conceiving a favourable opinion of them in that character, have kindly expressed it.

London, December, 1827.

During the progress of these pages through the press, it has pleased Providence to inflict upon me the severest calamity that domestic life can sustain. In the private sorrows of the humble candidate for literary fame, I am aware that the world will feel no interest, yet humanity will forgive the weakness that struggles under such a bereavement, and will pardon the tear that falls upon such a tomb. If, indeed, the Being who is lost to her family and society were endowed only with those gifts and graces, which are shared by thousands of her sex, I should have been silent at this moment. To those who knew her,[1] and to know her was to esteem and love, this tribute will be superfluous; but to those who knew her not, I would say, that, superadded to every natural advantage, to the charms of every polite accomplishment, and to a cheerful and sincere piety, she was deeply imbued with the love of literature and of science. In these, her Lectures on the Physiology of the External Senses exhibit a splendid proof of her acquirements in their highest walks, and are an imperishable memorial of her patient and laborious research. They who were present at the delivery of these Lectures will not soon forget the effect of her impressive elocution, chastened as it was by as unaffected modesty as ever adorned and dignified a woman. I speak of that which she performed—that which her capacious mind had meditated I forbear to mention. For the advancement of her sex in pursuits that are intellectual she made many sacrifices, both of her feelings and her time; yet, in all she did, and in all she contemplated, usefulness was her end and aim—but I must not proceed; less than this I could not say—more than this might be deemed ostentatious.

What earthly tongue, and, oh! what human penCan tell that scene of suffering, too severe.'Tis ever present to my sight, oh! whenWill the sound cease its torture on mine ear?

Oh! my lost love, thou patient Being, never!Thy dying look of love can I forget;The last fond pressure of thy hand,for ever!Thrills in my veins, I see thy struggles yet.

Thy sculptured beauty is before me now:In thy calm dignity, and sweet repose,Alas! sad memory re-invests thy brow,With death's stern agony, and pain's last throes.

Desolate heart be still—forgive, oh God!The cries of feeble nature stricken sore.Father! assuage the terrors of thy rod.Teach me to see thy wisdom—and adore!

[Footnote 1: I cannot resist the melancholy gratification of quoting from the Literary Gazette, of August 18, in which the death of Mrs. Gent was announced to the public.—"Science has, since our last, suffered a severe lost by the death of this accomplished lady; she was well known for her high attainments as a Lecturer, and her Course on the Physiology of the External Senses was a perfect model of elegant composition and refined oratory. Mrs. Gent died at the residence of her husband, Thomas Gent, Esq. Doctor's Commons, after a month of severe suffering, which she bore with singular fortitude, and the most pious resignation. There is a fine bust of her, by Behnes; it was in the Exhibition two years since, and, from its intrinsic simplicity and beauty alone, has had many casts made from it."

And one of the most distinguished Poets of the present day, will, I am sure, forgive me if I quote his beautiful words in writing to me on this subject—for his talents she had the highest admiration, and no one was better able than himself to appreciate the excellence of her character.—"As to condolence, I never condole—what condolence could any one offer for the loss of so estimable a being as has been lost to society in your accomplished wife? I had a very great respect and esteem for her, and it would have highly gratified me to have been able to lighten the least of her trials; but what avails writing or visiting on occasions of such real pain. She lived a most amiable being—and for such there is the highest hope in the Highest World. If I had conceived that her illness was at all serious, I should have gone to gather wisdom from her for my own hour—but now, that all her anxieties are past, I can invent no condolence."]

PoemsMature ReflectionsThe Grave of DibdinA Sketch from LifeOn the Portrait of the Son of J.G. Lambton, Esq.Written in the Album of the Lady of Counsellor D. PollockThe HeliotropeSonnet On seeing a Young Lady I had previously known,confined in a MadhousePrometheusRosa's GraveThe Sibyl. A SketchLoveOn a delightful Drawing in my AlbumStanzasShakspeareImpromptu. To Oriana, on attending with her, as Sponsors,at a ChristeningTo my Spaniel FannyWidowed LoveWritten to the Lady of Dr. George BirkbeckThe Chain-pier, Brighton. A SketchSonnet. Morning.On the Death of Dr. AbelSonnet. Night.Constancy. To ———Epistle to a FriendHere in our Fairy Bowers we Dwell. A GleeHenry and ElizaWritten on the Death of General WashingtonTo ———Monody on the Right Hon. R.B. SheridanOn the beautiful Portrait of Mrs. Forman, as PandoraSonnet. To ———, on her Recovery from IllnessTo Margaret Jane H———, on her Birth-dayThe RunawayOn Reading the Poem of "Paris."On the Death of Gen. Sir R. AbercrombieRetaliationLines, written in a Copy of the Poem on the Princess CharlotteSonnetTo Robert Soothey, Esq. on reading his "Remains of Henry Kirke White"The State Secret. An ImpromptuThe Morning CallSonnetOn the Rupture of the Thames' TunnelAnacreontic. "The Wisest Men are Fools in Wine."Lines, written in Hornsey WoodTo MaryBlack Eyes and BlueEpigram. Auri Sacra FamesSonnet. To FaithOn a Spirited Portrait, by E. Landaeer, Esq.Sonnet. To HopeLines, written on the Sixth of SeptemberSonnet. To CharityHymnReflections of a Poet on going to a great DinnerSundayA Night-StormOn the Death of NelsonThe Blue-eyed MaidTaking Orders. A Tale, founded on factThe Gipsy's Home. A GleeSonnet. The BeggarTo ———Song. "The Recal of the Hero."To Eliza. Written in her AlbumElegy on the Death of A. Goldsmid, Esq.Sonnet. On the Death of Mrs. Charlotte SmithMister Punch. A Hasty SketchContentEpitaph. On MatildaTo ———. An ImpromptuThe Steam-BoatSonnet To Lydia, on her Birth-dayTo Sarah, while SingingTo ThaddeusYouth and AgeSent for the Album of the Rev. G——- C——-Written under an elegant Drawing of a Dead Canary BirdLines suggested by the Death of the Princess CharlotteThe Presumptuous FlyThe Heroes of WaterlooThe Night-blowing Cereus1827; or, the Poet's Last PoemTo the Reviewers

Tis sweet in boyhood's visionary mood,When glowing Fancy, innocently gay,Flings forth, like motes, her bright aërial brood,To dance and shine in Hope's prolific ray;'Tis sweet, unweeting how the flight of yearsMay darkling roll in trials and in tears,To dress the future in what garb we list,And shape the thousand joys that never may exist.But he, sad wight! of all that feverish train,Fool'd by those phantoms of the wizard brain,Most wildly dotes, whom young ambition stingsTo trust his weight upon poetic wings;He, downward looking in his airy ride,Beholds Elysium bloom on every side;Unearthly bliss each thrilling nerve attunes,And thus the dreamer with himself communes.Yes! Earth shall witness, 'ere my star be set,That partial nature mark'd me for her pet;That Phoebus doom'd me, kind indulgent sire!To mount his car, and set the world on fire.Fame's steep ascent by easy flights to win,With a neat pocket volume I'll begin;And dirge, and sonnet, ode, and epigram,Shall show mankind how versatile I am.The buskin'd Muse shall next my pen descry:The boxes from their inmost rows shall sigh;The pit shall weep, the galleries deploreSuch moving woes as ne'er were heard before:Enough—I'll leave them in their soft hysterics,Mount, in a brighter blaze, and dazzle with Homerics.

Then, while my name runs ringing through Reviews,And maids, wives, widows, smitten with my Muse,Assail me with Platonicbillet-doux.From this suburban attic I'll dismount,With Coutts or Barclays open an account;Ranged in my mirror, cards, with burnish'd ends,Shall show the whole nobility my friends;That happy host with whom I choose to dine,Shall make set-parties, give his-choicest wine;And age and infancy shall gape to seeThe lucky bard, and whisper "That is he!"

Poor youth! he print—and wakes,to sleep no more—The world goes on, indifferent, as before;And the first notice of his metric skillComes in the likeness of—his printer's bill;To pen soft notes no fair enthusiast stirs,Except his laundress—and who values her's?None but herself: for though the bard may burnHernote, she still expects one in return.The luckless maiden, all unblest shall sigh;His pockettomehath drawn his pockets dry.His tragedy expires in peals of laughter;And that soul-thrilling wish—to live hereafter—Gives way to one as hopeless quite, I fear,And far more needful—how tolive while here.Where are ye now, divine illusions all;Cheques, dinners, wines, admirers great and small!Changed to two followers, terrible to see,Who dog his walks, and whisper "That is he!"

Rhymesters attend! nor scorn & friendly hint,Restrain yourcacoëthsfierce to print.But hark,myprinter's devil's at the door,My leisure cannot yield one moment more:Nor matters it, advice can ne'er restrainMadman or poet from his bent:—'tis vainTo strive to point out colours to the blind,Or set men seeking what theywill not find.

O Love! divinest dream of youth,Thy day of ecstacy is o'er,My bosom, touch'd by time and truth,Thrills at thy dear deceits no more.

Nor thou, Ambition! e'er again,With splendour dazzling to betray,And aspirations fierce and vain,Shall tempt my steps—away! away!

Alas! by stern Experience cleft,When life's romance is turn'd to sport;If man hath consolation leftOn this side death—'tis good old port.

And thou, Advice! who glum and chill,Do'st thethird bottlestill gainsay;Smile, and partake it, if you will,But if you wont—away! away!

Lives there who, with unhallow'd hand, would tear,One leaf from that immortal wreath which shadesThe Hero's living brow, or decks his urn?Breathes there who does not triumph in the thoughtThat "Nelson's language is his mother tongue,"And that St. Vincent's country is his own?Oh! these bright guerdons of renown are wonBy means most palpable to sense and sight;By days of peril and by nights of toil;By Valour's long probation, closed at lastIn Victory's arms—consummated and seal'dIn deathless Glory and immortal Fame.

Musing I stand uponhislowly grave,Who, though he fought no battle—though he pour'dNo hostile thunders on his country's foes,Achieved for Britain triumphs, less array'd"In pomp and circumstance," nor visibleTo vulgar gaze—the triumphs of theMind.He nursed the elements of courage—heSupplied the aliment that feeds and guidesThe daring spirit to its high emprise—A nation's moral energies, by himDirected, found a nobler end and aim.He gave that high discriminating toneThat marks the Brave from mercenary tools—Features that separate a British CrewFrom hireling bravoes, and from pirate hordes.And yet no marble marks the spot where liesThe dust of DIBDIN;—no inscription speaksA Nation's gratitude—a Bard's desert.

The youthful Sailor on his midnight watch,Fixing his gaze upon the tranquil moon,Felt his heart soften as the thoughts of homeRush'd on his faithful memory;—then it wasIn language meet, and in appropriate strains—Strains which thy lyre had taught him—he pour'd forthThe feelings of his soul, and all was calm.

Thy Spirit still presides in that carouse,When to "the Far away" the toast is given,And "absent Wives and Sweethearts" claim their right,With Woman's constancy thy songs are rife;And this pure creed still teaches Man t' endurePrivations, danger, and each form of death.

When not a breath responded to the call,And Seamen whistled to the winds in vain;When the loose canvass droop'd in lazy folds,And idle pennants dangled from the mast;—There, in that trying moment, thou wert foundTo teach the hardest lesson man can learn—Passive endurance—and the breeze has sprung,As if obedient to the voice of Song:—And yet unhonour'd here thy ashes lie!

A nobler lesson learn'd the gallant TarFrom his Orphean lyre—to temper rightThe lion's courage with the attributesThat to the gentle and the meek belong;O'er fallen foes to check the eye of fire—O'er fallen foes to soften heart of oak.

He turn'd the Fatalist's rash eye to HimIn whom the issues are of life and death;He taught to whom the battle is—to whomThe victory belongs. His cherub, that aloftKept sleepless watch, was Providence—not Chance.

And yet no honours are decreed for him—Friend of the Brave, thy memory cannot die!Th'inquiring voice, that eagerly demandsWhere rest thy ashes?—shall preserve thy fame.Thine immortality thyself hast wrought;—Familiar as the terms of art, thy verse,Thine own peculiar words are still the modeIn which the Seaman aptly would expressHis honest passions and his manly thoughts;His feelings kindle at thy burning words,Which speak his duty in the battle's front;His parting whisper to the maid he lovesIs breathed in eloquence he learned from thee;Thou art his Oracle in every mood—His trump of victory—his lyre of love!

She sat in beauty, like some form of nymphOr naïad, on the mossy, purpled bankOf her wild woodland stream, that at her feetLinger'd, and play'd, and dimpled, as in love.Or like those shapes that on the western cloudsSpread gold-dropp'd plumes, and sing to harps of pearl,And teach the evening winds their melody:How shall I tell her beauty?—for the eye,Fix'd on the sun, is blinded by its beam.One glance, and then no more, upon that browBrighter than marble shining through those curls,Richer than hyacinths when they wave their bellsIn the low breathing of the twilight wind.—One glance upon that lip, beside whose hueThe morning rose would sicken and grow pale,'Till it was waked again by the soft breathThat steals in music from those lips of love.Wert thou a statue I could pine for thee,But in thy living beauty there is awe;The sacredness of modesty enshrinesThe ruby lip, bright brow, and beaming eye;—I dare but worship what I must not love.

Beautiful Boy—thy heavenward thoughtsAre pictured in thine eyes,Thou hast no taint of mortal birth,Thy communing is not of earth,Thy holy musings rise:Like incense kindled from on high,Ascending to its native sky.

And such a head might once have gracedThe infant Samuel, whenCall'd by the favour of his God,The youthful priest the Temple trodBeloved of Heaven and men!The same devotion on his browAs brightens in thy forehead now.

Or, thou may'st seem to Fancy's eyeOne borne by arms Divine;One, whom on Earth a Saviour bless'd,And on whose features left impress'dThe Contact's holy sign:A light, a halo, and a grace,So pure th' expression of that face.

Or, has the Painter's skillaloneSuch grace and glory given?Clothed thee with attributes which seemCreations of an angel's dream,To raise the soul to Heaven?No, as he found thee, he arrayed,And Genius taught what God had made!

Joy to thee, Lady! many years of joyTo thee—and thine—that springtide of the heart,The bliss of virtuous love, without alloy.And all that health and gladsome life impart.How gracefully hast thou thy task perform'd,The watchful tender mother, matchless wife;All woman boasts—thou hast indeed adorn'd—Thine the high merit of an useful life.For ever cheerful, though the Tragic Muse[1]May call thee Sister, both in form and mind;Thou do'st to all those envied charms transfuse,Which shine so highly temper'd and refined.Lady revered—the sunbeam and the roseAre poor in beauty to sweet woman's smiles:'Tis the bright sunset of life's awful close,The Poet's deathless wreath! a spell all grief beguiles!

[Footnote 1: The Lady, to whom these lines are addressed has been greatly noticed for the strong resemblance she bears to Mrs. Siddons.]

There is a flower, whose modest eyeIs turn'd with looks of light and love,Who breathes her softest, sweetest sigh.Whene'er the sun is bright above.

Let clouds obscure, or darkness veil,Her fond idolatry is fled,Her sighs no more their sweets exhale.The loving eye is cold—and dead.

Canst thou not trace a moral here,False flatterer of the prosperous hour?Let but an adverse cloud appear,And Thou art faithless, as the Flower!

Sweet wreck of loveliness! alas, how soonThe sad brief summer of thy joys hath fled:How sorrows Friendship for thy hapless doom,Thy beauty faded, and thy hopes all dead.Oh! 'twas that beauty's power which first destroy'dThy mind's serenity; its charms but ledThe faithless friend, that thy pure love enjoy'd,To tear the beauteous blossom from its bed.How reason shudders at thy frenzied air!To see thee smile, with fancy's dreams possess'd;Or shrink, the frozen image of despair.Or, love-enraptured, chant thy griefs to rest:Oh! cease that mournful voice, affliction's child,My heart but bleeds to hear thy musings wild.

What sovereign good shall satiate man's desires,Propell'd by Hope's unconquerable fires?Vain each bright bauble by ambition prized;Unwon, 'tis worshipp'd—but possess'd, despised.Yet all defect with virtue shines allied,His mightiest impulse genius owes to pride.From conquer'd science graced with glorious spoils,He still dares on, demands sublimer toils;And, had not Nature check'd his vent'rous wing,His eye had pierced her at her primal spring.

Thus when, enwrapt, Prometheus strove to traceInspired perceptions of celestial grace,Th' ideal spirit, fugitive as wind,Art's forceful spells in adamant confined:Curved with nice chisel floats the obsequious line;From stone unconscious, beauty beams divine;On magic poised, th' exulting structure swims,And spurns attraction with elastic limbs.While ravish'd fancy vivifies the form;While judgment toils to analyze its charm;While admiration spreads her speaking hands;The lofty artist undelighted stands.He longs to ravish from the bless'd abodesThe seal of heaven, the attribute of gods;To give his labour more than man can give,Breathe Jove's own breath, and bid the marble live!

Won from her woof, embellishing the skies,Descending, Pallas soothes her vot'ry's sighs,Where, 'midst the twilight of o'er-arching groves,By waking visions led, th' enthusiast roves;Like summer suns, by showery clouds conceal'd,With sudden blaze the goddess shines reveal'd:Behold, she cries, in thy distinguished causeI challenge Jove's inexorable laws!With life-stol'n essence let th' awaken'd stoneA super-human generation own.Defrauded nature shall admire the deed,And time recoil at thy immortal meed.

Impregn'd with action, and convoked to breathe,Sighs the still form his ardent hands beneath;Electric lustres flash from either eve,O'er its pale cheeks suffusive flushes fly,And glossy damps its clust'ring curls adorn,Like dew-drops bright'ning on the brows of morn.Through nerves that vibrate in unfolding chains,Foams the warm life-blood, excavating veins;'Till all infused, and organized the whole,The finish'd fabric hails the breathing soul!Then waked tumultuous in th' alarmed breast,Contending passions claim th' etherial guest;And still, as each alternate empire proves,She hopes, she fears, she envies, and she loves;Owns all sensations that deride the span,And eternize the little life of man!

It is a mournful pleasure to remember the exquisite taste and delight she evinced in the arrangement of a Bouquet; and how often she wished that, hereafter, she might appear to me as a beautiful flower!

Oh! lay me where my Rosa lies,And love shall o'er the moss-grown bed,When dew-drops leave the weeping skies.His tenderest tear of pity shed.

And sacred shall the willow be,That shades the spot where virtue sleeps;And mournful memory weep to seeThe hallow'd watch affection keeps.

Yes, soul of love! this bleeding heartScarce beating, soon its griefs shall cease;Soon from his woes the sufferer part,And hail thee at the Throne of Peace

So stood the Sibyl: stream'd her hoary hairWild as the blast, and with a comet's glareGlow'd her red eye-balls 'midst the sunken gloomOf their wild orbs, like death-fires in a tomb.Slow, like the rising storm, in fitful moans,Broke from her breast the deep prophetic tones.Anon, with whirlwind rash, the Spirit came;Then in dire splendour, like imprison'd flameFlashing through rifted domes or towns amazed,Her voice in thunder burst; her arm she raised;Outstretch'd her hands, as with a Fury's force,To grasp, and launch the slow descending curse:Still as she spoke, her stature seem'd to grow;Still she denounced unmitigable woe:Pain, want, and madness, pestilence, and death,Rode forth triumphant at her blasting breath:Their march she marshall'd, taught their ire to fall—And seem'd herself the emblem of them all!

Love!—what is love? a mere machine, a springFor freaks fantastic, a convenient thing,A point to which each scribbling wight most steer,Or vainly hope for food or favour here;A summer's sigh; a winter's wistful tale:A sound at which th' untutor'd maid turns pale;Her soft eyes languish, and her bosom heaves,And Hope delights as Fancy's dream deceives.

Thus speaks the heart which cold disgust invades,When time instructs, and Hope's enchantment fades;Through life's wide stage, from sages down to kings,The puppets move, as art directs the strings:Imperious beauty bows to sordid gold,Her smiles, whence heaven flows emanent, are sold;And affectation swells th' entrancing tones,Which nature subjugates, and truth disowns.

I love th' ingenuous maiden, practised notTo pierce the heart with ambush'd glances, shotFrom eyelashes, whose shadowy length she knowsTo a hair's point, their high arch when to closeHalf o'er the swimming orb, and when to raise,Disclosing all the artificial blazeOf unfelt passion, which alone can moveHim whom the genuine eloquence of loveAffected never, won with wanton wiles,With soulless sighs, and meretricious smiles;By nature unimpress'd, uncharm'd by thee,Sweet goddess of my heart, Simplicity!

By my friend, T. WOODWARD, ESQ., of a Group, consisting of aDonkey, a Boy, and a Dog.

Welcome, my pretty Neddy—welcome tooThy merry Rider with his apron blue;And thou, poor Dog, most patient thing of all,Begging for morsels that may never fall!Oh! 'tis a faithful group—and it might shamePainters of bold pretence, and greater name—To see how nature triumphs, and how rareSuch matchless proofs of Nature's triumphs are—The smallest particle of sand may tellWith what rich ore Pactolus' tide may swell:And Woodward! this ingenious, chaste design,Proclaims what treasures lie within the mine—Pupil of Cooper—Nature's favorite son—Whom, but to name, and to admire, is one!

Say, why is the stern eye averted with scornOf the stoic who passes along?And why frowns the maid, else as mild as the morn.On the victim of falsehood and wrong?

For the wretch sunk in sorrow, repentance, and shame,The tear of compassion is won:And alone must she forfeit the wretch's sad claim,Because she's deceived and undone?

Oh! recal the stern look, ere it reaches her heart,To bid its wounds rankle anew;Oh! smile, or embalm with a tear the sad smart,And angels will smile upon you.

Time was, when she knew nor opprobrium nor pain,And youth could its pleasures impart,Till some serpent distill'd through her bosom the stain,As he wound round the strings of her heart.

Poor girl! let thy tears through thy blandishments break,Nor strive to retrace them within;For mine would I mingle with those on thy cheek,Nor think that such sorrow were sin.

When the low-trampled reed, and the pine in its pride,Shall alike feel the hand of decay,May thy God grant that mercy the world has denied,And wipe all your sorrows away!

Respectfully inscribed, with permission, to the Committee (of which His Majesty is the Patron) for the proposed Monuments to SHAKSPEARE at Stratford and in London. Intended to be spoken at one of the Theatres.

While o'er this pageant of sublunar thingsOblivion spreads her unrelenting wings,And sweeps adown her dark unebbing tideMan, and his mightiest monuments of pride—Alone, aloft, immutable, sublime,Star-like, ensphered above the track of time,Great SHAKSPEARE beams with undiminish'd ray.His bright creations sacred from decay,Like Nature's self, whose living form he drew,Though still the same, still beautiful and new.

He came, untaught in academic bowers,A gift to Glory from the Sylvan powers:But what keen Sage, with all the science fraught,By elder bards or later critics taught,Shall count the cords of his mellifluous shell,Span the vast fabric of his fame, and tellBy what strange arts he bade the structure rise—On what deep site the strong foundation lies?This, why should scholiasts labour to reveal?We all can answer it, we all can feel,Ten thousand sympathies, attesting, start—For SHAKSPEARE'S Temple,is the human heart!

Lord of a throne which mortal ne'er shall share—Despot adored! he rales and revels there.Who but has found, where'er his track hath been,Through life's oft shifting, multifarious scene,Still at his side the genial Bard attend,His loved companion, counsellor, and friend!

The Thespian Sisters nurtured in the schoolsOf Greece and Rome, and long coerced by rules,Scarce moved the inmates of their native hearthWith tiny pathos and with trivial mirth,Till She, great muse of daring enterprise,Delighted ENGLAND! saw her SHAKSPEARE rise!

Then, first aroused in that appointed hour,The Tragic Muse confess'd th' inspiring power;Sudden before the startled earth she stood,A giant spectre, weeping tears and blood;Guilt shrunk appall'd, Despair embraced his shroud,And Terror shriek'd, and Pity sobb'd aloud;—Then, first Thalia with dilated kenAnd quicken'd footstep pierced the walks of men;Then Folly blush'd, Vice fled the general hiss,Delight met Reason with a loving kiss;At Satire's glance Pride smooth'd his low'ring crest,The Graces weaved the dance.—And last and bestCame Momus down in Falstaff's form to earth.To make the world one universe of mirth!

Such Sympathies the glorious Bard endear!Thus fair he walks in Man's diurnal sphere.But when, upborne on bright Invention's wings.He dares the realms of uncreated things,Forms more divine, more dreadful, start to view,Than ever Hades or Olympus knew.Round the dark cauldron, terrible and fell,The midnight Witches breathe the songs of hell;DelightedArielwings his fiery wayTo whirl the storm, the wheeling Orbs to stay;Then bathes in honey-dews, and sleeps in flowers;Meanwhile, youngOberon, girt with shadowy powers,Pursues o'er Ocean's verge the pale cold Moon,Or hymns her, riding in her highest noon.

Thus graced, thus glorified, shall SHAKSPEARE craveThe Sculptor's skill, the pageant of the grave?HE needs it not—but Gratitude demandsThis votive offering at his Country's hands.Haply, e'er now, from blissful bowers on high,From some Parnassus of the empyreal sky,Pleased, o'er this dome the gentle Spirit bends,Accepts the gift, and hails us as his friends—Yet smiles, perchance, to think when envious TimeO'er Bust and Urn shall bid his ivies climb,When Palaces and Pyramids shall fall—HIS PAGE SHALL TRIUMPH—still surviving all—'Till Earth itself, "like breath upon the wind,"Shall melt away, "nor leave a rack behind!"

Lady! who didst—with angel-look and smile,And the sweet lustre of those dear, dark eyes,Gracefully bend before the font of Christ,In humble adoration, faith, and prayer!Oh!—as the infant pledge of friends belovedReceived from thy pure lips its future name,Sweetly unconscious look'd the baby-boy!How beautifully helpless—and how mild!—Methought, a seraph spread her shelt'ring wingsOver the solemn scene; and as the sun,In its full splendour, on the altar came,God's blessing seem'd to sanctify the deed.

Fanny! were all the world like thee,How cheerly then this life would glide,Dear emblem of Fidelity!Long may'st thou grace thy master's side.

Long cheer his hours of solitude,With watchful eye each wish to learn,And anxious speechless gratitudeHail with delight each short sojourn.

When sick at heart, thy welcome homeA weary load of grief dispels,Gladdens with hope the hours to come,And yet a mournful lesson tells!

To findtheeever faithful, kind,My guard by night, my friend by day,While those in friendship more refinedHave with my fortunes flown away.

Why bounteous nature hast thou givenTo this poorBrute—a boon so kindAs constancy—bless'd gift of Heaven!And MAN—to waver like the wind?

Tell me, chaste spirit! in yon orb of light,Which seems to wearied souls an ark of rest,So calm, so peaceful, so divinely bright—Solace of broken hearts, the mansion of the bless'd!

Tell me, oh! tell me—shall I meet againThe long lost object of my only love!—This hope but mine, death were release from pain;Angel of mercy! haste, and waft my soul above!

[Footnote 1: Mr. T. Millar has composed sweet music to these lines, and has been peculiarly fortunate in composing and singing some of the exquisite Melodies of T.H. Bayly, Esq. of Bath.]

President of the London Mechanic's Institution, and of the Chemical and Meteorological Societies. Founder and Patron of the Glasgow Mechanic's Institute, &c. &c. &c.

Lady unknown! a pilgrim from the shrineOf Poesy's fair temple, brings a wreathWhich fame and gratitude alike entwine,Around a name that charms the monster Death,And bids him pause!—Amidst despairing lifeBIRKBECK's the harbinger of hope and health;When sordid affluence was with man at strife,He boldly stripp'd the veil, and show'd the wealthTo aged ignorance, and ardent youth,Of cultured minds—the freedom of the soul!The sun of science, and the light of truth,The bliss of reason—mind without control.

Accept this tribute. Lady! and the praise,As Consort and the soother of his care!His offspring's pride—his friend's commingled rays,And every other grace that man has deem'd most rare!

Hail, lovely morn! and thou, all-beauteous sea!Sun-sparkling with the diamond's countless rays:Thy look, how tranquil, one eternal calm,Which seems to woo the troubled soul to peace!Now, all is sunshine, and thy boundless breastScarce heaves; unruffled, all thy waves subside(Light murmuring, like the baby sighs of rest)Into a gentle ripple on the shore.

All hail, dear Woman! saving-ark of man,His surest solace in this world of woe;How cheering are thy smiles, which, like the breezeOf health, play softly o'er the pallid cheek,And turn its rigid markings to a smile.England may well be proud of scenes like this;The beaming Beauty which adorns the PIER!

Hung like a fairy fabric o'er the sea,The graceful wonder of this wondrous age;Intrepid Brown,[1] the future page shall tellThy generous spirit's persevering aim,That wrought so much, so well, thy country's weal;How fit for thee, the gallant seaman's life,His restless nights, and days of ceaseless toil;Framed by thy mighty hand, the giant workCheck'd the rude tempest, in its fearful way.Thy bold inventions gave new life to hope,Steadied the wavering, and confirm'd the brave,And bade the timid smile, amidst the storm!

Spirit of Hogarth! had I but one rayOf that vast sun which warm'd thy varied mind;How would I now describe the motley groupsWhich crowd, in thoughtless ease, thy moving road.Mark the young Confidence of yesterday,Offspring of pride, and fortune's blinded fool,(Engender'd like the vermin of an hour)All would-be fashion, elegance, and ease,While, by his side, the weaker vessel smirks,In tawdry finery, with presuming gait,As though the world were made for them alone;Their liveried Lacquey, half-conceal'd in lace,The vulgar wonder of an upstart race.How heartlessly they pass that mourner by,The poor lone Widow, with her death-struck load.In speechless poverty, she courts the air,To give its blessing to her suff'ring babe;Not asking it herself; for life, to her,Has now no charm—her refuge is the grave!

Here comes the moral Almanack of years—The prim old maid, and, by her side, her Niece,Full of bewitching beauty, health, and love.See, how the tabby watches Laura's eyes,Lest they should smile upon some pleasing spark,And violate grim prudery's tyrant ties.With icy finger, she her charge directs,To view the faithful dial of the sun,Whose moral tells how tide and time pass on.See, there—the fated victim of mischance;Read, in that hollow eye, and alter'd look,The deep anxiety which gnaws the heart,Incessant struggling 'gainst a tide of care,Which wears his life away;—and there, again,The empty, lucky Fool, who never thought,Nor ever will, yet lives and smiles, and thrives!Mark ye, that Ready-reckoner's figured face?Cold calculation in his thoughtful step;The heartless wretch, who never trusts his land,And never is deceived!—And, next him, comesLaughing Good-nature, with ruddy cheeks,And welcome look, determined to be pleased.He comes to ask—or go with friend to dine;His labour but to dress—to eat, to sleep:He knows no suffering equal to bad wine.There—the prig-Parson, with indented hat,And formal step—demanding your respect—Yonder, the lovely insect-chasing Child.His is, indeed, a life of envious joy;Hope and anticipation, on the wing,To him no sad realities e'er bring!

And now, the humble Quaker, plain and proud.Humility, is this, indeed, thy type?(I know it is not, for I know the man.)His lovely Daughter bears an angel formAnd mind, that glorifies her sex's charms;Meekness and charity her life employ—A seraph sorrowing for a suffering world!Lo! too, the Matron, with her household gods,The deities she worships night and day.Affection has no bounds, nor language words.To tell a mother's tender ceaseless charge.Children! can all your future lore repayThe nights of watchfulness, and days of care,Which a fond parent gives?—See, last, sad sight! the hardy British Tar,Cutlass unsheath'd, unlike the truly brave.Here, watching, night and day—degenerate lot!To seize a fisherman, or stop a cart,Or "fright the wandering spirits from the shore."His "brief authority" has just detain'dA boat of cockles and a quart of gin!The smart Lieutenant's epaulette, methinks,Blushes at this degrading, pimping trade.—For deeds like these—let objects be employ'd,Who never shared their country's high renown!Adieu! vast Ocean, cradle of the brave,Tablet of England's glory, and her shield!To thee—and those dear friends who lured me here,With hospitality's enchanting smile,And chased away a little age of woe—Gratefully—I dedicate thesetuneful lays!

July, 1826.

[Footnote 1: My friend, Captain Samuel Brown, of the Royal Navy, whose inventions and improvements of the iron chain cable, and various others connected with the naval service, deserve the gratitude of his country, independent of the admirable Chain-Pier at Brighton, a Suspension Bridge over the Tweed, Pier at Newhaven, Bridge at Heckham, the iron work for Hammersmith Suspension Bridge, and other successful undertakings.]

Light as the breeze that hails the infant mornThe Milkmaid trips, as o'er her arm she slingsHer cleanly pail, some fav'rite lay she singsAs sweetly wild and cheerful as the horn.O! happy girl I may never faithless love,Or fancied splendour, lead thy steps astray;No cares becloud the sunshine of thy day,Nor want e'er urge thee from thy cot to rove.What though thy station dooms thee to be poor,And by the hard-earn'd morsel thou art fed;Yet sweet content bedecks thy lowly bed,And health and peace sit smiling at thy door:Of these possess'd—thou hast a gracious meed,Which Heaven's high wisdom gives, to make thee rich indeed!

Physician and Naturalist to Lord Amherst, Governor General ofIndia, who died at Cawnpoor, 24th of November, 1826.

Another awful warning voice of deathTo human dignity, and human pride;'Tis sad, to mark how short the longest life—How brief was thine! Thy day is done,And all its complicated hopes and fearsLie buried, ABEL! in an early grave.The unavailing tear for thee shall flow,And love and friendship faithful record keepOf all thy varied worth, thy anxious strifeFor fame and years, now gone for ever!Yet o'er thy tomb science and learningBend in mute regret, and truth proclaimsThy just inheritance an honour'd name!

Lamented most by those who knew thee best,Accept this humble, tributary lay,From one, who in thy boyhood and thy primeHad shared thy friendship, and had fondly hopedWhen last we parted, many years were thineAnd joys in store—that thy elastic mindMight long have gladden'd life's monotony.Thine was a princely heart, a joyous soul,The charm of reason, and the sprightly witWhich kept dull letter'd ignorance in awe,Shook the pretender on his tinsel throne,And claim'd the glorious dignity of mind!

Alas! that in thy prime, when time beganTo make thee nearly all the World could wish,The spoiler Death should unrelenting come(As though in envy of thy wondrous skill)And stop the fountain of a noble heart.

Rest, anxious spirit! from life's feverish dream,From all its sad realities and cares:Be this thy Epitaph, thy honour'd boast—Thine was the fame, which thine own mind achieved!

[Footnote 1: Dr. Abel was greatly distinguished in his profession for his love of it, and for the ardour of his pursuits in useful knowledge. —He published many ingenious Papers on Medical Science and Natural History. His account of the Embassy to China, under Lord Amherst, has been generally admired. He practised with increasing respect as a Physician, at Brighton, previous to his leaving England for India; and meditated (as the Author of this article knows) one or two works, which, from the activity of his mind, may yet be anticipated. Dr. Abel was a native of Bungay, in Suffolk (where his father was a banker), and it is supposed was about 35 years of age when he died. It is worthy of remark, that the present eminent and estimable Dr. Gooch, Librarian to His Majesty, and Dr. Abel, should both have been pupils of Mr. Borrett, Surgeon, of Yarmouth.]

Now when dun Night her shadowy veil has spread,See want and infamy, as forth they come,Lead their wan daughter from her branded home,To woo the stranger for unhallow'd bread.Poor outcast! o'er thy sickly-tinted cheekAnd half-clad form, what havoc want hath made;And the sweet lustre of thine eye doth fade,And all thy soul's sad sorrow seems to speak.O! miserable state! compell'd to wearThe wooing smile, as on thy aching breastSome wretch reclines, who feeling ne'er possess'd;Thy poor heart bursting with the stifled tear!Oh! GOD OF MERCY! bid her woes subside,And be to her a friend, who hath no friend beside.

Dearest love! when thy God shall recall thee,Be this record inscribed on thy tomb:Truth, and gratitude, well may applaud thee,And all thy past virtues relume.

It shall tell—to thy sex's proud honour,Of sufferings and trials severe,While still, through protracted affliction,Not a murmur escaped; but the tear

Of resignment to Heaven's high dictates,'Twas thine, like a martyr, to shed:That heart—all affection for others—For thyself, uncomplainingly, bled.

Midst the storms, which misfortune had gather'd,What an angel thou wert unto me;In that hour, when all friendship seem'd sever'd,Thou didst bloom like the ever-green tree!

All was gloom; and in vain had I striven,For hope ceased a ray to impart;When thou cam'st, like a meteor from heaven,And gave peace to my desolate heart!

Give me the wreath of friendship true,Whose flowerets fade not in a breath:From memory gaining many a hue,To bloom beyond the touch of death.

And I will send it to thy home—Thy home beloved, my faithful friend!And pray for its perpetual bloomAnd every bliss that earth can send.

Within its magic wreath I'd placeHearts'-ease and every lovely flower;To win thee by their matchless grace,And cheer and bless the lonely hour.

When at the world's unkind returnOf all thy worth, and all thy care,Thou may'st in spite of manhood turn,And shed the sad, the bitter, tear.

Then, midst this holy grief of thine,The thought of some true friend may bless,And cheer the gloom like angel's smile,Or sunbeam in a wilderness.

And could I hope I had a claimOn thee in such a rapturous hour?Oh! that, indeed, I'd own were fame.The saving ark of friendship's power.

Or that, in future years, thy babesShould o'er this frail memorial bend,(For first affection rarely fades!)And boast that I was once the friend

Whose wit, or worth, possess'd a charm,By Parents loved, and them caress'd.That spell would every sorrow calm,And bid my anxious spirit rest!

Sung by Messrs. GOULDEN, PYNE, and NELSON.—Composed byMr. ROOKE.

Here, in our fairy bowers, we dwell,Women our idol, life's best treasure!Echo enchanted joys to tell,Our feast of laugh, of love, and pleasure.Say, is not this then bliss divine,Beauty's smiles and rosy wine?

Eternal mirth and sunshine reign,For grief we cannot find the leisure;Night's social gods have banish'd pain,Morn lights us to increasing pleasure.Say, is not this then bliss divine,Beauty's smiles and rosy wine?Here in our fairy bowers, &c.

O'er the wide heath now moon-tide horrors hung,And night's dark pencil dimm'd the tints of spring;The boding minstrel now harsh omens sung,And the bat spread his dark nocturnal wing.

At that still hour, pale Cynthia oft had seenThe fair Eliza (joyous once and gay),With pensive step, and melancholy mien,O'er the broad plain in love-born anguish stray.

Long had her heart with Henry's been entwined,And love's soft voice had waked the sacred blazeOf Hymen's altar; while, with him combined,His cherub train prepared the torch to raise:

When, lo! his standard raging war uprear'd,And honour call'd her Henry from her charms.He fought, but ah! torn, mangled, blood-besmear'd,Fell, nobly fell, amid his conquering arms!

In her sad bosom, a tumultuous worldOf hopes and fears on his dear mem'ry spread;For fate had not the clouded roll unfurl'd,Nor yet with baleful hemlock crown'd her head.

Reflection, oft to sad remembrance broughtThe well known spot, where they so oft had stray'd;While fond affection ten-fold ardour caught,And smiling innocence around them play'd.

But these were past! and now the distant bell(For deep and pensive thought had held her there)Toll'd midnight out, with long resounding knell,While dismal echoes quiver'd in the air.

Again 'twas silence—when from out the gloomShe saw, with awe-struck eye, a phantom glide:'Twas Henry's form!—what pencil shall presumeTo paint her horror!——HENRY AS HE DIED!

Enervate, long she stood—a sculptured dread,Till waking sense dissolved amazement's chain;Then home, with timid haste, distracted fled,And sunk in dreadful agony of pain.

Not the deep sigh, which madden'd Sappho gave,When from Leucate's craggy height she sprung,Could equal that which gave her to the grave,The last sad sound that echo'd from her tongue.

Lamented Chief! at thy distinguish'd deedsThe world shall gaze with wonder and applause,While, on fair History's page, the patriot readsThy matchless virtue in thy Country's cause.

Yes, it was thine, amid destructive war,To shield it nobly from oppression's chain;By justice arm'd, to brave each threat'ning jar,Assert its freedom, and its rights maintain.

Much honour'd Statesman, Husband, Father, Friend,A generous nation's grateful tears are thine;E'en unborn ages shall thy worth commend,And never-fading laurels deck thy shrine.

Illustrious Warrior! on the immortal base,By Freedom rear'd, thy envied name shall stand;And Fame, by Truth inspired, shall fondly traceThee, Pride and Guardian of thy Native Land!

To——.

In vain, sweet Maid! for me you bringThe first-blown blossoms of the spring;My tearful cheek you wipe in vain,And bid its pale rose bloom again.

In vain! unconscious, did I say?Oh! you alone these tears can stay;Alone, the pale rose can renew,Whose sunshine is a smile from you.

Yet not in friendship's smile it lives;Too cold the gifts that friendship gives:The beam that warms a winter's day,Plays coldly in the lap of May.

You bid my sad heart cease to swell,But will you, if its tale I tell,Nor turn away, nor frown the while,But smile, as you were wont to smile?

Then bring me not the blossoms young,That erst on Flora's forehead hung;But round thy radiant temples twine,The flowers whose flaunting mocks at mine.

Give me—nor pinks, nor pansies gay,Nor violets, fading fast away,Nor myrtle, rue, nor rosemary,But give, oh! give, thyself to me!

The very flattering success which attended the first Edition of this brief but affectionate Sketch, I must attribute to the interest of the subject, rather than the merit of the composition; and I cannot but feel grateful to those Writers who have honoured me by their notice and approbation.

I must not again go to press, without acknowledging how much I am indebted to a kind friend, who happened to be in Norfolk at the time I was printing the first Edition; with whom I had the happiness to pass many delightful hours, and to whose admirable taste and judgment I owe many valuable suggestions. In mentioning John Kemble with Sheridan, I associate two of the brightest stars that have illumined the Literature and Drama of the Country.

Yarmouth, Norfolk, 1816.

Embalm'd in fame, and sacred from decay,What mighty name, in arms, in arts, or verse,From England claims this consecrated day.Her nobles crowding round the shadowy hearse?

Hark! from yon fane, within whose hallow'd mounds,Her bards, her warriors, and her statesmen, sleep;The solemn, slow, funereal bell resounds,While mournful echoes dread accordance keep.

Spirits revered! beyond that awful bourne.Who share the dark communion of the tomb,A kindred genius seeks your dread sojourn;Ye heirs of glory! hail a brother home.

Obscured, as SHERIDAN to dust descends,Recedes each ray from Wit's effulgent sphere;Lo! every Muse in silent sorrow bends,Her votive laurels mingling o'er his bier.

But chiefly thou, from whose polluted shrineHis filial hand Circean rabble drove;What pangs, Thalia! in this hour are thine;What fervent anguish of maternal love!

How long perverted, had the Comic scene,(The flattering reflex of a sensual age)Shown prurient Folly's rank licentious mien,Refined, embellish'd on the pander stage:

While Vanburgh, Congreve, Farquhar, heaven-endow'd,To scourge bold Vice with Wit's resistless rod,Embraced her chains, stood forth her priests avow'd,And scatter'd flowers in every path she trod:

Inglorious praise! though Judgment's self admiredThose wanton strains which Virtue blush'd to hear;While pamper'd Passion from the scene retired,With wilder rage to urge his fierce career.

At length, all graced in Fancy's orient hues,His native fires with added culture bright,Rose SHERIDAN! to vindicate the Muse,And gild the drama with meridian light.

Him, skill'd alike great Nature's genuine form,Or Fashion's light factitious traits to trace,The scene confess'd;—with glowing pathos warm,Or gaily sportive in familiar grace.

With what nice art his master-hand he flungO'er each fine chord which thrills the polish'd breast,Let Faukland tell! with woes ideal stung;Let gentle Julia's generous flame attest![1]

Satire, that oft with castigation rudeDegrades, while zealous to correct mankind,Refined by him, more generous aims pursued,Reform'd the vice—but left no sting behind.

Yet, though with Wit's imperishable baysEnwreath'd, he held an uncontested throne;Though circling climes, unanimous in praise,Confirm'd the partial suffrage of his own:

In careless mood he sought the Muse's bower;His lyre, like that to great Pelides strong,The soft'ning solace of a vacant boor,Its airy descant indolently rung.

But when, portentous 'mid the storms of war,Glared Public danger; when, with withering din,The spoil-flush'd foe strode furious from afar;And direr dread! Rebellion raged within:

Then SHERIDAN! dilating to the storm,Bright as the pharos, as the watch-tower strong,With all the patriot's inspiration warm,Thy genius pour'd its thundering voice along.

Who heard thee not, in that tremendous hour,When Britain mourn'd her surest anchor lost,And saw her alienated Navies lour,Like the charged tempest, round their parent coast?

With active zeal, which no cold medium knew,Nor party ruled, nor prejudice confined,But, to thy heart's spontaneous impulse true,Thou gay'st thy country ALL thy mighty mind.

What time Iberia, gash'd with many a scar,Braved the fierce Gaul, in fervour uncontroll'd,Though doubts and fears bedimm'd her struggling star,Its bright ascent thy prescient soul foretold.

Late, too, when France, with sophist cunning fraught,Essay'd that field which force had fail'd to gain,And proudly question'd, by success untaught,Britannia's lineal right—her watery reign!

While meaner foes denounced with equal hateHer flag, which wide in Freedom's cause unfurl'd,The saving sign of many a sinking state,Had chased Oppression from th' insulted world.—

Oh! that beyond the light diurnal page,Inscribed on high in monumental gold,That strain might kindle each succeeding age,Which thus thy generous indignation roll'd:

"If e'er, of ancient energy bereaved,Britannia, bent by menace or design,Should stain her naval sceptre, hard-achieved,And yield one claim, one cherish'd right resign:

"Then, hurl'd in ruin from her radiant sphere,Sunk her proud Isle in Ocean's depths profound;May all her glories pass from Memory's ear,An idle legend—a derided sound!"

Such were his merits whom the Muse deplores,The Wit, the Statesman, Orator, and Bard!Nor when his frailties jealous truth explores,Shall Candour shrink from her supreme award?

If, all propitious, when his ardent primeBeat high with hope, in conscious powers elate,Ambition woo'd him from her height sublime,And partial Fortune op'd her golden gate;

What hostile influence, glooming o'er his way,Chill'd each fine impulse, each aspiring aim,Effused bleak clouds round Life's declining ray,And left his labours no reward but fame?

'Twas not alone that in the festive bower,Prompt in the social sympathies to melt,Too long he linger'd; that the genial hourHis fervid sense too exquisitely felt.

But that in tasks of public duty proved,Onward with faith inflexible he trod;Alike by Fortune's dazzling lure unmoved,Or stern Necessity's relentless rod.

E'en Envy's self shall sanction that applause:And oft, slow pacing yon sepulchral gloom,With fond regret shall Meditation pause,And breathe these accents o'er his honour'd tomb:

Ye Muses! come, with ministry divine.Protect the shrine where SHERIDAN is laid;Ye Patriot Virtues! here your homage join;Assert his worth, and soothe his hovering shade.

Emblazon'd high in Albion's rolls of fame,A guiding star by which her sons may steer;This proud inscription let his memory claim—Above himself, he held his Country dear!

[Footnote 1: Rivals.]


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