Chapter 2

Sleeps with the fiercest of his Arian foes;

Socinians here with Calvinists abide,

And thin partitions angry chiefs divide;

Here wily Jesuits simple Quakers meet,

And Bellarmine has rest at Luther’s feet.

Great authors, for the church’s glory fired,

Are for the church’s peace to rest retired;

And close beside, a mystic, maudlin race,

Lie “Crumbs of Comfort for the Babes of Grace.”

Against her foes Religion well defends

Her sacred truths, but often fears her friends:

If learn’d, their pride, if weak, their zeal she dreads,

And their hearts’ weakness, who have soundest heads.

But most she fears the controversial pen,

The holy strife of disputatious men;

Who the blest Gospel’s peaceful page explore,

Only to fight against its precepts more.

Near to these seats behold yon slender frames,

All closely fill’d and mark’d with modern names;

Where no fair science ever shows her face,

Few sparks of genius, and no spark of grace;

There sceptics rest, a still-increasing throng,

And stretch their widening wings ten thousand strong;

Some in close fight their dubious claims maintain;

Some skirmish lightly, fly, and fight again;

Coldly profane, and impiously gay,

Their end the same, though various in their way.

When first Religion came to bless the land,

Her friends were then a firm believing band;

To doubt was then to plunge in guilt extreme,

And all was gospel that a monk could dream;

Insulted Reason fled the grov’lling soul,

For Fear to guide, and visions to control:

But now, when Reason has assumed her throne,

She, in her turn, demands to reign alone;

Rejecting all that lies beyond her view,

And, being judge, will be a witness too:

Insulted Faith then leaves the doubtful mind,

To seek for truth, without a power to find:

Ah! when will both in friendly beams unite,

And pour on erring man resistless light?

Next to the seats, well stored with works divine,

An ample space, PHILOSOPHY! is thine;

Our reason’s guide, by whose assisting light

We trace the moral bounds of wrong and right;

Our guide through nature, from the sterile clay,

To the bright orbs of yon celestial way!

’Tis thine, the great, the golden chain to trace,

Which runs through all, connecting race with race;

Save where those puzzling, stubborn links remain,

Which thy inferior light pursues in vain:-

How vice and virtue in the soul contend;

How widely differ, yet how nearly blend;

What various passions war on either part,

And now confirm, now melt the yielding heart:

How Fancy loves around the world to stray,

While Judgment slowly picks his sober way;

The stores of memory, and the flights sublime

Of genius, bound by neither space nor time; -

All these divine Philosophy explores,

Till, lost in awe, she wonders and adores.

From these, descending to the earth, she turns,

And matter, in its various forms, discerns;

She parts the beamy light with skill profound,

Metes the thin air, and weighs the flying sound;

‘Tis hers the lightning from the clouds to call,

And teach the fiery mischief where to fall.

Yet more her volumes teach, - on these we look

As abstracts drawn from Nature’s larger book:

Here, first described, the torpid earth appears,

And next, the vegetable robe it wears;

Where flow’ry tribes, in valleys, fields, and groves,

Nurse the still flame, and feed the silent loves;

Loves where no grief, nor joy, nor bliss, nor pain,

Warm the glad heart or vex the labouring brain;

But as the green blood moves along the blade,

The bed of Flora on the branch is made;

Where, without passion love instinctive lives,

And gives new life, unconscious that it gives.

Advancing still in Nature’s maze, we trace,

In dens and burning plains, her savage race

With those tame tribes who on their lord attend,

And find in man a master and a friend;

Man crowns the scene, a world of wonders new,

A moral world, that well demands our view.

This world is here; for, of more lofty kind,

These neighbouring volumes reason on the mind;

They paint the state of man ere yet endued

With knowledge; - man, poor, ignorant, and rude;

Then, as his state improves, their pages swell,

And all its cares, and all its comforts, tell:

Here we behold how inexperience buys,

At little price, the wisdom of the wise;

Without the troubles of an active state,

Without the cares and dangers of the great,

Without the miseries of the poor, we know

What wisdom, wealth, and poverty bestow;

We see how reason calms the raging mind,

And how contending passions urge mankind:

Some, won by virtue, glow with sacred fire;

Some, lured by vice, indulge the low desire;

Whilst others, won by either, now pursue

The guilty chase, now keep the good in view;

For ever wretched, with themselves at strife,

They lead a puzzled, vex’d, uncertain life;

For transient vice bequeaths a lingering pain,

Which transient virtue seeks to cure in vain.

Whilst thus engaged, high views enlarge the soul,

New interests draw, new principles control:

Nor thus the soul alone resigns her grief,

But here the tortured body finds relief;

For see where yonder sage Arachne shapes

Her subtile gin, that not a fly escapes!

There PHYSIC fills the space, and far around,

Pile above pile her learned works abound:

Glorious their aim- to ease the labouring heart;

To war with death, and stop his flying dart;

To trace the source whence the fierce contest grew,

And life’s short lease on easier terms renew;

To calm the phrensy of the burning brain;

To heal the tortures of imploring pain;

Or, when more powerful ills all efforts brave,

To ease the victim no device can save,

And smooth the stormy passage to the grave.

But man, who knows no good unmix’d and pure,

Oft finds a poison where he sought a cure;

For grave deceivers lodge their labours here,

And cloud the science they pretend to clear;

Scourges for sin, the solemn tribe are sent;

Like fire and storms, they call us to repent;

But storms subside, and fires forget to rage.

These

are eternal scourges of the age:

’Tis not enough that each terrific hand

Spreads desolations round a guilty land;

But train’d to ill, and harden’d by its crimes,

Their pen relentless kills through future times.

Say, ye, who search these records of the dead-

Who read huge works, to boast what ye have read;

Can all the real knowledge ye possess,

Or those - if such there are - who more than guess,

Atone for each impostor’s wild mistakes,

And mend the blunders pride or folly makes ?

What thought so wild, what airy dream so light,

That will not prompt a theorist to write?

What art so prevalent, what proof so strong,

That will convince him his attempt is wrong?

One in the solids finds each lurking ill,

Nor grants the passive fluids power to kill;

A learned friend some subtler reason brings,

Absolves the channels, but condemns their springs;

The subtile nerves, that shun the doctor’s eye,

Escape no more his subtler theory;

The vital heat, that warms the labouring heart,

Lends a fair system to these sons of art;

The vital air, a pure and subtile stream,

Serves a foundation for an airy scheme,

Assists the doctor, and supports his dream.

Some have their favourite ills, and each disease

Is but a younger branch that kills from these;

One to the gout contracts all human pain;

He views it raging in the frantic brain;

Finds it in fevers all his efforts mar,

And sees it lurking in the cold catarrh:

Bilious by some, by others nervous seen,

Rage the fantastic demons of the spleen;

And every symptom of the strange disease

With every system of the sage agrees.

Ye frigid tribe, on whom I wasted long

The tedious hours, and ne’er indulged in song;

Ye first seducers of my easy heart,

Who promised knowledge ye could not impart;

Ye dull deluders, truth’s destructive foes;

Ye sons of fiction, clad in stupid prose;

Ye treacherous leaders, who, yourselves in doubt,

Light up false fires, and send us far about;-

Still may yon spider round your pages spin,

Subtile and slow, her emblematic gin!

Buried in dust and lost in silence, dwell,

Most potent, grave, and reverend friends - farewell!

Near these, and where the setting sun displays,

Through the dim window, his departing rays,

And gilds yon columns, there, on either side,

The huge Abridgments of the LAW abide;

Fruitful as vice the dread correctors stand,

And spread their guardian terrors round the land;

Yet, as the best that human care can do

Is mix’d with error, oft with evil too,

Skill’d in deceit, and practised to evade,

Knaves stand secure, for whom these laws were made,

And justice vainly each expedient tries,

While art eludes it, or while power defies.

“Ah! happy age,” the youthful poet sings,

“When the free nations knew not laws nor kings,

When all were blest to share a common store,

And none were proud of wealth, for none were poor,

No wars nor tumults vex’d each still domain,

No thirst of empire, no desire of gain;

No proud great man, nor one who would be great,

Drove modest merit from its proper state;

Nor into distant climes would Avarice roam,

To fetch delights for Luxury at home:

Bound by no ties which kept the soul in awe,

They dwelt at liberty, and love was law!”

“Mistaken youth! each nation first was rude,

Each man a cheerless son of solitude,

To whom no joys of social life were known,

None felt a care that was not all his own;

Or in some languid clime his abject soul

Bow’d to a little tyrant’s stern control;

A slave, with slaves his monarch’s throne he raised,

And in rude song his ruder idol praised;

The meaner cares of life were all he knew;

Bounded his pleasures, and his wishes few;

But when by slow degrees the Arts arose,

And Science waken’d from her long repose;

When Commerce, rising from the bed of ease,

Ran round the land, and pointed to the seas;

When Emulation, born with jealous eye,

And Avarice, lent their spurs to industry;

Then one by one the numerous laws were made,

Those to control, and these to succour trade;

To curb the insolence of rude command,

To snatch the victim from the usurer’s hand;

To awe the bold, to yield the wrong’d redress,

And feed the poor with Luxury’s excess.”

{3}

Like some vast flood, unbounded, fierce, and strong,

His nature leads ungovern’d man along;

Like mighty bulwarks made to stem that tide,

The laws are form’d, and placed on ev’ry side;

Whene’er it breaks the bounds by these decreed,

New statutes rise, and stronger laws succeed;

More and more gentle grows the dying stream,

More and more strong the rising bulwarks seem;

Till, like a miner working sure and slow,

Luxury creeps on, and ruins all below;

The basis sinks, the ample piles decay;

The stately fabric, shakes and falls away;

Primeval want and ignorance come on,

But Freedom, that exalts the savage state, is gone.

Next, HISTORY ranks; - there full in front she lies,

And every nation her dread tale supplies;

Yet History has her doubts, and every age

With sceptic queries marks the passing page;

Records of old nor later date are clear,

Too distant those, and these are placed too near;

There time conceals the objects from our view,

Here our own passions and a writer’s too:

Yet, in these volumes, see how states arose!

Guarded by virtue from surrounding foes;

Their virtue lost, and of their triumphs vain,

Lo! how they sunk to slavery again!

Satiate with power, of fame and wealth possess’d,

A nation grows too glorious to be blest;

Conspicuous made, she stands the mark of all,

And foes join foes to triumph in her fall.

Thus speaks the page that paints ambition’s race,

The monarch’s pride, his glory, his disgrace;

The headlong course, that madd’ning heroes run,

How soon triumphant, and how soon undone;

How slaves, turn’d tyrants, offer crowns to sale,

And each fall’n nation’s melancholy tale.


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