[pg 001]The Last Day.In Three Books.Venit summa dies.—Virg.Book I.Ipse pater, media nimborum in nocte, coruscaFulmina molitur dextra. Quo maxima motuTerra tremit: fugêre feræ! et mortalia cordaPer gentes humilis stravit pavor.Virg.While others sing the fortune of the great;Empire and arms, and all the pomp of state;With Britain's hero1set their souls on fire,And grow immortal as his deeds inspire;I draw a deeper scene: a scene that yieldsA louder trumpet, and more dreadful fields;The world alarm'd, both earth and heaven o'erthrown,And gasping nature's last tremendous groan;Death's ancient sceptre broke, the teeming tomb,The righteous Judge, and man's eternal doom.'Twixt joy and pain I view the bold design,[pg 002]And ask my anxious heart, if it be mine.Whatever great or dreadful has been doneWithin the sight of conscious stars or sun,Is far beneath my daring: I look downOn all the splendours of the British crown.This globe is for my verse a narrow bound;Attend me, all the glorious worlds around!O! all ye angels, howsoe'er disjoin'd,Of every various order, place, and kind,Hear, and assist, a feeble mortal's lays;'Tis your Eternal King I strive to praise.But chiefly thou, great Ruler! Lord of all!Before whose throne archangels prostrate fall;If at thy nod, from discord, and from night,Sprang beauty, and yon sparkling worlds of light,Exalt e'en me; all inward tumults quell;The clouds and darkness of my mind dispel;To my great subject thou my breast inspire,And raise my lab'ring soul with equal fire.Man, bear thy brow aloft, view every graceIn God's great offspring, beauteous nature's face:See spring's gay bloom; see golden autumn's store;See how earth smiles, and hear old ocean roar.Leviathans but heave their cumbrous mail,It makes a tide, and wind-bound navies sail.Here, forests rise, the mountains awful pride;Here, rivers measure climes, and worlds divide;There, valleys fraught with gold's resplendent seeds,Hold kings, and kingdoms' fortunes, in their beds:There, to the skies, aspiring hills ascend,[pg 003]And into distant lands their shades extend.View cities, armies, fleets; of fleets the pride,See Europe's law, in Albion's channel ride.View the whole earth's vast landscape unconfin'd,Or view in Britain all her glories join'd.Then let the firmament thy wonder raise;'Twill raise thy wonder, but transcend thy praise.How far from east to west? the lab'ring eyeCan scarce the distant azure bounds descry:Wide theatre! where tempests play at large,And God's right hand can all its wrath discharge.Mark how those radiant lamps inflame the pole,Call forth the seasons, and the year control:They shine thro' time, with an unalter'd ray:See this grand period rise, and that decay:So vast, this world's a grain; yet myriads grace,With golden pomp, the throng'd ethereal space;So bright, with such a wealth of glory stor'd,'Twere sin in heathens not to have ador'd.How great, how firm, how sacred, all appears!How worthy an immortal round of years!Yet all must drop, as autumn's sickliest grain,And earth and firmament be sought in vain:The tract forgot where constellations shone,Or where the Stuarts fill'd an awful throne:Time shall be slain, all nature be destroy'd,Nor leave an atom in the mighty void.Sooner, or later, in some future date,(A dreadful secret in the book of fate!)This hour, for aught all human wisdom knows,[pg 004]Or when ten thousand harvests more have rose;When scenes are chang'd on this revolving earth,Old empires fall, and give new empires birth;While other Bourbons rule in other lands,And (if man's sin forbids not) other Annes;While the still busy world is treading o'erThe paths they trod five thousand years before,Thoughtless as those who now life's mazes run,Of earth dissolv'd, or an extinguish'd sun;(Ye sublunary worlds, awake, awake!Ye rulers of the nation, hear, and shake!)Thick clouds of darkness shall arise on day;In sudden night all earth's dominions lay;Impetuous winds the scatter'd forests rend;Eternal mountains, like their cedars, bend:The valleys yawn, the troubled ocean roar,And break the bondage of his wonted shore;A sanguine stain the silver moon o'erspread;Darkness the circle of the sun invade;From inmost heaven incessant thunders roll,And the strong echo bound from pole to pole.When, lo, a mighty trump, one half conceal'dIn clouds, one half to mortal eye reveal'd,Shall pour a dreadful note; the piercing callShall rattle in the centre of the ball;Th' extended circuit of creation shake,The living die with fear, the dead awake.Oh powerful blast! to which no equal soundDid e'er the frighted ear of nature wound,Tho' rival clarions have been strain'd on high,[pg 005]And kindled wars immortal thro' the sky,Tho' God's whole enginery discharg'd, and allThe rebel angels bellow'd in their fall.Have angels sinn'd? and shall not man beware?How shall a son of earth decline the snare?Not folded arms, and slackness of the mind,Can promise for the safety of mankind:None are supinely good: thro' care and painAnd various arts, the steep ascent we gain.This is the scene of combat, not of rest,Man's is laborious happiness at best;On this side death his dangers never cease,His joys are joys of conquest, not of peace.If then, obsequious to the will of fate,And bending to the terms of human state,When guilty joys invite us to their arms,When beauty smiles, or grandeur spreads her charms,The conscious soul would this great scene display,Call down th' immortal hosts in dread array,The trumpet sound, the Christian banner spread,And raise from silent graves the trembling dead;Such deep impression would the picture make,No power on earth her firm resolve could shake;Engag'd with angels she would greatly stand,And look regardless down on sea and land;Not proffer'd worlds her ardour could restrain,And death might shake his threat'ning lance in vain!Her certain conquest would endear the sight,And danger serve but to exalt delight.[pg 006]Instructed thus to shun the fatal spring,Whence flow the terrors of that day I sing;More boldly we our labours may pursue,And all the dreadful image set to view.The sparkling eye, the sleek and painted breast,The burnish'd scale, curl'd train, and rising crest,All that is lovely in the noxious snake,Provokes our fear, and bids us flee the brake:The sting once drawn, his guiltless beauties riseIn pleasing lustre, and detain our eyes;We view with joy, what once did horror move,And strong aversion softens into love.Say then, my muse, whom dismal scenes delight,Frequent at tombs, and in the realms of night;Say, melancholy maid, if bold to dareThe last extremes of terror and despair;Oh say, what change on earth, what heart in man,This blackest moment since the world began.Ah mournful turn! the blissful earth, who lateAt leisure on her axle roll'd in state;While thousand golden planets knew no rest,Still onward in their circling journey prest;A grateful change of seasons some to bring,And sweet vicissitude of fall and spring:Some thro' vast oceans to conduct the keel,And some those watery worlds to sink, or swell:Around her some their splendours to display,And gild her globe with tributary day:This world so great, of joy the bright abode,Heaven's darling child, and fav'rite of her God,[pg 007]Now looks an exile from her father's care,Deliver'd o'er to darkness and despair.No sun in radiant glory shines on high;No light, but from the terrors of the sky:Fall'n are her mountains, her fam'd rivers lost,And all into a second chaos tost:One universal ruin spreads abroad;Nothing is safe beneath the throne of God.Such, earth, thy fate: what then canst thou affordTo comfort and support thy guilty lord?Man, haughty lord of all beneath the moon,How must he bend his soul's ambition downProstrate, the reptile own, and disavowHis boasted stature, and assuming brow?Claim kindred with the clay, and curse his form,That speaks distinction from his sister worm?What dreadful pangs the trembling heart invade?Lord, why dost thou forsake whom thou hast made?Who can sustain thy anger? who can standBeneath the terrors of thy lifted hand?It flies the reach of thought; oh, save me, PowerOf powers supreme, in that tremendous hour!Thou who beneath the frown of fate hast stood,And in thy dreadful agony sweat blood;Thou, who for me, thro' every throbbing vein,Hast felt the keenest edge of mortal pain;Whom death led captive thro' the realms below,And taught those horrid mysteries of woe;Defend me, O my God! Oh, save me, PowerOf powers supreme, in that tremendous hour![pg 008]From east to west they fly, from pole to line,Imploring shelter from the wrath divine;Beg flames to wrap, or whelming seas to sweep,Or rocks to yawn, compassionately deep;Seas cast the monster forth to meet his doom,And rocks but prison up for wrath to come.So fares a traitor to an earthly crown;While death sits threat'ning in his prince's frownHis heart's dismay'd; and now his fears command,To change his native for a distant land:Swift orders fly, the king's severe decreeStands in the channel, and locks up the sea;The port he seeks, obedient to her lord,Hurls back the rebel to his lifted sword.But why this idle toil to paint that day?This time elaborately thrown away?Words all in vain pant after the distress,The height of eloquence would make it less;Heavens! how the good man trembles!—And is there a last day? and must there comeA sure, a fix'd, inexorable doom?Ambition swell, and, thy proud sails to show,Take all the winds that vanity can blow;Wealth on a golden mountain blazing stand,And reach an India forth in either hand;Spread all thy purple clusters, tempting vine,And thou, more dreaded foe, bright beauty, shine;Shine all; in all your charms together rise;That all, in all your charms, I may despise;[pg 009]While I mount upward on a strong desire,Borne, like Elijah, in a car of fire.In hopes of glory to be quite involv'd!To smile at death! to long to be dissolv'd!From our decays a pleasure to receive!And kindle into transport at a grave!What equals this? And shall the victor nowBoast the proud laurels on his loaded brow?Religion! Oh, thou cherub, heavenly bright!Oh, joys unmix'd, and fathomless delight!Thou, thou art all; nor find I in the wholeCreation aught, but God and my own soul.For ever, then, my soul, thy God adore,Nor let the brute creation praise him more.Shall things inanimate my conduct blame,And flush my conscious cheek with spreading shame?They all for him pursue, or quit, their endThe mountain flames their burning power suspend;In solid heaps th' unfrozen billows stand,To rest and silence aw'd by his command:Nay, the dire monsters that infest the flood,By nature dreadful, and athirst for blood,His will can calm, their savage tempers bind,And turn to mild protectors of mankind.Did not the prophet this great truth maintainIn the deep chambers of the gloomy main;When darkness round him all her horrors spread,And the loud ocean bellow'd o'er his head?When now the thunder roars, the lightning flies,[pg 010]And all the warring winds tumultuous rise;When now the foaming surges, tost on high,Disclose the sands beneath, and touch the sky;When death draws near, the mariners aghast,Look back with terror on their actions past;Their courage sickens into deep dismay,Their hearts, thro' fear and anguish, melt away;Nor tears, nor prayers, the tempest can appease;Now they devote their treasure to the seas;Unload their shatter'd barque, tho' richly fraught,And think the hopes of life are cheaply boughtWith gems and gold; but oh, the storm so high!Nor gems nor gold the hopes of life can buy.The trembling prophet then, themselves to save,They headlong plunge into the briny wave;Down he descends, and, booming o'er his head,The billows close; he's number'd with the dead.(Hear, O ye just! attend, ye virtuous few!And the bright paths of piety pursue)Lo! the great Ruler of the world, from high,Looks smiling down with a propitious eye,Covers his servant with his gracious hand,And bids tempestuous nature silent stand;Commands the peaceful waters to give place,Or kindly fold him in a soft embrace:He bridles in the monsters of the deep:The bridled monsters awful distance keep:Forget their hunger, while they view their prey;And guiltless gaze, and round the stranger play.But still arise new wonders; nature's Lord[pg 011]Sends forth into the deep his powerful word,And calls the great leviathan: the greatLeviathan attends in all his state;Exults for joy, and, with a mighty bound,Makes the sea shake, and heaven and earth resound;Blackens the waters with the rising sand.And drives vast billows to the distant land.As yawns an earthquake, when imprison'd airStruggles for vent, and lays the centre bare,The whale expands his jaws' enormous size;The prophet views the cavern with surprise;Measures his monstrous teeth, afar descried,And rolls his wond'ring eyes from side to side:Then takes possession of the spacious seat,And sails secure within the dark retreat.Now is he pleas'd the northern blast to hear,And hangs on liquid mountains, void of fear;Or falls immers'd into the depths below,Where the dead silent waters never flow;To the foundation of the hills convey'd,Dwells in the shelving mountain's dreadful shade:Where plummet never reach'd, he draws his breath,And glides serenely thro' the paths of death.Two wondrous days and nights thro' coral groves,Thro' labyrinths of rocks and sands, he roves:When the third morning with its level raysThe mountains gilds, and on the billows plays,[pg 012]It sees the king of waters rise and pourHis sacred guest uninjur'd on the shore:A type of that great blessing, which the museIn her next labour ardently pursues.Book II.Έκ γαιη έλπιξομεν ές Φάος έλθειν. Λειψαν άποιχομένων όπισω δέ Θεοι τελέθονται.Phocyl.——We hope that the departed will rise again from the dust: after which, like the gods, they will be immortal.Now man awakes, and from his silent bed,Where he has slept for ages, lifts his head;Shakes off the slumber of ten thousand years,And on the borders of new worlds appears.Whate'er the bold, the rash, adventure cost,In wide eternity I dare be lost.The muse is wont in narrow bounds to sing,To teach the swain, or celebrate the king.I grasp the whole, no more to parts confin'd,I lift my voice, and sing to humankind:I sing to men and angels; angels join,While such the theme, their sacred songs with mine.Again the trumpet's intermitted soundRolls the wide circuit of creation round,A universal concourse to prepare[pg 013]Of all that ever breath'd the vital air:In some wide field, which active whirlwinds sweep,Drive cities, forests, mountains, to the deep,To smooth and lengthen out th' unbounded space,And spread an area for all human race.Now monuments prove faithful to their trust,And render back their long committed dust.Now charnels rattle; scatter'd limbs, and allThe various bones, obsequious to the call,Self-mov'd, advance; the neck perhaps to meetThe distant head; the distant legs the feet.Dreadful to view, see thro' the dusky skyFragments of bodies in confusion fly,To distant regions journeying, there to claimDeserted members, and complete the frame.When the world bow'd to Rome's almighty sword,Rome bow'd to Pompey, and confess'd her lord.Yet one day lost, this deity belowBecame the scorn and pity of his foe.His blood a traitor's sacrifice was made,And smok'd indignant on a ruffian's blade.No trumpet's sound, no gasping army's yell,Bid, with due horror, his great soul farewell.Obscure his fall! all welt'ring in his gore,His trunk was cast to perish on the shore!While Julius frown'd the bloody monster dead,Who brought the world in his great rival's head.This sever'd head and trunk shall join once more,Tho' realms now rise between, and oceans roar.The trumpet's sound each fragrant mote shall hear,[pg 014]Or fix'd in earth, or if afloat in air,Obey the signal wafted in the wind,And not one sleeping atom lag behind.So swarming bees, that on a summer's dayIn airy rings, and wild meanders play,Charm'd with the brazen sound, their wand'rings end,And, gently circling, on a bough descend.The body thus renew'd, the conscious soul,Which has perhaps been flutt'ring near the pole,Or midst the burning planets wond'ring stray'd,Or hover'd o'er where her pale corpse was laid;Or rather coasted on her final state,And fear'd or wish'd for her appointed fate:This soul, returning with a constant flame,Now weds for ever her immortal frame.Life, which ran down before, so high is wound,The springs maintain an everlasting round.Thus a frail model of the work design'dFirst takes a copy of the builder's mind,Before the structure firm with lasting oak,And marble bowels of the solid rock,Turns the strong arch, and bids the columns rise,And bear the lofty palace to the skies;The wrongs of time enabled to surpass,With bars of adamant, and ribs of brass.That ancient, sacred, and illustrious dome,2Where soon or late fair Albion's heroes come,[pg 015]From camps, and courts, tho' great, or wise, or just,To feed the worm, and moulder into dust;That solemn mansion of the royal dead,Where passing slaves o'er sleeping monarchs tread,Now populous o'erflows: a num'rous raceOf rising kings fill all th' extended space:A life well spent, not the victorious sword,Awards the crown, and styles the greater lord.Nor monuments alone, and burial-earth,Labours with man to this his second birth;But where gay palaces in pomp arise,And gilded theatres invade the skies,Nations shall wake, whose unrespected bonesSupport the pride of their luxurious sons.The most magnificent and costly domeIs but an upper chamber to the tomb.No spot on earth but has supplied a grave,And human skulls the spacious ocean pave.All's full of man; and at this dreadful turn,The swarm shall issue, and the hive shall burn.Not all at once, nor in like manner, rise:Some lift with pain their slow, unwilling eyes:Shrink backward from the terror of the light,And bless the grave, and call for lasting night.Others, whose long-attempted virtue stoodFix'd as a rock, and broke the rushing flood,Whose firm resolve, nor beauty could melt down,Nor raging tyrants from their posture frown;[pg 016]Such, in this day of horrors, shall be seenTo face the thunders with a godlike mien;The planets drop, their thoughts are fixt above;The centre shakes, their hearts disdain to move;An earth dissolving, and a heaven thrown wide,A yawning gulf, and fiends on every side,Serene they view, impatient of delay,And bless the dawn of everlasting day.Here, greatness prostrate falls; there, strength gives place;Here, lazars smile; there, beauty hides her face.Christians, and Jews, and Turks, and Pagans stand,A blended throng, one undistinguish'd band.Some who, perhaps, by mutual wounds expir'd,With zeal for their distinct persuasions fir'd,In mutual friendship their long slumber break,And hand in hand their Saviour's love partake.But none are flush'd with brighter joy, or, warmWith juster confidence, enjoy the storm,Than those, whose pious bounties, unconfin'd,Have made them public fathers of mankind.In that illustrious rank, what shining lightWith such distinguish'd glory fills my sight?Bend down, my grateful muse, that homage show,Which to such worthies thou art proud to owe.Wickham! Fox! Chichley! hail, illustrious names,3Who to far distant times dispense your beams;[pg 017]Beneath your shades, and near your crystal springs,I first presum'd to touch the trembling strings.All hail, thrice honour'd! 'Twas your great renownTo bless a people, and oblige a crown.And now you rise, eternally to shine,Eternally to drink the rays divine.Indulgent God! Oh how shall mortal raiseHis soul to due returns of grateful praise,For bounty so profuse to humankind,Thy wondrous gift of an eternal mind?Shall I, who, some few years ago, was lessThan worm, or mite, or shadow can express,Was nothing; shall I live, when every fireAnd every star shall languish and expire?When earth's no more, shall I survive above,And thro' the radiant files of angels move?Or, as before the throne of God I stand,See new worlds rolling from his spacious hand,Where our adventures shall perhaps be taught,As we now tell how Michael sung or fought?All that has being in full concert join,And celebrate the depths of love divine!But oh! before this blissful state, beforeTh' aspiring soul this wondrous height can soar,The Judge, descending, thunders from afar,And all mankind is summon'd to the bar.This mighty scene I next presume to draw:Attend, great Anna, with religious awe.Expect not here the known successful artsTo win attention, and command our hearts:[pg 018]Fiction, be far away; let no machineDescending here, no fabled god, be seen;Behold the God of gods indeed descend,And worlds unnumber'd his approach attend!Lo! the wide theatre, whose ample spaceMust entertain the whole of human race,At heaven's all-powerful edict is prepar'd,And fenc'd around with an immortal guard.Tribes, provinces, dominions, worlds, o'erflowThe mighty plain, and deluge all below:And every age, and nation, pours along,Nimrod and Bourbon mingle in the throng:Adam salutes his youngest son; no sign,Of all those ages, which their births disjoin.How empty learning, and how vain is art,But as it mends the life, and guides the heart!What volumes have been swell'd, what time been spent,To fix a hero's birth-day, or descent!What joy must it now yield, what rapture raise,To see the glorious race of ancient days!To greet those worthies who perhaps have stoodIllustrious on record before the flood!Alas! a nearer care your soul demands,Cæsar unnoted in your presence stands.How vast the concourse! not in number moreThe waves that break on the resounding shore,The leaves that tremble in the shady grove,The lamps that gild the spangled vaults above:Those overwhelming armies, whose command[pg 019]Said to one empire, fall; another, stand:Whose rear lay wrapt in night, while breaking dawnRous'd the broad front, and call'd the battle on:Great Xerxes' world in arms, proud Cannæ's field,Where Carthage taught victorious Rome to yield,(Another blow had broke the fates' decree,And earth had wanted her fourth monarchy,)Immortal Blenheim, fam'd Ramillia's host,They all are here, and here they all are lost:Their millions swell to be discern'd in vain,Lost as a billow in th' unbounded main.This echoing voice now rends the yielding air,For judgment, judgment, sons of men, prepare!Earth shakes anew; I hear her groans profound;And hell through all her trembling realms resound.Whoe'er thou art, thou greatest power of earth,Blest with most equal planets at thy birth;Whose valour drew the most successful sword,Most realms united in one common lord;Who, on the day of triumph, saidst, Be thineThe skies, Jehovah, all this world is mine:Dare not to lift thine eye—Alas! my muse,How art thou lost! what numbers canst thou choose?A sudden blush inflames the waving sky,And now the crimson curtains open fly;Lo! far within, and far above all height,[pg 020]Where heaven's great Sov'reign reigns in worlds of light,Whence nature he informs, and with one rayShot from his eye, does all her works survey,Creates, supports, confounds! Where time, and place,Matter, and form, and fortune, life, and grace,Wait humbly at the footstool of their God,And move obedient at his awful nod;Whence he beholds us vagrant emmets crawlAt random on this air-suspended ball(Speck of creation): if he pour one breath,The bubble breaks, and 'tis eternal death.Thence issuing I behold (but mortal sightSustains not such a rushing sea of light!)I see, on an empyreal flying throneSublimely rais'd, heaven's everlasting Son;Crown'd with that majesty which form'd the world,And the grand rebel flaming downward hurl'd.Virtue, dominion, praise, omnipotence,Support the train of their triumphant prince.A zone, beyond the thought of angels bright,Around him, like the zodiac, winds its light.Night shades the solemn arches of his brows,And in his cheek the purple morning glows.Where'er serene, he turns propitious eyes,Or we expect, or find, a paradise:But if resentment reddens their mild beams,The Eden kindles, and the world's in flames.[pg 021]On one hand, knowledge shines in purest light;On one, the sword of justice fiercely bright.Now bend the knee in sport, present the reed;Now tell the scourg'd impostor he shall bleed!Thus glorious thro' the courts of heav'n, the sourceOf life and death eternal bends his course;Loud thunders round him roll, and lightnings play;Th' angelic host is rang'd in bright array:Some touch the string, some strike the sounding shell,And mingling voices in rich concert swell;Voices seraphic; blest with such a strain,Could Satan hear, he were a god again.Triumphant King of Glory! Soul of bliss!What a stupendous turn of fate is this!O! whither art thou rais'd above the scornAnd indigence of him in Bethlem born;A needless, helpless, unaccounted guest,And but a second to the fodder'd beast!How chang'd from him, who, meekly prostrate laid,Vouchsaf'd to wash the feet himself had made!From him who was betray'd, forsook, denied,Wept, languish'd, pray'd, bled, thirsted, groan'd, and died;Hung pierc'd and bare, insulted by the foe,All heaven in tears above, earth unconcern'd below!And was't enough to bid the sun retire?Why did not nature at thy groan expire?[pg 022]I see, I hear, I feel, the pangs divine;The world is vanish'd,—I am wholly thine.Mistaken Caiaphas! Ah! which blasphem'd;Thou, or thy pris'ner? which shall be condemn'd?Well might'st thou rend thy garments, well exclaim;Deep are the horrors of eternal flame!But God is good! 'Tis wondrous all! Ev'n heThou gav'st to death, shame, torture, died for thee.Now the descending triumph stops its flightFrom earth full twice a planetary height.There all the clouds condens'd, two columns raiseDistinct with orient veins, and golden blaze.One fix'd on earth, and one in sea, and roundIts ample foot the swelling billows sound.These an immeasurable arch support,The grand tribunal of this awful court.Sheets of bright azure, from the purest sky,Stream from the crystal arch, and round the columns fly.Death, wrapt in chains, low at the basis lies,And on the point of his own arrow dies.Here high enthron'd th' eternal Judge is plac'd,With all the grandeur of his godhead grac'd;Stars on his robes in beauteous order meet,And the sun burns beneath his awful feet.Now an archangel eminently bright,From off his silver staff of wondrous height,Unfurls the Christian flag, which waving flies,And shuts and opens more than half the skies:[pg 023]The cross so strong a red, it sheds a stain,Where'er it floats, on earth, and air, and main;Flushes the hill, and sets on fire the wood,And turns the deep-dy'd ocean, into blood.Oh formidable glory! dreadful bright!Refulgent torture to the guilty sight.Ah turn, unwary muse, nor dare revealWhat horrid thoughts with the polluted dwell.Say not, (to make the sun shrink in his beam,)Dare not affirm, they wish it all a dream;With, or their souls may with their limbs decay,Or God be spoil'd of his eternal sway.But rather, if thou know'st the means, unfoldHow they with transport might the scene behold.Ah how! but by repentance, by a mindQuick, and severe its own offence to find?By tears, and groans, and never-ceasing care,And all the pious violence of prayer?Thus then, with fervency till now unknown,I cast my heart before th' eternal throne,In this great temple, which the skies surround,For homage to its lord, a narrow bound."O thou! whose balance does the mountains weigh,Whose will the wild tumultuous seas obey,Whose breath can turn these watery worlds to flame,That flame to tempest, and that tempest tame;Earth's meanest son, all trembling, prostrate falls,And on the boundless of thy goodness calls."Oh! give the winds all past offence to sweep,[pg 024]To scatter wide, or bury in the deep:Thy power, my weakness, may I ever see,And wholly dedicate my soul to thee:Reign o'er my will; my passions ebb and flowAt thy command, nor human motive know!If anger boil, let anger be my praise,And sin the graceful indignation raise.My love be warm to succour the distress'd,And lift the burden from the soul oppress'd.Oh may my understanding ever readThis glorious volume, which thy wisdom made!Who decks the maiden spring with flow'ry pride?Who calls forth summer, like a sparkling bride?Who joys the mother autumn's bed to crown?And bids old winter lay her honours down?Not the great Ottoman, or greater Czar,Not Europe's arbitress of peace and war.May sea and land, and earth and heaven be join'dTo bring th' eternal author to my mind!When oceans roar, or awful thunders roll,May thoughts of thy dread vengeance shake my soul!When earth's in bloom, or planets proudly shine,Adore, my heart, the majesty divine!"Thro' every scene of life, or peace, or war,Plenty, or want, thy glory be my care!Shine we in arms? or sing beneath our vine?Thine is the vintage, and the conquest thine:Thy pleasure points the shaft, and bends the bow;The cluster blasts, or bids it brightly glow:[pg 025]'Tis thou that lead'st our powerful armies forth,And giv'st great Anne thy sceptre o'er the north."Grant I may ever, at the morning ray,Open with prayer the consecrated day;Tune thy great praise, and bid my soul arise,And with the mounting sun ascend the skies:As that advances, let my zeal improve,And glow with ardour of consummate love;Nor cease at eve, but with the setting sunMy endless worship shall be still begun."And, oh! permit the gloom of solemn nightTo sacred thought may forcibly invite.When this world's shut, and awful planets rise,Call on our minds, and raise them to the skies;Compose our souls with a less dazzling sight,And show all nature in a milder light;How every boisterous thought in calm subsides!How the smooth'd spirit into goodness glides!O how divine! to tread the milky way,To the bright palace of the lord of day;His court admire, or for his favour sue,Or leagues of friendship with his saints renew;Pleas'd to look down, and see the world asleep,While I long vigils to its founder keep!"Canst thou not shake the centre? Oh! control,Subdue by force, the rebel in my soul:Thou, who canst still the raging of the flood,Restrain the various tumults of my blood;Teach me, with equal firmness, to sustainAlluring pleasure, and assaulting pain.[pg 026]O may I pant for thee in each desire!And with strong faith foment the holy fire!Stretch out my soul in hope, and grasp the prize,Which in eternity's deep bosom lies!At the great day of recompense behold,Devoid of fear, the fatal book unfold!Then wafted upward to the blissful seat,From age to age, my grateful song repeat;My light, my life, my God, my Saviour see,And rival angels in the praise of thee."
[pg 001]The Last Day.In Three Books.Venit summa dies.—Virg.Book I.Ipse pater, media nimborum in nocte, coruscaFulmina molitur dextra. Quo maxima motuTerra tremit: fugêre feræ! et mortalia cordaPer gentes humilis stravit pavor.Virg.While others sing the fortune of the great;Empire and arms, and all the pomp of state;With Britain's hero1set their souls on fire,And grow immortal as his deeds inspire;I draw a deeper scene: a scene that yieldsA louder trumpet, and more dreadful fields;The world alarm'd, both earth and heaven o'erthrown,And gasping nature's last tremendous groan;Death's ancient sceptre broke, the teeming tomb,The righteous Judge, and man's eternal doom.'Twixt joy and pain I view the bold design,[pg 002]And ask my anxious heart, if it be mine.Whatever great or dreadful has been doneWithin the sight of conscious stars or sun,Is far beneath my daring: I look downOn all the splendours of the British crown.This globe is for my verse a narrow bound;Attend me, all the glorious worlds around!O! all ye angels, howsoe'er disjoin'd,Of every various order, place, and kind,Hear, and assist, a feeble mortal's lays;'Tis your Eternal King I strive to praise.But chiefly thou, great Ruler! Lord of all!Before whose throne archangels prostrate fall;If at thy nod, from discord, and from night,Sprang beauty, and yon sparkling worlds of light,Exalt e'en me; all inward tumults quell;The clouds and darkness of my mind dispel;To my great subject thou my breast inspire,And raise my lab'ring soul with equal fire.Man, bear thy brow aloft, view every graceIn God's great offspring, beauteous nature's face:See spring's gay bloom; see golden autumn's store;See how earth smiles, and hear old ocean roar.Leviathans but heave their cumbrous mail,It makes a tide, and wind-bound navies sail.Here, forests rise, the mountains awful pride;Here, rivers measure climes, and worlds divide;There, valleys fraught with gold's resplendent seeds,Hold kings, and kingdoms' fortunes, in their beds:There, to the skies, aspiring hills ascend,[pg 003]And into distant lands their shades extend.View cities, armies, fleets; of fleets the pride,See Europe's law, in Albion's channel ride.View the whole earth's vast landscape unconfin'd,Or view in Britain all her glories join'd.Then let the firmament thy wonder raise;'Twill raise thy wonder, but transcend thy praise.How far from east to west? the lab'ring eyeCan scarce the distant azure bounds descry:Wide theatre! where tempests play at large,And God's right hand can all its wrath discharge.Mark how those radiant lamps inflame the pole,Call forth the seasons, and the year control:They shine thro' time, with an unalter'd ray:See this grand period rise, and that decay:So vast, this world's a grain; yet myriads grace,With golden pomp, the throng'd ethereal space;So bright, with such a wealth of glory stor'd,'Twere sin in heathens not to have ador'd.How great, how firm, how sacred, all appears!How worthy an immortal round of years!Yet all must drop, as autumn's sickliest grain,And earth and firmament be sought in vain:The tract forgot where constellations shone,Or where the Stuarts fill'd an awful throne:Time shall be slain, all nature be destroy'd,Nor leave an atom in the mighty void.Sooner, or later, in some future date,(A dreadful secret in the book of fate!)This hour, for aught all human wisdom knows,[pg 004]Or when ten thousand harvests more have rose;When scenes are chang'd on this revolving earth,Old empires fall, and give new empires birth;While other Bourbons rule in other lands,And (if man's sin forbids not) other Annes;While the still busy world is treading o'erThe paths they trod five thousand years before,Thoughtless as those who now life's mazes run,Of earth dissolv'd, or an extinguish'd sun;(Ye sublunary worlds, awake, awake!Ye rulers of the nation, hear, and shake!)Thick clouds of darkness shall arise on day;In sudden night all earth's dominions lay;Impetuous winds the scatter'd forests rend;Eternal mountains, like their cedars, bend:The valleys yawn, the troubled ocean roar,And break the bondage of his wonted shore;A sanguine stain the silver moon o'erspread;Darkness the circle of the sun invade;From inmost heaven incessant thunders roll,And the strong echo bound from pole to pole.When, lo, a mighty trump, one half conceal'dIn clouds, one half to mortal eye reveal'd,Shall pour a dreadful note; the piercing callShall rattle in the centre of the ball;Th' extended circuit of creation shake,The living die with fear, the dead awake.Oh powerful blast! to which no equal soundDid e'er the frighted ear of nature wound,Tho' rival clarions have been strain'd on high,[pg 005]And kindled wars immortal thro' the sky,Tho' God's whole enginery discharg'd, and allThe rebel angels bellow'd in their fall.Have angels sinn'd? and shall not man beware?How shall a son of earth decline the snare?Not folded arms, and slackness of the mind,Can promise for the safety of mankind:None are supinely good: thro' care and painAnd various arts, the steep ascent we gain.This is the scene of combat, not of rest,Man's is laborious happiness at best;On this side death his dangers never cease,His joys are joys of conquest, not of peace.If then, obsequious to the will of fate,And bending to the terms of human state,When guilty joys invite us to their arms,When beauty smiles, or grandeur spreads her charms,The conscious soul would this great scene display,Call down th' immortal hosts in dread array,The trumpet sound, the Christian banner spread,And raise from silent graves the trembling dead;Such deep impression would the picture make,No power on earth her firm resolve could shake;Engag'd with angels she would greatly stand,And look regardless down on sea and land;Not proffer'd worlds her ardour could restrain,And death might shake his threat'ning lance in vain!Her certain conquest would endear the sight,And danger serve but to exalt delight.[pg 006]Instructed thus to shun the fatal spring,Whence flow the terrors of that day I sing;More boldly we our labours may pursue,And all the dreadful image set to view.The sparkling eye, the sleek and painted breast,The burnish'd scale, curl'd train, and rising crest,All that is lovely in the noxious snake,Provokes our fear, and bids us flee the brake:The sting once drawn, his guiltless beauties riseIn pleasing lustre, and detain our eyes;We view with joy, what once did horror move,And strong aversion softens into love.Say then, my muse, whom dismal scenes delight,Frequent at tombs, and in the realms of night;Say, melancholy maid, if bold to dareThe last extremes of terror and despair;Oh say, what change on earth, what heart in man,This blackest moment since the world began.Ah mournful turn! the blissful earth, who lateAt leisure on her axle roll'd in state;While thousand golden planets knew no rest,Still onward in their circling journey prest;A grateful change of seasons some to bring,And sweet vicissitude of fall and spring:Some thro' vast oceans to conduct the keel,And some those watery worlds to sink, or swell:Around her some their splendours to display,And gild her globe with tributary day:This world so great, of joy the bright abode,Heaven's darling child, and fav'rite of her God,[pg 007]Now looks an exile from her father's care,Deliver'd o'er to darkness and despair.No sun in radiant glory shines on high;No light, but from the terrors of the sky:Fall'n are her mountains, her fam'd rivers lost,And all into a second chaos tost:One universal ruin spreads abroad;Nothing is safe beneath the throne of God.Such, earth, thy fate: what then canst thou affordTo comfort and support thy guilty lord?Man, haughty lord of all beneath the moon,How must he bend his soul's ambition downProstrate, the reptile own, and disavowHis boasted stature, and assuming brow?Claim kindred with the clay, and curse his form,That speaks distinction from his sister worm?What dreadful pangs the trembling heart invade?Lord, why dost thou forsake whom thou hast made?Who can sustain thy anger? who can standBeneath the terrors of thy lifted hand?It flies the reach of thought; oh, save me, PowerOf powers supreme, in that tremendous hour!Thou who beneath the frown of fate hast stood,And in thy dreadful agony sweat blood;Thou, who for me, thro' every throbbing vein,Hast felt the keenest edge of mortal pain;Whom death led captive thro' the realms below,And taught those horrid mysteries of woe;Defend me, O my God! Oh, save me, PowerOf powers supreme, in that tremendous hour![pg 008]From east to west they fly, from pole to line,Imploring shelter from the wrath divine;Beg flames to wrap, or whelming seas to sweep,Or rocks to yawn, compassionately deep;Seas cast the monster forth to meet his doom,And rocks but prison up for wrath to come.So fares a traitor to an earthly crown;While death sits threat'ning in his prince's frownHis heart's dismay'd; and now his fears command,To change his native for a distant land:Swift orders fly, the king's severe decreeStands in the channel, and locks up the sea;The port he seeks, obedient to her lord,Hurls back the rebel to his lifted sword.But why this idle toil to paint that day?This time elaborately thrown away?Words all in vain pant after the distress,The height of eloquence would make it less;Heavens! how the good man trembles!—And is there a last day? and must there comeA sure, a fix'd, inexorable doom?Ambition swell, and, thy proud sails to show,Take all the winds that vanity can blow;Wealth on a golden mountain blazing stand,And reach an India forth in either hand;Spread all thy purple clusters, tempting vine,And thou, more dreaded foe, bright beauty, shine;Shine all; in all your charms together rise;That all, in all your charms, I may despise;[pg 009]While I mount upward on a strong desire,Borne, like Elijah, in a car of fire.In hopes of glory to be quite involv'd!To smile at death! to long to be dissolv'd!From our decays a pleasure to receive!And kindle into transport at a grave!What equals this? And shall the victor nowBoast the proud laurels on his loaded brow?Religion! Oh, thou cherub, heavenly bright!Oh, joys unmix'd, and fathomless delight!Thou, thou art all; nor find I in the wholeCreation aught, but God and my own soul.For ever, then, my soul, thy God adore,Nor let the brute creation praise him more.Shall things inanimate my conduct blame,And flush my conscious cheek with spreading shame?They all for him pursue, or quit, their endThe mountain flames their burning power suspend;In solid heaps th' unfrozen billows stand,To rest and silence aw'd by his command:Nay, the dire monsters that infest the flood,By nature dreadful, and athirst for blood,His will can calm, their savage tempers bind,And turn to mild protectors of mankind.Did not the prophet this great truth maintainIn the deep chambers of the gloomy main;When darkness round him all her horrors spread,And the loud ocean bellow'd o'er his head?When now the thunder roars, the lightning flies,[pg 010]And all the warring winds tumultuous rise;When now the foaming surges, tost on high,Disclose the sands beneath, and touch the sky;When death draws near, the mariners aghast,Look back with terror on their actions past;Their courage sickens into deep dismay,Their hearts, thro' fear and anguish, melt away;Nor tears, nor prayers, the tempest can appease;Now they devote their treasure to the seas;Unload their shatter'd barque, tho' richly fraught,And think the hopes of life are cheaply boughtWith gems and gold; but oh, the storm so high!Nor gems nor gold the hopes of life can buy.The trembling prophet then, themselves to save,They headlong plunge into the briny wave;Down he descends, and, booming o'er his head,The billows close; he's number'd with the dead.(Hear, O ye just! attend, ye virtuous few!And the bright paths of piety pursue)Lo! the great Ruler of the world, from high,Looks smiling down with a propitious eye,Covers his servant with his gracious hand,And bids tempestuous nature silent stand;Commands the peaceful waters to give place,Or kindly fold him in a soft embrace:He bridles in the monsters of the deep:The bridled monsters awful distance keep:Forget their hunger, while they view their prey;And guiltless gaze, and round the stranger play.But still arise new wonders; nature's Lord[pg 011]Sends forth into the deep his powerful word,And calls the great leviathan: the greatLeviathan attends in all his state;Exults for joy, and, with a mighty bound,Makes the sea shake, and heaven and earth resound;Blackens the waters with the rising sand.And drives vast billows to the distant land.As yawns an earthquake, when imprison'd airStruggles for vent, and lays the centre bare,The whale expands his jaws' enormous size;The prophet views the cavern with surprise;Measures his monstrous teeth, afar descried,And rolls his wond'ring eyes from side to side:Then takes possession of the spacious seat,And sails secure within the dark retreat.Now is he pleas'd the northern blast to hear,And hangs on liquid mountains, void of fear;Or falls immers'd into the depths below,Where the dead silent waters never flow;To the foundation of the hills convey'd,Dwells in the shelving mountain's dreadful shade:Where plummet never reach'd, he draws his breath,And glides serenely thro' the paths of death.Two wondrous days and nights thro' coral groves,Thro' labyrinths of rocks and sands, he roves:When the third morning with its level raysThe mountains gilds, and on the billows plays,[pg 012]It sees the king of waters rise and pourHis sacred guest uninjur'd on the shore:A type of that great blessing, which the museIn her next labour ardently pursues.Book II.Έκ γαιη έλπιξομεν ές Φάος έλθειν. Λειψαν άποιχομένων όπισω δέ Θεοι τελέθονται.Phocyl.——We hope that the departed will rise again from the dust: after which, like the gods, they will be immortal.Now man awakes, and from his silent bed,Where he has slept for ages, lifts his head;Shakes off the slumber of ten thousand years,And on the borders of new worlds appears.Whate'er the bold, the rash, adventure cost,In wide eternity I dare be lost.The muse is wont in narrow bounds to sing,To teach the swain, or celebrate the king.I grasp the whole, no more to parts confin'd,I lift my voice, and sing to humankind:I sing to men and angels; angels join,While such the theme, their sacred songs with mine.Again the trumpet's intermitted soundRolls the wide circuit of creation round,A universal concourse to prepare[pg 013]Of all that ever breath'd the vital air:In some wide field, which active whirlwinds sweep,Drive cities, forests, mountains, to the deep,To smooth and lengthen out th' unbounded space,And spread an area for all human race.Now monuments prove faithful to their trust,And render back their long committed dust.Now charnels rattle; scatter'd limbs, and allThe various bones, obsequious to the call,Self-mov'd, advance; the neck perhaps to meetThe distant head; the distant legs the feet.Dreadful to view, see thro' the dusky skyFragments of bodies in confusion fly,To distant regions journeying, there to claimDeserted members, and complete the frame.When the world bow'd to Rome's almighty sword,Rome bow'd to Pompey, and confess'd her lord.Yet one day lost, this deity belowBecame the scorn and pity of his foe.His blood a traitor's sacrifice was made,And smok'd indignant on a ruffian's blade.No trumpet's sound, no gasping army's yell,Bid, with due horror, his great soul farewell.Obscure his fall! all welt'ring in his gore,His trunk was cast to perish on the shore!While Julius frown'd the bloody monster dead,Who brought the world in his great rival's head.This sever'd head and trunk shall join once more,Tho' realms now rise between, and oceans roar.The trumpet's sound each fragrant mote shall hear,[pg 014]Or fix'd in earth, or if afloat in air,Obey the signal wafted in the wind,And not one sleeping atom lag behind.So swarming bees, that on a summer's dayIn airy rings, and wild meanders play,Charm'd with the brazen sound, their wand'rings end,And, gently circling, on a bough descend.The body thus renew'd, the conscious soul,Which has perhaps been flutt'ring near the pole,Or midst the burning planets wond'ring stray'd,Or hover'd o'er where her pale corpse was laid;Or rather coasted on her final state,And fear'd or wish'd for her appointed fate:This soul, returning with a constant flame,Now weds for ever her immortal frame.Life, which ran down before, so high is wound,The springs maintain an everlasting round.Thus a frail model of the work design'dFirst takes a copy of the builder's mind,Before the structure firm with lasting oak,And marble bowels of the solid rock,Turns the strong arch, and bids the columns rise,And bear the lofty palace to the skies;The wrongs of time enabled to surpass,With bars of adamant, and ribs of brass.That ancient, sacred, and illustrious dome,2Where soon or late fair Albion's heroes come,[pg 015]From camps, and courts, tho' great, or wise, or just,To feed the worm, and moulder into dust;That solemn mansion of the royal dead,Where passing slaves o'er sleeping monarchs tread,Now populous o'erflows: a num'rous raceOf rising kings fill all th' extended space:A life well spent, not the victorious sword,Awards the crown, and styles the greater lord.Nor monuments alone, and burial-earth,Labours with man to this his second birth;But where gay palaces in pomp arise,And gilded theatres invade the skies,Nations shall wake, whose unrespected bonesSupport the pride of their luxurious sons.The most magnificent and costly domeIs but an upper chamber to the tomb.No spot on earth but has supplied a grave,And human skulls the spacious ocean pave.All's full of man; and at this dreadful turn,The swarm shall issue, and the hive shall burn.Not all at once, nor in like manner, rise:Some lift with pain their slow, unwilling eyes:Shrink backward from the terror of the light,And bless the grave, and call for lasting night.Others, whose long-attempted virtue stoodFix'd as a rock, and broke the rushing flood,Whose firm resolve, nor beauty could melt down,Nor raging tyrants from their posture frown;[pg 016]Such, in this day of horrors, shall be seenTo face the thunders with a godlike mien;The planets drop, their thoughts are fixt above;The centre shakes, their hearts disdain to move;An earth dissolving, and a heaven thrown wide,A yawning gulf, and fiends on every side,Serene they view, impatient of delay,And bless the dawn of everlasting day.Here, greatness prostrate falls; there, strength gives place;Here, lazars smile; there, beauty hides her face.Christians, and Jews, and Turks, and Pagans stand,A blended throng, one undistinguish'd band.Some who, perhaps, by mutual wounds expir'd,With zeal for their distinct persuasions fir'd,In mutual friendship their long slumber break,And hand in hand their Saviour's love partake.But none are flush'd with brighter joy, or, warmWith juster confidence, enjoy the storm,Than those, whose pious bounties, unconfin'd,Have made them public fathers of mankind.In that illustrious rank, what shining lightWith such distinguish'd glory fills my sight?Bend down, my grateful muse, that homage show,Which to such worthies thou art proud to owe.Wickham! Fox! Chichley! hail, illustrious names,3Who to far distant times dispense your beams;[pg 017]Beneath your shades, and near your crystal springs,I first presum'd to touch the trembling strings.All hail, thrice honour'd! 'Twas your great renownTo bless a people, and oblige a crown.And now you rise, eternally to shine,Eternally to drink the rays divine.Indulgent God! Oh how shall mortal raiseHis soul to due returns of grateful praise,For bounty so profuse to humankind,Thy wondrous gift of an eternal mind?Shall I, who, some few years ago, was lessThan worm, or mite, or shadow can express,Was nothing; shall I live, when every fireAnd every star shall languish and expire?When earth's no more, shall I survive above,And thro' the radiant files of angels move?Or, as before the throne of God I stand,See new worlds rolling from his spacious hand,Where our adventures shall perhaps be taught,As we now tell how Michael sung or fought?All that has being in full concert join,And celebrate the depths of love divine!But oh! before this blissful state, beforeTh' aspiring soul this wondrous height can soar,The Judge, descending, thunders from afar,And all mankind is summon'd to the bar.This mighty scene I next presume to draw:Attend, great Anna, with religious awe.Expect not here the known successful artsTo win attention, and command our hearts:[pg 018]Fiction, be far away; let no machineDescending here, no fabled god, be seen;Behold the God of gods indeed descend,And worlds unnumber'd his approach attend!Lo! the wide theatre, whose ample spaceMust entertain the whole of human race,At heaven's all-powerful edict is prepar'd,And fenc'd around with an immortal guard.Tribes, provinces, dominions, worlds, o'erflowThe mighty plain, and deluge all below:And every age, and nation, pours along,Nimrod and Bourbon mingle in the throng:Adam salutes his youngest son; no sign,Of all those ages, which their births disjoin.How empty learning, and how vain is art,But as it mends the life, and guides the heart!What volumes have been swell'd, what time been spent,To fix a hero's birth-day, or descent!What joy must it now yield, what rapture raise,To see the glorious race of ancient days!To greet those worthies who perhaps have stoodIllustrious on record before the flood!Alas! a nearer care your soul demands,Cæsar unnoted in your presence stands.How vast the concourse! not in number moreThe waves that break on the resounding shore,The leaves that tremble in the shady grove,The lamps that gild the spangled vaults above:Those overwhelming armies, whose command[pg 019]Said to one empire, fall; another, stand:Whose rear lay wrapt in night, while breaking dawnRous'd the broad front, and call'd the battle on:Great Xerxes' world in arms, proud Cannæ's field,Where Carthage taught victorious Rome to yield,(Another blow had broke the fates' decree,And earth had wanted her fourth monarchy,)Immortal Blenheim, fam'd Ramillia's host,They all are here, and here they all are lost:Their millions swell to be discern'd in vain,Lost as a billow in th' unbounded main.This echoing voice now rends the yielding air,For judgment, judgment, sons of men, prepare!Earth shakes anew; I hear her groans profound;And hell through all her trembling realms resound.Whoe'er thou art, thou greatest power of earth,Blest with most equal planets at thy birth;Whose valour drew the most successful sword,Most realms united in one common lord;Who, on the day of triumph, saidst, Be thineThe skies, Jehovah, all this world is mine:Dare not to lift thine eye—Alas! my muse,How art thou lost! what numbers canst thou choose?A sudden blush inflames the waving sky,And now the crimson curtains open fly;Lo! far within, and far above all height,[pg 020]Where heaven's great Sov'reign reigns in worlds of light,Whence nature he informs, and with one rayShot from his eye, does all her works survey,Creates, supports, confounds! Where time, and place,Matter, and form, and fortune, life, and grace,Wait humbly at the footstool of their God,And move obedient at his awful nod;Whence he beholds us vagrant emmets crawlAt random on this air-suspended ball(Speck of creation): if he pour one breath,The bubble breaks, and 'tis eternal death.Thence issuing I behold (but mortal sightSustains not such a rushing sea of light!)I see, on an empyreal flying throneSublimely rais'd, heaven's everlasting Son;Crown'd with that majesty which form'd the world,And the grand rebel flaming downward hurl'd.Virtue, dominion, praise, omnipotence,Support the train of their triumphant prince.A zone, beyond the thought of angels bright,Around him, like the zodiac, winds its light.Night shades the solemn arches of his brows,And in his cheek the purple morning glows.Where'er serene, he turns propitious eyes,Or we expect, or find, a paradise:But if resentment reddens their mild beams,The Eden kindles, and the world's in flames.[pg 021]On one hand, knowledge shines in purest light;On one, the sword of justice fiercely bright.Now bend the knee in sport, present the reed;Now tell the scourg'd impostor he shall bleed!Thus glorious thro' the courts of heav'n, the sourceOf life and death eternal bends his course;Loud thunders round him roll, and lightnings play;Th' angelic host is rang'd in bright array:Some touch the string, some strike the sounding shell,And mingling voices in rich concert swell;Voices seraphic; blest with such a strain,Could Satan hear, he were a god again.Triumphant King of Glory! Soul of bliss!What a stupendous turn of fate is this!O! whither art thou rais'd above the scornAnd indigence of him in Bethlem born;A needless, helpless, unaccounted guest,And but a second to the fodder'd beast!How chang'd from him, who, meekly prostrate laid,Vouchsaf'd to wash the feet himself had made!From him who was betray'd, forsook, denied,Wept, languish'd, pray'd, bled, thirsted, groan'd, and died;Hung pierc'd and bare, insulted by the foe,All heaven in tears above, earth unconcern'd below!And was't enough to bid the sun retire?Why did not nature at thy groan expire?[pg 022]I see, I hear, I feel, the pangs divine;The world is vanish'd,—I am wholly thine.Mistaken Caiaphas! Ah! which blasphem'd;Thou, or thy pris'ner? which shall be condemn'd?Well might'st thou rend thy garments, well exclaim;Deep are the horrors of eternal flame!But God is good! 'Tis wondrous all! Ev'n heThou gav'st to death, shame, torture, died for thee.Now the descending triumph stops its flightFrom earth full twice a planetary height.There all the clouds condens'd, two columns raiseDistinct with orient veins, and golden blaze.One fix'd on earth, and one in sea, and roundIts ample foot the swelling billows sound.These an immeasurable arch support,The grand tribunal of this awful court.Sheets of bright azure, from the purest sky,Stream from the crystal arch, and round the columns fly.Death, wrapt in chains, low at the basis lies,And on the point of his own arrow dies.Here high enthron'd th' eternal Judge is plac'd,With all the grandeur of his godhead grac'd;Stars on his robes in beauteous order meet,And the sun burns beneath his awful feet.Now an archangel eminently bright,From off his silver staff of wondrous height,Unfurls the Christian flag, which waving flies,And shuts and opens more than half the skies:[pg 023]The cross so strong a red, it sheds a stain,Where'er it floats, on earth, and air, and main;Flushes the hill, and sets on fire the wood,And turns the deep-dy'd ocean, into blood.Oh formidable glory! dreadful bright!Refulgent torture to the guilty sight.Ah turn, unwary muse, nor dare revealWhat horrid thoughts with the polluted dwell.Say not, (to make the sun shrink in his beam,)Dare not affirm, they wish it all a dream;With, or their souls may with their limbs decay,Or God be spoil'd of his eternal sway.But rather, if thou know'st the means, unfoldHow they with transport might the scene behold.Ah how! but by repentance, by a mindQuick, and severe its own offence to find?By tears, and groans, and never-ceasing care,And all the pious violence of prayer?Thus then, with fervency till now unknown,I cast my heart before th' eternal throne,In this great temple, which the skies surround,For homage to its lord, a narrow bound."O thou! whose balance does the mountains weigh,Whose will the wild tumultuous seas obey,Whose breath can turn these watery worlds to flame,That flame to tempest, and that tempest tame;Earth's meanest son, all trembling, prostrate falls,And on the boundless of thy goodness calls."Oh! give the winds all past offence to sweep,[pg 024]To scatter wide, or bury in the deep:Thy power, my weakness, may I ever see,And wholly dedicate my soul to thee:Reign o'er my will; my passions ebb and flowAt thy command, nor human motive know!If anger boil, let anger be my praise,And sin the graceful indignation raise.My love be warm to succour the distress'd,And lift the burden from the soul oppress'd.Oh may my understanding ever readThis glorious volume, which thy wisdom made!Who decks the maiden spring with flow'ry pride?Who calls forth summer, like a sparkling bride?Who joys the mother autumn's bed to crown?And bids old winter lay her honours down?Not the great Ottoman, or greater Czar,Not Europe's arbitress of peace and war.May sea and land, and earth and heaven be join'dTo bring th' eternal author to my mind!When oceans roar, or awful thunders roll,May thoughts of thy dread vengeance shake my soul!When earth's in bloom, or planets proudly shine,Adore, my heart, the majesty divine!"Thro' every scene of life, or peace, or war,Plenty, or want, thy glory be my care!Shine we in arms? or sing beneath our vine?Thine is the vintage, and the conquest thine:Thy pleasure points the shaft, and bends the bow;The cluster blasts, or bids it brightly glow:[pg 025]'Tis thou that lead'st our powerful armies forth,And giv'st great Anne thy sceptre o'er the north."Grant I may ever, at the morning ray,Open with prayer the consecrated day;Tune thy great praise, and bid my soul arise,And with the mounting sun ascend the skies:As that advances, let my zeal improve,And glow with ardour of consummate love;Nor cease at eve, but with the setting sunMy endless worship shall be still begun."And, oh! permit the gloom of solemn nightTo sacred thought may forcibly invite.When this world's shut, and awful planets rise,Call on our minds, and raise them to the skies;Compose our souls with a less dazzling sight,And show all nature in a milder light;How every boisterous thought in calm subsides!How the smooth'd spirit into goodness glides!O how divine! to tread the milky way,To the bright palace of the lord of day;His court admire, or for his favour sue,Or leagues of friendship with his saints renew;Pleas'd to look down, and see the world asleep,While I long vigils to its founder keep!"Canst thou not shake the centre? Oh! control,Subdue by force, the rebel in my soul:Thou, who canst still the raging of the flood,Restrain the various tumults of my blood;Teach me, with equal firmness, to sustainAlluring pleasure, and assaulting pain.[pg 026]O may I pant for thee in each desire!And with strong faith foment the holy fire!Stretch out my soul in hope, and grasp the prize,Which in eternity's deep bosom lies!At the great day of recompense behold,Devoid of fear, the fatal book unfold!Then wafted upward to the blissful seat,From age to age, my grateful song repeat;My light, my life, my God, my Saviour see,And rival angels in the praise of thee."
[pg 001]The Last Day.In Three Books.Venit summa dies.—Virg.Book I.Ipse pater, media nimborum in nocte, coruscaFulmina molitur dextra. Quo maxima motuTerra tremit: fugêre feræ! et mortalia cordaPer gentes humilis stravit pavor.Virg.While others sing the fortune of the great;Empire and arms, and all the pomp of state;With Britain's hero1set their souls on fire,And grow immortal as his deeds inspire;I draw a deeper scene: a scene that yieldsA louder trumpet, and more dreadful fields;The world alarm'd, both earth and heaven o'erthrown,And gasping nature's last tremendous groan;Death's ancient sceptre broke, the teeming tomb,The righteous Judge, and man's eternal doom.'Twixt joy and pain I view the bold design,[pg 002]And ask my anxious heart, if it be mine.Whatever great or dreadful has been doneWithin the sight of conscious stars or sun,Is far beneath my daring: I look downOn all the splendours of the British crown.This globe is for my verse a narrow bound;Attend me, all the glorious worlds around!O! all ye angels, howsoe'er disjoin'd,Of every various order, place, and kind,Hear, and assist, a feeble mortal's lays;'Tis your Eternal King I strive to praise.But chiefly thou, great Ruler! Lord of all!Before whose throne archangels prostrate fall;If at thy nod, from discord, and from night,Sprang beauty, and yon sparkling worlds of light,Exalt e'en me; all inward tumults quell;The clouds and darkness of my mind dispel;To my great subject thou my breast inspire,And raise my lab'ring soul with equal fire.Man, bear thy brow aloft, view every graceIn God's great offspring, beauteous nature's face:See spring's gay bloom; see golden autumn's store;See how earth smiles, and hear old ocean roar.Leviathans but heave their cumbrous mail,It makes a tide, and wind-bound navies sail.Here, forests rise, the mountains awful pride;Here, rivers measure climes, and worlds divide;There, valleys fraught with gold's resplendent seeds,Hold kings, and kingdoms' fortunes, in their beds:There, to the skies, aspiring hills ascend,[pg 003]And into distant lands their shades extend.View cities, armies, fleets; of fleets the pride,See Europe's law, in Albion's channel ride.View the whole earth's vast landscape unconfin'd,Or view in Britain all her glories join'd.Then let the firmament thy wonder raise;'Twill raise thy wonder, but transcend thy praise.How far from east to west? the lab'ring eyeCan scarce the distant azure bounds descry:Wide theatre! where tempests play at large,And God's right hand can all its wrath discharge.Mark how those radiant lamps inflame the pole,Call forth the seasons, and the year control:They shine thro' time, with an unalter'd ray:See this grand period rise, and that decay:So vast, this world's a grain; yet myriads grace,With golden pomp, the throng'd ethereal space;So bright, with such a wealth of glory stor'd,'Twere sin in heathens not to have ador'd.How great, how firm, how sacred, all appears!How worthy an immortal round of years!Yet all must drop, as autumn's sickliest grain,And earth and firmament be sought in vain:The tract forgot where constellations shone,Or where the Stuarts fill'd an awful throne:Time shall be slain, all nature be destroy'd,Nor leave an atom in the mighty void.Sooner, or later, in some future date,(A dreadful secret in the book of fate!)This hour, for aught all human wisdom knows,[pg 004]Or when ten thousand harvests more have rose;When scenes are chang'd on this revolving earth,Old empires fall, and give new empires birth;While other Bourbons rule in other lands,And (if man's sin forbids not) other Annes;While the still busy world is treading o'erThe paths they trod five thousand years before,Thoughtless as those who now life's mazes run,Of earth dissolv'd, or an extinguish'd sun;(Ye sublunary worlds, awake, awake!Ye rulers of the nation, hear, and shake!)Thick clouds of darkness shall arise on day;In sudden night all earth's dominions lay;Impetuous winds the scatter'd forests rend;Eternal mountains, like their cedars, bend:The valleys yawn, the troubled ocean roar,And break the bondage of his wonted shore;A sanguine stain the silver moon o'erspread;Darkness the circle of the sun invade;From inmost heaven incessant thunders roll,And the strong echo bound from pole to pole.When, lo, a mighty trump, one half conceal'dIn clouds, one half to mortal eye reveal'd,Shall pour a dreadful note; the piercing callShall rattle in the centre of the ball;Th' extended circuit of creation shake,The living die with fear, the dead awake.Oh powerful blast! to which no equal soundDid e'er the frighted ear of nature wound,Tho' rival clarions have been strain'd on high,[pg 005]And kindled wars immortal thro' the sky,Tho' God's whole enginery discharg'd, and allThe rebel angels bellow'd in their fall.Have angels sinn'd? and shall not man beware?How shall a son of earth decline the snare?Not folded arms, and slackness of the mind,Can promise for the safety of mankind:None are supinely good: thro' care and painAnd various arts, the steep ascent we gain.This is the scene of combat, not of rest,Man's is laborious happiness at best;On this side death his dangers never cease,His joys are joys of conquest, not of peace.If then, obsequious to the will of fate,And bending to the terms of human state,When guilty joys invite us to their arms,When beauty smiles, or grandeur spreads her charms,The conscious soul would this great scene display,Call down th' immortal hosts in dread array,The trumpet sound, the Christian banner spread,And raise from silent graves the trembling dead;Such deep impression would the picture make,No power on earth her firm resolve could shake;Engag'd with angels she would greatly stand,And look regardless down on sea and land;Not proffer'd worlds her ardour could restrain,And death might shake his threat'ning lance in vain!Her certain conquest would endear the sight,And danger serve but to exalt delight.[pg 006]Instructed thus to shun the fatal spring,Whence flow the terrors of that day I sing;More boldly we our labours may pursue,And all the dreadful image set to view.The sparkling eye, the sleek and painted breast,The burnish'd scale, curl'd train, and rising crest,All that is lovely in the noxious snake,Provokes our fear, and bids us flee the brake:The sting once drawn, his guiltless beauties riseIn pleasing lustre, and detain our eyes;We view with joy, what once did horror move,And strong aversion softens into love.Say then, my muse, whom dismal scenes delight,Frequent at tombs, and in the realms of night;Say, melancholy maid, if bold to dareThe last extremes of terror and despair;Oh say, what change on earth, what heart in man,This blackest moment since the world began.Ah mournful turn! the blissful earth, who lateAt leisure on her axle roll'd in state;While thousand golden planets knew no rest,Still onward in their circling journey prest;A grateful change of seasons some to bring,And sweet vicissitude of fall and spring:Some thro' vast oceans to conduct the keel,And some those watery worlds to sink, or swell:Around her some their splendours to display,And gild her globe with tributary day:This world so great, of joy the bright abode,Heaven's darling child, and fav'rite of her God,[pg 007]Now looks an exile from her father's care,Deliver'd o'er to darkness and despair.No sun in radiant glory shines on high;No light, but from the terrors of the sky:Fall'n are her mountains, her fam'd rivers lost,And all into a second chaos tost:One universal ruin spreads abroad;Nothing is safe beneath the throne of God.Such, earth, thy fate: what then canst thou affordTo comfort and support thy guilty lord?Man, haughty lord of all beneath the moon,How must he bend his soul's ambition downProstrate, the reptile own, and disavowHis boasted stature, and assuming brow?Claim kindred with the clay, and curse his form,That speaks distinction from his sister worm?What dreadful pangs the trembling heart invade?Lord, why dost thou forsake whom thou hast made?Who can sustain thy anger? who can standBeneath the terrors of thy lifted hand?It flies the reach of thought; oh, save me, PowerOf powers supreme, in that tremendous hour!Thou who beneath the frown of fate hast stood,And in thy dreadful agony sweat blood;Thou, who for me, thro' every throbbing vein,Hast felt the keenest edge of mortal pain;Whom death led captive thro' the realms below,And taught those horrid mysteries of woe;Defend me, O my God! Oh, save me, PowerOf powers supreme, in that tremendous hour![pg 008]From east to west they fly, from pole to line,Imploring shelter from the wrath divine;Beg flames to wrap, or whelming seas to sweep,Or rocks to yawn, compassionately deep;Seas cast the monster forth to meet his doom,And rocks but prison up for wrath to come.So fares a traitor to an earthly crown;While death sits threat'ning in his prince's frownHis heart's dismay'd; and now his fears command,To change his native for a distant land:Swift orders fly, the king's severe decreeStands in the channel, and locks up the sea;The port he seeks, obedient to her lord,Hurls back the rebel to his lifted sword.But why this idle toil to paint that day?This time elaborately thrown away?Words all in vain pant after the distress,The height of eloquence would make it less;Heavens! how the good man trembles!—And is there a last day? and must there comeA sure, a fix'd, inexorable doom?Ambition swell, and, thy proud sails to show,Take all the winds that vanity can blow;Wealth on a golden mountain blazing stand,And reach an India forth in either hand;Spread all thy purple clusters, tempting vine,And thou, more dreaded foe, bright beauty, shine;Shine all; in all your charms together rise;That all, in all your charms, I may despise;[pg 009]While I mount upward on a strong desire,Borne, like Elijah, in a car of fire.In hopes of glory to be quite involv'd!To smile at death! to long to be dissolv'd!From our decays a pleasure to receive!And kindle into transport at a grave!What equals this? And shall the victor nowBoast the proud laurels on his loaded brow?Religion! Oh, thou cherub, heavenly bright!Oh, joys unmix'd, and fathomless delight!Thou, thou art all; nor find I in the wholeCreation aught, but God and my own soul.For ever, then, my soul, thy God adore,Nor let the brute creation praise him more.Shall things inanimate my conduct blame,And flush my conscious cheek with spreading shame?They all for him pursue, or quit, their endThe mountain flames their burning power suspend;In solid heaps th' unfrozen billows stand,To rest and silence aw'd by his command:Nay, the dire monsters that infest the flood,By nature dreadful, and athirst for blood,His will can calm, their savage tempers bind,And turn to mild protectors of mankind.Did not the prophet this great truth maintainIn the deep chambers of the gloomy main;When darkness round him all her horrors spread,And the loud ocean bellow'd o'er his head?When now the thunder roars, the lightning flies,[pg 010]And all the warring winds tumultuous rise;When now the foaming surges, tost on high,Disclose the sands beneath, and touch the sky;When death draws near, the mariners aghast,Look back with terror on their actions past;Their courage sickens into deep dismay,Their hearts, thro' fear and anguish, melt away;Nor tears, nor prayers, the tempest can appease;Now they devote their treasure to the seas;Unload their shatter'd barque, tho' richly fraught,And think the hopes of life are cheaply boughtWith gems and gold; but oh, the storm so high!Nor gems nor gold the hopes of life can buy.The trembling prophet then, themselves to save,They headlong plunge into the briny wave;Down he descends, and, booming o'er his head,The billows close; he's number'd with the dead.(Hear, O ye just! attend, ye virtuous few!And the bright paths of piety pursue)Lo! the great Ruler of the world, from high,Looks smiling down with a propitious eye,Covers his servant with his gracious hand,And bids tempestuous nature silent stand;Commands the peaceful waters to give place,Or kindly fold him in a soft embrace:He bridles in the monsters of the deep:The bridled monsters awful distance keep:Forget their hunger, while they view their prey;And guiltless gaze, and round the stranger play.But still arise new wonders; nature's Lord[pg 011]Sends forth into the deep his powerful word,And calls the great leviathan: the greatLeviathan attends in all his state;Exults for joy, and, with a mighty bound,Makes the sea shake, and heaven and earth resound;Blackens the waters with the rising sand.And drives vast billows to the distant land.As yawns an earthquake, when imprison'd airStruggles for vent, and lays the centre bare,The whale expands his jaws' enormous size;The prophet views the cavern with surprise;Measures his monstrous teeth, afar descried,And rolls his wond'ring eyes from side to side:Then takes possession of the spacious seat,And sails secure within the dark retreat.Now is he pleas'd the northern blast to hear,And hangs on liquid mountains, void of fear;Or falls immers'd into the depths below,Where the dead silent waters never flow;To the foundation of the hills convey'd,Dwells in the shelving mountain's dreadful shade:Where plummet never reach'd, he draws his breath,And glides serenely thro' the paths of death.Two wondrous days and nights thro' coral groves,Thro' labyrinths of rocks and sands, he roves:When the third morning with its level raysThe mountains gilds, and on the billows plays,[pg 012]It sees the king of waters rise and pourHis sacred guest uninjur'd on the shore:A type of that great blessing, which the museIn her next labour ardently pursues.Book II.Έκ γαιη έλπιξομεν ές Φάος έλθειν. Λειψαν άποιχομένων όπισω δέ Θεοι τελέθονται.Phocyl.——We hope that the departed will rise again from the dust: after which, like the gods, they will be immortal.Now man awakes, and from his silent bed,Where he has slept for ages, lifts his head;Shakes off the slumber of ten thousand years,And on the borders of new worlds appears.Whate'er the bold, the rash, adventure cost,In wide eternity I dare be lost.The muse is wont in narrow bounds to sing,To teach the swain, or celebrate the king.I grasp the whole, no more to parts confin'd,I lift my voice, and sing to humankind:I sing to men and angels; angels join,While such the theme, their sacred songs with mine.Again the trumpet's intermitted soundRolls the wide circuit of creation round,A universal concourse to prepare[pg 013]Of all that ever breath'd the vital air:In some wide field, which active whirlwinds sweep,Drive cities, forests, mountains, to the deep,To smooth and lengthen out th' unbounded space,And spread an area for all human race.Now monuments prove faithful to their trust,And render back their long committed dust.Now charnels rattle; scatter'd limbs, and allThe various bones, obsequious to the call,Self-mov'd, advance; the neck perhaps to meetThe distant head; the distant legs the feet.Dreadful to view, see thro' the dusky skyFragments of bodies in confusion fly,To distant regions journeying, there to claimDeserted members, and complete the frame.When the world bow'd to Rome's almighty sword,Rome bow'd to Pompey, and confess'd her lord.Yet one day lost, this deity belowBecame the scorn and pity of his foe.His blood a traitor's sacrifice was made,And smok'd indignant on a ruffian's blade.No trumpet's sound, no gasping army's yell,Bid, with due horror, his great soul farewell.Obscure his fall! all welt'ring in his gore,His trunk was cast to perish on the shore!While Julius frown'd the bloody monster dead,Who brought the world in his great rival's head.This sever'd head and trunk shall join once more,Tho' realms now rise between, and oceans roar.The trumpet's sound each fragrant mote shall hear,[pg 014]Or fix'd in earth, or if afloat in air,Obey the signal wafted in the wind,And not one sleeping atom lag behind.So swarming bees, that on a summer's dayIn airy rings, and wild meanders play,Charm'd with the brazen sound, their wand'rings end,And, gently circling, on a bough descend.The body thus renew'd, the conscious soul,Which has perhaps been flutt'ring near the pole,Or midst the burning planets wond'ring stray'd,Or hover'd o'er where her pale corpse was laid;Or rather coasted on her final state,And fear'd or wish'd for her appointed fate:This soul, returning with a constant flame,Now weds for ever her immortal frame.Life, which ran down before, so high is wound,The springs maintain an everlasting round.Thus a frail model of the work design'dFirst takes a copy of the builder's mind,Before the structure firm with lasting oak,And marble bowels of the solid rock,Turns the strong arch, and bids the columns rise,And bear the lofty palace to the skies;The wrongs of time enabled to surpass,With bars of adamant, and ribs of brass.That ancient, sacred, and illustrious dome,2Where soon or late fair Albion's heroes come,[pg 015]From camps, and courts, tho' great, or wise, or just,To feed the worm, and moulder into dust;That solemn mansion of the royal dead,Where passing slaves o'er sleeping monarchs tread,Now populous o'erflows: a num'rous raceOf rising kings fill all th' extended space:A life well spent, not the victorious sword,Awards the crown, and styles the greater lord.Nor monuments alone, and burial-earth,Labours with man to this his second birth;But where gay palaces in pomp arise,And gilded theatres invade the skies,Nations shall wake, whose unrespected bonesSupport the pride of their luxurious sons.The most magnificent and costly domeIs but an upper chamber to the tomb.No spot on earth but has supplied a grave,And human skulls the spacious ocean pave.All's full of man; and at this dreadful turn,The swarm shall issue, and the hive shall burn.Not all at once, nor in like manner, rise:Some lift with pain their slow, unwilling eyes:Shrink backward from the terror of the light,And bless the grave, and call for lasting night.Others, whose long-attempted virtue stoodFix'd as a rock, and broke the rushing flood,Whose firm resolve, nor beauty could melt down,Nor raging tyrants from their posture frown;[pg 016]Such, in this day of horrors, shall be seenTo face the thunders with a godlike mien;The planets drop, their thoughts are fixt above;The centre shakes, their hearts disdain to move;An earth dissolving, and a heaven thrown wide,A yawning gulf, and fiends on every side,Serene they view, impatient of delay,And bless the dawn of everlasting day.Here, greatness prostrate falls; there, strength gives place;Here, lazars smile; there, beauty hides her face.Christians, and Jews, and Turks, and Pagans stand,A blended throng, one undistinguish'd band.Some who, perhaps, by mutual wounds expir'd,With zeal for their distinct persuasions fir'd,In mutual friendship their long slumber break,And hand in hand their Saviour's love partake.But none are flush'd with brighter joy, or, warmWith juster confidence, enjoy the storm,Than those, whose pious bounties, unconfin'd,Have made them public fathers of mankind.In that illustrious rank, what shining lightWith such distinguish'd glory fills my sight?Bend down, my grateful muse, that homage show,Which to such worthies thou art proud to owe.Wickham! Fox! Chichley! hail, illustrious names,3Who to far distant times dispense your beams;[pg 017]Beneath your shades, and near your crystal springs,I first presum'd to touch the trembling strings.All hail, thrice honour'd! 'Twas your great renownTo bless a people, and oblige a crown.And now you rise, eternally to shine,Eternally to drink the rays divine.Indulgent God! Oh how shall mortal raiseHis soul to due returns of grateful praise,For bounty so profuse to humankind,Thy wondrous gift of an eternal mind?Shall I, who, some few years ago, was lessThan worm, or mite, or shadow can express,Was nothing; shall I live, when every fireAnd every star shall languish and expire?When earth's no more, shall I survive above,And thro' the radiant files of angels move?Or, as before the throne of God I stand,See new worlds rolling from his spacious hand,Where our adventures shall perhaps be taught,As we now tell how Michael sung or fought?All that has being in full concert join,And celebrate the depths of love divine!But oh! before this blissful state, beforeTh' aspiring soul this wondrous height can soar,The Judge, descending, thunders from afar,And all mankind is summon'd to the bar.This mighty scene I next presume to draw:Attend, great Anna, with religious awe.Expect not here the known successful artsTo win attention, and command our hearts:[pg 018]Fiction, be far away; let no machineDescending here, no fabled god, be seen;Behold the God of gods indeed descend,And worlds unnumber'd his approach attend!Lo! the wide theatre, whose ample spaceMust entertain the whole of human race,At heaven's all-powerful edict is prepar'd,And fenc'd around with an immortal guard.Tribes, provinces, dominions, worlds, o'erflowThe mighty plain, and deluge all below:And every age, and nation, pours along,Nimrod and Bourbon mingle in the throng:Adam salutes his youngest son; no sign,Of all those ages, which their births disjoin.How empty learning, and how vain is art,But as it mends the life, and guides the heart!What volumes have been swell'd, what time been spent,To fix a hero's birth-day, or descent!What joy must it now yield, what rapture raise,To see the glorious race of ancient days!To greet those worthies who perhaps have stoodIllustrious on record before the flood!Alas! a nearer care your soul demands,Cæsar unnoted in your presence stands.How vast the concourse! not in number moreThe waves that break on the resounding shore,The leaves that tremble in the shady grove,The lamps that gild the spangled vaults above:Those overwhelming armies, whose command[pg 019]Said to one empire, fall; another, stand:Whose rear lay wrapt in night, while breaking dawnRous'd the broad front, and call'd the battle on:Great Xerxes' world in arms, proud Cannæ's field,Where Carthage taught victorious Rome to yield,(Another blow had broke the fates' decree,And earth had wanted her fourth monarchy,)Immortal Blenheim, fam'd Ramillia's host,They all are here, and here they all are lost:Their millions swell to be discern'd in vain,Lost as a billow in th' unbounded main.This echoing voice now rends the yielding air,For judgment, judgment, sons of men, prepare!Earth shakes anew; I hear her groans profound;And hell through all her trembling realms resound.Whoe'er thou art, thou greatest power of earth,Blest with most equal planets at thy birth;Whose valour drew the most successful sword,Most realms united in one common lord;Who, on the day of triumph, saidst, Be thineThe skies, Jehovah, all this world is mine:Dare not to lift thine eye—Alas! my muse,How art thou lost! what numbers canst thou choose?A sudden blush inflames the waving sky,And now the crimson curtains open fly;Lo! far within, and far above all height,[pg 020]Where heaven's great Sov'reign reigns in worlds of light,Whence nature he informs, and with one rayShot from his eye, does all her works survey,Creates, supports, confounds! Where time, and place,Matter, and form, and fortune, life, and grace,Wait humbly at the footstool of their God,And move obedient at his awful nod;Whence he beholds us vagrant emmets crawlAt random on this air-suspended ball(Speck of creation): if he pour one breath,The bubble breaks, and 'tis eternal death.Thence issuing I behold (but mortal sightSustains not such a rushing sea of light!)I see, on an empyreal flying throneSublimely rais'd, heaven's everlasting Son;Crown'd with that majesty which form'd the world,And the grand rebel flaming downward hurl'd.Virtue, dominion, praise, omnipotence,Support the train of their triumphant prince.A zone, beyond the thought of angels bright,Around him, like the zodiac, winds its light.Night shades the solemn arches of his brows,And in his cheek the purple morning glows.Where'er serene, he turns propitious eyes,Or we expect, or find, a paradise:But if resentment reddens their mild beams,The Eden kindles, and the world's in flames.[pg 021]On one hand, knowledge shines in purest light;On one, the sword of justice fiercely bright.Now bend the knee in sport, present the reed;Now tell the scourg'd impostor he shall bleed!Thus glorious thro' the courts of heav'n, the sourceOf life and death eternal bends his course;Loud thunders round him roll, and lightnings play;Th' angelic host is rang'd in bright array:Some touch the string, some strike the sounding shell,And mingling voices in rich concert swell;Voices seraphic; blest with such a strain,Could Satan hear, he were a god again.Triumphant King of Glory! Soul of bliss!What a stupendous turn of fate is this!O! whither art thou rais'd above the scornAnd indigence of him in Bethlem born;A needless, helpless, unaccounted guest,And but a second to the fodder'd beast!How chang'd from him, who, meekly prostrate laid,Vouchsaf'd to wash the feet himself had made!From him who was betray'd, forsook, denied,Wept, languish'd, pray'd, bled, thirsted, groan'd, and died;Hung pierc'd and bare, insulted by the foe,All heaven in tears above, earth unconcern'd below!And was't enough to bid the sun retire?Why did not nature at thy groan expire?[pg 022]I see, I hear, I feel, the pangs divine;The world is vanish'd,—I am wholly thine.Mistaken Caiaphas! Ah! which blasphem'd;Thou, or thy pris'ner? which shall be condemn'd?Well might'st thou rend thy garments, well exclaim;Deep are the horrors of eternal flame!But God is good! 'Tis wondrous all! Ev'n heThou gav'st to death, shame, torture, died for thee.Now the descending triumph stops its flightFrom earth full twice a planetary height.There all the clouds condens'd, two columns raiseDistinct with orient veins, and golden blaze.One fix'd on earth, and one in sea, and roundIts ample foot the swelling billows sound.These an immeasurable arch support,The grand tribunal of this awful court.Sheets of bright azure, from the purest sky,Stream from the crystal arch, and round the columns fly.Death, wrapt in chains, low at the basis lies,And on the point of his own arrow dies.Here high enthron'd th' eternal Judge is plac'd,With all the grandeur of his godhead grac'd;Stars on his robes in beauteous order meet,And the sun burns beneath his awful feet.Now an archangel eminently bright,From off his silver staff of wondrous height,Unfurls the Christian flag, which waving flies,And shuts and opens more than half the skies:[pg 023]The cross so strong a red, it sheds a stain,Where'er it floats, on earth, and air, and main;Flushes the hill, and sets on fire the wood,And turns the deep-dy'd ocean, into blood.Oh formidable glory! dreadful bright!Refulgent torture to the guilty sight.Ah turn, unwary muse, nor dare revealWhat horrid thoughts with the polluted dwell.Say not, (to make the sun shrink in his beam,)Dare not affirm, they wish it all a dream;With, or their souls may with their limbs decay,Or God be spoil'd of his eternal sway.But rather, if thou know'st the means, unfoldHow they with transport might the scene behold.Ah how! but by repentance, by a mindQuick, and severe its own offence to find?By tears, and groans, and never-ceasing care,And all the pious violence of prayer?Thus then, with fervency till now unknown,I cast my heart before th' eternal throne,In this great temple, which the skies surround,For homage to its lord, a narrow bound."O thou! whose balance does the mountains weigh,Whose will the wild tumultuous seas obey,Whose breath can turn these watery worlds to flame,That flame to tempest, and that tempest tame;Earth's meanest son, all trembling, prostrate falls,And on the boundless of thy goodness calls."Oh! give the winds all past offence to sweep,[pg 024]To scatter wide, or bury in the deep:Thy power, my weakness, may I ever see,And wholly dedicate my soul to thee:Reign o'er my will; my passions ebb and flowAt thy command, nor human motive know!If anger boil, let anger be my praise,And sin the graceful indignation raise.My love be warm to succour the distress'd,And lift the burden from the soul oppress'd.Oh may my understanding ever readThis glorious volume, which thy wisdom made!Who decks the maiden spring with flow'ry pride?Who calls forth summer, like a sparkling bride?Who joys the mother autumn's bed to crown?And bids old winter lay her honours down?Not the great Ottoman, or greater Czar,Not Europe's arbitress of peace and war.May sea and land, and earth and heaven be join'dTo bring th' eternal author to my mind!When oceans roar, or awful thunders roll,May thoughts of thy dread vengeance shake my soul!When earth's in bloom, or planets proudly shine,Adore, my heart, the majesty divine!"Thro' every scene of life, or peace, or war,Plenty, or want, thy glory be my care!Shine we in arms? or sing beneath our vine?Thine is the vintage, and the conquest thine:Thy pleasure points the shaft, and bends the bow;The cluster blasts, or bids it brightly glow:[pg 025]'Tis thou that lead'st our powerful armies forth,And giv'st great Anne thy sceptre o'er the north."Grant I may ever, at the morning ray,Open with prayer the consecrated day;Tune thy great praise, and bid my soul arise,And with the mounting sun ascend the skies:As that advances, let my zeal improve,And glow with ardour of consummate love;Nor cease at eve, but with the setting sunMy endless worship shall be still begun."And, oh! permit the gloom of solemn nightTo sacred thought may forcibly invite.When this world's shut, and awful planets rise,Call on our minds, and raise them to the skies;Compose our souls with a less dazzling sight,And show all nature in a milder light;How every boisterous thought in calm subsides!How the smooth'd spirit into goodness glides!O how divine! to tread the milky way,To the bright palace of the lord of day;His court admire, or for his favour sue,Or leagues of friendship with his saints renew;Pleas'd to look down, and see the world asleep,While I long vigils to its founder keep!"Canst thou not shake the centre? Oh! control,Subdue by force, the rebel in my soul:Thou, who canst still the raging of the flood,Restrain the various tumults of my blood;Teach me, with equal firmness, to sustainAlluring pleasure, and assaulting pain.[pg 026]O may I pant for thee in each desire!And with strong faith foment the holy fire!Stretch out my soul in hope, and grasp the prize,Which in eternity's deep bosom lies!At the great day of recompense behold,Devoid of fear, the fatal book unfold!Then wafted upward to the blissful seat,From age to age, my grateful song repeat;My light, my life, my God, my Saviour see,And rival angels in the praise of thee."
Venit summa dies.—Virg.
Venit summa dies.—Virg.
Book I.Ipse pater, media nimborum in nocte, coruscaFulmina molitur dextra. Quo maxima motuTerra tremit: fugêre feræ! et mortalia cordaPer gentes humilis stravit pavor.Virg.While others sing the fortune of the great;Empire and arms, and all the pomp of state;With Britain's hero1set their souls on fire,And grow immortal as his deeds inspire;I draw a deeper scene: a scene that yieldsA louder trumpet, and more dreadful fields;The world alarm'd, both earth and heaven o'erthrown,And gasping nature's last tremendous groan;Death's ancient sceptre broke, the teeming tomb,The righteous Judge, and man's eternal doom.'Twixt joy and pain I view the bold design,[pg 002]And ask my anxious heart, if it be mine.Whatever great or dreadful has been doneWithin the sight of conscious stars or sun,Is far beneath my daring: I look downOn all the splendours of the British crown.This globe is for my verse a narrow bound;Attend me, all the glorious worlds around!O! all ye angels, howsoe'er disjoin'd,Of every various order, place, and kind,Hear, and assist, a feeble mortal's lays;'Tis your Eternal King I strive to praise.But chiefly thou, great Ruler! Lord of all!Before whose throne archangels prostrate fall;If at thy nod, from discord, and from night,Sprang beauty, and yon sparkling worlds of light,Exalt e'en me; all inward tumults quell;The clouds and darkness of my mind dispel;To my great subject thou my breast inspire,And raise my lab'ring soul with equal fire.Man, bear thy brow aloft, view every graceIn God's great offspring, beauteous nature's face:See spring's gay bloom; see golden autumn's store;See how earth smiles, and hear old ocean roar.Leviathans but heave their cumbrous mail,It makes a tide, and wind-bound navies sail.Here, forests rise, the mountains awful pride;Here, rivers measure climes, and worlds divide;There, valleys fraught with gold's resplendent seeds,Hold kings, and kingdoms' fortunes, in their beds:There, to the skies, aspiring hills ascend,[pg 003]And into distant lands their shades extend.View cities, armies, fleets; of fleets the pride,See Europe's law, in Albion's channel ride.View the whole earth's vast landscape unconfin'd,Or view in Britain all her glories join'd.Then let the firmament thy wonder raise;'Twill raise thy wonder, but transcend thy praise.How far from east to west? the lab'ring eyeCan scarce the distant azure bounds descry:Wide theatre! where tempests play at large,And God's right hand can all its wrath discharge.Mark how those radiant lamps inflame the pole,Call forth the seasons, and the year control:They shine thro' time, with an unalter'd ray:See this grand period rise, and that decay:So vast, this world's a grain; yet myriads grace,With golden pomp, the throng'd ethereal space;So bright, with such a wealth of glory stor'd,'Twere sin in heathens not to have ador'd.How great, how firm, how sacred, all appears!How worthy an immortal round of years!Yet all must drop, as autumn's sickliest grain,And earth and firmament be sought in vain:The tract forgot where constellations shone,Or where the Stuarts fill'd an awful throne:Time shall be slain, all nature be destroy'd,Nor leave an atom in the mighty void.Sooner, or later, in some future date,(A dreadful secret in the book of fate!)This hour, for aught all human wisdom knows,[pg 004]Or when ten thousand harvests more have rose;When scenes are chang'd on this revolving earth,Old empires fall, and give new empires birth;While other Bourbons rule in other lands,And (if man's sin forbids not) other Annes;While the still busy world is treading o'erThe paths they trod five thousand years before,Thoughtless as those who now life's mazes run,Of earth dissolv'd, or an extinguish'd sun;(Ye sublunary worlds, awake, awake!Ye rulers of the nation, hear, and shake!)Thick clouds of darkness shall arise on day;In sudden night all earth's dominions lay;Impetuous winds the scatter'd forests rend;Eternal mountains, like their cedars, bend:The valleys yawn, the troubled ocean roar,And break the bondage of his wonted shore;A sanguine stain the silver moon o'erspread;Darkness the circle of the sun invade;From inmost heaven incessant thunders roll,And the strong echo bound from pole to pole.When, lo, a mighty trump, one half conceal'dIn clouds, one half to mortal eye reveal'd,Shall pour a dreadful note; the piercing callShall rattle in the centre of the ball;Th' extended circuit of creation shake,The living die with fear, the dead awake.Oh powerful blast! to which no equal soundDid e'er the frighted ear of nature wound,Tho' rival clarions have been strain'd on high,[pg 005]And kindled wars immortal thro' the sky,Tho' God's whole enginery discharg'd, and allThe rebel angels bellow'd in their fall.Have angels sinn'd? and shall not man beware?How shall a son of earth decline the snare?Not folded arms, and slackness of the mind,Can promise for the safety of mankind:None are supinely good: thro' care and painAnd various arts, the steep ascent we gain.This is the scene of combat, not of rest,Man's is laborious happiness at best;On this side death his dangers never cease,His joys are joys of conquest, not of peace.If then, obsequious to the will of fate,And bending to the terms of human state,When guilty joys invite us to their arms,When beauty smiles, or grandeur spreads her charms,The conscious soul would this great scene display,Call down th' immortal hosts in dread array,The trumpet sound, the Christian banner spread,And raise from silent graves the trembling dead;Such deep impression would the picture make,No power on earth her firm resolve could shake;Engag'd with angels she would greatly stand,And look regardless down on sea and land;Not proffer'd worlds her ardour could restrain,And death might shake his threat'ning lance in vain!Her certain conquest would endear the sight,And danger serve but to exalt delight.[pg 006]Instructed thus to shun the fatal spring,Whence flow the terrors of that day I sing;More boldly we our labours may pursue,And all the dreadful image set to view.The sparkling eye, the sleek and painted breast,The burnish'd scale, curl'd train, and rising crest,All that is lovely in the noxious snake,Provokes our fear, and bids us flee the brake:The sting once drawn, his guiltless beauties riseIn pleasing lustre, and detain our eyes;We view with joy, what once did horror move,And strong aversion softens into love.Say then, my muse, whom dismal scenes delight,Frequent at tombs, and in the realms of night;Say, melancholy maid, if bold to dareThe last extremes of terror and despair;Oh say, what change on earth, what heart in man,This blackest moment since the world began.Ah mournful turn! the blissful earth, who lateAt leisure on her axle roll'd in state;While thousand golden planets knew no rest,Still onward in their circling journey prest;A grateful change of seasons some to bring,And sweet vicissitude of fall and spring:Some thro' vast oceans to conduct the keel,And some those watery worlds to sink, or swell:Around her some their splendours to display,And gild her globe with tributary day:This world so great, of joy the bright abode,Heaven's darling child, and fav'rite of her God,[pg 007]Now looks an exile from her father's care,Deliver'd o'er to darkness and despair.No sun in radiant glory shines on high;No light, but from the terrors of the sky:Fall'n are her mountains, her fam'd rivers lost,And all into a second chaos tost:One universal ruin spreads abroad;Nothing is safe beneath the throne of God.Such, earth, thy fate: what then canst thou affordTo comfort and support thy guilty lord?Man, haughty lord of all beneath the moon,How must he bend his soul's ambition downProstrate, the reptile own, and disavowHis boasted stature, and assuming brow?Claim kindred with the clay, and curse his form,That speaks distinction from his sister worm?What dreadful pangs the trembling heart invade?Lord, why dost thou forsake whom thou hast made?Who can sustain thy anger? who can standBeneath the terrors of thy lifted hand?It flies the reach of thought; oh, save me, PowerOf powers supreme, in that tremendous hour!Thou who beneath the frown of fate hast stood,And in thy dreadful agony sweat blood;Thou, who for me, thro' every throbbing vein,Hast felt the keenest edge of mortal pain;Whom death led captive thro' the realms below,And taught those horrid mysteries of woe;Defend me, O my God! Oh, save me, PowerOf powers supreme, in that tremendous hour![pg 008]From east to west they fly, from pole to line,Imploring shelter from the wrath divine;Beg flames to wrap, or whelming seas to sweep,Or rocks to yawn, compassionately deep;Seas cast the monster forth to meet his doom,And rocks but prison up for wrath to come.So fares a traitor to an earthly crown;While death sits threat'ning in his prince's frownHis heart's dismay'd; and now his fears command,To change his native for a distant land:Swift orders fly, the king's severe decreeStands in the channel, and locks up the sea;The port he seeks, obedient to her lord,Hurls back the rebel to his lifted sword.But why this idle toil to paint that day?This time elaborately thrown away?Words all in vain pant after the distress,The height of eloquence would make it less;Heavens! how the good man trembles!—And is there a last day? and must there comeA sure, a fix'd, inexorable doom?Ambition swell, and, thy proud sails to show,Take all the winds that vanity can blow;Wealth on a golden mountain blazing stand,And reach an India forth in either hand;Spread all thy purple clusters, tempting vine,And thou, more dreaded foe, bright beauty, shine;Shine all; in all your charms together rise;That all, in all your charms, I may despise;[pg 009]While I mount upward on a strong desire,Borne, like Elijah, in a car of fire.In hopes of glory to be quite involv'd!To smile at death! to long to be dissolv'd!From our decays a pleasure to receive!And kindle into transport at a grave!What equals this? And shall the victor nowBoast the proud laurels on his loaded brow?Religion! Oh, thou cherub, heavenly bright!Oh, joys unmix'd, and fathomless delight!Thou, thou art all; nor find I in the wholeCreation aught, but God and my own soul.For ever, then, my soul, thy God adore,Nor let the brute creation praise him more.Shall things inanimate my conduct blame,And flush my conscious cheek with spreading shame?They all for him pursue, or quit, their endThe mountain flames their burning power suspend;In solid heaps th' unfrozen billows stand,To rest and silence aw'd by his command:Nay, the dire monsters that infest the flood,By nature dreadful, and athirst for blood,His will can calm, their savage tempers bind,And turn to mild protectors of mankind.Did not the prophet this great truth maintainIn the deep chambers of the gloomy main;When darkness round him all her horrors spread,And the loud ocean bellow'd o'er his head?When now the thunder roars, the lightning flies,[pg 010]And all the warring winds tumultuous rise;When now the foaming surges, tost on high,Disclose the sands beneath, and touch the sky;When death draws near, the mariners aghast,Look back with terror on their actions past;Their courage sickens into deep dismay,Their hearts, thro' fear and anguish, melt away;Nor tears, nor prayers, the tempest can appease;Now they devote their treasure to the seas;Unload their shatter'd barque, tho' richly fraught,And think the hopes of life are cheaply boughtWith gems and gold; but oh, the storm so high!Nor gems nor gold the hopes of life can buy.The trembling prophet then, themselves to save,They headlong plunge into the briny wave;Down he descends, and, booming o'er his head,The billows close; he's number'd with the dead.(Hear, O ye just! attend, ye virtuous few!And the bright paths of piety pursue)Lo! the great Ruler of the world, from high,Looks smiling down with a propitious eye,Covers his servant with his gracious hand,And bids tempestuous nature silent stand;Commands the peaceful waters to give place,Or kindly fold him in a soft embrace:He bridles in the monsters of the deep:The bridled monsters awful distance keep:Forget their hunger, while they view their prey;And guiltless gaze, and round the stranger play.But still arise new wonders; nature's Lord[pg 011]Sends forth into the deep his powerful word,And calls the great leviathan: the greatLeviathan attends in all his state;Exults for joy, and, with a mighty bound,Makes the sea shake, and heaven and earth resound;Blackens the waters with the rising sand.And drives vast billows to the distant land.As yawns an earthquake, when imprison'd airStruggles for vent, and lays the centre bare,The whale expands his jaws' enormous size;The prophet views the cavern with surprise;Measures his monstrous teeth, afar descried,And rolls his wond'ring eyes from side to side:Then takes possession of the spacious seat,And sails secure within the dark retreat.Now is he pleas'd the northern blast to hear,And hangs on liquid mountains, void of fear;Or falls immers'd into the depths below,Where the dead silent waters never flow;To the foundation of the hills convey'd,Dwells in the shelving mountain's dreadful shade:Where plummet never reach'd, he draws his breath,And glides serenely thro' the paths of death.Two wondrous days and nights thro' coral groves,Thro' labyrinths of rocks and sands, he roves:When the third morning with its level raysThe mountains gilds, and on the billows plays,[pg 012]It sees the king of waters rise and pourHis sacred guest uninjur'd on the shore:A type of that great blessing, which the museIn her next labour ardently pursues.
Ipse pater, media nimborum in nocte, coruscaFulmina molitur dextra. Quo maxima motuTerra tremit: fugêre feræ! et mortalia cordaPer gentes humilis stravit pavor.Virg.
Ipse pater, media nimborum in nocte, coruscaFulmina molitur dextra. Quo maxima motuTerra tremit: fugêre feræ! et mortalia cordaPer gentes humilis stravit pavor.
Ipse pater, media nimborum in nocte, corusca
Fulmina molitur dextra. Quo maxima motu
Terra tremit: fugêre feræ! et mortalia corda
Per gentes humilis stravit pavor.
Virg.
While others sing the fortune of the great;Empire and arms, and all the pomp of state;With Britain's hero1set their souls on fire,And grow immortal as his deeds inspire;I draw a deeper scene: a scene that yieldsA louder trumpet, and more dreadful fields;The world alarm'd, both earth and heaven o'erthrown,And gasping nature's last tremendous groan;Death's ancient sceptre broke, the teeming tomb,The righteous Judge, and man's eternal doom.'Twixt joy and pain I view the bold design,[pg 002]And ask my anxious heart, if it be mine.Whatever great or dreadful has been doneWithin the sight of conscious stars or sun,Is far beneath my daring: I look downOn all the splendours of the British crown.This globe is for my verse a narrow bound;Attend me, all the glorious worlds around!O! all ye angels, howsoe'er disjoin'd,Of every various order, place, and kind,Hear, and assist, a feeble mortal's lays;'Tis your Eternal King I strive to praise.But chiefly thou, great Ruler! Lord of all!Before whose throne archangels prostrate fall;If at thy nod, from discord, and from night,Sprang beauty, and yon sparkling worlds of light,Exalt e'en me; all inward tumults quell;The clouds and darkness of my mind dispel;To my great subject thou my breast inspire,And raise my lab'ring soul with equal fire.Man, bear thy brow aloft, view every graceIn God's great offspring, beauteous nature's face:See spring's gay bloom; see golden autumn's store;See how earth smiles, and hear old ocean roar.Leviathans but heave their cumbrous mail,It makes a tide, and wind-bound navies sail.Here, forests rise, the mountains awful pride;Here, rivers measure climes, and worlds divide;There, valleys fraught with gold's resplendent seeds,Hold kings, and kingdoms' fortunes, in their beds:There, to the skies, aspiring hills ascend,[pg 003]And into distant lands their shades extend.View cities, armies, fleets; of fleets the pride,See Europe's law, in Albion's channel ride.View the whole earth's vast landscape unconfin'd,Or view in Britain all her glories join'd.Then let the firmament thy wonder raise;'Twill raise thy wonder, but transcend thy praise.How far from east to west? the lab'ring eyeCan scarce the distant azure bounds descry:Wide theatre! where tempests play at large,And God's right hand can all its wrath discharge.Mark how those radiant lamps inflame the pole,Call forth the seasons, and the year control:They shine thro' time, with an unalter'd ray:See this grand period rise, and that decay:So vast, this world's a grain; yet myriads grace,With golden pomp, the throng'd ethereal space;So bright, with such a wealth of glory stor'd,'Twere sin in heathens not to have ador'd.How great, how firm, how sacred, all appears!How worthy an immortal round of years!Yet all must drop, as autumn's sickliest grain,And earth and firmament be sought in vain:The tract forgot where constellations shone,Or where the Stuarts fill'd an awful throne:Time shall be slain, all nature be destroy'd,Nor leave an atom in the mighty void.Sooner, or later, in some future date,(A dreadful secret in the book of fate!)This hour, for aught all human wisdom knows,[pg 004]Or when ten thousand harvests more have rose;When scenes are chang'd on this revolving earth,Old empires fall, and give new empires birth;While other Bourbons rule in other lands,And (if man's sin forbids not) other Annes;While the still busy world is treading o'erThe paths they trod five thousand years before,Thoughtless as those who now life's mazes run,Of earth dissolv'd, or an extinguish'd sun;(Ye sublunary worlds, awake, awake!Ye rulers of the nation, hear, and shake!)Thick clouds of darkness shall arise on day;In sudden night all earth's dominions lay;Impetuous winds the scatter'd forests rend;Eternal mountains, like their cedars, bend:The valleys yawn, the troubled ocean roar,And break the bondage of his wonted shore;A sanguine stain the silver moon o'erspread;Darkness the circle of the sun invade;From inmost heaven incessant thunders roll,And the strong echo bound from pole to pole.When, lo, a mighty trump, one half conceal'dIn clouds, one half to mortal eye reveal'd,Shall pour a dreadful note; the piercing callShall rattle in the centre of the ball;Th' extended circuit of creation shake,The living die with fear, the dead awake.Oh powerful blast! to which no equal soundDid e'er the frighted ear of nature wound,Tho' rival clarions have been strain'd on high,[pg 005]And kindled wars immortal thro' the sky,Tho' God's whole enginery discharg'd, and allThe rebel angels bellow'd in their fall.Have angels sinn'd? and shall not man beware?How shall a son of earth decline the snare?Not folded arms, and slackness of the mind,Can promise for the safety of mankind:None are supinely good: thro' care and painAnd various arts, the steep ascent we gain.This is the scene of combat, not of rest,Man's is laborious happiness at best;On this side death his dangers never cease,His joys are joys of conquest, not of peace.If then, obsequious to the will of fate,And bending to the terms of human state,When guilty joys invite us to their arms,When beauty smiles, or grandeur spreads her charms,The conscious soul would this great scene display,Call down th' immortal hosts in dread array,The trumpet sound, the Christian banner spread,And raise from silent graves the trembling dead;Such deep impression would the picture make,No power on earth her firm resolve could shake;Engag'd with angels she would greatly stand,And look regardless down on sea and land;Not proffer'd worlds her ardour could restrain,And death might shake his threat'ning lance in vain!Her certain conquest would endear the sight,And danger serve but to exalt delight.[pg 006]Instructed thus to shun the fatal spring,Whence flow the terrors of that day I sing;More boldly we our labours may pursue,And all the dreadful image set to view.The sparkling eye, the sleek and painted breast,The burnish'd scale, curl'd train, and rising crest,All that is lovely in the noxious snake,Provokes our fear, and bids us flee the brake:The sting once drawn, his guiltless beauties riseIn pleasing lustre, and detain our eyes;We view with joy, what once did horror move,And strong aversion softens into love.Say then, my muse, whom dismal scenes delight,Frequent at tombs, and in the realms of night;Say, melancholy maid, if bold to dareThe last extremes of terror and despair;Oh say, what change on earth, what heart in man,This blackest moment since the world began.Ah mournful turn! the blissful earth, who lateAt leisure on her axle roll'd in state;While thousand golden planets knew no rest,Still onward in their circling journey prest;A grateful change of seasons some to bring,And sweet vicissitude of fall and spring:Some thro' vast oceans to conduct the keel,And some those watery worlds to sink, or swell:Around her some their splendours to display,And gild her globe with tributary day:This world so great, of joy the bright abode,Heaven's darling child, and fav'rite of her God,[pg 007]Now looks an exile from her father's care,Deliver'd o'er to darkness and despair.No sun in radiant glory shines on high;No light, but from the terrors of the sky:Fall'n are her mountains, her fam'd rivers lost,And all into a second chaos tost:One universal ruin spreads abroad;Nothing is safe beneath the throne of God.Such, earth, thy fate: what then canst thou affordTo comfort and support thy guilty lord?Man, haughty lord of all beneath the moon,How must he bend his soul's ambition downProstrate, the reptile own, and disavowHis boasted stature, and assuming brow?Claim kindred with the clay, and curse his form,That speaks distinction from his sister worm?What dreadful pangs the trembling heart invade?Lord, why dost thou forsake whom thou hast made?Who can sustain thy anger? who can standBeneath the terrors of thy lifted hand?It flies the reach of thought; oh, save me, PowerOf powers supreme, in that tremendous hour!Thou who beneath the frown of fate hast stood,And in thy dreadful agony sweat blood;Thou, who for me, thro' every throbbing vein,Hast felt the keenest edge of mortal pain;Whom death led captive thro' the realms below,And taught those horrid mysteries of woe;Defend me, O my God! Oh, save me, PowerOf powers supreme, in that tremendous hour![pg 008]From east to west they fly, from pole to line,Imploring shelter from the wrath divine;Beg flames to wrap, or whelming seas to sweep,Or rocks to yawn, compassionately deep;Seas cast the monster forth to meet his doom,And rocks but prison up for wrath to come.So fares a traitor to an earthly crown;While death sits threat'ning in his prince's frownHis heart's dismay'd; and now his fears command,To change his native for a distant land:Swift orders fly, the king's severe decreeStands in the channel, and locks up the sea;The port he seeks, obedient to her lord,Hurls back the rebel to his lifted sword.But why this idle toil to paint that day?This time elaborately thrown away?Words all in vain pant after the distress,The height of eloquence would make it less;Heavens! how the good man trembles!—And is there a last day? and must there comeA sure, a fix'd, inexorable doom?Ambition swell, and, thy proud sails to show,Take all the winds that vanity can blow;Wealth on a golden mountain blazing stand,And reach an India forth in either hand;Spread all thy purple clusters, tempting vine,And thou, more dreaded foe, bright beauty, shine;Shine all; in all your charms together rise;That all, in all your charms, I may despise;[pg 009]While I mount upward on a strong desire,Borne, like Elijah, in a car of fire.In hopes of glory to be quite involv'd!To smile at death! to long to be dissolv'd!From our decays a pleasure to receive!And kindle into transport at a grave!What equals this? And shall the victor nowBoast the proud laurels on his loaded brow?Religion! Oh, thou cherub, heavenly bright!Oh, joys unmix'd, and fathomless delight!Thou, thou art all; nor find I in the wholeCreation aught, but God and my own soul.For ever, then, my soul, thy God adore,Nor let the brute creation praise him more.Shall things inanimate my conduct blame,And flush my conscious cheek with spreading shame?They all for him pursue, or quit, their endThe mountain flames their burning power suspend;In solid heaps th' unfrozen billows stand,To rest and silence aw'd by his command:Nay, the dire monsters that infest the flood,By nature dreadful, and athirst for blood,His will can calm, their savage tempers bind,And turn to mild protectors of mankind.Did not the prophet this great truth maintainIn the deep chambers of the gloomy main;When darkness round him all her horrors spread,And the loud ocean bellow'd o'er his head?When now the thunder roars, the lightning flies,[pg 010]And all the warring winds tumultuous rise;When now the foaming surges, tost on high,Disclose the sands beneath, and touch the sky;When death draws near, the mariners aghast,Look back with terror on their actions past;Their courage sickens into deep dismay,Their hearts, thro' fear and anguish, melt away;Nor tears, nor prayers, the tempest can appease;Now they devote their treasure to the seas;Unload their shatter'd barque, tho' richly fraught,And think the hopes of life are cheaply boughtWith gems and gold; but oh, the storm so high!Nor gems nor gold the hopes of life can buy.The trembling prophet then, themselves to save,They headlong plunge into the briny wave;Down he descends, and, booming o'er his head,The billows close; he's number'd with the dead.(Hear, O ye just! attend, ye virtuous few!And the bright paths of piety pursue)Lo! the great Ruler of the world, from high,Looks smiling down with a propitious eye,Covers his servant with his gracious hand,And bids tempestuous nature silent stand;Commands the peaceful waters to give place,Or kindly fold him in a soft embrace:He bridles in the monsters of the deep:The bridled monsters awful distance keep:Forget their hunger, while they view their prey;And guiltless gaze, and round the stranger play.But still arise new wonders; nature's Lord[pg 011]Sends forth into the deep his powerful word,And calls the great leviathan: the greatLeviathan attends in all his state;Exults for joy, and, with a mighty bound,Makes the sea shake, and heaven and earth resound;Blackens the waters with the rising sand.And drives vast billows to the distant land.As yawns an earthquake, when imprison'd airStruggles for vent, and lays the centre bare,The whale expands his jaws' enormous size;The prophet views the cavern with surprise;Measures his monstrous teeth, afar descried,And rolls his wond'ring eyes from side to side:Then takes possession of the spacious seat,And sails secure within the dark retreat.Now is he pleas'd the northern blast to hear,And hangs on liquid mountains, void of fear;Or falls immers'd into the depths below,Where the dead silent waters never flow;To the foundation of the hills convey'd,Dwells in the shelving mountain's dreadful shade:Where plummet never reach'd, he draws his breath,And glides serenely thro' the paths of death.Two wondrous days and nights thro' coral groves,Thro' labyrinths of rocks and sands, he roves:When the third morning with its level raysThe mountains gilds, and on the billows plays,[pg 012]It sees the king of waters rise and pourHis sacred guest uninjur'd on the shore:A type of that great blessing, which the museIn her next labour ardently pursues.
While others sing the fortune of the great;
Empire and arms, and all the pomp of state;
With Britain's hero1set their souls on fire,
And grow immortal as his deeds inspire;
I draw a deeper scene: a scene that yields
A louder trumpet, and more dreadful fields;
The world alarm'd, both earth and heaven o'erthrown,
And gasping nature's last tremendous groan;
Death's ancient sceptre broke, the teeming tomb,
The righteous Judge, and man's eternal doom.
'Twixt joy and pain I view the bold design,
And ask my anxious heart, if it be mine.
Whatever great or dreadful has been done
Within the sight of conscious stars or sun,
Is far beneath my daring: I look down
On all the splendours of the British crown.
This globe is for my verse a narrow bound;
Attend me, all the glorious worlds around!
O! all ye angels, howsoe'er disjoin'd,
Of every various order, place, and kind,
Hear, and assist, a feeble mortal's lays;
'Tis your Eternal King I strive to praise.
But chiefly thou, great Ruler! Lord of all!
Before whose throne archangels prostrate fall;
If at thy nod, from discord, and from night,
Sprang beauty, and yon sparkling worlds of light,
Exalt e'en me; all inward tumults quell;
The clouds and darkness of my mind dispel;
To my great subject thou my breast inspire,
And raise my lab'ring soul with equal fire.
Man, bear thy brow aloft, view every grace
In God's great offspring, beauteous nature's face:
See spring's gay bloom; see golden autumn's store;
See how earth smiles, and hear old ocean roar.
Leviathans but heave their cumbrous mail,
It makes a tide, and wind-bound navies sail.
Here, forests rise, the mountains awful pride;
Here, rivers measure climes, and worlds divide;
There, valleys fraught with gold's resplendent seeds,
Hold kings, and kingdoms' fortunes, in their beds:
There, to the skies, aspiring hills ascend,
And into distant lands their shades extend.
View cities, armies, fleets; of fleets the pride,
See Europe's law, in Albion's channel ride.
View the whole earth's vast landscape unconfin'd,
Or view in Britain all her glories join'd.
Then let the firmament thy wonder raise;
'Twill raise thy wonder, but transcend thy praise.
How far from east to west? the lab'ring eye
Can scarce the distant azure bounds descry:
Wide theatre! where tempests play at large,
And God's right hand can all its wrath discharge.
Mark how those radiant lamps inflame the pole,
Call forth the seasons, and the year control:
They shine thro' time, with an unalter'd ray:
See this grand period rise, and that decay:
So vast, this world's a grain; yet myriads grace,
With golden pomp, the throng'd ethereal space;
So bright, with such a wealth of glory stor'd,
'Twere sin in heathens not to have ador'd.
How great, how firm, how sacred, all appears!
How worthy an immortal round of years!
Yet all must drop, as autumn's sickliest grain,
And earth and firmament be sought in vain:
The tract forgot where constellations shone,
Or where the Stuarts fill'd an awful throne:
Time shall be slain, all nature be destroy'd,
Nor leave an atom in the mighty void.
Sooner, or later, in some future date,
(A dreadful secret in the book of fate!)
This hour, for aught all human wisdom knows,
Or when ten thousand harvests more have rose;
When scenes are chang'd on this revolving earth,
Old empires fall, and give new empires birth;
While other Bourbons rule in other lands,
And (if man's sin forbids not) other Annes;
While the still busy world is treading o'er
The paths they trod five thousand years before,
Thoughtless as those who now life's mazes run,
Of earth dissolv'd, or an extinguish'd sun;
(Ye sublunary worlds, awake, awake!
Ye rulers of the nation, hear, and shake!)
Thick clouds of darkness shall arise on day;
In sudden night all earth's dominions lay;
Impetuous winds the scatter'd forests rend;
Eternal mountains, like their cedars, bend:
The valleys yawn, the troubled ocean roar,
And break the bondage of his wonted shore;
A sanguine stain the silver moon o'erspread;
Darkness the circle of the sun invade;
From inmost heaven incessant thunders roll,
And the strong echo bound from pole to pole.
When, lo, a mighty trump, one half conceal'd
In clouds, one half to mortal eye reveal'd,
Shall pour a dreadful note; the piercing call
Shall rattle in the centre of the ball;
Th' extended circuit of creation shake,
The living die with fear, the dead awake.
Oh powerful blast! to which no equal sound
Did e'er the frighted ear of nature wound,
Tho' rival clarions have been strain'd on high,
And kindled wars immortal thro' the sky,
Tho' God's whole enginery discharg'd, and all
The rebel angels bellow'd in their fall.
Have angels sinn'd? and shall not man beware?
How shall a son of earth decline the snare?
Not folded arms, and slackness of the mind,
Can promise for the safety of mankind:
None are supinely good: thro' care and pain
And various arts, the steep ascent we gain.
This is the scene of combat, not of rest,
Man's is laborious happiness at best;
On this side death his dangers never cease,
His joys are joys of conquest, not of peace.
If then, obsequious to the will of fate,
And bending to the terms of human state,
When guilty joys invite us to their arms,
When beauty smiles, or grandeur spreads her charms,
The conscious soul would this great scene display,
Call down th' immortal hosts in dread array,
The trumpet sound, the Christian banner spread,
And raise from silent graves the trembling dead;
Such deep impression would the picture make,
No power on earth her firm resolve could shake;
Engag'd with angels she would greatly stand,
And look regardless down on sea and land;
Not proffer'd worlds her ardour could restrain,
And death might shake his threat'ning lance in vain!
Her certain conquest would endear the sight,
And danger serve but to exalt delight.
Instructed thus to shun the fatal spring,
Whence flow the terrors of that day I sing;
More boldly we our labours may pursue,
And all the dreadful image set to view.
The sparkling eye, the sleek and painted breast,
The burnish'd scale, curl'd train, and rising crest,
All that is lovely in the noxious snake,
Provokes our fear, and bids us flee the brake:
The sting once drawn, his guiltless beauties rise
In pleasing lustre, and detain our eyes;
We view with joy, what once did horror move,
And strong aversion softens into love.
Say then, my muse, whom dismal scenes delight,
Frequent at tombs, and in the realms of night;
Say, melancholy maid, if bold to dare
The last extremes of terror and despair;
Oh say, what change on earth, what heart in man,
This blackest moment since the world began.
Ah mournful turn! the blissful earth, who late
At leisure on her axle roll'd in state;
While thousand golden planets knew no rest,
Still onward in their circling journey prest;
A grateful change of seasons some to bring,
And sweet vicissitude of fall and spring:
Some thro' vast oceans to conduct the keel,
And some those watery worlds to sink, or swell:
Around her some their splendours to display,
And gild her globe with tributary day:
This world so great, of joy the bright abode,
Heaven's darling child, and fav'rite of her God,
Now looks an exile from her father's care,
Deliver'd o'er to darkness and despair.
No sun in radiant glory shines on high;
No light, but from the terrors of the sky:
Fall'n are her mountains, her fam'd rivers lost,
And all into a second chaos tost:
One universal ruin spreads abroad;
Nothing is safe beneath the throne of God.
Such, earth, thy fate: what then canst thou afford
To comfort and support thy guilty lord?
Man, haughty lord of all beneath the moon,
How must he bend his soul's ambition down
Prostrate, the reptile own, and disavow
His boasted stature, and assuming brow?
Claim kindred with the clay, and curse his form,
That speaks distinction from his sister worm?
What dreadful pangs the trembling heart invade?
Lord, why dost thou forsake whom thou hast made?
Who can sustain thy anger? who can stand
Beneath the terrors of thy lifted hand?
It flies the reach of thought; oh, save me, Power
Of powers supreme, in that tremendous hour!
Thou who beneath the frown of fate hast stood,
And in thy dreadful agony sweat blood;
Thou, who for me, thro' every throbbing vein,
Hast felt the keenest edge of mortal pain;
Whom death led captive thro' the realms below,
And taught those horrid mysteries of woe;
Defend me, O my God! Oh, save me, Power
Of powers supreme, in that tremendous hour!
From east to west they fly, from pole to line,
Imploring shelter from the wrath divine;
Beg flames to wrap, or whelming seas to sweep,
Or rocks to yawn, compassionately deep;
Seas cast the monster forth to meet his doom,
And rocks but prison up for wrath to come.
So fares a traitor to an earthly crown;
While death sits threat'ning in his prince's frown
His heart's dismay'd; and now his fears command,
To change his native for a distant land:
Swift orders fly, the king's severe decree
Stands in the channel, and locks up the sea;
The port he seeks, obedient to her lord,
Hurls back the rebel to his lifted sword.
But why this idle toil to paint that day?
This time elaborately thrown away?
Words all in vain pant after the distress,
The height of eloquence would make it less;
Heavens! how the good man trembles!—
And is there a last day? and must there come
A sure, a fix'd, inexorable doom?
Ambition swell, and, thy proud sails to show,
Take all the winds that vanity can blow;
Wealth on a golden mountain blazing stand,
And reach an India forth in either hand;
Spread all thy purple clusters, tempting vine,
And thou, more dreaded foe, bright beauty, shine;
Shine all; in all your charms together rise;
That all, in all your charms, I may despise;
While I mount upward on a strong desire,
Borne, like Elijah, in a car of fire.
In hopes of glory to be quite involv'd!
To smile at death! to long to be dissolv'd!
From our decays a pleasure to receive!
And kindle into transport at a grave!
What equals this? And shall the victor now
Boast the proud laurels on his loaded brow?
Religion! Oh, thou cherub, heavenly bright!
Oh, joys unmix'd, and fathomless delight!
Thou, thou art all; nor find I in the whole
Creation aught, but God and my own soul.
For ever, then, my soul, thy God adore,
Nor let the brute creation praise him more.
Shall things inanimate my conduct blame,
And flush my conscious cheek with spreading shame?
They all for him pursue, or quit, their end
The mountain flames their burning power suspend;
In solid heaps th' unfrozen billows stand,
To rest and silence aw'd by his command:
Nay, the dire monsters that infest the flood,
By nature dreadful, and athirst for blood,
His will can calm, their savage tempers bind,
And turn to mild protectors of mankind.
Did not the prophet this great truth maintain
In the deep chambers of the gloomy main;
When darkness round him all her horrors spread,
And the loud ocean bellow'd o'er his head?
When now the thunder roars, the lightning flies,
And all the warring winds tumultuous rise;
When now the foaming surges, tost on high,
Disclose the sands beneath, and touch the sky;
When death draws near, the mariners aghast,
Look back with terror on their actions past;
Their courage sickens into deep dismay,
Their hearts, thro' fear and anguish, melt away;
Nor tears, nor prayers, the tempest can appease;
Now they devote their treasure to the seas;
Unload their shatter'd barque, tho' richly fraught,
And think the hopes of life are cheaply bought
With gems and gold; but oh, the storm so high!
Nor gems nor gold the hopes of life can buy.
The trembling prophet then, themselves to save,
They headlong plunge into the briny wave;
Down he descends, and, booming o'er his head,
The billows close; he's number'd with the dead.
(Hear, O ye just! attend, ye virtuous few!
And the bright paths of piety pursue)
Lo! the great Ruler of the world, from high,
Looks smiling down with a propitious eye,
Covers his servant with his gracious hand,
And bids tempestuous nature silent stand;
Commands the peaceful waters to give place,
Or kindly fold him in a soft embrace:
He bridles in the monsters of the deep:
The bridled monsters awful distance keep:
Forget their hunger, while they view their prey;
And guiltless gaze, and round the stranger play.
But still arise new wonders; nature's Lord
Sends forth into the deep his powerful word,
And calls the great leviathan: the great
Leviathan attends in all his state;
Exults for joy, and, with a mighty bound,
Makes the sea shake, and heaven and earth resound;
Blackens the waters with the rising sand.
And drives vast billows to the distant land.
As yawns an earthquake, when imprison'd air
Struggles for vent, and lays the centre bare,
The whale expands his jaws' enormous size;
The prophet views the cavern with surprise;
Measures his monstrous teeth, afar descried,
And rolls his wond'ring eyes from side to side:
Then takes possession of the spacious seat,
And sails secure within the dark retreat.
Now is he pleas'd the northern blast to hear,
And hangs on liquid mountains, void of fear;
Or falls immers'd into the depths below,
Where the dead silent waters never flow;
To the foundation of the hills convey'd,
Dwells in the shelving mountain's dreadful shade:
Where plummet never reach'd, he draws his breath,
And glides serenely thro' the paths of death.
Two wondrous days and nights thro' coral groves,
Thro' labyrinths of rocks and sands, he roves:
When the third morning with its level rays
The mountains gilds, and on the billows plays,
It sees the king of waters rise and pour
His sacred guest uninjur'd on the shore:
A type of that great blessing, which the muse
In her next labour ardently pursues.
Book II.Έκ γαιη έλπιξομεν ές Φάος έλθειν. Λειψαν άποιχομένων όπισω δέ Θεοι τελέθονται.Phocyl.——We hope that the departed will rise again from the dust: after which, like the gods, they will be immortal.Now man awakes, and from his silent bed,Where he has slept for ages, lifts his head;Shakes off the slumber of ten thousand years,And on the borders of new worlds appears.Whate'er the bold, the rash, adventure cost,In wide eternity I dare be lost.The muse is wont in narrow bounds to sing,To teach the swain, or celebrate the king.I grasp the whole, no more to parts confin'd,I lift my voice, and sing to humankind:I sing to men and angels; angels join,While such the theme, their sacred songs with mine.Again the trumpet's intermitted soundRolls the wide circuit of creation round,A universal concourse to prepare[pg 013]Of all that ever breath'd the vital air:In some wide field, which active whirlwinds sweep,Drive cities, forests, mountains, to the deep,To smooth and lengthen out th' unbounded space,And spread an area for all human race.Now monuments prove faithful to their trust,And render back their long committed dust.Now charnels rattle; scatter'd limbs, and allThe various bones, obsequious to the call,Self-mov'd, advance; the neck perhaps to meetThe distant head; the distant legs the feet.Dreadful to view, see thro' the dusky skyFragments of bodies in confusion fly,To distant regions journeying, there to claimDeserted members, and complete the frame.When the world bow'd to Rome's almighty sword,Rome bow'd to Pompey, and confess'd her lord.Yet one day lost, this deity belowBecame the scorn and pity of his foe.His blood a traitor's sacrifice was made,And smok'd indignant on a ruffian's blade.No trumpet's sound, no gasping army's yell,Bid, with due horror, his great soul farewell.Obscure his fall! all welt'ring in his gore,His trunk was cast to perish on the shore!While Julius frown'd the bloody monster dead,Who brought the world in his great rival's head.This sever'd head and trunk shall join once more,Tho' realms now rise between, and oceans roar.The trumpet's sound each fragrant mote shall hear,[pg 014]Or fix'd in earth, or if afloat in air,Obey the signal wafted in the wind,And not one sleeping atom lag behind.So swarming bees, that on a summer's dayIn airy rings, and wild meanders play,Charm'd with the brazen sound, their wand'rings end,And, gently circling, on a bough descend.The body thus renew'd, the conscious soul,Which has perhaps been flutt'ring near the pole,Or midst the burning planets wond'ring stray'd,Or hover'd o'er where her pale corpse was laid;Or rather coasted on her final state,And fear'd or wish'd for her appointed fate:This soul, returning with a constant flame,Now weds for ever her immortal frame.Life, which ran down before, so high is wound,The springs maintain an everlasting round.Thus a frail model of the work design'dFirst takes a copy of the builder's mind,Before the structure firm with lasting oak,And marble bowels of the solid rock,Turns the strong arch, and bids the columns rise,And bear the lofty palace to the skies;The wrongs of time enabled to surpass,With bars of adamant, and ribs of brass.That ancient, sacred, and illustrious dome,2Where soon or late fair Albion's heroes come,[pg 015]From camps, and courts, tho' great, or wise, or just,To feed the worm, and moulder into dust;That solemn mansion of the royal dead,Where passing slaves o'er sleeping monarchs tread,Now populous o'erflows: a num'rous raceOf rising kings fill all th' extended space:A life well spent, not the victorious sword,Awards the crown, and styles the greater lord.Nor monuments alone, and burial-earth,Labours with man to this his second birth;But where gay palaces in pomp arise,And gilded theatres invade the skies,Nations shall wake, whose unrespected bonesSupport the pride of their luxurious sons.The most magnificent and costly domeIs but an upper chamber to the tomb.No spot on earth but has supplied a grave,And human skulls the spacious ocean pave.All's full of man; and at this dreadful turn,The swarm shall issue, and the hive shall burn.Not all at once, nor in like manner, rise:Some lift with pain their slow, unwilling eyes:Shrink backward from the terror of the light,And bless the grave, and call for lasting night.Others, whose long-attempted virtue stoodFix'd as a rock, and broke the rushing flood,Whose firm resolve, nor beauty could melt down,Nor raging tyrants from their posture frown;[pg 016]Such, in this day of horrors, shall be seenTo face the thunders with a godlike mien;The planets drop, their thoughts are fixt above;The centre shakes, their hearts disdain to move;An earth dissolving, and a heaven thrown wide,A yawning gulf, and fiends on every side,Serene they view, impatient of delay,And bless the dawn of everlasting day.Here, greatness prostrate falls; there, strength gives place;Here, lazars smile; there, beauty hides her face.Christians, and Jews, and Turks, and Pagans stand,A blended throng, one undistinguish'd band.Some who, perhaps, by mutual wounds expir'd,With zeal for their distinct persuasions fir'd,In mutual friendship their long slumber break,And hand in hand their Saviour's love partake.But none are flush'd with brighter joy, or, warmWith juster confidence, enjoy the storm,Than those, whose pious bounties, unconfin'd,Have made them public fathers of mankind.In that illustrious rank, what shining lightWith such distinguish'd glory fills my sight?Bend down, my grateful muse, that homage show,Which to such worthies thou art proud to owe.Wickham! Fox! Chichley! hail, illustrious names,3Who to far distant times dispense your beams;[pg 017]Beneath your shades, and near your crystal springs,I first presum'd to touch the trembling strings.All hail, thrice honour'd! 'Twas your great renownTo bless a people, and oblige a crown.And now you rise, eternally to shine,Eternally to drink the rays divine.Indulgent God! Oh how shall mortal raiseHis soul to due returns of grateful praise,For bounty so profuse to humankind,Thy wondrous gift of an eternal mind?Shall I, who, some few years ago, was lessThan worm, or mite, or shadow can express,Was nothing; shall I live, when every fireAnd every star shall languish and expire?When earth's no more, shall I survive above,And thro' the radiant files of angels move?Or, as before the throne of God I stand,See new worlds rolling from his spacious hand,Where our adventures shall perhaps be taught,As we now tell how Michael sung or fought?All that has being in full concert join,And celebrate the depths of love divine!But oh! before this blissful state, beforeTh' aspiring soul this wondrous height can soar,The Judge, descending, thunders from afar,And all mankind is summon'd to the bar.This mighty scene I next presume to draw:Attend, great Anna, with religious awe.Expect not here the known successful artsTo win attention, and command our hearts:[pg 018]Fiction, be far away; let no machineDescending here, no fabled god, be seen;Behold the God of gods indeed descend,And worlds unnumber'd his approach attend!Lo! the wide theatre, whose ample spaceMust entertain the whole of human race,At heaven's all-powerful edict is prepar'd,And fenc'd around with an immortal guard.Tribes, provinces, dominions, worlds, o'erflowThe mighty plain, and deluge all below:And every age, and nation, pours along,Nimrod and Bourbon mingle in the throng:Adam salutes his youngest son; no sign,Of all those ages, which their births disjoin.How empty learning, and how vain is art,But as it mends the life, and guides the heart!What volumes have been swell'd, what time been spent,To fix a hero's birth-day, or descent!What joy must it now yield, what rapture raise,To see the glorious race of ancient days!To greet those worthies who perhaps have stoodIllustrious on record before the flood!Alas! a nearer care your soul demands,Cæsar unnoted in your presence stands.How vast the concourse! not in number moreThe waves that break on the resounding shore,The leaves that tremble in the shady grove,The lamps that gild the spangled vaults above:Those overwhelming armies, whose command[pg 019]Said to one empire, fall; another, stand:Whose rear lay wrapt in night, while breaking dawnRous'd the broad front, and call'd the battle on:Great Xerxes' world in arms, proud Cannæ's field,Where Carthage taught victorious Rome to yield,(Another blow had broke the fates' decree,And earth had wanted her fourth monarchy,)Immortal Blenheim, fam'd Ramillia's host,They all are here, and here they all are lost:Their millions swell to be discern'd in vain,Lost as a billow in th' unbounded main.This echoing voice now rends the yielding air,For judgment, judgment, sons of men, prepare!Earth shakes anew; I hear her groans profound;And hell through all her trembling realms resound.Whoe'er thou art, thou greatest power of earth,Blest with most equal planets at thy birth;Whose valour drew the most successful sword,Most realms united in one common lord;Who, on the day of triumph, saidst, Be thineThe skies, Jehovah, all this world is mine:Dare not to lift thine eye—Alas! my muse,How art thou lost! what numbers canst thou choose?A sudden blush inflames the waving sky,And now the crimson curtains open fly;Lo! far within, and far above all height,[pg 020]Where heaven's great Sov'reign reigns in worlds of light,Whence nature he informs, and with one rayShot from his eye, does all her works survey,Creates, supports, confounds! Where time, and place,Matter, and form, and fortune, life, and grace,Wait humbly at the footstool of their God,And move obedient at his awful nod;Whence he beholds us vagrant emmets crawlAt random on this air-suspended ball(Speck of creation): if he pour one breath,The bubble breaks, and 'tis eternal death.Thence issuing I behold (but mortal sightSustains not such a rushing sea of light!)I see, on an empyreal flying throneSublimely rais'd, heaven's everlasting Son;Crown'd with that majesty which form'd the world,And the grand rebel flaming downward hurl'd.Virtue, dominion, praise, omnipotence,Support the train of their triumphant prince.A zone, beyond the thought of angels bright,Around him, like the zodiac, winds its light.Night shades the solemn arches of his brows,And in his cheek the purple morning glows.Where'er serene, he turns propitious eyes,Or we expect, or find, a paradise:But if resentment reddens their mild beams,The Eden kindles, and the world's in flames.[pg 021]On one hand, knowledge shines in purest light;On one, the sword of justice fiercely bright.Now bend the knee in sport, present the reed;Now tell the scourg'd impostor he shall bleed!Thus glorious thro' the courts of heav'n, the sourceOf life and death eternal bends his course;Loud thunders round him roll, and lightnings play;Th' angelic host is rang'd in bright array:Some touch the string, some strike the sounding shell,And mingling voices in rich concert swell;Voices seraphic; blest with such a strain,Could Satan hear, he were a god again.Triumphant King of Glory! Soul of bliss!What a stupendous turn of fate is this!O! whither art thou rais'd above the scornAnd indigence of him in Bethlem born;A needless, helpless, unaccounted guest,And but a second to the fodder'd beast!How chang'd from him, who, meekly prostrate laid,Vouchsaf'd to wash the feet himself had made!From him who was betray'd, forsook, denied,Wept, languish'd, pray'd, bled, thirsted, groan'd, and died;Hung pierc'd and bare, insulted by the foe,All heaven in tears above, earth unconcern'd below!And was't enough to bid the sun retire?Why did not nature at thy groan expire?[pg 022]I see, I hear, I feel, the pangs divine;The world is vanish'd,—I am wholly thine.Mistaken Caiaphas! Ah! which blasphem'd;Thou, or thy pris'ner? which shall be condemn'd?Well might'st thou rend thy garments, well exclaim;Deep are the horrors of eternal flame!But God is good! 'Tis wondrous all! Ev'n heThou gav'st to death, shame, torture, died for thee.Now the descending triumph stops its flightFrom earth full twice a planetary height.There all the clouds condens'd, two columns raiseDistinct with orient veins, and golden blaze.One fix'd on earth, and one in sea, and roundIts ample foot the swelling billows sound.These an immeasurable arch support,The grand tribunal of this awful court.Sheets of bright azure, from the purest sky,Stream from the crystal arch, and round the columns fly.Death, wrapt in chains, low at the basis lies,And on the point of his own arrow dies.Here high enthron'd th' eternal Judge is plac'd,With all the grandeur of his godhead grac'd;Stars on his robes in beauteous order meet,And the sun burns beneath his awful feet.Now an archangel eminently bright,From off his silver staff of wondrous height,Unfurls the Christian flag, which waving flies,And shuts and opens more than half the skies:[pg 023]The cross so strong a red, it sheds a stain,Where'er it floats, on earth, and air, and main;Flushes the hill, and sets on fire the wood,And turns the deep-dy'd ocean, into blood.Oh formidable glory! dreadful bright!Refulgent torture to the guilty sight.Ah turn, unwary muse, nor dare revealWhat horrid thoughts with the polluted dwell.Say not, (to make the sun shrink in his beam,)Dare not affirm, they wish it all a dream;With, or their souls may with their limbs decay,Or God be spoil'd of his eternal sway.But rather, if thou know'st the means, unfoldHow they with transport might the scene behold.Ah how! but by repentance, by a mindQuick, and severe its own offence to find?By tears, and groans, and never-ceasing care,And all the pious violence of prayer?Thus then, with fervency till now unknown,I cast my heart before th' eternal throne,In this great temple, which the skies surround,For homage to its lord, a narrow bound."O thou! whose balance does the mountains weigh,Whose will the wild tumultuous seas obey,Whose breath can turn these watery worlds to flame,That flame to tempest, and that tempest tame;Earth's meanest son, all trembling, prostrate falls,And on the boundless of thy goodness calls."Oh! give the winds all past offence to sweep,[pg 024]To scatter wide, or bury in the deep:Thy power, my weakness, may I ever see,And wholly dedicate my soul to thee:Reign o'er my will; my passions ebb and flowAt thy command, nor human motive know!If anger boil, let anger be my praise,And sin the graceful indignation raise.My love be warm to succour the distress'd,And lift the burden from the soul oppress'd.Oh may my understanding ever readThis glorious volume, which thy wisdom made!Who decks the maiden spring with flow'ry pride?Who calls forth summer, like a sparkling bride?Who joys the mother autumn's bed to crown?And bids old winter lay her honours down?Not the great Ottoman, or greater Czar,Not Europe's arbitress of peace and war.May sea and land, and earth and heaven be join'dTo bring th' eternal author to my mind!When oceans roar, or awful thunders roll,May thoughts of thy dread vengeance shake my soul!When earth's in bloom, or planets proudly shine,Adore, my heart, the majesty divine!"Thro' every scene of life, or peace, or war,Plenty, or want, thy glory be my care!Shine we in arms? or sing beneath our vine?Thine is the vintage, and the conquest thine:Thy pleasure points the shaft, and bends the bow;The cluster blasts, or bids it brightly glow:[pg 025]'Tis thou that lead'st our powerful armies forth,And giv'st great Anne thy sceptre o'er the north."Grant I may ever, at the morning ray,Open with prayer the consecrated day;Tune thy great praise, and bid my soul arise,And with the mounting sun ascend the skies:As that advances, let my zeal improve,And glow with ardour of consummate love;Nor cease at eve, but with the setting sunMy endless worship shall be still begun."And, oh! permit the gloom of solemn nightTo sacred thought may forcibly invite.When this world's shut, and awful planets rise,Call on our minds, and raise them to the skies;Compose our souls with a less dazzling sight,And show all nature in a milder light;How every boisterous thought in calm subsides!How the smooth'd spirit into goodness glides!O how divine! to tread the milky way,To the bright palace of the lord of day;His court admire, or for his favour sue,Or leagues of friendship with his saints renew;Pleas'd to look down, and see the world asleep,While I long vigils to its founder keep!"Canst thou not shake the centre? Oh! control,Subdue by force, the rebel in my soul:Thou, who canst still the raging of the flood,Restrain the various tumults of my blood;Teach me, with equal firmness, to sustainAlluring pleasure, and assaulting pain.[pg 026]O may I pant for thee in each desire!And with strong faith foment the holy fire!Stretch out my soul in hope, and grasp the prize,Which in eternity's deep bosom lies!At the great day of recompense behold,Devoid of fear, the fatal book unfold!Then wafted upward to the blissful seat,From age to age, my grateful song repeat;My light, my life, my God, my Saviour see,And rival angels in the praise of thee."
Έκ γαιη έλπιξομεν ές Φάος έλθειν. Λειψαν άποιχομένων όπισω δέ Θεοι τελέθονται.Phocyl.
Έκ γαιη έλπιξομεν ές Φάος έλθειν. Λειψαν άποιχομένων όπισω δέ Θεοι τελέθονται.
Phocyl.
——We hope that the departed will rise again from the dust: after which, like the gods, they will be immortal.
——We hope that the departed will rise again from the dust: after which, like the gods, they will be immortal.
Now man awakes, and from his silent bed,Where he has slept for ages, lifts his head;Shakes off the slumber of ten thousand years,And on the borders of new worlds appears.Whate'er the bold, the rash, adventure cost,In wide eternity I dare be lost.The muse is wont in narrow bounds to sing,To teach the swain, or celebrate the king.I grasp the whole, no more to parts confin'd,I lift my voice, and sing to humankind:I sing to men and angels; angels join,While such the theme, their sacred songs with mine.Again the trumpet's intermitted soundRolls the wide circuit of creation round,A universal concourse to prepare[pg 013]Of all that ever breath'd the vital air:In some wide field, which active whirlwinds sweep,Drive cities, forests, mountains, to the deep,To smooth and lengthen out th' unbounded space,And spread an area for all human race.Now monuments prove faithful to their trust,And render back their long committed dust.Now charnels rattle; scatter'd limbs, and allThe various bones, obsequious to the call,Self-mov'd, advance; the neck perhaps to meetThe distant head; the distant legs the feet.Dreadful to view, see thro' the dusky skyFragments of bodies in confusion fly,To distant regions journeying, there to claimDeserted members, and complete the frame.When the world bow'd to Rome's almighty sword,Rome bow'd to Pompey, and confess'd her lord.Yet one day lost, this deity belowBecame the scorn and pity of his foe.His blood a traitor's sacrifice was made,And smok'd indignant on a ruffian's blade.No trumpet's sound, no gasping army's yell,Bid, with due horror, his great soul farewell.Obscure his fall! all welt'ring in his gore,His trunk was cast to perish on the shore!While Julius frown'd the bloody monster dead,Who brought the world in his great rival's head.This sever'd head and trunk shall join once more,Tho' realms now rise between, and oceans roar.The trumpet's sound each fragrant mote shall hear,[pg 014]Or fix'd in earth, or if afloat in air,Obey the signal wafted in the wind,And not one sleeping atom lag behind.So swarming bees, that on a summer's dayIn airy rings, and wild meanders play,Charm'd with the brazen sound, their wand'rings end,And, gently circling, on a bough descend.The body thus renew'd, the conscious soul,Which has perhaps been flutt'ring near the pole,Or midst the burning planets wond'ring stray'd,Or hover'd o'er where her pale corpse was laid;Or rather coasted on her final state,And fear'd or wish'd for her appointed fate:This soul, returning with a constant flame,Now weds for ever her immortal frame.Life, which ran down before, so high is wound,The springs maintain an everlasting round.Thus a frail model of the work design'dFirst takes a copy of the builder's mind,Before the structure firm with lasting oak,And marble bowels of the solid rock,Turns the strong arch, and bids the columns rise,And bear the lofty palace to the skies;The wrongs of time enabled to surpass,With bars of adamant, and ribs of brass.That ancient, sacred, and illustrious dome,2Where soon or late fair Albion's heroes come,[pg 015]From camps, and courts, tho' great, or wise, or just,To feed the worm, and moulder into dust;That solemn mansion of the royal dead,Where passing slaves o'er sleeping monarchs tread,Now populous o'erflows: a num'rous raceOf rising kings fill all th' extended space:A life well spent, not the victorious sword,Awards the crown, and styles the greater lord.Nor monuments alone, and burial-earth,Labours with man to this his second birth;But where gay palaces in pomp arise,And gilded theatres invade the skies,Nations shall wake, whose unrespected bonesSupport the pride of their luxurious sons.The most magnificent and costly domeIs but an upper chamber to the tomb.No spot on earth but has supplied a grave,And human skulls the spacious ocean pave.All's full of man; and at this dreadful turn,The swarm shall issue, and the hive shall burn.Not all at once, nor in like manner, rise:Some lift with pain their slow, unwilling eyes:Shrink backward from the terror of the light,And bless the grave, and call for lasting night.Others, whose long-attempted virtue stoodFix'd as a rock, and broke the rushing flood,Whose firm resolve, nor beauty could melt down,Nor raging tyrants from their posture frown;[pg 016]Such, in this day of horrors, shall be seenTo face the thunders with a godlike mien;The planets drop, their thoughts are fixt above;The centre shakes, their hearts disdain to move;An earth dissolving, and a heaven thrown wide,A yawning gulf, and fiends on every side,Serene they view, impatient of delay,And bless the dawn of everlasting day.Here, greatness prostrate falls; there, strength gives place;Here, lazars smile; there, beauty hides her face.Christians, and Jews, and Turks, and Pagans stand,A blended throng, one undistinguish'd band.Some who, perhaps, by mutual wounds expir'd,With zeal for their distinct persuasions fir'd,In mutual friendship their long slumber break,And hand in hand their Saviour's love partake.But none are flush'd with brighter joy, or, warmWith juster confidence, enjoy the storm,Than those, whose pious bounties, unconfin'd,Have made them public fathers of mankind.In that illustrious rank, what shining lightWith such distinguish'd glory fills my sight?Bend down, my grateful muse, that homage show,Which to such worthies thou art proud to owe.Wickham! Fox! Chichley! hail, illustrious names,3Who to far distant times dispense your beams;[pg 017]Beneath your shades, and near your crystal springs,I first presum'd to touch the trembling strings.All hail, thrice honour'd! 'Twas your great renownTo bless a people, and oblige a crown.And now you rise, eternally to shine,Eternally to drink the rays divine.Indulgent God! Oh how shall mortal raiseHis soul to due returns of grateful praise,For bounty so profuse to humankind,Thy wondrous gift of an eternal mind?Shall I, who, some few years ago, was lessThan worm, or mite, or shadow can express,Was nothing; shall I live, when every fireAnd every star shall languish and expire?When earth's no more, shall I survive above,And thro' the radiant files of angels move?Or, as before the throne of God I stand,See new worlds rolling from his spacious hand,Where our adventures shall perhaps be taught,As we now tell how Michael sung or fought?All that has being in full concert join,And celebrate the depths of love divine!But oh! before this blissful state, beforeTh' aspiring soul this wondrous height can soar,The Judge, descending, thunders from afar,And all mankind is summon'd to the bar.This mighty scene I next presume to draw:Attend, great Anna, with religious awe.Expect not here the known successful artsTo win attention, and command our hearts:[pg 018]Fiction, be far away; let no machineDescending here, no fabled god, be seen;Behold the God of gods indeed descend,And worlds unnumber'd his approach attend!Lo! the wide theatre, whose ample spaceMust entertain the whole of human race,At heaven's all-powerful edict is prepar'd,And fenc'd around with an immortal guard.Tribes, provinces, dominions, worlds, o'erflowThe mighty plain, and deluge all below:And every age, and nation, pours along,Nimrod and Bourbon mingle in the throng:Adam salutes his youngest son; no sign,Of all those ages, which their births disjoin.How empty learning, and how vain is art,But as it mends the life, and guides the heart!What volumes have been swell'd, what time been spent,To fix a hero's birth-day, or descent!What joy must it now yield, what rapture raise,To see the glorious race of ancient days!To greet those worthies who perhaps have stoodIllustrious on record before the flood!Alas! a nearer care your soul demands,Cæsar unnoted in your presence stands.How vast the concourse! not in number moreThe waves that break on the resounding shore,The leaves that tremble in the shady grove,The lamps that gild the spangled vaults above:Those overwhelming armies, whose command[pg 019]Said to one empire, fall; another, stand:Whose rear lay wrapt in night, while breaking dawnRous'd the broad front, and call'd the battle on:Great Xerxes' world in arms, proud Cannæ's field,Where Carthage taught victorious Rome to yield,(Another blow had broke the fates' decree,And earth had wanted her fourth monarchy,)Immortal Blenheim, fam'd Ramillia's host,They all are here, and here they all are lost:Their millions swell to be discern'd in vain,Lost as a billow in th' unbounded main.This echoing voice now rends the yielding air,For judgment, judgment, sons of men, prepare!Earth shakes anew; I hear her groans profound;And hell through all her trembling realms resound.Whoe'er thou art, thou greatest power of earth,Blest with most equal planets at thy birth;Whose valour drew the most successful sword,Most realms united in one common lord;Who, on the day of triumph, saidst, Be thineThe skies, Jehovah, all this world is mine:Dare not to lift thine eye—Alas! my muse,How art thou lost! what numbers canst thou choose?A sudden blush inflames the waving sky,And now the crimson curtains open fly;Lo! far within, and far above all height,[pg 020]Where heaven's great Sov'reign reigns in worlds of light,Whence nature he informs, and with one rayShot from his eye, does all her works survey,Creates, supports, confounds! Where time, and place,Matter, and form, and fortune, life, and grace,Wait humbly at the footstool of their God,And move obedient at his awful nod;Whence he beholds us vagrant emmets crawlAt random on this air-suspended ball(Speck of creation): if he pour one breath,The bubble breaks, and 'tis eternal death.Thence issuing I behold (but mortal sightSustains not such a rushing sea of light!)I see, on an empyreal flying throneSublimely rais'd, heaven's everlasting Son;Crown'd with that majesty which form'd the world,And the grand rebel flaming downward hurl'd.Virtue, dominion, praise, omnipotence,Support the train of their triumphant prince.A zone, beyond the thought of angels bright,Around him, like the zodiac, winds its light.Night shades the solemn arches of his brows,And in his cheek the purple morning glows.Where'er serene, he turns propitious eyes,Or we expect, or find, a paradise:But if resentment reddens their mild beams,The Eden kindles, and the world's in flames.[pg 021]On one hand, knowledge shines in purest light;On one, the sword of justice fiercely bright.Now bend the knee in sport, present the reed;Now tell the scourg'd impostor he shall bleed!Thus glorious thro' the courts of heav'n, the sourceOf life and death eternal bends his course;Loud thunders round him roll, and lightnings play;Th' angelic host is rang'd in bright array:Some touch the string, some strike the sounding shell,And mingling voices in rich concert swell;Voices seraphic; blest with such a strain,Could Satan hear, he were a god again.Triumphant King of Glory! Soul of bliss!What a stupendous turn of fate is this!O! whither art thou rais'd above the scornAnd indigence of him in Bethlem born;A needless, helpless, unaccounted guest,And but a second to the fodder'd beast!How chang'd from him, who, meekly prostrate laid,Vouchsaf'd to wash the feet himself had made!From him who was betray'd, forsook, denied,Wept, languish'd, pray'd, bled, thirsted, groan'd, and died;Hung pierc'd and bare, insulted by the foe,All heaven in tears above, earth unconcern'd below!And was't enough to bid the sun retire?Why did not nature at thy groan expire?[pg 022]I see, I hear, I feel, the pangs divine;The world is vanish'd,—I am wholly thine.Mistaken Caiaphas! Ah! which blasphem'd;Thou, or thy pris'ner? which shall be condemn'd?Well might'st thou rend thy garments, well exclaim;Deep are the horrors of eternal flame!But God is good! 'Tis wondrous all! Ev'n heThou gav'st to death, shame, torture, died for thee.Now the descending triumph stops its flightFrom earth full twice a planetary height.There all the clouds condens'd, two columns raiseDistinct with orient veins, and golden blaze.One fix'd on earth, and one in sea, and roundIts ample foot the swelling billows sound.These an immeasurable arch support,The grand tribunal of this awful court.Sheets of bright azure, from the purest sky,Stream from the crystal arch, and round the columns fly.Death, wrapt in chains, low at the basis lies,And on the point of his own arrow dies.Here high enthron'd th' eternal Judge is plac'd,With all the grandeur of his godhead grac'd;Stars on his robes in beauteous order meet,And the sun burns beneath his awful feet.Now an archangel eminently bright,From off his silver staff of wondrous height,Unfurls the Christian flag, which waving flies,And shuts and opens more than half the skies:[pg 023]The cross so strong a red, it sheds a stain,Where'er it floats, on earth, and air, and main;Flushes the hill, and sets on fire the wood,And turns the deep-dy'd ocean, into blood.Oh formidable glory! dreadful bright!Refulgent torture to the guilty sight.Ah turn, unwary muse, nor dare revealWhat horrid thoughts with the polluted dwell.Say not, (to make the sun shrink in his beam,)Dare not affirm, they wish it all a dream;With, or their souls may with their limbs decay,Or God be spoil'd of his eternal sway.But rather, if thou know'st the means, unfoldHow they with transport might the scene behold.Ah how! but by repentance, by a mindQuick, and severe its own offence to find?By tears, and groans, and never-ceasing care,And all the pious violence of prayer?Thus then, with fervency till now unknown,I cast my heart before th' eternal throne,In this great temple, which the skies surround,For homage to its lord, a narrow bound."O thou! whose balance does the mountains weigh,Whose will the wild tumultuous seas obey,Whose breath can turn these watery worlds to flame,That flame to tempest, and that tempest tame;Earth's meanest son, all trembling, prostrate falls,And on the boundless of thy goodness calls."Oh! give the winds all past offence to sweep,[pg 024]To scatter wide, or bury in the deep:Thy power, my weakness, may I ever see,And wholly dedicate my soul to thee:Reign o'er my will; my passions ebb and flowAt thy command, nor human motive know!If anger boil, let anger be my praise,And sin the graceful indignation raise.My love be warm to succour the distress'd,And lift the burden from the soul oppress'd.Oh may my understanding ever readThis glorious volume, which thy wisdom made!Who decks the maiden spring with flow'ry pride?Who calls forth summer, like a sparkling bride?Who joys the mother autumn's bed to crown?And bids old winter lay her honours down?Not the great Ottoman, or greater Czar,Not Europe's arbitress of peace and war.May sea and land, and earth and heaven be join'dTo bring th' eternal author to my mind!When oceans roar, or awful thunders roll,May thoughts of thy dread vengeance shake my soul!When earth's in bloom, or planets proudly shine,Adore, my heart, the majesty divine!"Thro' every scene of life, or peace, or war,Plenty, or want, thy glory be my care!Shine we in arms? or sing beneath our vine?Thine is the vintage, and the conquest thine:Thy pleasure points the shaft, and bends the bow;The cluster blasts, or bids it brightly glow:[pg 025]'Tis thou that lead'st our powerful armies forth,And giv'st great Anne thy sceptre o'er the north."Grant I may ever, at the morning ray,Open with prayer the consecrated day;Tune thy great praise, and bid my soul arise,And with the mounting sun ascend the skies:As that advances, let my zeal improve,And glow with ardour of consummate love;Nor cease at eve, but with the setting sunMy endless worship shall be still begun."And, oh! permit the gloom of solemn nightTo sacred thought may forcibly invite.When this world's shut, and awful planets rise,Call on our minds, and raise them to the skies;Compose our souls with a less dazzling sight,And show all nature in a milder light;How every boisterous thought in calm subsides!How the smooth'd spirit into goodness glides!O how divine! to tread the milky way,To the bright palace of the lord of day;His court admire, or for his favour sue,Or leagues of friendship with his saints renew;Pleas'd to look down, and see the world asleep,While I long vigils to its founder keep!"Canst thou not shake the centre? Oh! control,Subdue by force, the rebel in my soul:Thou, who canst still the raging of the flood,Restrain the various tumults of my blood;Teach me, with equal firmness, to sustainAlluring pleasure, and assaulting pain.[pg 026]O may I pant for thee in each desire!And with strong faith foment the holy fire!Stretch out my soul in hope, and grasp the prize,Which in eternity's deep bosom lies!At the great day of recompense behold,Devoid of fear, the fatal book unfold!Then wafted upward to the blissful seat,From age to age, my grateful song repeat;My light, my life, my God, my Saviour see,And rival angels in the praise of thee."
Now man awakes, and from his silent bed,
Where he has slept for ages, lifts his head;
Shakes off the slumber of ten thousand years,
And on the borders of new worlds appears.
Whate'er the bold, the rash, adventure cost,
In wide eternity I dare be lost.
The muse is wont in narrow bounds to sing,
To teach the swain, or celebrate the king.
I grasp the whole, no more to parts confin'd,
I lift my voice, and sing to humankind:
I sing to men and angels; angels join,
While such the theme, their sacred songs with mine.
Again the trumpet's intermitted sound
Rolls the wide circuit of creation round,
A universal concourse to prepare
Of all that ever breath'd the vital air:
In some wide field, which active whirlwinds sweep,
Drive cities, forests, mountains, to the deep,
To smooth and lengthen out th' unbounded space,
And spread an area for all human race.
Now monuments prove faithful to their trust,
And render back their long committed dust.
Now charnels rattle; scatter'd limbs, and all
The various bones, obsequious to the call,
Self-mov'd, advance; the neck perhaps to meet
The distant head; the distant legs the feet.
Dreadful to view, see thro' the dusky sky
Fragments of bodies in confusion fly,
To distant regions journeying, there to claim
Deserted members, and complete the frame.
When the world bow'd to Rome's almighty sword,
Rome bow'd to Pompey, and confess'd her lord.
Yet one day lost, this deity below
Became the scorn and pity of his foe.
His blood a traitor's sacrifice was made,
And smok'd indignant on a ruffian's blade.
No trumpet's sound, no gasping army's yell,
Bid, with due horror, his great soul farewell.
Obscure his fall! all welt'ring in his gore,
His trunk was cast to perish on the shore!
While Julius frown'd the bloody monster dead,
Who brought the world in his great rival's head.
This sever'd head and trunk shall join once more,
Tho' realms now rise between, and oceans roar.
The trumpet's sound each fragrant mote shall hear,
Or fix'd in earth, or if afloat in air,
Obey the signal wafted in the wind,
And not one sleeping atom lag behind.
So swarming bees, that on a summer's day
In airy rings, and wild meanders play,
Charm'd with the brazen sound, their wand'rings end,
And, gently circling, on a bough descend.
The body thus renew'd, the conscious soul,
Which has perhaps been flutt'ring near the pole,
Or midst the burning planets wond'ring stray'd,
Or hover'd o'er where her pale corpse was laid;
Or rather coasted on her final state,
And fear'd or wish'd for her appointed fate:
This soul, returning with a constant flame,
Now weds for ever her immortal frame.
Life, which ran down before, so high is wound,
The springs maintain an everlasting round.
Thus a frail model of the work design'd
First takes a copy of the builder's mind,
Before the structure firm with lasting oak,
And marble bowels of the solid rock,
Turns the strong arch, and bids the columns rise,
And bear the lofty palace to the skies;
The wrongs of time enabled to surpass,
With bars of adamant, and ribs of brass.
That ancient, sacred, and illustrious dome,2
Where soon or late fair Albion's heroes come,
From camps, and courts, tho' great, or wise, or just,
To feed the worm, and moulder into dust;
That solemn mansion of the royal dead,
Where passing slaves o'er sleeping monarchs tread,
Now populous o'erflows: a num'rous race
Of rising kings fill all th' extended space:
A life well spent, not the victorious sword,
Awards the crown, and styles the greater lord.
Nor monuments alone, and burial-earth,
Labours with man to this his second birth;
But where gay palaces in pomp arise,
And gilded theatres invade the skies,
Nations shall wake, whose unrespected bones
Support the pride of their luxurious sons.
The most magnificent and costly dome
Is but an upper chamber to the tomb.
No spot on earth but has supplied a grave,
And human skulls the spacious ocean pave.
All's full of man; and at this dreadful turn,
The swarm shall issue, and the hive shall burn.
Not all at once, nor in like manner, rise:
Some lift with pain their slow, unwilling eyes:
Shrink backward from the terror of the light,
And bless the grave, and call for lasting night.
Others, whose long-attempted virtue stood
Fix'd as a rock, and broke the rushing flood,
Whose firm resolve, nor beauty could melt down,
Nor raging tyrants from their posture frown;
Such, in this day of horrors, shall be seen
To face the thunders with a godlike mien;
The planets drop, their thoughts are fixt above;
The centre shakes, their hearts disdain to move;
An earth dissolving, and a heaven thrown wide,
A yawning gulf, and fiends on every side,
Serene they view, impatient of delay,
And bless the dawn of everlasting day.
Here, greatness prostrate falls; there, strength gives place;
Here, lazars smile; there, beauty hides her face.
Christians, and Jews, and Turks, and Pagans stand,
A blended throng, one undistinguish'd band.
Some who, perhaps, by mutual wounds expir'd,
With zeal for their distinct persuasions fir'd,
In mutual friendship their long slumber break,
And hand in hand their Saviour's love partake.
But none are flush'd with brighter joy, or, warm
With juster confidence, enjoy the storm,
Than those, whose pious bounties, unconfin'd,
Have made them public fathers of mankind.
In that illustrious rank, what shining light
With such distinguish'd glory fills my sight?
Bend down, my grateful muse, that homage show,
Which to such worthies thou art proud to owe.
Wickham! Fox! Chichley! hail, illustrious names,3
Who to far distant times dispense your beams;
Beneath your shades, and near your crystal springs,
I first presum'd to touch the trembling strings.
All hail, thrice honour'd! 'Twas your great renown
To bless a people, and oblige a crown.
And now you rise, eternally to shine,
Eternally to drink the rays divine.
Indulgent God! Oh how shall mortal raise
His soul to due returns of grateful praise,
For bounty so profuse to humankind,
Thy wondrous gift of an eternal mind?
Shall I, who, some few years ago, was less
Than worm, or mite, or shadow can express,
Was nothing; shall I live, when every fire
And every star shall languish and expire?
When earth's no more, shall I survive above,
And thro' the radiant files of angels move?
Or, as before the throne of God I stand,
See new worlds rolling from his spacious hand,
Where our adventures shall perhaps be taught,
As we now tell how Michael sung or fought?
All that has being in full concert join,
And celebrate the depths of love divine!
But oh! before this blissful state, before
Th' aspiring soul this wondrous height can soar,
The Judge, descending, thunders from afar,
And all mankind is summon'd to the bar.
This mighty scene I next presume to draw:
Attend, great Anna, with religious awe.
Expect not here the known successful arts
To win attention, and command our hearts:
Fiction, be far away; let no machine
Descending here, no fabled god, be seen;
Behold the God of gods indeed descend,
And worlds unnumber'd his approach attend!
Lo! the wide theatre, whose ample space
Must entertain the whole of human race,
At heaven's all-powerful edict is prepar'd,
And fenc'd around with an immortal guard.
Tribes, provinces, dominions, worlds, o'erflow
The mighty plain, and deluge all below:
And every age, and nation, pours along,
Nimrod and Bourbon mingle in the throng:
Adam salutes his youngest son; no sign,
Of all those ages, which their births disjoin.
How empty learning, and how vain is art,
But as it mends the life, and guides the heart!
What volumes have been swell'd, what time been spent,
To fix a hero's birth-day, or descent!
What joy must it now yield, what rapture raise,
To see the glorious race of ancient days!
To greet those worthies who perhaps have stood
Illustrious on record before the flood!
Alas! a nearer care your soul demands,
Cæsar unnoted in your presence stands.
How vast the concourse! not in number more
The waves that break on the resounding shore,
The leaves that tremble in the shady grove,
The lamps that gild the spangled vaults above:
Those overwhelming armies, whose command
Said to one empire, fall; another, stand:
Whose rear lay wrapt in night, while breaking dawn
Rous'd the broad front, and call'd the battle on:
Great Xerxes' world in arms, proud Cannæ's field,
Where Carthage taught victorious Rome to yield,
(Another blow had broke the fates' decree,
And earth had wanted her fourth monarchy,)
Immortal Blenheim, fam'd Ramillia's host,
They all are here, and here they all are lost:
Their millions swell to be discern'd in vain,
Lost as a billow in th' unbounded main.
This echoing voice now rends the yielding air,
For judgment, judgment, sons of men, prepare!
Earth shakes anew; I hear her groans profound;
And hell through all her trembling realms resound.
Whoe'er thou art, thou greatest power of earth,
Blest with most equal planets at thy birth;
Whose valour drew the most successful sword,
Most realms united in one common lord;
Who, on the day of triumph, saidst, Be thine
The skies, Jehovah, all this world is mine:
Dare not to lift thine eye—Alas! my muse,
How art thou lost! what numbers canst thou choose?
A sudden blush inflames the waving sky,
And now the crimson curtains open fly;
Lo! far within, and far above all height,
Where heaven's great Sov'reign reigns in worlds of light,
Whence nature he informs, and with one ray
Shot from his eye, does all her works survey,
Creates, supports, confounds! Where time, and place,
Matter, and form, and fortune, life, and grace,
Wait humbly at the footstool of their God,
And move obedient at his awful nod;
Whence he beholds us vagrant emmets crawl
At random on this air-suspended ball
(Speck of creation): if he pour one breath,
The bubble breaks, and 'tis eternal death.
Thence issuing I behold (but mortal sight
Sustains not such a rushing sea of light!)
I see, on an empyreal flying throne
Sublimely rais'd, heaven's everlasting Son;
Crown'd with that majesty which form'd the world,
And the grand rebel flaming downward hurl'd.
Virtue, dominion, praise, omnipotence,
Support the train of their triumphant prince.
A zone, beyond the thought of angels bright,
Around him, like the zodiac, winds its light.
Night shades the solemn arches of his brows,
And in his cheek the purple morning glows.
Where'er serene, he turns propitious eyes,
Or we expect, or find, a paradise:
But if resentment reddens their mild beams,
The Eden kindles, and the world's in flames.
On one hand, knowledge shines in purest light;
On one, the sword of justice fiercely bright.
Now bend the knee in sport, present the reed;
Now tell the scourg'd impostor he shall bleed!
Thus glorious thro' the courts of heav'n, the source
Of life and death eternal bends his course;
Loud thunders round him roll, and lightnings play;
Th' angelic host is rang'd in bright array:
Some touch the string, some strike the sounding shell,
And mingling voices in rich concert swell;
Voices seraphic; blest with such a strain,
Could Satan hear, he were a god again.
Triumphant King of Glory! Soul of bliss!
What a stupendous turn of fate is this!
O! whither art thou rais'd above the scorn
And indigence of him in Bethlem born;
A needless, helpless, unaccounted guest,
And but a second to the fodder'd beast!
How chang'd from him, who, meekly prostrate laid,
Vouchsaf'd to wash the feet himself had made!
From him who was betray'd, forsook, denied,
Wept, languish'd, pray'd, bled, thirsted, groan'd, and died;
Hung pierc'd and bare, insulted by the foe,
All heaven in tears above, earth unconcern'd below!
And was't enough to bid the sun retire?
Why did not nature at thy groan expire?
I see, I hear, I feel, the pangs divine;
The world is vanish'd,—I am wholly thine.
Mistaken Caiaphas! Ah! which blasphem'd;
Thou, or thy pris'ner? which shall be condemn'd?
Well might'st thou rend thy garments, well exclaim;
Deep are the horrors of eternal flame!
But God is good! 'Tis wondrous all! Ev'n he
Thou gav'st to death, shame, torture, died for thee.
Now the descending triumph stops its flight
From earth full twice a planetary height.
There all the clouds condens'd, two columns raise
Distinct with orient veins, and golden blaze.
One fix'd on earth, and one in sea, and round
Its ample foot the swelling billows sound.
These an immeasurable arch support,
The grand tribunal of this awful court.
Sheets of bright azure, from the purest sky,
Stream from the crystal arch, and round the columns fly.
Death, wrapt in chains, low at the basis lies,
And on the point of his own arrow dies.
Here high enthron'd th' eternal Judge is plac'd,
With all the grandeur of his godhead grac'd;
Stars on his robes in beauteous order meet,
And the sun burns beneath his awful feet.
Now an archangel eminently bright,
From off his silver staff of wondrous height,
Unfurls the Christian flag, which waving flies,
And shuts and opens more than half the skies:
The cross so strong a red, it sheds a stain,
Where'er it floats, on earth, and air, and main;
Flushes the hill, and sets on fire the wood,
And turns the deep-dy'd ocean, into blood.
Oh formidable glory! dreadful bright!
Refulgent torture to the guilty sight.
Ah turn, unwary muse, nor dare reveal
What horrid thoughts with the polluted dwell.
Say not, (to make the sun shrink in his beam,)
Dare not affirm, they wish it all a dream;
With, or their souls may with their limbs decay,
Or God be spoil'd of his eternal sway.
But rather, if thou know'st the means, unfold
How they with transport might the scene behold.
Ah how! but by repentance, by a mind
Quick, and severe its own offence to find?
By tears, and groans, and never-ceasing care,
And all the pious violence of prayer?
Thus then, with fervency till now unknown,
I cast my heart before th' eternal throne,
In this great temple, which the skies surround,
For homage to its lord, a narrow bound.
"O thou! whose balance does the mountains weigh,
Whose will the wild tumultuous seas obey,
Whose breath can turn these watery worlds to flame,
That flame to tempest, and that tempest tame;
Earth's meanest son, all trembling, prostrate falls,
And on the boundless of thy goodness calls.
"Oh! give the winds all past offence to sweep,
To scatter wide, or bury in the deep:
Thy power, my weakness, may I ever see,
And wholly dedicate my soul to thee:
Reign o'er my will; my passions ebb and flow
At thy command, nor human motive know!
If anger boil, let anger be my praise,
And sin the graceful indignation raise.
My love be warm to succour the distress'd,
And lift the burden from the soul oppress'd.
Oh may my understanding ever read
This glorious volume, which thy wisdom made!
Who decks the maiden spring with flow'ry pride?
Who calls forth summer, like a sparkling bride?
Who joys the mother autumn's bed to crown?
And bids old winter lay her honours down?
Not the great Ottoman, or greater Czar,
Not Europe's arbitress of peace and war.
May sea and land, and earth and heaven be join'd
To bring th' eternal author to my mind!
When oceans roar, or awful thunders roll,
May thoughts of thy dread vengeance shake my soul!
When earth's in bloom, or planets proudly shine,
Adore, my heart, the majesty divine!
"Thro' every scene of life, or peace, or war,
Plenty, or want, thy glory be my care!
Shine we in arms? or sing beneath our vine?
Thine is the vintage, and the conquest thine:
Thy pleasure points the shaft, and bends the bow;
The cluster blasts, or bids it brightly glow:
'Tis thou that lead'st our powerful armies forth,
And giv'st great Anne thy sceptre o'er the north.
"Grant I may ever, at the morning ray,
Open with prayer the consecrated day;
Tune thy great praise, and bid my soul arise,
And with the mounting sun ascend the skies:
As that advances, let my zeal improve,
And glow with ardour of consummate love;
Nor cease at eve, but with the setting sun
My endless worship shall be still begun.
"And, oh! permit the gloom of solemn night
To sacred thought may forcibly invite.
When this world's shut, and awful planets rise,
Call on our minds, and raise them to the skies;
Compose our souls with a less dazzling sight,
And show all nature in a milder light;
How every boisterous thought in calm subsides!
How the smooth'd spirit into goodness glides!
O how divine! to tread the milky way,
To the bright palace of the lord of day;
His court admire, or for his favour sue,
Or leagues of friendship with his saints renew;
Pleas'd to look down, and see the world asleep,
While I long vigils to its founder keep!
"Canst thou not shake the centre? Oh! control,
Subdue by force, the rebel in my soul:
Thou, who canst still the raging of the flood,
Restrain the various tumults of my blood;
Teach me, with equal firmness, to sustain
Alluring pleasure, and assaulting pain.
O may I pant for thee in each desire!
And with strong faith foment the holy fire!
Stretch out my soul in hope, and grasp the prize,
Which in eternity's deep bosom lies!
At the great day of recompense behold,
Devoid of fear, the fatal book unfold!
Then wafted upward to the blissful seat,
From age to age, my grateful song repeat;
My light, my life, my God, my Saviour see,
And rival angels in the praise of thee."