I.
LORD Thou knowest all Things, Thou knowest that I love Thee. Joh. xxi. 17.
MY GOD! the Wretch that does not love Thy Name
To Life and Being forfeits all his Claim,
And may he sink to nothing whence he came.
Or let the Yawn of the dire Mouth of Hell,
Receive him with his Fellow-Fiends to dwell.
*
Oh! if my Heart does not to Thee aspire,
If ought with equal Fervour I desire,
I'm self-condemn'd, and doom myself to Fire.
Let not my guilty Breath profane Thy Air,
Nor groaning Earth the monstrous Burden bear.
Let Clouds with Vengeance big, burst o'er my Head,
And Vollies of red Thunder strike me dead.
[Page 2] The Sun convert his gentle Rays to Flames,
And blast the Miscreant with his vengeful Beams.
The whole Creation rise in Arms for Thee,
To vindicate the Rights of Thy Divinity.
Vile Wretch! that dare refuse to love a GOD,
Who form'd me Man out of my native Clod;
Whose Breath the Faculty of Love inspir'd,
And with the heav'nly Spark my Bosom sir'd:
Whose uncreated Beauties charm the Sight
Of gazing Angels, in the Realms of Light:
Whose Glories, faintly copy'd, round me shine,
And mildly beam thro' all these Works of Thine,
Proclaiming Thee their Origin Divine:
Whose Grace, diffus'd around in thousand Rills,
Arrays a thousand Worlds in chearful Smiles:
Thou too, when Man to dreadful Ruin fell,
Helpless, unpity'd on the Brink of Hell;
When Justice frowning did the Prey demand,
And None could rescue from his vengeful Hand;
Thou, touch'd with Pity, did'st avert his Doom,
And gav'st Thy Son a Victim in his Room.
Nail'd to the Cross the bleeding Saviour hangs,
And courts my Love with Groans and dying Pangs.
Oh! I must love!—Or can the Groans and Blood
Of an incarnate Godhead be withstood!
Yet ah! in some dark Hours I hardly know
Whether I love my gracious GOD or no.
Gloomy Suspicions, twinging Jealousies,
And anxious Doubts in all their Horrors rise.
I hear the Whisperings of misgiving Fear,
"Thy Love is feign'd, thy Ardour insincere"
Too true! too true! my trembling Soul replies,
Else whence so often could this Languor rise?
[Page 3]
Ah! these unruly Passions would not rove
Thus wildly, were they fix'd with sacred Love.
Nor would the Flame of pure Devotion die
Thus frequent, and my Pow'rs so stupid lie.
And yet methinks in some bright Moments too,
I feel the heav'nly Flame divinely glow.
To Thee so ardent all my Passions move,
That if I love Thee not, I know not what I love.
If I'm deceiv'd in this with empty Shew,
Then my Existence is uncertain too:
An universal Sceptic I commence,
Beneath the Glare of brightest Evidence,
In spite of Reason, and in spite of Sense.
Oh! if I love Thee not, as Fears suggest,
Why am I, in Thine Absence, thus distrest?
Whence this strange Tumult, this uneasy Pain,
'Til Thy sweet Smiles compose my Soul again?
Whence these wild Pantings of immense Desire?
Why should poor breathing Dust so high aspire?
I see my busy Fellow-Worms pursue
Created Bliss, and nothing nobler view;
Content they waste their Life, estrang'd from Thee,
In undisturb'd, serene Stupidity.
And why, like them, can't I contented play,
And eat, and drink, and sleep my Life away?
Whence this immense Ambition in my Mind,
That scorns all Joys but those of heavenly Kind?
Why should a Worm, an animated Clod;
Disdain all Bliss beneath a boundless GOD?
Oh! what but the attractive Force of Love,
Could raise my groveling Spirit thus above?
Say, Great OMNISCIENT! (for Thou know'st my Heart)
Can Nature ease my Soul, if Thou depart?
[Page 4] Can Riches, Pleasures, Honours, Empires, Crowns,
Or Friends, content me, when I feel Thy Frowns?
No! all Creation dwindles to a Toy,
And Heav'n itself could not excite my Joy.
The chearful Sun glares hateful to my Eyes,
And every blooming Beauty round me dies.
Thou great INVISIBLE! Thou dear UNKNOWN!
Why thus to Thee should my soft Passions run?
Thus thro' the Objects of my Senses break,
And Charms unknown and hidden Glories seek?
Deep in Recesses of approachless Light
Thou dwellest, far beyond my feeble Sight;
Yet drawn by some strange mystic Influence,
I love Thee more than all that strikes my Sense;
Than all my Ears have heard, or Eyes have seen,
Or lively Fancy's gayest Pow'rs can feign.
O! if Thy Love does not my Heart inflame,
Why do I thus delight in JESUS' Name?
His Name is Music to my ravish'd Ears,
Sweeter than that which charms the heav'nly Spheres:
A cheering Cordial to my fainting Breast;
My Hope, my Joy, my Peace, my Heav'n, my Rest.
I spring from Earth, and Heav'n is my Abode,
When I can say those charming Words, MY GOD;
MY GOD!—Infinite Joys lie in the Sound:
Be Thou but mine; and all the Sun goes round
Without reluctant Murm'ring I resign;
I have enough, if I can call Thee MINE.
O! if I love Thee not, why do I thus
Love the dear Mansion of Thy earthly House?
The sacred Morning shines with heav'nly Rays.
More bright, more charming than ten thousand Days,
That bids me visit that delightful Place.
[Page 5] There would I dwell, and pass my Life away,
'Til Death convey me up to brighter Day.
In all the Institutions of Thy Grace,
For Thee I look; and if Thou hide Thy Face,
The sacred Rites would dull and tiresome seem,
Did I not hope to find my GOD in them.
When at Thy Throne I bow my suppliant Knee,
Is Pray'r a stupid cold Formality!
Oh! can my Pray'rs content me without Thee?
No! these are but the Channels of thy Grace,
Transparent Glasses where I see Thy Face:
I thirst for living Water all in vain,
If Thou Thy gracious Influence restrain:
The radiant Glasses shew me nothing fair,
Unless I see Thy Charms reflected there.
Then Peace, my restless and suspicious Heart;
And ye dire-boding Jealousies, depart.
I love my GOD, or else I nothing love;
And the pure Flame e'er long shall burn above,
And from its native El'ment ne'er remove.
II.
Early Piety recommended. (Sent originally in a Letter to two young Ladies.)
YE lovely Flow'rs, that just begin to bloom,
And raise our Hope of glorious Fruit to come;
That just begin to open all your Charms,
While vig'rous Youth your tender Bosoms warms:
Indulge a Muse, that's anxious for your Good,
Lest some rude Storm should blast the op'ning Bud;
Indulge the Muse, that would the Blossoms shield,
'Till they mature, and Fruit immortal yield,
And bloom forever gay in Heaven's fair azure Field.
[Page 6]
Now you begin to tread Youth's slippery Path,
Where Thousands stumble, and sink down to Death.
Where'er you walk, 'tis all enchanted Ground,
And Snares in dang'rous Ambush lurk around.
The flattering World presents her fairest Charms,
And Vice would tempt you to her horrid Arms.
The Crowd of fashionable Sinners aim
To
form you to the Mode, to walk with them;
Spread false enchanting Scenes before your Eyes,
And promise Bliss from empty Vanities:
While sanguine, forward Youth is still intent
To make the terrible Experiment;
And will not, 'til by dear Experience taught,
Indulge the true, tho' melancholy Tho't,
That all beneath the Sun is Vanity and Nought.
The dang'rous Path of Youth my Feet have trod,
And lately left the smooth enchanting Road:
Now safe advanc'd to a more solid Age,
Let me conduct, you o'er the slippery Stage.
Trembling I wait th' Event of every Step,
And shudder left you make a fatal Slip.
O! cautious tread: Let Virtue be your Guard:
Virtue alone can keep you un-ensnar'd.
O! chuse your Maker for your early Friend,
And on His gracious Patronage depend:
He can obscure Temptation's brightest Charms,
And shelter feeble Youth from threatning Harms;
Steel the weak Breast with Grace invincible,
And baffle all the Stratagems of Hell.
O! heave the Sigh, waft up the weeping Pray'r
To HIM who loves that Harmony to hear:
He looks and smiles and sheds His richest Grace
On Virgin-Souls that early seek His Face.
[Page 7] O! let not Earth your tender Hearts ensnare;
Give your first Love to THE ETERNAL FAIR.
'Twas HE, 'twas HE that form'd your mortal Frame,
Inspir'd the living Soul, that heav'nly Flame:
Taught senseless Dust to see and hear and move,
And kindled in the Breast the gentle Pow'r of Love:
But lately, from His all-creating Hand
You came, and sprung to Life at His Command;
'Til then, you lay in native Nothing's Shade;
And but for Him, had still remain'd unmade;
A FATHER's tender Name He bears to you;
And is not your first Love a Father's Due?
O! can your grateful Souls so soon forget
The gracious Pow'r from whence they came so late?
Should not your Bosoms with His Love be fir'd,
Whose Breath the tender Passions all inspir'd?
He too, when Man to deepest Ruin fell,
Helpless, forlorn on the dire Brink of Hell;
He, touch'd with Pity, and impell'd by Grace,
Sent his own Son to save a guilty Race,
And yield His sacred Soul a Ransom in their Place.
The Infant-GOD did soon begin for you
To bear the Vengeance to your Follies due.
For you the heav'nly Mansions He forsook,
And a vile Stable for His Chamber took.
His Robes of Light Divine aside he threw,
And wrap'd Himself in swaddling Cloaths for you.
Just as He enter'd on the Stage of Life,
He felt the painful circumcising Knife.
In His weak Mother's Arms the young Exile,
From
Herod's Rage fled to the Land of
Nile.
*
His Load of Sorrow grew still as He grew;
At length, see! on the Cross He bleeds for you!
[Page 8] There rack'd and tortur'd your Redeemer hangs,
And courts your Love with Groans and dying Pangs.
See how He agonizes! see His Blood!
And say, Can such Allurements be withstood?
Oh no! you melt! you yield! I hear you say,
"See, JESUS! here we give our Hearts away!
"Our earliest Love, Dear Lord! unrival'd take;
"'Tis all the poor Requital we can make."
See how in youthful Prime, the smiling Year
Now blooms, and all her flow'ry Charms appear:
*
The tuneful Birds, that hail the welcome Spring,
Grateful at Nature's Restoration sing,
And all the Groves with charming Music ring:
A living Green arrays the Woods and Fields,
And the sweet Vale a thousand Pleasures yields:
The lovely Family of Flow'rs appear,
And breathe Perfumes thro' all the balmy Air:
The Sun shines bright and mild; the gentle Breeze
Regales our Sense, and whispers thro' the Trees:
The wide Creation smiles; Earth, Sky and Air
In vernal Robes and blooming Youth appear.
But ah! e'er long will surly Winter come,
Strip the gay Year of all her youthful Bloom,
And spread o'er all a cheerless sullen Gloom;
Snow, Rain and Frost commixt, and savage Storms
Ravage and bluster in a thousand Forms;
The smiling World with baleful Influence blast,
And turn these charming Scenes t' a rueful Waste.
Here see your mournful Fate, ye blooming FAIRS;
Stern Death nor Youth nor Strength nor Beauty spares.
The Young, the Old, the Wise, the Fair, the Gay,
All fall a common undistinguish'd Prey.
[Page 9] The Tyrant, senseless of the Pow'r of Charms,
Hurries the Beauty to reside with Worms;
Covers with mortal Pale the rosy Cheeks,
And dooms the Dust with Fellow-Dust to mix:
Hurries the Soul at once to Worlds unknown,
Doom'd by the Sentence of th' Eternal Throne
To shine with Angels, or with Friends to groan.
Then catch the fleeting Hour before 'tis past;
The present Now perhaps may be your last.
For barren Winter early lay up Store,
That joyful you may meet the fatal Hour.
Survey the Garden, where the fragrant Rose,
In all the Pride of youthful Beauty glows;
Go, pluck the tempting Flow'r, and pensive say,
"So cruel Death may cut me off to-day."
And when the Sun withdraws his quick'ning Ray,
And Ev'ning Shades shut up the cheerful Day;
See! how the flow'ry Tribes their Beauties hide,
And fade and languish in their gayest Pride;
Shrivel their Leaves, and bend the drooping Head;
"So (let your Heart suggest) so I may fade,
"And sudden sink among the mould'ring Dead."
O! may the Lustre of your Minds surpass
The with'ring Beauties of the fairest Face:
May every shining Virtue deck your Youth,
And ev'ry heav'nly Grace grow with your Growth;
Life's fleeting Moments glide delightful by,
With every Grace adorn'd, and every Joy;
Till Death, far distant, finding you mature
for Heav'n, convey you up to Joys more pure.
[Page 11]
IV. SOLOMON.
A Paraphrastical Poem on sundry Passages in the Book of Ecclesiastes.
WHY shou'd I, anxious after Happiness,
Pursue wrong Ways, or right without Success?
Why fret and toil in Searches long and vain,
Since a Director I with Ease may gain?
A skillful Guide, made by Experience wise,
That costly Med'cine for mis-judging Eyes.
The Traveller bewilder'd asks the Way,
And cautious shuns the Path where others stray:
Come then, My Soul, exempt from every Care,
Come, to the Royal Preacher lend an Ear;
Attend the Monarch, whose unbounded Mind
Made one Experiment for all Mankind,
Past thro' the Lab'rinths that ensnare the Wise,
Try'd all that's charming in the Miser's Eyes,
Undaunted climb'd bright Honour's steep Ascent,
And thro' the Round of sensual Pleasures went;
Listen, while grey Experience tells the Truth;
Nor fear Deception from her faithful Mouth.
In happy CANAAN, the World's Paradise,
Where constant Harvests of rich Plenty rise;
Where candid Milk and pleasant Honey flows
In luscious Streams, and ev'ry Pleasure grows:
In sacred SALEM, the belov'd and great,
Where
Canaan's Blessings all collected meet;
Where HE who Empires crushes and sustains,
Tremendous in His awful Temple reigns,
And Clouds of sacred Incense early rise,
Breathing Perfumes to the propitious Skies;
Where foreign Merchants vend their richest Store,
And Ophir-Ships import their golden Oar;
[Page 12] The Fear and Wonder of the Nations round,
Profuse in Wealth with endless Honours crown'd;
Where, yearly, tributary Princes meet,
To pay their Homage at their Sov'reign's Feet;
There first my Lungs the vital Ether drew,
And there the Light of Life first blest my View.
Sprung from a Royal Sire, a Glorious Crown
By heav'nly Designation was my own;
Millions of loyal Heroes thro' the Land
Confirm'd my Throne, and stoopt to my Command;
The Sons of
Jacob, Favourites of the Skies!
At whose dread Name each Tyrant shrinks and dies,
Mov'd at my Nod, their Sov'reign Law, my Will,
The Dictates of my Tongue, their Oracle:
While neighb'ring Sceptres yielded to my Sway,
Ambitious of the Honour to obey;
And gentle Peace her downy Pinions spread,
Shadowing the Throne, and hovering round my Head,
Nature and Art with Emulation strove,
T' advance my Bliss, and every Grief remove.
*
My Mind enlighten'd with a heav'nly Ray,
Was calm as midnight Hours, and bright as Day,
Deep as the vast Abyss, and vigorous as May;
Freed from the Freaks of young Impertinence,
And ripen'd by Experience into Sense.
Thrice happy State! below but seldom found!
A Heav'nly Paradise on earthly Ground!
†
Come then, My Soul, this Season sure was lent
To qualifie me for Experiment;
That Men from my Experience may discern,
Where lies their Bliss, and what to follow learn:
Come, in this happy Juncture, let us try
Wherein the Happiness of Man does lie;
[Page 13] Pursue that unknown
Something, whether hid
She in the Bosom of the Wise abide,
Or lie conceal'd in the enchanting Stream
Of sensual Joys, where the Luxurious swim:
Extend thy Searches wheresoe'er the Ray
Of yon' bright Sun extends, and kindles Day:
The dear, coy Nymph, which Mortals never saw,
Where'er she lurks, from her Retirements draw.
*
I said—And as an Eagle, Hunger-smit,
Pours all his nimble Vigour into Flight,
And thro' aërial Fields pursues his Prey,
Swift as a Sun-Beam in the Blaze of Day:
So flew my curious Mind thro' all the Plains,
Where, in alluring Glory, SCIENCE reigns;
With contemplative Eyes the Works explor'd,
With which this spacious Universe is stor'd;
The hidden Causes and the Ends of Things,
And Order which from their Contexture springs;
The Powers of immaterial Essences,
And puzzling intellectual Mysteries;
The Properties of Matter and its Laws,
And each Phaenomenon from unseen Cause;
The Wonders of the Planetary World,
The Rules by which their ample Orbs are hurl'd;
The boundless Regions of the fixed Stars,
And Comets scatt'ring Pestilence and Wars.
Descending thence, I took a wide Survey
Of this vast Earth, and the unbounded Sea;
From the tall Cedars that luxuriant spread
Their stately Branches on
Libanus' Head,
To the small Hyssop blooming on the Wall
Mould'ring to Dust, and nodding to its Fall,
My Search extended:
† — While each studious Sage
As my Assistant gladly did engage;
[Page 14] To their learn'd Lectures eager I attend,
Embrace what's right; what's corrigible, mend;
Hypotheses upon Hypotheses
They raise, and the well-fram'd Illusions please.
*
My Enquiries thus finish'd I begun
To view th' extensive Circuit I had run;
If haply in the Maze of studious Thought
True Happiness may with Success be sought:
When struck, amaz'd, I call'd my Mind aside,
And pausing deep—thus cry'd;
In tiresome Labours of the busy Brain
I seek for Bliss; but ah! I seek in vain.
Insinuating Sorrows still pervade
The knowing Heart, and contemplative Head.
†
This curious Itch is never satisfy'd
With what is known, if aught continues hid,
But eager pants and reaches after more,
Pronouncing all in vain it knew before.
Alass! what Glooms still hover o'er my Soul!
And blended Clouds in close Succession roll!
The clea est of my vast Discoveries lie
Involv'd in Doubts and dark Uncertainty;
And most of Things are wrapt in solid Glooms,
Where a bright Beam of Knowledge never comes,
Conceal'd forever from th' enquiring Sight
In Caverns of imperviable Night.
‡
The anxious Mind intense in the Pursuit,
Faints with the Toil, but never tastes the Fruit;
Perplexing Thoughts still ravage thro' the Brain,
And twinge the Spirit with acutest Pain;
And Melancholy, nurs'd with studious Care,
Often erects her sooty Banner there;
Hollow and sunk the poring Eye appears,
And the dull Image of her Sorrows wears.
§
[Page 15] In Parts superior, then, what Profit lies?
Alas! how small the Pleasure to be wise?
'Tis but to know how little can be known,
*
To see our Ignorance and Weakness shown;
To chase a Phantom, which our Chase outflies,
And leaves us lagging, distant from the Prize.
This fail'd; I try'd one more Experiment,
Still in Pursuit of Happiness intent.
Delicate Mirth array'd in tempting Smiles,
Pleasures surrounding in delicious Rills,
Facetious Jests, and Laughter op'ning wide
Her sprightly Jaws, with Hands on every Side,
Present themselves, and promise perfect Bliss:
†
[...] try'd,—but found them lying Vanities.
This empty Mirth tends but to make me sad,
And thou, unthinking Laughter! too, art mad.
‡
Her Vigour next the generous Grape bestow'd,
And sprightly Wine in liberal Glasses glow'd:
My Palate I indulg'd; yet, lest Excess
Shou'd cloy my Taste, and make the Pleasure less,
Or Wisdom with intemperate Vapours blind,
And in luxurious Puddles drown the Mind,
My Reason still her Government maintain'd,
And the bold Licence of the Taste restrain'd.
§
But Happiness in Luxury and Wine
I seek in vain, and Bliss is too Divine
To lurk in Grapes: the Pleasures of the Taste
Degrade the
Man, and only suit the
Beast.
To Architecture next I turn'd my Mind,
And Palaces magnificent design'd.
[Page 16] Columns were rais'd, which spacious Rooss o'erspread;
Sculpture and Paint their various Charms display'd:
Marble was taught to live, and Shade and Light
With fair Illusions pleas'd the ravish'd Sight.
And shining Gold its yellow Radiance spread
Thro' all the Buildings: Burnish'd Brass display'd
Its rougher Glories: All the Charms of Art
Blaz'd on my Eye, and sought to win my Heart.
*
But all the Pomp of glitt'ring Roofs and Walls,
Of stately Chambers and embellish'd Halls
Is nought but Vanity and empty Shew,
And never free from rude, intrusive Woe.
Shy Happiness abhors this useless State,
And shuns the gaudy Buildings of the Great.
Wood, Brass and Gold, by all the Powers of Art
However form'd, can never ease the Heart.
Then in the sylvan Scene I sought for Bliss;
I made me Vineyards, and I planted Trees.
Unwithering Verdure, and eternal Blooms
Form'd lovely Prospects, and diffus'd Perfumes.
Perpetual Spring her numerous Beauties strew'd
Thro' all my Groves, and blest the waving Wood.
Refreshing Rills, thro' various Pipes convey'd,
Their chearing Moisture thro' the Forest spread,
And, murmuring, sooth'd the Ear; while Zephyrs mild
Panted and breath'd thro' all the pleasant Wild.
†
Here oft' I walk'd in sacred Solitude,
And, unmolested, Happiness pursu'd;—
In vain; for Happiness cou'd not be found
Among the Groves in this delightful Ground.
I try'd the Pomp and Equipage of State.
Obsequious Crowds did in long Order wait
[Page 17] Around my sumptuous Table, and abroad
When Pleasure call'd me, dazzled all the Road:
Domestics home-born, and from every Clime,
Of either Sex the Beauty and the Prime,
Form'd my illustrious Retinue, and stood
Waiting my Will, observant of my Nod.
*
But ah! this proud Magnificence of State
Can never make my Happiness compleat.
But Music, sure, that calms the boist'rous Breast,
And sooths tumultuous Passions into Rest;
That charms deep-fixt Anxieties away,
Makes even moping Melancholy gay;
The Hero's Breast with martial Ardour fires,
And dire Despair herself with Ease inspires:
Music will breathe refin'd, exalted Bliss
Into my Soul, and lull me into Peace:
I said. The Masters of the tuneful Art
†
The utmost Pow'rs of Harmony exert.
In sweetly-varying Strains the Music floats,
While various Instruments try various Notes.
But all these Strains are useless; I despair
To find true Bliss in modulated Air.
Hitherto disappointed, I'll behold
My vast Possessions, and unnumber'd Gold.
The Riches of the World are in my Hand;
Surrounding Monarchs, aw'd at my Command,
With Wealth immense my spacious Treasures fill,
And yield their choicest Blessings to my Will.
My Cattle graze upon a thousand Hills,
And feed unnumber'd in the fertile Vales.
So various, so unbounded is my Store,
The greediest Wish can comprehend no more.
[Page 18] But still unsatisfy'd, from the Survey
Scornful I turn'd my weary Eyes away,
And cry'd,
Bliss is not made of Dust and glitt'ring Clay.
Thus freely I indulg'd my Eyes to roll,
And gave unbridl'd Licence to my Soul.
Whate'er insatiate Appetite could crave,
With lib'ral Hand, without Restraint, I gave.
*
Not to indulge a Lust, was my Design,
But act the Philosophic Libertine:
I paus'd, I reason'd, and with Eye intense
Observ'd the Issue of th' Experiments.
But when the tedious Circuit I review'd,
And all the anxious Labours I pursu'd,
†
In which my restless Spirit toil'd with Pain,
Seeking for Bliss with eager Wish in vain;
I saw that all beneath the lower Skies
Is abstract Vanity of Vanities.
Oppressive Sorrows and Vexations grow
In ev'ry State, in ev'ry Clime below.
Nor for themselves need future Ages try
‡
Th' Experiment; for all is Vanity.
Anxieties in all Things earthly dwell,
Which All alas! can feel, but none can tell.
§
No Novelties present themselves to View,
To tempt succeeding Ages to renew
Th' Experiment, or Bliss below pursue.
**
In dull Succession early Pleasures run
††
In the same tedious Circle ever on.
The Ear with antiquated Harmonies
‡‡
Is cloy'd, and with accustom'd Sights the Eyes.
The ever-moving Wheels of Nature run
In the same Tract; in the same Tract the Sun
§§
[Page 19] Rolls on his tiresome, everlasting Round;
And still we tread the same old-fashion'd Ground.
Besides; the Intervals of Bliss we find
Are short, uncertain, varying as the Wind.
Death unsuspected in close Ambush lurks,
And undermining still, our Ruin works.
*
Whether we laugh or weep, or wake or sleep,
He haunts us, ready on his Prey to leap.
So the unthinking Rovers of the Air,
Caught unexpected, flutter in the Snare.
So finny Shoals rush heedless into Death,
Dragg'd to the Land, and gasp in vain for Breath.
But see! above the Earth, beyond the Skies,
What charming Scenes, what brighter Prospects rise!
There the Paternal Mind, the Source of Good,
Feeds His own Offspring with immortal Food.
There Happiness in full Perfection grows;
And restless Souls enjoy a calm Repose;
A Bliss proportion'd to the widest Wish;
Ever enjoy'd, yet ever new and fresh.
Hail happy Realms! the Bliss we seek below
In vain, is only to be found in you.
Soon (welcome Prospect!) the bright Hour will come
That wafts us to our blest celestial Home:
Soon into Dust this brittle Frame will fall;
The Soul return to her Original;
†
Return exulting from her long Exile
In this dark Dungeon, and laborious Toil:
There dwell forever with her Father-GOD,
And find the Bliss before not understood.
Then since the Happiness of Mortals lies
Beyond the Bounds of these inferior Skies,
[Page 20] The only Happiness they here can share,
Is for those blissful Regions to prepare.
Thro' various Mazes then at length we come
*
To this Conclusion as the total Sum.
Fear thy Creator God with filial Awe,
And all thy Life observe His holy Law.
†
Chuse as thy constant Path this heav'nly Plan;
'Tis the whole Duty, the whole Bliss of Man;
‡
The only Point where Happiness is fixt,
Pleasures in this World, greater in the next.
Tir'd of my fruitless Scarches, here I rest,
With this Discovery pleas'd, content and blest.
XII.
The universal Lamentation.
*
I.
WHEN Heav'n with a vindictive Frown
Throws an aspiring Monarch down,
The trembling Nation takes th' Alarm.
And when we view the wide Champaign
Soak'd with the Blood of Heroes slain,
The softest Passions wake, and every Bosom warm.
[Page 32]
II.
The softest Passions wake and mourn,
When Sons of Honour, nobly born,
Are sold for Slaves in barb'rous Climes.
'The Wretch that on the Gibbet hangs
Moves in us sympathethic Pangs,
Tho' self-destroy'd he dies for his own scarlet Crimes.
[Page 33]
III.
Th' importunate and helpless Poor,
Naked and famish'd at our Door;
The Widow and the Fatherless;
The melancholy House where Pain,
Sickness and Death and Sorrows reign,
Dissolve the gen'rous Heart to softest Tenderness.
IV.
But from our Hearts if Death should rend
Some darling Relative or Friend,
How we bewall the mould'ring Dust!
Our Life is Grief, our Breath is Sighs,
Our Days are Glooms, and from our Eyes
Torrents of ever-flowing Sorrows burst.
V.
But what are Thrones or Monarchs sunk,
Or Fields with Blood of Heroes drunk,
Or Lords in barb'rous Climes confin'd!
Ah! what are Lumps of breathing Clay,
That into Ruin pine away,
What, when compar'd with one immortal Mind!
VI.
Th' immortal Mind! a heav'nly Spark,
Lost and extinguish'd in the Dark!
By Sin seduc'd, by Sin undone!—
Let all superfluous Sorrows cease;
And Deluges of Tears, for this,
For this alone! gush forth and unremitted run!
VII.
Souls form'd for Immortality,
Th' Eternal Father's Progeny,
[Page 34] Forgetful of their noble Birth,
Despise the Great PATERNAL MIND,
So bright, so fair, so good, so kind,
And loose their heav'nly Essence in ignoble Earth!
VIII.
Souls ransom'd by the vital Blood
And Death of an incarnate GOD,
Insult his dying Groans and Cries;
And still, remorseless, dare commit
The Sins that pierc'd His Hands and Feet,
And rack'd his tortur'd Soul with twinging Agonies!
IX.
The mild, propitious, heav'nly Dove
Desends from his own Realms of Love,
To strive with unrelenting Souls:
In vain;—the Rebels love their Chains,
And Sin, the Tyrant, Sov'reign reigns,
And ev'ry heav'nly Tendency controuls.
X.
The Voice of Mercy sounds aloud,
And offers a Redeemer's Blood,
Eternal Joys, and heav'nly Crowns:
But still, with stiff unyielding Neck,
The gracious Offer they reject,
And rather perish of their mortal Wounds.
XI.
Eager with full Career they run
In Chase of Pleasures, 'til undone,
Nor pause at Mercy's loudest Call:
Dancing with inadvertent Feet
Round the dire Borders of the Pit,
'Til helpless, unexpected, down they fall.
[Page 35]
XII.
There are (delightful Thought!) a Fow
Who the unbeaten Path pursue,
That leads to purer Joys on high:
Transporting Sight! but Oh! how rare!
While mournful Prospects every where
Glare on our Eyes, and Thousands round us die!
XIII.
And shall they unlamented die!—
Come every tender Heart and Eye,
Join in the Lamentation, join!
Fr
[...]th my Eyes let Rivers flow,
And Floods of sympathetic Woe
Gush from this adamantine Heart of mine.
XIV.
Ye Sons of
Levi! Sacred Train!
That spend your Breath and Strength in vain,
That toil and sow, but seldom reap;
See thoughtless Mortals, in your Eye,
Deaf to your loudest Warnings, die!
Behold the mournful Scene, ye sacred Tribe! and weep!
XV.
See your dear Fellow-Men undone,
While shock'd, astonish'd, you look on,
But can, alas, yield no Relief!
Yet sure you may indulge your Tears,
And ev'n o'er those that stop their Ears,
Vent your full Hearts in Streams of useless Grief.
XVI.
Come ev'ry tender-hearted Saint,
Give all the mournful Passions vent,
[Page 36] Or are your Bowels form'd of Stone?
See how ungrateful Worms despise
JESUS the Darling of your Eyes!
See the dear Souls you love by their own Hands undone!
XVII.
Ye gen'rous Souls! whose Bosoms bleed
O'er some dear Creature cold and dead,
Some dearer Self torn from your Heart;
Forbear your useless Tears, and turn
The Stream from them, and only mourn
The cruel Hands that kill their own immortal Part.
XVIII.
Come all ye Sons of
Adam, join;
Mingle your flowing Griefs with mine;
Let Groans tumultuous heave your Lungs.
But you alas! refuse your Tears;
And waste them on inferior Cares;
Or lull yourselves to Ease with Luxury and Song.
XIX.
Angels! that charm the list'ning Skies
With everlasting Harmonies,
Say, Have Ye ne'er a mourning String?
O! while your Songs transport the Poles,
Raise one sad Note for Kindred-Souls,
Your Kindred lost to you, revolted from your King!
XX.
Fountain of Day and cheerful Light
Why should the Gloomy Sons of Night,
The Radiance of thy Beams abuse?
The Mourner's sable Dress assume,
And wrap the Globe in Midnight Gloom;
Why should they see the Light who Works of Darkness chuse?
[Page 37]
XXI.
Ye Lamps of Heav'n that nightly burn,
O'er brighter Flames extinguish'd mourn,
As wakeful you survey the World.
Regent of Night! Resplendent Moon!
Bewail the Scenes of Lewdness done,
While thro' the silver Shades thy ample Orb is whirl'd.
XXII.
Ye Winds that gently fan the Air,
Or ravage in fierce Tempests there,
Expend your Breath in Groans and Sighs:
Disgusting Joys of heav'nly Kind,
Immortal Spirits feed on Wind,
And eager pant for airy Vanities.
XXIII.
Ye Thunders groan from Cloud to Cloud,
Roar your majestic Sorrows loud,
O'er Worms that scorn JEHOVAH's Voice.
Tempests, and Hurricanes and Storms,
Bewail in all your dreadful Forms,
The more pernicious Storm that Human Kind destroys.
XXIV.
Ye Clouds that lightly float in Air,
Or roll in heavy Oceans there,
Weep on a wretched World below.
Soft Dews and fruitful Show'rs, bewail
Th' ungrateful Plants, that constant feel
The Show'rs of Grace distil, but never fruitful grow.
XXV.
Ye Rivers rapid, rough and strong,
And Streams that gently glide along,
[Page 38] And in
Meandrine Circuits flow;
Exhaust in Tears your liquid Store,
And murmur Grief; or swell and pour
Your useless Chanels dry in Deluges of Woe.
XXVI.
And thou immense, majestic Main,
Let not thy Billows roll in vain;
But swell each Billow to a Tear;
Mortals the Pleasures disesteem
That roll their plenteous Chrystal Stream
In Paradise; and thirst for sordid Pleasures here.
XXVII.
Sweet Mourner! melancholy Dove,
And all ye Songsters of the Grove,
Let tuneful Sorrows swell your Throats;
You warble gratest Songs of Praise,
And join with heav'nly Choirs to raise
Your Maker's Name; but Mortals will not join the Notes.
XXVIII.
Ye fierce, rapacious Beasts of Prey,
That in the horrid Desert stray,
Thro' the rough Wild your Sorrows roar:
Men put your Savage Natures on,
Renounce the Mildness of their own,
And Tyger-like, their Fellow-Men devour.
XXIX.
Ye Cattle that on Mountains feed,
Or graze in the luxuriant Mead,
Low sorth your Sorrows as you roam:
[Page 39] Lament the wretched Animal,
Fashion'd by Nature rational,
Degraded by himself, and one of you become.
XXX.
Let all Things mourn: Let Rocks and Stones
Learn Sympathy, and burst to Groans,
And senseless Marble learn to melt:
Marble will weep, and Rocks relent
Sooner than stubborn Hearts repent,
And contrite wail their own oppressive Guilt.
XXXI.
O Thou All-Good, Paternal Mind!
Pity the Crowds of Human Kind,
Whose Hearts are hearden'd from Thy Fear.
The Madness of the Wretch controul,
Who ruins his immortal Soul,
Without acute Remorse, without a pitying Tear.
XXXII.
JESUS! Thy tender Griefs did stream
O'er Obstinate
Jerusalem,
Thy dying Breath implor'd "FORGIVE:"
O! may Thy soft Compassions move,
And Thy unconquerable Love
Constrain a dying World to turn and live!
XXXIII.
Then shall the glad Creation smile,
New Pleasures every Bosom fill,
And Sin and Death and Sorrow die:
Angels with sevenfold Ardours flame,
And sound new Praises to Thy Name,
While Mortals join below, and to their Song reply.
XVI.
Whom have I in Heaven but Thee? And there is none upon Earth I desire besides Thee. My Flesh and my Heart faileth; but Thou art the Strength of my Heart, and my Portion forever. Ps. lxxiii. 25, 26.
FOUNTAIN of Good! from Thee incessant flow
The Streams of Bliss that cheer the World below.
The Charms of Nature in her fairest Dress
Are but faint Copies of Thy fairer Face.
[Page 52] As some sweet Flow'r, when vernal Suns infuse
The vegetative Soul, and fertile Dews,
Impearl the Grass, its painted Foliage spreads,
Blooms fair and gay, and fragrant Odours sheds;
But when the Sun withdraws his genial Ray,
Contracts its Beauties, droops and pines away:
So at Thy Smiles, the wide Creation blooms;
But should'st Thou frown, Horrors and dismal Glooms
Would cover All; Deformity would reign;
All Nature die, and Chaos come again.
Unnumber'd Worlds, thro' boundless Aether lost,
Are clad by Thee in all their Charms they boast.
Impell'd by Thee, the mighty Spheres roll on,
And Nature's ample Wheels harmonious run.
Thy Glory twinkles thro' the Midnight Sky,
From thousand Golden Lamps suspended high
In azure Vaults. Yon' boundless Source of Day,
That flames from Age to Age without Decay,
That cheers surrounding Worlds with vital Rays,
Is but a Gleam from Thee; whose brighter Face,
Dazzles the Eyes of Angels as they gaze:
Who sit'st enthron'd, insufferably bright,
In the Recesses of eternal Light.
Thy Goodness in the vernal Seasons blooms;
From Thee the Rose derives its rich Perfumes.
By Thee the Groves are in their Verdure clad,
And Plains and Vales with flow'ry Carpets spread.
Eternal All! what is this lovely Frame
But a faint Transcript of Thy glorious Name?
The soft enchanting Smile, the sparkling Eye,
The charming Voice, the Strains of Harmony,
The graceful Conduct, the unbounded Aim
Of noble Minds, the Patriot's gen'rous Flame,
[Page 53] Th' exalted Genius, the celestial Fire
Of Piety, Thy Spirit did inspire.
'Twas thou
Fidelio form'd in Friendship's Mould,
And stampt the social Virtues on his Soul;
The candid Temper, and the Heart sincere,
Thee their divine Original declare.
When
Chara, the Companion of my Life,
The chastest, mildest, tenderest, kindest Wife;
The Honour and the Beauty of her Sex;
Whom every Grace and every Virtue decks:
When she blooms on my Sight in all her Charms,
And every correspondent Passion warms;
I farther look; and thro' this radiant Glass
Gaze on the brighter Beauties of thy Face.
Thus Mortals read some Letter of thy Name,
On every Pin in this amazing Frame:
View some reflected Beams of Charms Divine
Break thro' Thy Works, and with bright Radiance shine
But O! how far the loveliest Creatures fall
Beneath th' immensely bright Original!
Thou Excellence unknown, divinely fair!
Shew us what uncreated Beauties are.
Reveal THYSELF! Let trembling Mortals see
Th' unrival'd Glories that beam forth in Thee.
The borrow'd Beauties of Thy Works but raise
The restless Pant to view Thy brighter Face;
But warms the eager Wish, that breaks thro' all
The Ranks of Creatures to th' Original:
But O! 'tis Thou, 'tis Thou alone canst fill
The boundless Wish, and bid the Pant be still.
Without Thee, every Charm insipid grows,
And the aspiring Soul finds no Repose.
[Page 54] In Quest of Thee she flies; in Quest of Thee
Roves thro' the Mazes of Immensity,
Restless, bewilder'd. O my only Joy!
Reveal Thyself; these Cravings satisfy:
Fill this unbounded Void; nor let me more
For solid Bliss created Bounds explore
Oh! if Thy Goodness will not satisfy
These boundless Aims, why were they rais'd so high?
Why was I curs'd with this immortal Mind,
This Dignity of Thought, these Pow'rs refined;
O! why, if Thou wilt ever, ever hide
Thyself, and leave them still unsatisfy'd?
Far better had I flourish'd for a Day
A fading Flow'r beneath the quick'ning Ray
Of vernal Suns; or with my Fellow-Brutes
Roam'd o'er the trackless Waste in low Pursuits,
Graz'd the green Mead, or unmolested lain,
And stretch'd my careless Bulk in some wild Den,
Sleeping dull Life away; nor fear'd my Doom
From Evil past, or present or to come.
O envy'd Lot to mine! if I must pass
My Immortality far from Thy Face;
Whether on Earth, in Air, or Heaven I dwell,
If Thou art absent, every Place is Hell.
Advance me to the Grandeur of a Throne,
And let me call the Universe my own;
Let Planetary Worlds my Nod obey,
And Earth and Ocean reverence my Sway:
Yet, if depriv'd of Thy auspicious Smile,
I shall be curst, abandon'd, wretched still.
Let Heaven her sparkling Portals wide display,
And take me to the Realms of endless Day;
[Page 55] Angelic Harps their sweetest Notes employ,
And round me Rivers flow of heav'nly Joy;
My Soul would sicken at the hateful Sight,
If hid from Thee, sole Spring of my Delight!
The Light offensive to my Eyes would glare,
And heavenly Notes grate harsh upon my Ear.
But if refresh'd with Thy propitious Face,
My Soul would find a Heav'n in ev'rv Place.
Thy Presence would eternal Pains beguile,
And cause the Realms of Desolation smile.
A Beam from Thee would kindle into Light
The solid Glooms of everlasting Night;
Not even infernal Horrors could affright.
O! then, where e'er Thou fix my last Abode,
Be it in Reach of Thy sweet Smiles, my GOD!
Be Thou my Portion, Thou my Bliss, my ALL;
I care not to whose Share the Creatures fall;
I have enough in Thee, th' immense Original.
XVII.
Conjugal Love and Happiness. February 27, 1750-1.
COnjugal Love my joyful Heart inspires,
And warms a languid Muse with active Fires.
The pleasing Impulse the glad Muse obeys;
And as a pious Monument of Praise,
Grateful she consecrates these humble Lays.
Nor can she stray in trackless Wilds unknown;
Since to describe the Bliss, I need but tell my own.
But hence! far hence! ye wild lascivious Fires:
To purer Themes the modest Muse aspires,
[Page 56] Hencebanish'd, to your native Hell return!
There with your loose degen'rate Bards to mourn;
There with your kindred Flames to rage and burn.
Hail, gentle Love! thou sacred Heaven-born Flame!
Pure Spark, that from th' eternal GODHEAD came!
Who clad in Glories infinitely bright,
Does in this mild Perfection most delight;
In Love rejoices as this darling Name,
*
And breathes thro' Nature the celestial Flame.
'Tis Love adjusts this fair harmonious World;
On Wheels of Love the heavenly Spheres are whirl'd,
Ten Thousand Systems round Ten Thousand Suns,
Impell'd by Love, each in its Orbit runs.
What's the
Attractive or
Projectile Force,
But Love well-ballanc'd, to direct their Course?
Love, the great Cement of the Universe,
That hinders Worlds to conflict and disperse.
'Tis Love that tunes th' harmonious Harps above;
And the blest Voices sing immortal Love.
There in its native Element it glows;
There from the uncreated Fountain flows,
Diffusing Heav'n where e'er its Current goes.
Of firm Societies Love form'd the Plan,
"And Creature linkt to Creature, Man to Man."
Blest the rude World with Friendship, downy Peace,
And humaniz'd a wild, barbarian Race.
The kindest Gift indulgent Heaven bestow'd,
To sweeten Life, and ease the crushing Load;
To sooth Anxieties, to lull to Rest
The Hurricanes that ravage thro' the Breast;
[Page 57] To double scanty Bliss, and multiply
The rare celestial Plants of Peace and Joy,
So apt in this unnat'ral Soil to die.
Could Hell extinguish this celestial Spark,
The Universe would sall, the Sun grow dark;
Infernal Horrors thro' the World prevail:
And Heaven itself would sadden into Hell:
Men chang'd to Savages, forsake their Home,
And with fell Tygers, the wild Desart roam:
The screaming Infant die as soon as born,
By his own Father's Rage to Pieces torn.
But Thou, All-gracious Maker! hast imprest
This heav'nly Stamp upon the human Breast;
Mixt in the tender Embryo of our Frame,
Some gentle Sparks of Thy essential Flame.
O! early may the sacred Fire return
To Thee its Source, and there divinely burn!
Ev'ry soft Passion to Thy Name aspire,
And Love to Thee the whole Creation fire!
But chiefly, may thy Praises be exprest,
By those whom gentle Love has rendered blest!
Ye Parents, whose kind Bowels melt and move
With all th' Endearments of paternal Love;
Who feel the silken Bands of Nature tye
Your yearning Souls to your fond Progeny;
O! praise Him, who a feeble Spark imparts
Of his paternal Kindness to your Hearts.
Ye grateful Infants, whose young Souls begin
To feel the soft Emotions work within;
In thousand little fondling Actions shew
The filial Duty that begins to glow;
O! while you toy in your fond Mother's Arms,
[...]isp to his Honour who your Bosom warms:
[Page 58] O! consecrate th' imperfect rude Essays
Of your first Language, to your Maker's Praise.
Ye Youths and Nymphs, who feel the pleasing Flame
Pant in your Breast, and throb thro' all your Frame;
Who lost in anxious, pleasing Transports prove
The charming wild Extravagance of Love;
Let human Beauties claim their proper Share,
But Oh! supremely love THE EVERLASTING FAIR!
Friendship, thou sacred Name! may every Mind
Whom thy soft Fetters in sweet Bondage bind;
Who melted into Union coalesce,
And but one Joy, one Grief, one Life possess;
O may their warmest Gratitude ascend
In Extasies to their celestial Friend!
Praise Him, ye happy Pairs, who no more sigh
For absent Bliss, but all your Wish enjoy:
Your Hands conjoin'd, cogenial Souls commixt;
And not a jealous Thought intrudes betwixt;
While mutual Confidence, and Peace serene
Smile in your Looks, and still the Storms within:
Your mutual Virtues mutual Wants supply;
Your Burden shar'd, and multiply'd your Joy;
Adore His Name who join'd two kindred Souls,
And fashion'd you in correspondent Moulds.
CONNUBIAL LOVE! thrice happy was the Hour
I fell a willing Captive to thy Pow'r.
Opprest I panted underneath my Load,
While I a single Individual stood:
But,
Chara, since with thee I coalesc'd,
And join'd thee to my maim'd imperfect Breast,
I grew into a finish'd Man, compleat,
And hardly feel the huge unwieldy Weight—
[Page 59]
So when a marble Pillar singly tries
To bear the Weight of some vast Edifice,
The Pillar trembles, and the tott'ring Wall
Horrendous nods, and threats a thund'ring Fall.
But if the prudent Architect bestows
A Set of Columns in proportion'd Rows,
The Building stands indissolubly firm,
And mocks the blust'ring Hurricane and Storm.
Nor will my OTHER SELF refuse to own
She finds her Soul to perfect Stature grown,
And two conjoin'd but make a finish'd ONE
The rougher Virtues of a manly Mind
With her more tender female Virtues join'd,
Form a well-temper'd Compound.—So unite
The Glooms of Black, and the mild Streaks of White,
And form a well-mix'd Picture, pleasing to the Sight.
The Mildness of her Temper seem'd to court
Masculine Boldness for its kind Support;
Unfit, alone, t' avert impending Harms,
And face Life's Terrors and outragious Storms.—
So creeps the noble Vine along the Ground,
When no supporting Elm is near her found:
No gen'rous Clusters her rich Boughs adorn,
Smother'd with noxious Weeds and overborn.
But place some kind Support within her Reach,
Her marriageable Arms you'll see her stretch;
Round the rough Trunk with loving Tendrils twine,
And bloom on high, a fair prolific Vine.
Chara, beneath thy Influence I felt
The charming Flame; my Soul was taught to melt
In Extasies unknown, and soon began
To put the Stoic off, and soften into Man.
The Veil of Modesty, in vain confin'd
Th' alluring Beauties of thy lovely Mind:
[Page 60] The shining Charms beam'd thro' the fair Disguise;
Blush'd in thy Aspect, dazzled in thy Eyes;
In every Word, in all thy Conduct known,
And in thy artless Face, well-copy'd, shone—
So thro' refulgent Clouds breaks the bright Morning Sun.
I saw, I lov'd, I sought to gain,
The blooming Fair; nor sought in vain.
Thy yielding Bosom soon began to glow
With the same Flame thy Charms taught me to know.
Thy Soul, unskill'd in those inhumane Arts,
Thy Sex affect to torture captive Hearts,
A constant Lover did disdain to vex,
Or with unkind Delays and treach'rous Wiles perplex.
Thy Soul, that knew not what dissembling meant,
With modest soft Reluctance, blush'd Consent.
In Transport lost the joyful News I heard;
And vow'd my Life the Favour to reward.
A solemn Rite the willing Contract seal'd,
To stand, 'til Death divide us, unrepeal'd.
'Twas gracious Heav'n presided o'or our Choice—
Come,
Chara, then, assist my grateful Voice.
To Thee, Great GOD! to Thee alone we owe
This mutual Bliss, this Paradise below.
And dost THOU, Sovereign Ruler of the Spheres!
Stoop down to Worms, and manage our Affairs!
THOU, in Whose Sight Arch-Angels are but Nought,
And highest Heav'n beneath Thy meanest Thought!
Compar'd with Whom, ten thousand Worlds appear
But Vanity, unworthy of Thy Care!
Oh! what are we, or what our Father's House,
That THOU should'st condescend so low to us,
And with peculiar Favours crown us thus!
*
O! never, never be Thy Grace forgot
That destin'd for us a distinguish'd Lot.
[Page 61] While wretched Thousands, form'd of diff'rent Clay,
In nuptial Fetters fret their Days away;
Jangle and murmur in eternal Strife,
And gnaw'd with Jealousies consume their Life;
In mutual Love, in mutual Confidence,
Unconscious of Suspicion or Offence,
In Fondness, Peace and melting Tenderness,
The calm unclouded Day of Life we pass:
Pitying survey the angry jarring World,
Contentious, loud, in boist'rous Passions whirl'd:
Then into sweet Society retire,
And find the peaceful Calm our Souls desire.
Love charms the Heart, and in the Aspect smiles,
Our anxious Griefs and fretting Cares beguiles;
Doubles our Pleasures, while th' impartial Scale
Of Sympathy divides the Woes we feel.
Thus over Life's tempestous Sea we sail,
When Storms blow fierce, and the rough Surges swell;
With equal Hands ply the tough yielding Oar,
And fly triumphant to the wish'd for Shore.
O! may our Days, Eternal GOD! be Thine;
And every Passion yield to Love Divine.
Oh! in our Hearts still do Thou reign supreme;
Nor let us steal the Love thy Glories claim.
But here, ah! here a guilty Scene appears!—
Oh! break my senseless Heart, and flow my Tears!
How manifold and strange my Frailties be!
Chara, I find Temptations ev'n in thee!
When fondly in thy loving Arms I rest,
And thy resistless Charms enflame my Breast,
The pleasing Tempter seizes all my Heart,
Or leaves my GOD but the inferior Part.
Almighty Grace th' Extravagance controul
Of this unruly Pow'r that captivates my Soul.
[Page 62] From all created charms my Heart recall,
To the ALL-PERFECT FAIR, TH' ETERNAL ALL!
My lovely
Chara! help me to restrain
The wild Excesses of the Love you gain.
With Horror, shun the sacrilegious Thest,
And tho' I give, yet Oh! refuse the Gift.
Far from my Breast expell each human Fair;
But Oh! let JESUS reign unrivall'd there:
JESUS! Thou sacred and unrivall'd Name!
My warmest Love thy matchless Glories claim.
Ah! shall this Spark Thy Spirit did inspire,
From Thee, its Origin, my Heart ensnare!
No! Claim my tend'rest Passions for Thy own;
Or tear them from my Heart, and change me into Stone.
Another pleasing Scene, my Muse, disclose—
Love multiply'd in blooming Branches grows.
These smiling Infants with a thousand Arts
To fond parental Love dissolve our Hearts.
In our fond Arms the pretty Triflers toy,
And overwhelm us with oppressive Joy.
Young Reason blooms, and shews its tender Flow'rs,
And importunes INSTRUCTION's gentle Show'rs.
Delightful Task! to rear the tender Thought;
To teach the young Idea how to shoot;
To form the pliant Mind in Virtue's Mould,
Before it hardens, and stiff Vice grows old.
Eternal GOD! to whom ourselves we owe,
To Thee we dedicate our Offspring too.
O! may Thy Conduct guide them o'er the Stage
Of slipp'ry Youth to Manhood's sob'rer Age;
And if Thou crown their Heads with hoary Hairs,
May they devote to Thee their aged Years;
Proclaim Thy Praise, when we resign our Breath,
And lie forgotten in the Dust of Death.
[Page 63] Then in Thy kind Embraces let them die,
And people the celestial Colony.
Chara, thou dear Partaker of my Heart,
The Hour approaches, when ev'n we must part:
We tho' in strongest Bonds of Union join'd,
Must feel the painful Rupture of the Mind.
When on the Bridal Day I took thy Hand,
And clasp'd thee to me in the nuptial Band,
This Thought did mod'rate my Excess of Joy.
"
Resistless Death this Union will destroy:
"
This spendid Jewel must not still be mine;
"But cruel Fate will force me to resign."
I shudder at the Prospect!—Ah! my Dear,
How could I leave you solitary here!
Leave you, like the poor widow'd Dove, to mourn!
Opprest with Cares, in the wide World forlorn!
With all the Mother yearning in your Breast,
To see your helpless Orphan-Babes distrest!
Methinks I see you weeping o'er my Clay,
And drown'd in Sorrow, my pale Corpse survey:
"There all my Comfort, all my Joy lies dead,
(You cry) "Each smiling Prospect now is fled.
"My Love, alas! was impotent to save
"The Man I lov'd from the all-conquering Grave.
"To Thee, Great GOD! the Widow's Friend, I flee;
"I've no Support, no Refuge now, but Thee."
Methinks I see you sad and solemn tread
The Place where I lie mould'ring 'mong the Dead
"Here the dear Reliques lie, the Dust lies here,"
You say, and sob, and drop a tender Tear,
"The Dust of that dear Man, who once possest
"My Soul, whom these fond Arms have oft embrac'd.
[Page 64] "Here silent, senseless, now he lies; nor hears
"His
Chara's Sighs, nor minds her flowing Tears."
O
Chara! could the iron Bands of Death
Be bursted, and its Slaves resume their Breath;
Thy Sorrows would revive my mould'ring Clay,
And Death's eternal Stupor drive away.
My senseless Dust with thee would sympathize,
And spring to Life to wipe thy streaming Eyes.
But ah! the Tyrant Death will not dismiss
His Captives, nor grant one poor Hour's Release.
Yet now at least my pitying Tears can flow,
In Prospect of th' approaching Scenes of Woe,
And now anticipate the Sympathy I owe.
Your Grief at my own Funeral I share,
And since I cannot then, now drop a Tear.
But Oh! the Prospect overwhelms my Minds—
I cannot, leave my Fair behind.
No!—Hear, Indulgent Heav'n! this humble Pray'r;
"
Let her not mourn for me, but me for her!
"
Doom me to live to close her dying Eyes,
"
And see her struggling in Death's Agonies.
"
The pale cold Clay with last Embraces clasp,
"
And from her Lips receive th' expiring Gasp.
"
Attend her Reliques to her clay-cold Bed,
"
And o'er her Grave my dewy Sorrows shed.
"
In pensive Solitude oft thither rove,
"
To view the Mansion of the Dust I love.
"
In melancholy Crape myself array,
"
And darken with the Pomp of Grief the Day.
"
Thus mourn away the sad Remains of Life,
"'Til friendly Death restore me to my Wife."—
Ah no! ah no! Kind Heav'n! refuse to hear;
Nor curse me with the Answer of my Pray'r.
[Page 65] My Heart would break, my Spirit faint away,
To see my
Chara pallid lifeless Clay.
To hear the Clods with hollow murm'ring Sound
Fall on thy Coffin, would my Soul confound.
And when th' important, solemn Hour draws nigh,
When I must bow my fainting Head and die,
How could I face the Terrors, if thou wert not by?
May I expire in thy kind Arms embrac'd,
And Guardian Angels take me from thy Breast,
And guide my Soul to everlasting Rest!
May thy dear Voice some cheering Thought suggest,
And teach me on my Saviour's Arm to rest;
Whisper some Promise from the sacred Writ,
That thro' Death's Glooms may dart a cheerful Light.
Above for thee I'll wait, 'til gentle Fate
Waft up thy Soul, and make our Bliss compleat.
But here again the dismal Views return,—
I see my
Chara pine and weep and mourn.
The moving Sight my Spirit cannot bear;
And here again I must retract my Pray'r.
Straiten'd, perplext, I know not what to crave;
A longer Life than she, or earlier Grave.
Propitious Heav'n! direct my doubtful Vow,
And what is best, ask'd or unask'd, bestow.
Thus the best Blessing does perplexing prove;
These are the wild Anxieties of Love.
The senseless Stoic seeks the Bliss in vain,
'Tis true — but then, he pines not with the Pain,
His little
Self is all his narrow Care,
And all his Fears and Wishes center there.
But this fond Soul with various Passions tost,
Is in a Maze of Contradictions loft.
[Page 66] Now could I almost wish from Love to flee,
And harden into quiet Apathy.
But Oh! is there no Cure, no heav'nly Art
To case this twinging Anguish of my Heart?
To arm this coward Soul, and make her smile
At all the Terrors of approaching Ill?
To teach these Spectres no more to affright,
That stalk in future Time's impenetrable Night?
O yes there is!—My anxious Soul be still;
Calmly submit to Heav'n's all-ruling Will.
His Will be done! Refuse to chuse thy Lot;
And leave that Trust to His unerring Thought.
He rules unnumber'd Worlds with Skill Divine;
And can't He rule these mean Affairs of thine?
What's best for us, His Wisdom only knows;
And what is best, His boundless Grace bestows.
Here will I rest: And here, my
Chara too,
Appears a Rock in every Storm for you.
But Nature, perverse Nature, will rebel,
And o'er my calm and settled Thoughts prevail.
The rising Waves will dash me from my Rock;
And all my firmest Resolutions shock.
Father! forgive these Ravings of my Love;
These lawless Passions that rebellious rove.
O! to this Fondness proper Limits set,
And its Extravagancies regulate.
If my wild Pen one guilty Word has writ,
Pity my Weakness, and that Word remit.
Be Thou my Bliss, be Thou my All, in Life;
My Strength, my Comfort, in the dying Strife.
If 'tis Thy Will that I should pine alone,
Bereft of
Chara, may Thy Will be done!
Or if I first relapse to native Dust,
And leave her here to mourn, Thy Will is just.
[Page 67] Thy Right it is, the Knot Thy Hands have ty'd
When, where, and as Thou pleasest, to divide.
Yet O! forgive Thy Servant if he speaks,
And Dust and Ashes this one Prayer makes:
If Thou consent, thankful before Thy Feet
I fall! if not, I'm silent and submit.
"O! may we both at once resign our Breath,
"And sink together in the Arms of Death.
"One humble Tomb preserve our mingling Dust,
"'Til the all-rousing Trump demand the Trust.
"Conducted by one heav'nly Convoy rise,
"And soar together to the upper Skies.
"There in eternal Union praise Thy Name,
"And Love Divine our mingled Souls enflame."
Chara, this humble Monument I raise
Of our fond Passion, in my youthful Days;
That if you're doom'd the mournful Day to view,
When I shall cease to speak or write to you;
When my dull Muse shall silent lie in Death,
Or in celestial Strains employ her tuneful Breath;
To still, or rather vent your Griefs, you may
With gushing Eyes these tender Lines survey,
And as you pore upon them, sigh and say,
"Well; once I had a Friend, whose loving Soul
"Did antedate these Sorrows to condole;
"That early wail'd my then uncertain Doom,
"And mourn'd in Prospect what I mourn as come.
Or if grim Death first tear you from my Breast;
And waft you earlier to eternal Rest;
I may at least enjoy that poor Relief,
To find a Help to vent my bursting Grief;
To raise the Sluices of o'erwhelming Woe,
That Deluges of easing Tears may flow.
[Page 68]
But Oh! why does the cruel Muse repose
So early, Treasures for our future Woes?
Nor you nor I can then endure to view
These sad Predictions then so sadly true.
Again perplext, I wish my Work undone;
But the resistless Passion push'd me on.
I doom these dire Predictions to the Fire;
Yet would the sad Accomplishment appear;
Therefore I check my Ravings, and forbear.
XVIII.
The MESSIAH
's KINGDOM.
Extracted out of the Prophet Isaiah
*
DEscend, Celestial Dove! my Voice inspire
O thou that tipt
Isaiah's Tongue with Fire!
†
Teach me like him to feel th' extatic Flame,
And raise my Numbers equal to my Theme.
"Rapt into future Times, the Bard begun,—
"A Virgin shall conceive, a Virgin bear a Son."
‡
His Names Divine His Dignity declare!
Immanuel, the wondrous Counseller:
Th' eternal Father, the pacific Prince,
The GOD arm'd with His own Omnipotence.
§
Th' eternal Spirit shall profusely shed
His richest Unction on his sacred Head:
Wisdom and Knowledge, Piety and Might
Descend, and on His sacred Temples light.
‖
The radiant Beam of His all-piercing Eyes
Shall dart thro' lurking Frauds obstruse Disguise.
[Page 69] Sly Hypocrites with all their artful Shews
On His Omniscience try in vain t'impose.
*
His Shoulders shall the Government sustain,
And He triumphant o'er the Nations reign:
His growing Empire o'er the World extend,
And know no Bounds but Nature's utmost End.
†
To this illustrious Ensign, high in Air,
The numerous Tribes of
Adam shall repair:
Thither the Gentiles with unwearied Feet
Shall tend, and there in endless Armies meet;
With the MESSIAH's peaceful Conduct blest,
Shall, undisturb'd enjoy eternal Rest.
‡
The scatt'red Remnant of the sacred Stock,
Shall to their own MESSIAH's Standard flock;
With eager Haste in endless Orders crowd
From foreign Climes and barb'rous Servitude.
§
Impartial Justice shall erect her Scale,
And weak, insulted Innocence prevail:
The Meek, the Poor defy impending Harm,
And smile secure beneath His Guardian Arm.
‖
Eternal Righteousness shall rule the Globe,
The glorious Girdle of His royal Robe.
¶
Confusion, Anarchy, with wild Dismay,
Shall fly afar from his well ordered Sway:
Serene and steady his Affairs shall run
In calm, harmonious Order ever on.
**
Nor shall His Reign those Revolutions know
That toss the petty Monarchies below;
But while eternal Years their Circuits run,
Triumphant He shall sit on
David's Throne.
**
Soft Peace shall bloom in His auspicious Reign;
The Olive flourish in eternal Green.
††
[Page 70] He into Peace the jarring World shall look,
And still their Contests with his dread Rebuke:
The jarring World, obedient to His Eye,
Shall lay their useless martial Weapons by.
The bloody Sword new form'd shall learn to plow,
And mortal Spears to Pruning-Hooks shall bow:
No more shall Fields drink in heroic Gore,
Nor brazen Trumpets kindle Fury more,
Nor deadly War with usual Thunder roar.
*
The Tribes that savage and rapacious rove
In Quest of Prey, shall soften into Love;
And weary of their former sullen Joy,
Shall in the sacred Mount no more destroy,
"The Lambs with Wolves shall graze the verdant Mead.
"And Boys in flow'ry Bands the Tyger lead.
"The Steer and Lion at one Crib shall meet,
"And harmless Serpents lick the Pilgrim's Feet.
"The smiling Infant in his Hand shall take,
"The erected Basilisk, and speckled Snake;
"Pleas'd the green Lustre of the Scales survey,
"And with their forky Tongue and pointless Sting shall play."
†
The proud Rebuke, the big insulting Frown
Shall on the smiling Earth no more be known.
"No Sigh, no Murmur the wide World shall hear;
"From every Face He wipes off every Tear."
‡
Then shall the Earth, the Air, the Sea, the Sky
Eccho with Praise and grateful Harmony.
To Thee JEHOVAH! every Tongue shall sing;
And with loud Praise the wide Creation ring.
Tho' late Thy Wrath did with dread Fury glow,
The Flame is quench'd, and now Thy Mercies flow.
The Hand that wounded, now affords Relief,
And endless Joy succeeds to transient Grief.
§
[Page 71]
Behold a GOD vouchsafes to be my Aid!
Why should I, thus protected, be afraid?
Th' Omnipotent becomes my Strength and Guard,
And His Salvation my immense Reward.
Therefore my Tongue, the Glory of my Frame,
Exulting shall His grateful Praise proclaim.
*
My Soul with lib'ral Draughts be satisfy'd,
Where living Streams of pure Salvation glide:
In parched Desarts copious Streams shall burst,
And flow, and quench the Pilgrim's raging Thirst.
†
Then various Tongues shall say with one Accord,
Come jointly let us praise th' Almighty Lord;
With reverent Lips invoke His awful Name,
And round th' astonish'd World His wond'rous Works proclaim.
Let thousand Tongues with glad Submission own,
JEHOVAH reigns exalted on his Throne;
‡
Let thousand Voices in loud Accents sing
The vast Exploits of the eternal King;
Exploits to Earth's remotest Limits known,
Vast as his Power, and boundless as his Throne.
§
As some besieged City, when they spy
Their kind Deliverer's welcome Flag draw nigh,
With Shouts triumphant stun the ecchoing Skies,
And shock the Courage of their Enemies:
So sacred
Zion! with exulting Voice,
Shout loud thro' Heav'n and Earth thy boist'rous Joys;
For great in Majesty, and great in Arms,
Clad in fair Holiness with all its Charms,
Great in the Midst of thee JEHOVAH reigns,
And the fierce Rage of hostile Pow'r restrains.
‖
Thy Arm, Great GOD! has levell'd to the Ground
Proud Cities that proclaim'd Defiance round;
[Page 72] Laid in rude Heaps the strong aspiring Tow'r,
And Palaces to be repair'd no more.
*
These mighty Works convey'd on Wings of Fame,
Shall teach the World to reverence Thy Name.
Conqu'rors shall lay their Laurels at Thy Feet,
And savage Nations tremble and submit.
†
Tyrants shall feel the Terror of his Rod,
And own, reluctant, a superior GOD.
Oppression, blasted with his vengeful Breath,
Wither and sink in everlasting Death;
Thro' Rebel Crowds the Terror of his Word
Shall pierce resistless like a griding Sword.
‡
Aspiring-Mortals! hide you in the Rock
From the majestick Terror of His Look:
Into the Dust, abas'd, confounded sink,
And struck with Awe from his dread Presence shrink.
§
The supercilious Look, the lofty Brow,
The stubborn Haughtiness of Man shall bow;
And in that Day th' UNNUTTERABLE NAME,
Shall reign unrivall'd on His Throne supreme.
‖
The proud, aspiring Monarchs of the World
Shall from their fancy'd Dignity be hurl'd.
¶
His vengeful Thunder with destructive Strokes
Shall rend and blast proud
Bashan's sturdy Oaks,
The stately Cedars of
Libanus scathe,
And blend their Fragments with the Shrubs beneath.
**
The tow'ring Mountains and aspiring Hills
Adoring fall and sink to humble Vales.
††
The Tow'r impregnable, the fenced Wall
Crumble to Dust, and with loud Ruin fall
‡‡
The Ships of
Tarshish, fraught with golden Store,
Founder in the rough Deep and float no more.
§§
[Page 73] Struck with the Terror of JEHOVAH's Look,
Aspiring Worms shall creep into the Rock;
To gloomy Clefts and Caves, with wild Dismay,
From His majestic Presence shrink away,
When He with Terror shall Himself enrobe,
And rises to affright the trembling Globe.
*
With pious Boasts then shall th' insulted Just
Proclaim the Issue of their patient Trust.
Ye impious Scoffers of our Patience, see!
Our GOD appears! th' Incarnate Deity!
Our GOD appears! for Him, for Him we sought;
And lo! our patient Tears are not forgot.
This is our GOD! and lo! the GOD appears!
Exult our Hearts! and flow no more our Tears!
Salvation on this glad Approach attends,
And grants the largest Wishes of his Friends.
†
Here shall Omnipotence itself exert,
And His right Hand shall never hence depart:
With wrathful Majesty His Feet shall tread
On
Zion's Foes, and Heaps of hostile Dead;
Insult the Rebels prostrate struck with Awe;
So heavy Oxen tread the rotting Straw.
‡
Then shall He scatter the dark Glooms of Hell,
And from benighted Nations tear the Veil,
The universal Veil that now excludes
The cheerful Light from groping Multitudes.
§
So bright a Glory shall He dart around,
The dazzling Deluge shall the Sun confound,
Absorpt and lost in the superior Light,
The Sun shall hide his Face, in everlasting Night:
The Moon confounded, thro' the midnight Shade
Shall gleam no more, nor feeble Radiance spread.
‖
[Page 74] For as th' accumulated Waters crowd
Th' unbounded Deep, old Ocean's vast Abode;
Th' unbottom'd Cavity compactly fill
With Waves on Waves, Billows on Billows still:
So shall the Dawn of bright celestial Light
O'erflow the World, and banish ancient Night;
Thro' thickest Glooms of Ignorance shall pierce,
And dart its Lustre round the Universe.
*
The wretched Tribes that walk in Death's dark Shade,
With Clouds of Ignorance and Guilt o'erspread,
Observe the heavenly Ray, with glad Surprize,
Dart thro' the hideous Gloom and bless their Eyes.
†
(Not so the Tribes beneath the Artic Bear,
Immur'd in Ice and Darkness half the Year,
Rejoice to see the Stranger-Sun appear.)
With brighter Splendors fir'd, the languid Moon
Shall shine the Rival of the Noon-day Sun;
The Noon-day Sun with sevenfold Lustre glow,
And seven Days Light at once the World o'erflow.
†
The heav'nly Branch from
Jesse's sacred Root,
To bless the World shall germinate and shoot;
See clad in vernal Beauty, how it blooms!
And breathes among the Nations rich Perfumes:
Blest with its Fruit th' expiring World revives,
And Death avoids the Fragrance of its Leaves.
§
O'ercome with sultry Heat, the fainting Head,
Reclin'd beneath its fragrant cooling Shade,
Shall fresh returning Life and Vigour feel,
And in the Blaze of Noon himself regale.
When ruptur'd Clouds in rapid Torrents burst,
And rush o'erwhelming with outragious Gust,
The verdant Shelter guards the Tempest off,
That raves in vain around the arb'rous Roof.
‖
[Page 75]
As with a Cloud Thou dost the Earth regale,
When Noon-day Beams and scorching Suns prevail;
*
As cooling Streams in barren parched Lands
Refresh the Trav'ler on the burning Sands;
As some great Rock with its propitious Shade
Protects from piercing Beams the drooping Head;
†
So shall Thy Grace relieve the helpless Poor,
When round them Crowds of hostile Strangers roar;
‡
Their fiercest Rage shall ineffectual fall,
Like Blasts that ravage round a brazen Wall.
The Lord of Armies shall his Table spread
On
Zion Mount, and famish'd Nations feed;
With heav'nly Dainties form the sumptuous Feast,
Where luscious Marrow shall delight the Taste;
The gen'rous Grape her vig'rous Juice bestow
And vet'ran Wine in copious Rivers flow;
Wine well refin'd, extracted from the Lees,
Season'd by Time, and ripen'd fit to please.
Th' expiring World shall take what He prepares,
Appease their Hunger and renew their Years.
§
On barren Wastes th' eternal Spirit pours
His sacred Influence in prolific Show'rs;
The Desart flourishes a fruitful Field,
And verdant Groves adorn the horrid Wild.
‖
The Desert blossoms like the fragrant Rose,
And there sweet
Leb'non's flow'ry Beauty glows.
**
There a new
Sharon breathes its sweet Perfumes,
Fresh Lilies spring, and sudden Verdure blooms.
††
"The Trav'ler starts amidst the Wilds to hear
"New Falls of Water murm'ring in his Ear."
‡‡
Thro' the wide Wastes eternal Justice reigns,
And Judgment blooms thro' all the dismal Plains;
§§
[Page 76] Celestial Splendors from the Source Divine
Thro' the sad Realms of Desolation shine.
*
The barren Rocks, the bleak unwater'd Hills
Shall with irriguous Streams refresh the Vales;
From parched Mountains copious Rivers flow,
And on their barren Peaks eternal Verdure grow!
†
Surprizing Event! yet we rest assur'd;
A GOD, a GOD has spoke the solemn Word;
Even jealous Unbelief shall own it true,
For what his Lips declare His Pow'r can do.‖
XIX.
[...], Or,
The invisible World.
PROUD Mortal! to what narrow Bounds confin'd
Are the most ample Prospects of his Mind!
Impenetrable Mists and Clouds surround
His Reason, and its boasted Pow'rs confound.
He roves, tho' fixt to this contracted Spot,
In all th' Extravagance of boundless Thought.
Behind, Before, from the precarious Now,
(His only Time) he turns his eager View.
Behind, Eternity's unbounded Main
Extends infinite Lengths beyond his Ken,
Before, the same valt Ocean swells again.
Our Time is but a little floating Isle;
For wide Discoveries we look round and toil,
In vain; the Isle lies wrapt in thickest Glooms,
Where scarce a Gleam of shining Knowledge comes.
If
back we turn our Eyes, we only see
'Twas some Almighty Pow'r gave us To Be;
Some bright INVISIBLE, some great UNKNOWN
Spoke us to Life But a few Years agone.
[Page 77] Whate'er Thou art, Thou Dear UNKNOWN! receive
The humble Praise and Love Thy Offspring aims to give:
For O! Thy innate Glories must outshine
Their fairest Copies in these Works of Thine.
Duration, ere that Hour, a Blank appears;
We're lost in Mazes of unbounded Years.
A thousand Contradictions press us round,
And our unequal Faculties confound
Yet thro' the vast Obscure, we see and own
The Maker reign'd on His eternal Throne,
Self-happy, self-sufficient, Ages unbegun:
Rich in unmov'd Benev'lence, planning Schemes
To vent His Goodness in o'erflowing Streams
To Worlds unborn; or then perhaps employ'd
In new Creations thro' the boundless Void
In long Succession; Worlds beyond our Ken,
Or to their native Nothing turn'd again.
Before me, What unbounded Prospects lie
Wrapt in the Darkness of Futurity!
I feel the Pulse of Immortality
Beat, and assure me I must ever Be;
But where! or how!—Here feeble Reason fails,
The Gospel too but glimm'ring Rights reveals;
Assures the good of Joys in Paradise,
And thunders Vengeance to the Slaves of Vice;
Enough to give fair Virtue winning Charms,
And shock the Libertine with dire Alarms:
Yet hides those Scenes, in which with humble Eye
A Philosophic Mind aspires to pry.
Eternity! We daily walk upon
Its slippery Brink, and yet it lies unknown;
Seems an unbounded Void, a dismal Waste,
With Shadows, Clouds, and Darkness overcast.
[Page 78] Fain would we plunge into the vast Abyss,
And trace ourselves these boundless Mysteries;
But dark Suspicion gives a sudden Check,
And strait the Soul recoils and startles back.
Some daily make th' Experiment around,
But none return t' inform us what they've found:
They leap impetuous from this mortal Shore,
And dive; and we behold them rise no more;
As tho' absorpt in the unbounded Deep,
Or sunk and lost in everlasting Sleep.
Some, whose dear Mem'ries now dissolve my Mind,
Once to my Heart in closest Friendship join'd,
Have gone before, and left me here behind.
Now in th' immortal Colonies they dwell,
And people Worlds to us invisible;
Hold Converse with the Tennants of the Sky,
The various Nations of Eternity;
The various Tribes with which Omnipotence
Has peopled Regions thro' the vast Immense.
ROBINSON!
* Once my Father, Patron, Friend,
Thy painful Labours now the Prize have gain'd.
Now in a happy SOMEWHERE dwells thy Soul,
Where Rivers of immortal Pleasures roll.
Tho' Heav'n no doubt is thy blest Residence
Yet, where, O! where, thro' the unknown Immense,
Dost thou reside? how live, and act, and move?
And thro' what blissful Regions dost thou rove,
[Page 79] Transported still?—O could I soar to thee,
My ROBINSON! how happy should I be!
Is JESUS still the Matter of thy Song?
The Theme below of thy harmonious Tongue.
O yes! His Name diffuses Heav'n to thee
Thro' all th' Apartments of Immensity.
Thy Voice on Earth to Mortals taught His Name;
Now Angels listen to the glorious Theme.
Or does thy Soul delight, as when below,
T' attend as Guardian to conduct us thro'
This dang'rous Wild? With Fellow-Angels wait
To guide departing Saints to th' heav'nly Gate?
Then in thy Turn the gen'rous Care resign,
And hymn th' eternal Throne with Songs Divine?
Converse with Seraphs, and in equal Lays
And equal Zeal, proclaim thy Maker's Praise?
There CARNWATH
* shines, who won the rich Reward
Ere for the sacred Service quite prepar'd;
Obtain'd the Prize before he felt the Toil,
And reap'd his Harvest ere he till'd the Soil.
He left the Theologic Subtilties
Of
Schoolmen,
† to be taught above the Skies;
Blest Change! where one bright Hour instructs him more
Than all his painful Studies could before.
O! could'st, thou now thy Thoughts to me relate,
As oft thou did'st, while in this mortal State;
What wondrous Lessons would my Ears surprize,
What unexpected Scenes before me rise,
And in one shining Moment make me wise!
[Page 80]
Or were the Curtains of the Flesh withdrawn,
That Immortality might round me dawn;
What Prospects wonderful, immense and new
Would instantaneous crowd into my View!
Beings, and Worlds, and Regions hid before,
And the Great Author, whom those Worlds adore!
Well; I ere long th' Experiment must try,
And launch into unknown Eternity.
The mould'ring Bank that now supports my Weight,
Ere long must fall, and sink beneath my Feet:
Then tho' I catch and hold and strive to stay,
My Doom is fixt, my Soul! thou must away;
Thou must away, some distant Worlds t'explore,
And see the Vanities of Earth no more;
Must howl with Fiends, or with blest Angels shine,
In endless Torments, or in Joys Divine.
The Interval, at most, is short between
The present fleeting NOW, and Worlds unseen.
Forty or fifty Years, perhaps a Day,
Or Hour, will break this tottering House of Clay.
Alarming Thought! Almighty Grace prepare
My shudd'ring Soul to fly she knows not where.
All-gracious GOD! be Thou my Resting-Place;
Heav'n flows exuberant from Thy smiling Face
Thro' the Immensity of unknown Space.
O! be Thou mine; and wheresoe'er I dwell
All will be Heav'n, tho' in the Glooms of Hell.
[Page 81]
XX.
The Triumphs of CHRIST's
dying Love.
*
I.
THEE, Great Incarnate Godhead, Thee
Th' Almighty Father's equal Progeny,
Thee, JESUS! dear and venerable Name,
Partaker of our frail Humanity,
Thee shall my Voice, my Harp, my Muse and Quill proclaim.
II.
Wake my Harp! melodious sing
On each sweetly-sounding String
Th' illustrious Conquests of the Saviour-King:
In loud majestic Accents sound
His Triumphs o'er the Pow'rs below,
When He gave Death his everlasting-Wound,
'Led the infernal Monsters bound,
And crush'd the direst Terrors of His Foe.
III.
While Ages unbegun
Their vast, their boundless Circuits run,
On His eternal Father's loving Breast,
Self-happy, infinitely blest,
Lay the coeval Son;
In the immense JEHOVAH satisfy'd,
And the entire Divinity enjoy'd.
[Page 82]
IV.
There lay the filial Godhead, till He saw
From the superior Sky,
Adam trangress his Maker's Law,
Hell yawn with greedy Jaws to draw
Into one Ruin all his wretched Progeny.
He saw the Flashes of vindictive Fire
Break out impatient from the Throne,
And the Angelic Messenger
Wave his dread Weapons, that high-brandish'd shone,
Thirsting for human Blood; while Hell grew proud
With Hopes of Prey, and laugh'd prophanely loud.
V.
He saw, and (O amazing Grace!) He lov'd,
With Pity all his inmost Bowels mov'd,
And Love omnipotent began to glow:
"Shall all the human Race, He cries,
"Fall an eternal Sacrifice,
"And grace the Triumphs of the insulting Foe?
"What! shall Hell's Tyranny destroy
"My Father's Image, Work and Boast,
"And riot in malicious Joy
"To see His fav'rite Creature lost?
"No! rather confounded,
"With Chaos surrounded,
"Be Heav'n, Earth, Ocean and all!
"The Wheels of Nature break,
"The Universe to horrid Wreck,
"Blended, disjointed, fall!
"I will o'ercome, or be o'ercome,
"Wrench from the Tyrant's Hand his royal Rod,
"Or yield him mine, and own him God:
"My chosen Race shall live, or I will share their Doom.
[Page 83] "By the dread Life of the Divinity,
"Possest by the eternal THREE,
"I swear and ratify the firm Decree."
VI.
He said; He rose, and bow'd
The chrystal Heav'ns, and down he came:
Aside He threw the Grandeur of a GOD,
In mortal Regions fixt his low Abode,
And cloath'd Himself in feeble human Frame.
VII.
He gave His Heart to the vindictive Sword
Without a murm'ring Word;
Patient, His sacred Breath
At the Arrest of Death
Resign'd—O! the dire Terrors of the THUND'RER'S Wrath!
O! the immense Severity
Of the dread Law! the dire Reward
Of Sin! the Vengeance of the flaming Sword
Of Justice! O! dire Fruits of the forbidden Tree!
VIII.
Come, Sinners, see your Saviour dead,
And weep around His Tomb:
Your Hope, your Joy, your All is fled;
For Oh! your Champion's overcome.
For you in Conflict with the Pow'rs of Hell
He nobly fought, but ah! He fell.
IX.
But whither, raving Muse? refrain;
Nor with ignoble Tears profane
The Triumphs of the GOD.
[Page 84] The Dying Champion overthrows
Th' united Force of all His Foes;—
In louder Strains proclaim His Victories abroad:
X.
Sing how thro' the Shades of Death
He enter'd the dark Realms beneath,
Where Hell and Horror rage:
Th' infernal Pow'rs perceiv'd the GOD,
And the grim Monsters roar'd aloud,
Nor durst the well-known Arm engage.
XI.
Old Chaos trembled, Satan fled,
And in Hell's deepest Pit sought to conceal his Head.
"In vain thou fleest, the Conqu'ror cries,
"Fly to the Bottom of th' Abyss,
"This vengeful Thunder-Bolt shall dart thee thro',
"And to the lowest Deep pursue."
He said, and strait the glowing Bolt He threw:
New Horror seiz'd the trembling Host,
Blasted with vengeful Flame;
For well they mind the Day when Heav'n they lost,
And Thunder drove them to th' infernal Coast,
To Darkness, Pain and Shame.
XII.
He broke the Instruments of Pain,
Engines to torture, guilty Ghosts;
And strew'd them o'er the gloomy Coasts;
The Rack, the Wheel, the adamantine Chain
He tore and scatter'd o'er th' infernal Plain,
Unstrung the Monster Death, and bid him hiss in vain
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XIII.
But see! the Conqu'ror leaves the Glooms
Of Hell, and climbs His native Sky:
Around His Head victorious Lawrel blooms,
And Triumph sparkles in His Eye:
He drags the Tyrant of the Gulf profound
At His triumphant Chariot bound.
XIV.
Heav'n celebrates a Jubilee,
And shouts aloud His glad Return;
The heav'nly Choirs proclaim His Victory,
And with unusual Rapture burn.
His TRIUMPHS all the Harps on high,
His TRIUMPHS Mortals grateful sing;
The Universe joins in the Harmony,
And Stars, and Earth, and Seas, with His loud TRIUMPHS ring.