Chapter 5

’Tis he who wakes the nameless strong desire,

The melting rapture and the glowing fire;

’Tis he who pierces deep the tortured breast,

And stirs the terrors never more to rest.

Opposed to these we have a prouder kind,

Rash without heat, and without raptures blind;

These our Glad Tidings unconcern’d peruse,

Search without awe, and without fear refuse;

The truths, the blessings found in Sacred Writ,

Call forth their spleen, and exercise their wit;

Respect from these nor saints nor martyrs gain,

The zeal they scorn, and they deride the pain:

And take their transient, cool, contemptuous view,

Of that which must be tried, and doubtless may be true.

Friends of our Faith we have, whom doubts like these,

And keen remarks, and bold objections please;

They grant such doubts have weaker minds oppress’d,

Till sound conviction gave the troubled rest.

“But still,” they cry, “let none their censures spare.

They but confirm the glorious hopes we share;

From doubt, disdain, derision, scorn, and lies,

With five-fold triumph sacred Truth shall rise.”

Yes! I allow, so Truth shall stand at last,

And gain fresh glory by the conflict past: -

As Solway-Moss (a barren mass and cold,

Death to the seed, and poison to the fold),

The smiling plain and fertile vale o’erlaid,

Choked the green sod, and kill’d the springing blade;

That, changed by culture, may in time be seen

Enrich’d by golden grain and pasture green;

And these fair acres rented and enjoy’d

May those excel by Solway-Moss destroy’d.

Still must have mourn’d the tenant of the day,

For hopes destroy’d, and harvests swept away;

To him the gain of future years unknown,

The instant grief and suffering were his own:

So must I grieve for many a wounded heart,

Chill’d by those doubts which bolder minds impart:

Truth in the end shall shine divinely clear,

But sad the darkness till those times appear;

Contests for truth, as wars for freedom, yield

Glory and joy to those who gain the field:

But still the Christian must in pity sigh

For all who suffer, and uncertain die.

Here are, who all the Church maintains approve,

But yet the Church herself they will not love;

In angry speech, they blame the carnal tie

Which pure Religion lost her spirit by;

What time from prisons, flames, and tortures led,

She slumber’d careless in a royal bed;

To make, they add, the Church’s glory shine,

Should Diocletian reign, not Constantine.

“In pomp,” they cry, “is “England’s Church array’d,

Her cool Reformers wrought like men afraid;

We would have pull’d her gorgeous temples down,

And spurn’d her mitre, and defiled her gown:

We would have trodden low both bench and stall,

Nor left a tithe remaining, great or small.”

Let us be serious - Should such trials come.

Are they themselves prepared for martyrdom?

It seems to us that our reformers knew

Th’ important work they undertook to do;

An equal priesthood they were loth to try,

Lest zeal and care should with ambition die;

To them it seem’d that, take the tenth away,

Yet priests must eat, and you must feed or pay:

Would they indeed, who hold such pay in scorn,

Put on the muzzle when they tread the corn?

Would they all, gratis, watch and tend the fold,

Nor take one fleece to keep them from the cold?

Men are not equal, and ’tis meet and right

That robes and titles our respect excite;

Order requires it; ’tis by vulgar pride

That such regard is censured and denied;

Or by that false enthusiastic zeal,

That thinks the Spirit will the priest reveal,

And show to all men, by their powerful speech,

Who are appointed and inspired to teach:

Alas! could we the dangerous rule believe,

Whom for their teacher should the crowd receive?

Since all the varying kinds demand respect,

All press you on to join their chosen sect,

Although but in this single point agreed,

“Desert your churches and adopt our creed.”

We know full well how much our forms offend

The burthen’d Papist and the simple Friend:

Him, who new robes for every service takes,

And who in drab and beaver sighs and shakes;

He on the priest, whom hood and band adorn,

Looks with the sleepy eye of silent scorn;

But him I would not for my friend and guide,

Who views such things with spleen, or wears with pride.

See next our several Sects, - but first behold

The Church of Rome, who here is poor and old:

Use not triumphant raillery, or, at least,

Let not thy mother be a whore and beast;

Great was her pride indeed in ancient times,

Yet shall we think of nothing but her crimes?

Exalted high above all earthly things,

She placed her foot upon the neck of kings;

But some have deeply since avenged the crown,

And thrown her glory and her honours down;

Nor neck nor ear can she of kings command,

Nor place a foot upon her own fair land.

Among her sons, with us a quiet few,

Obscure themselves, her ancient state review,

And fond and melancholy glances cast

On power insulted, and on triumph past:

They look, they can but look, with many a sigh,

On sacred buildings doom’d in dust to lie;

“On seats,” they tell, “where priests mid tapers dim

Breathed the warm prayer, or tuned the midnight hymn;

Where trembling penitents their guilt confessed,

Where want had succour, and contrition rest;

There weary men from trouble found relief,

There men in sorrow found repose from grief.

To scenes like these the fainting soul retired;

Revenge and anger in these cells expired;

By Pity soothed, Remorse lost half her fears,

And soften’d Pride dropp’d penitential tears.

“Then convent walls and nunnery spires arose,

In pleasant spots which monk or abbot chose;

When counts and barons saints devoted fed,

And making cheap exchange, had pray’r for bread.

“Now all is lost, the earth where abbeys stood

Is layman’s land, the glebe, the stream, the wood:

His oxen low where monks retired to eat,

His cows repose upon the prior’s seat:

And wanton doves within the cloisters bill,

Where the chaste votary warr’d with wanton will.”

Such is the change they mourn, but they restrain

The rage of grief, and passively complain.

We’ve Baptists old and new; forbear to ask

What the distinction - I decline the task;

This I perceive, that when a sect grows old,

Converts are few, and the converted cold:

First comes the hotbed heat, and while it glows

The plants spring up, and each with vigour grows:

Then comes the cooler day, and though awhile

The verdure prospers and the blossoms smile,

Yet poor the fruit, and form’d by long delay,

Nor will the profits for the culture pay;

The skilful gard’ner then no longer stops,

But turns to other beds for bearing crops.

Some Swedenborgians in our streets are found,

Those wandering walkers on enchanted ground,

Who in our world can other worlds survey,

And speak with spirits though confin’d in clay:

Of Bible-mysteries they the keys possess,

Assured themselves, where wiser men but guess:

’Tis theirs to see around, about, above, -

How spirits mingle thoughts, and angels move;

Those whom our grosser views from us exclude,

To them appear - a heavenly multitude;

While the dark sayings, seal’d to men like us,

Their priests interpret, and their flocks discuss.

But while these gifted men, a favour’d fold,

New powers exhibit and new worlds behold;

Is there not danger lest their minds confound

The pure above them with the gross around?

May not these Phaetons, who thus contrive

’Twixt heaven above and earth beneath to drive,

When from their flaming chariots they descend,

The worlds they visit in their fancies blend?

Alas! too sure on both they bring disgrace,

Their earth is crazy, and their heaven is base.

We have, it seems, who treat, and doubtless well,

Of a chastising not awarding Hell;

Who are assured that an offended God

Will cease to use the thunder and the rod;

A soul on earth, by crime and folly stain’d,

When here corrected has improvement gain’d;

In other state still more improved to grow,

And nobler powers in happier world to know;

New strength to use in each divine employ,

And more enjoying, looking to more joy.

A pleasing vision! could we thus be sure

Polluted souls would be at length so pure;

The view is happy, we may think it just,

It may be true -  but who shall add, it must?

To the plain words and sense of Sacred Writ,

With all my heart I reverently submit;

But where it leaves me doubtful, I’m afraid

To call conjecture to my reason’s aid;

Thy thoughts, thy ways, great God! are not as mine,

And to thy mercy I my soul resign.

Jews are with us, but far unlike to those,

Who, led by David, warr’d with Israels foes;

Unlike to those whom his imperial son

Taught truths divine - the Preacher Solomon;

Nor war nor wisdom yield our Jews delight;

They will not study, and they dare not fight.

These are, with us, a slavish, knavish crew,

Shame and dishonour to the name of Jew;

The poorest masters of the meanest arts,

With cunning heads, and cold and cautious hearts;

They grope their dirty way to petty gains,

While poorly paid for their nefarious pains.

Amazing race! deprived of land and laws,

A general language and a public cause;

With a religion none can now obey,

With a reproach that none can take away:

A people still, whose common ties are gone;

Who, mix’d with every race, are lost in none.

What said their Prophet? - “Shouldst thou disobey,

The Lord shall take thee from thy land away;

Thou shalt a by-word and a proverb be,

And all shall wonder at thy woes and thee;

Daughter and son, shalt thou, while captive, have,

And see them made the bond-maid and the slave;

He, whom thou leav’st, the Lord thy God, shall bring

War to thy country on an eagle-wing.

A people strong and dreadful to behold,

Stern to the young, remorseless to the old;

Masters whose speech thou canst not understand

By cruel signs shall give the harsh command:

Doubtful of life shalt thou by night, by day,

For grief, and dread, and trouble pine away;

Thy evening wish, - Would God I saw the sun

Thy morning sigh, - Would God the day were done!

Thus shalt thou suffer, and to distant times

Regret thy misery, and lament thy crimes.”

A part there are, whom doubtless man might trust,

Worthy as wealthy, pure, religious, just;

They who with patience, yet with rapture, look

On the strong promise of the Sacred Book:

As unfulfill’d th’ endearing words they view,

And blind to truth, yet own their prophets true;

Well pleased they look for Sion’s coming state,

Nor think of Julian’s boast and Julian’s fate.

More might I add: I might describe the flocks

Made by Seceders from the ancient stocks;

Those who will not to any guide submit,

Nor find one creed to their conceptions fit -

Each sect, they judge, in something goes astray,

And every church has lost the certain way!

Then for themselves they carve out creed and laws,

And weigh their atoms, and divide their straws.

A Sect remains, which, though divided long

In hostile parties, both are fierce and strong,

And into each enlists a warm and zealous throng.

Soon as they rose in fame, the strife arose,

The Calvinistic these, th’ Arminian those;

With Wesley some remain’d, the remnant Whitfield chose.

Now various leaders both the parties take,

And the divided hosts their new divisions make.

See yonder Preacher! to his people pass,

Borne up and swell’d by tabernacle-gas:

Much he discourses, and of various points,

All unconnected, void of limbs and joints;

He rails, persuades, explains, and moves the will

By fierce bold words, and strong mechanic skill.

“That Gospel, Paul with zeal and love maintain’d,

To others lost, to you is now explain’d;

No worldly learning can these points discuss,

Books teach them not as they are taught to us.

Illiterate call us! - let their wisest man

Draw forth his thousands as your Teacher can:

They give their moral precepts: so, they say,

Did Epictetus once, and Seneca;

One was a slave, and slaves we all must be,


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