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  • Title: Eighteen Hundred and Eleven
  • Author: Anna Laetitia Barbauld
  • Release Date: November 19, 2004 [EBook #14100]
  • Language: English
  • *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EIGHTEEN HUNDRED AND ELEVEN ***
  • Produced by David Starner.
  • EIGHTEEN HUNDRED AND ELEVEN,
  • _A POEM_.
  • BY ANNA LÆTITIA BARBAULD.
  • LONDON:
  • PRINTED FOR J. JOHNSON AND CO.,
  • ST. PAUL'S CHURCHYARD.
  • 1812.
  • PRINTED BY
  • RICHARD TAYLOR AND CO., SHOE LANE.
  • EIGHTEEN HUNDRED AND ELEVEN.
  • Still the loud death drum, thundering from afar,
  • O'er the vext nations pours the storm of war:
  • To the stern call still Britain bends her ear,
  • Feeds the fierce strife, the alternate hope and fear;
  • Bravely, though vainly, dares to strive with Fate,
  • And seeks by turns to prop each sinking state.
  • Colossal Power with overwhelming force [2]
  • Bears down each fort of Freedom in its course;
  • Prostrate she lies beneath the Despot's sway,
  • While the hushed nations curse him--and obey,
  • Bounteous in vain, with frantic man at strife,
  • Glad Nature pours the means--the joys of life;
  • In vain with orange blossoms scents the gale,
  • The hills with olives clothes, with corn the vale;
  • Man calls to Famine, nor invokes in vain,
  • Disease and Rapine follow in her train;
  • The tramp of marching hosts disturbs the plough,
  • The sword, not sickle, reaps the harvest now,
  • And where the Soldier gleans the scant supply.
  • The helpless Peasant but retires to die;
  • No laws his hut from licensed outrage shield, [3]
  • And war's least horror is the ensanguined field.
  • Fruitful in vain, the matron counts with pride
  • The blooming youths that grace her honoured side;
  • No son returns to press her widow'd hand,
  • Her fallen blossoms strew a foreign strand.
  • --Fruitful in vain, she boasts her virgin race,
  • Whom cultured arts adorn and gentlest grace;
  • Defrauded of its homage, Beauty mourns,
  • And the rose withers on its virgin thorns.
  • Frequent, some stream obscure, some uncouth name
  • By deeds of blood is lifted into fame;
  • Oft o'er the daily page some soft-one bends
  • To learn the fate of husband, brothers, friends,
  • Or the spread map with anxious eye explores, [4]
  • Its dotted boundaries and penciled shores,
  • Asks _where_ the spot that wrecked her bliss is found,
  • And learns its name but to detest the sound.
  • And thinks't thou, Britain, still to sit at ease,
  • An island Queen amidst thy subject seas,
  • While the vext billows, in their distant roar,
  • But soothe thy slumbers, and but kiss thy shore?
  • To sport in wars, while danger keeps aloof,
  • Thy grassy turf unbruised by hostile hoof?
  • So sing thy flatterers; but, Britain, know,
  • Thou who hast shared the guilt must share the woe.
  • Nor distant is the hour; low murmurs spread,
  • And whispered fears, creating what they dread;
  • Ruin, as with an earthquake shock, is here, [5]
  • There, the heart-witherings of unuttered fear,
  • And that sad death, whence most affection bleeds,
  • Which sickness, only of the soul, precedes.
  • Thy baseless wealth dissolves in air away,
  • Like mists that melt before the morning ray:
  • No more on crowded mart or busy street
  • Friends, meeting friends, with cheerful hurry greet;
  • Sad, on the ground thy princely merchants bend
  • Their altered looks, and evil days portend,
  • And fold their arms, and watch with anxious breast
  • The tempest blackening in the distant West.
  • Yes, thou must droop; thy Midas dream is o'er;
  • The golden tide of Commerce leaves thy shore,
  • Leaves thee to prove the alternate ills that haunt [6]
  • Enfeebling Luxury and ghastly Want;
  • Leaves thee, perhaps, to visit distant lands,
  • And deal the gifts of Heaven with equal hands.
  • Yet, O my Country, name beloved, revered,
  • By every tie that binds the soul endeared,
  • Whose image to my infant senses came
  • Mixt with Religion's light and Freedom's holy flame!
  • If prayers may not avert, if 'tis thy fate
  • To rank amongst the names that once were great,
  • Not like the dim cold Crescent shalt thou fade,
  • Thy debt to Science and the Muse unpaid;
  • Thine are the laws surrounding states revere,
  • Thine the full harvest of the mental year,
  • Thine the bright stars in Glory's sky that shine, [7]
  • And arts that make it life to live are thine.
  • If westward streams the light that leaves thy shores,
  • Still from thy lamp the streaming radiance pours.
  • Wide spreads thy race from Ganges to the pole,
  • O'er half the western world thy accents roll:
  • Nations beyond the Apalachian hills
  • Thy hand has planted and thy spirit fills:
  • Soon as their gradual progress shall impart
  • The finer sense of morals and of art,
  • Thy stores of knowledge the new states shall know,
  • And think thy thoughts, and with thy fancy glow;
  • Thy Lockes, thy Paleys shall instruct their youth,
  • Thy leading star direct their search for truth;
  • Beneath the spreading Platan's tent-like shade, [8]
  • Or by Missouri's rushing waters laid,
  • "Old father Thames" shall be the Poets' theme,
  • Of Hagley's woods the enamoured virgin dream,
  • And Milton's tones the raptured ear enthrall,
  • Mixt with the roar of Niagara's fall;
  • In Thomson's glass the ingenuous youth shall learn
  • A fairer face of Nature to discern;
  • Nor of the Bards that swept the British lyre
  • Shall fade one laurel, or one note expire.
  • Then, loved Joanna, to admiring eyes
  • Thy storied groups in scenic pomp shall rise;
  • Their high soul'd strains and Shakespear's noble rage
  • Shall with alternate passion shake the stage.
  • Some youthful Basil from thy moral lay [9]
  • With stricter hand his fond desires shall sway;
  • Some Ethwald, as the fleeting shadows pass,
  • Start at his likeness in the mystic glass;
  • The tragic Muse resume her just controul,
  • With pity and with terror purge the soul,
  • While wide o'er transatlantic realms thy name
  • Shall live in light, and gather _all_ its fame.
  • Where wanders Fancy down the lapse of years
  • Shedding o'er imaged woes untimely tears?
  • Fond moody Power! as hopes--as fears prevail,
  • She longs, or dreads, to lift the awful veil,
  • On visions of delight now loves to dwell,
  • Now hears the shriek of woe or Freedom's knell:
  • Perhaps, she says, long ages past away, [10]
  • And set in western waves our closing day,
  • Night, Gothic night, again may shade the plains
  • Where Power is seated, and where Science reigns;
  • England, the seat of arts, be only known
  • By the gray ruin and the mouldering stone;
  • That Time may tear the garland from her brow,
  • And Europe sit in dust, as Asia now.
  • Yet then the ingenuous youth whom Fancy fires
  • With pictured glories of illustrious sires,
  • With duteous zeal their pilgrimage shall take
  • From the blue mountains, or Ontario's lake,
  • With fond adoring steps to press the sod
  • By statesmen, sages, poets, heroes trod;
  • On Isis' banks to draw inspiring air, [11]
  • From Runnymede to send the patriot's prayer;
  • In pensive thought, where Cam's slow waters wind,
  • To meet those shades that ruled the realms of mind;
  • In silent halls to sculptured marbles bow,
  • And hang fresh wreaths round Newton's awful brow.
  • Oft shall they seek some peasant's homely shed,
  • Who toils, unconscious of the mighty dead,
  • To ask where Avon's winding waters stray,
  • And thence a knot of wild flowers bear away;
  • Anxious enquire where Clarkson, friend of man,
  • Or all-accomplished Jones his race began;
  • If of the modest mansion aught remains
  • Where Heaven and Nature prompted Cowper's strains;
  • Where Roscoe, to whose patriot breast belong [12]
  • The Roman virtue and the Tuscan song,
  • Led Ceres to the black and barren moor
  • Where Ceres never gained a wreath before[1]:
  • With curious search their pilgrim steps shall rove
  • By many a ruined tower and proud alcove,
  • Shall listen for those strains that soothed of yore
  • Thy rock, stern Skiddaw, and thy fall, Lodore;
  • Feast with Dun Edin's classic brow their sight,
  • And visit "Melross by the pale moonlight."
  • But who their mingled feelings shall pursue
  • When London's faded glories rise to view?
  • The mighty city, which by every road, [13]
  • In floods of people poured itself abroad;
  • Ungirt by walls, irregularly great,
  • No jealous drawbridge, and no closing gate;
  • Whose merchants (such the state which commerce brings)
  • Sent forth their mandates to dependant kings:
  • Streets, where the turban'd Moslem, bearded Jew,
  • And woolly Afric, met the brown Hindu;
  • Where through each vein spontaneous plenty flowed,
  • Where Wealth enjoyed, and Charity bestowed.
  • Pensive and thoughtful shall the wanderers greet
  • Each splendid square, and still, untrodden street;
  • Or of some crumbling turret, mined by time,
  • The broken stair with perilous step shall climb,
  • Thence stretch their view the wide horizon round, [14]
  • By scattered hamlets trace its antient bound,
  • And, choked no more with fleets, fair Thames survey
  • Through reeds and sedge pursue his idle way.
  • With throbbing bosoms shall the wanderers tread
  • The hallowed mansions of the silent dead,
  • Shall enter the long isle and vaulted dome
  • Where Genius and where Valour find a home;
  • Awe-struck, midst chill sepulchral marbles breathe,
  • Where all above is still, as all beneath;
  • Bend at each antique shrine, and frequent turn
  • To clasp with fond delight some sculptured urn,
  • The ponderous mass of Johnson's form to greet,
  • Or breathe the prayer at Howard's sainted feet.
  • Perhaps some Briton, in whose musing mind [15]
  • Those ages live which Time has cast behind,
  • To every spot shall lead his wondering guests
  • On whose known site the beam of glory rests:
  • Here Chatham's eloquence in thunder broke,
  • Here Fox persuaded, or here Garrick spoke;
  • Shall boast how Nelson, fame and death in view,
  • To wonted victory led his ardent crew,
  • In England's name enforced, with loftiest tone[2],
  • Their duty,--and too well fulfilled his own:
  • How gallant Moore[3], as ebbing life dissolved,
  • _But_ hoped his country had his fame absolved.
  • Or call up sages whose capacious mind [16]
  • Left in its course a track of light behind;
  • Point where mute crowds on Davy's lips reposed,
  • And Nature's coyest secrets were disclosed;
  • Join with their Franklin, Priestley's injured name,
  • Whom, then, each continent shall proudly claim.
  • Oft shall the strangers turn their eager feet
  • The rich remains of antient art to greet,
  • The pictured walls with critic eye explore,
  • And Reynolds be what Raphael was before.
  • On spoils from every clime their eyes shall gaze,
  • Ægyptian granites and the Etruscan vase;
  • And when midst fallen London, they survey
  • The stone where Alexander's ashes lay,
  • Shall own with humbled pride the lesson just [17]
  • By Time's slow finger written in the dust.
  • There walks a Spirit o'er the peopled earth,
  • Secret his progress is, unknown his birth;
  • Moody and viewless as the changing wind,
  • No force arrests his foot, no chains can bind;
  • Where'er he turns, the human brute awakes,
  • And, roused to better life, his sordid hut forsakes:
  • He thinks, he reasons, glows with purer fires,
  • Feels finer wants, and burns with new desires:
  • Obedient Nature follows where he leads;
  • The steaming marsh is changed to fruitful meads;
  • The beasts retire from man's asserted reign,
  • And prove his kingdom was not given in vain.
  • Then from its bed is drawn the ponderous ore, [18]
  • Then Commerce pours her gifts on every shore,
  • Then Babel's towers and terrassed gardens rise,
  • And pointed obelisks invade the skies;
  • The prince commands, in Tyrian purple drest,
  • And Ægypt's virgins weave the linen vest.
  • Then spans the graceful arch the roaring tide,
  • And stricter bounds the cultured fields divide.
  • Then kindles Fancy, then expands the heart,
  • Then blow the flowers of Genius and of Art;
  • Saints, Heroes, Sages, who the land adorn,
  • Seem rather to descend than to be born;
  • Whilst History, midst the rolls consigned to fame,
  • With pen of adamant inscribes their name.
  • The Genius now forsakes the favoured shore, [19]
  • And hates, capricious, what he loved before;
  • Then empires fall to dust, then arts decay,
  • And wasted realms enfeebled despots sway;
  • Even Nature's changed; without his fostering smile
  • Ophir no gold, no plenty yields the Nile;
  • The thirsty sand absorbs the useless rill,
  • And spotted plagues from putrid fens distill.
  • In desert solitudes then Tadmor sleeps,
  • Stern Marius then o'er fallen Carthage weeps;
  • Then with enthusiast love the pilgrim roves
  • To seek his footsteps in forsaken groves,
  • Explores the fractured arch, the ruined tower,
  • Those limbs disjointed of gigantic power;
  • Still at each step he dreads the adder's sting, [20]
  • The Arab's javelin, or the tiger's spring;
  • With doubtful caution treads the echoing ground.
  • And asks where Troy or Babylon is found.
  • And now the vagrant Power no more detains
  • The vale of Tempe, or Ausonian plains;
  • Northward he throws the animating ray,
  • O'er Celtic nations bursts the mental day:
  • And, as some playful child the mirror turns,
  • Now here now there the moving lustre burns;
  • Now o'er his changeful fancy more prevail
  • Batavia's dykes than Arno's purple vale,
  • And stinted suns, and rivers bound with frost,
  • Than Enna's plains or Baia's viny coast;
  • Venice the Adriatic weds in vain, [21]
  • And Death sits brooding o'er Campania's plain;
  • O'er Baltic shores and through Hercynian groves,
  • Stirring the soul, the mighty impulse moves;
  • Art plies his tools, arid Commerce spreads her sail,
  • And wealth is wafted in each shifting gale.
  • The sons of Odin tread on Persian looms,
  • And Odin's daughters breathe distilled perfumes;
  • Loud minstrel Bards, in Gothic halls, rehearse
  • The Runic rhyme, and "build the lofty verse:"
  • The Muse, whose liquid notes were wont to swell
  • To the soft breathings of the' Æolian shell,
  • Submits, reluctant, to the harsher tone,
  • And scarce believes the altered voice her own.
  • And now, where Cæsar saw with proud disdain [22]
  • The wattled hut and skin of azure stain,
  • Corinthian columns rear their graceful forms,
  • And light varandas brave the wintry storms,
  • While British tongues the fading fame prolong
  • Of Tully's eloquence and Maro's song.
  • Where once Bonduca whirled the scythed car,
  • And the fierce matrons raised the shriek of war,
  • Light forms beneath transparent muslins float,
  • And tutored voices swell the artful note.
  • Light-leaved acacias and the shady plane
  • And spreading cedar grace the woodland reign;
  • While crystal walls the tenderer plants confine,
  • The fragrant orange and the nectared pine;
  • The Syrian grape there hangs her rich festoons, [23]
  • Nor asks for purer air, or brighter noons:
  • Science and Art urge on the useful toil,
  • New mould a climate and create the soil,
  • Subdue the rigour of the northern Bear,
  • O'er polar climes shed aromatic air,
  • On yielding Nature urge their new demands,
  • And ask not gifts but tribute at her hands.
  • London exults:--on London Art bestows
  • Her summer ices and her winter rose;
  • Gems of the East her mural crown adorn,
  • And Plenty at her feet pours forth her horn;
  • While even the exiles her just laws disclaim,
  • People a continent, and build a name:
  • August she sits, and with extended hands [24]
  • Holds forth the book of life to distant lands.
  • But fairest flowers expand but to decay;
  • The worm is in thy core, thy glories pass away;
  • Arts, arms and wealth destroy the fruits they bring;
  • Commerce, like beauty, knows no second spring.
  • Crime walks thy streets, Fraud earns her unblest bread,
  • O'er want and woe thy gorgeous robe is spread,
  • And angel charities in vain oppose:
  • With grandeur's growth the mass of misery grows.
  • For see,--to other climes the Genius soars,
  • He turns from Europe's desolated shores;
  • And lo, even now, midst mountains wrapt in storm,
  • On Andes' heights he shrouds his awful form;
  • On Chimborazo's summits treads sublime, [25]
  • Measuring in lofty thought the march of Time;
  • Sudden he calls:--"'Tis now the hour!" he cries,
  • Spreads his broad hand, and bids the nations rise.
  • La Plata hears amidst her torrents' roar,
  • Potosi hears it, as she digs the ore:
  • Ardent, the Genius fans the noble strife,
  • And pours through feeble souls a higher life,
  • Shouts to the mingled tribes from sea to sea,
  • And swears--Thy world, Columbus, shall be free.
  • THE END.
  • Footnotes:
  • [1] The Historian of the age of Leo has brought into cultivation
  • the extensive tract of Chatmoss.
  • [2] Every reader will recollect the sublime telegraphic dispatch,
  • "England expects every man to do his duty."
  • [3] "I hope England will be satisfied," were the last words of
  • General Moore.
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  • by Anna Laetitia Barbauld
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