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  • The Project Gutenberg EBook of Poems, Volume 2 (of 3), by George Crabbe
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  • Title: Poems, Volume 2 (of 3)
  • Author: George Crabbe
  • Release Date: January 22, 2016 [EBook #51003]
  • Language: English
  • Character set encoding: UTF-8
  • *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK POEMS, VOLUME 2 (OF 3) ***
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  • Transcriber's Notes:
  • Underscores "_" before and after a word or phrase indicate _italics_
  • in the original text.
  • Equals signs "=" before and after a word or phrase indicate =bold=
  • in the original text.
  • Small capitals have been converted to BLOCK capitals.
  • Antiquated spellings have been preserved.
  • Typographical errors have been silently corrected but other variations
  • in spelling and punctuation remain unaltered.
  • Where double quotes have been repeated at the beginnings of
  • consecutive stanzas, they have been omitted for clarity.
  • CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH CLASSICS
  • Poems by George Crabbe
  • In Three Volumes
  • GEORGE CRABBE
  • Born, 1754
  • Died, 1832
  • _GEORGE CRABBE_
  • POEMS
  • EDITED BY
  • ADOLPHUS WILLIAM WARD
  • Litt.D., Hon. LL.D., F.B.A.
  • Master of Peterhouse
  • [Illustration]
  • Volume II
  • CAMBRIDGE:
  • at the University Press
  • 1906
  • CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS WAREHOUSE
  • C. F. CLAY, Manager.
  • _London:_ FETTER LANE, E.C.
  • _Glasgow:_ 50, WELLINGTON STREET.
  • [Illustration]
  • _Leipzig:_ F. A. BROCKHAUS.
  • _New York:_ THE MACMILLAN COMPANY.
  • _Bombay and Calcutta:_ MACMILLAN AND CO., LTD.
  • [_All Rights reserved_]
  • PREFACE.
  • The poems contained in this volume, which comprise the whole of the
  • _Tales_ and the first eleven of the _Tales of the Hall_, are without
  • exception printed from the edition of 1823, the last of Crabbe’s
  • works published in this country in his lifetime.
  • The _Variants_ in the _Tales_ are from the first edition (1812) and
  • from the ‘Original MS.’ readings given as footnotes in the younger
  • Crabbe’s edition of his father’s _Life and Poems_ (1834). The
  • _Variants_ in the _Tales of the Hall_ are from the first edition
  • (1819); from the ‘Original MS.’ readings as above; from the Crabbe
  • MSS. in the possession of the Cambridge University Press (which will
  • be described in the Preface to Vol. III, where a much fuller use will
  • be made of them), and from the MSS. in the valuable collection of Mrs
  • Mackay of Trowbridge, most kindly lent by her for examination and
  • use (to which the same remark applies). In the present volume will
  • also be found certain _Addenda_ to the _Variants_ in Vol. I, from the
  • ‘Original MS.’ readings printed by the younger Crabbe.
  • Among the _Errata_ in this volume are included a considerable number
  • of quotations from Shakespeare with wrong indications of acts or
  • scenes, and occasionally even of the plays from which the passages
  • are taken. A large proportion of the quotations are in themselves
  • imperfect, or otherwise incorrect. Perhaps it is stretching a
  • point to treat all these defects as oversights; sometimes Crabbe
  • may have made intentional changes, and more frequently he may have
  • been wilfully careless. No readings which he could have found in any
  • current edition of Shakespeare have been altered.
  • In the preparation of the present volume, I have again enjoyed
  • the advantage of the friendly aid and cooperation of Mr A. T.
  • BARTHOLOMEW, to whom I am specially indebted for the compilation of
  • the _Variants_. Our joint efforts have been occasionally defeated
  • by the illegibility of passages in the Crabbe MSS. acquired by our
  • University Press. It is hoped that the third and concluding volume of
  • this edition, which will contain a considerable amount of previously
  • unpublished verse, will appear in the course of the summer.
  • A. W. WARD.
  • PETERHOUSE LODGE, CAMBRIDGE.
  • _March 19th, 1906._
  • CONTENTS.
  • TALES PAGE
  • I. THE DUMB ORATORS 13
  • II. THE PARTING HOUR 27
  • III. THE GENTLEMAN FARMER 41
  • IV. PROCRASTINATION 56
  • V. THE PATRON 67
  • VI. THE FRANK COURTSHIP 87
  • VII. THE WIDOW’S TALE 101
  • VIII. THE MOTHER 113
  • IX. ARABELLA 124
  • X. THE LOVER’S JOURNEY 134
  • XI. EDWARD SHORE 145
  • XII. ’SQUIRE THOMAS 159
  • XIII. JESSE AND COLIN 170
  • XIV. THE STRUGGLES OF CONSCIENCE 185
  • XV. THE ’SQUIRE AND THE PRIEST 199
  • XVI. THE CONFIDANT 211
  • XVII. RESENTMENT 228
  • XVIII. THE WAGER 242
  • XIX. THE CONVERT 251
  • XX. THE BROTHERS 264
  • XXI. THE LEARNED BOY 276
  • TALES OF THE HALL
  • I. THE HALL 302
  • II. THE BROTHERS 312
  • III. BOYS AT SCHOOL 319
  • IV. ADVENTURES OF RICHARD 332
  • V. RUTH 346
  • VI. ADVENTURES OF RICHARD (_concluded_) 359
  • VII. THE ELDER BROTHER 371
  • VIII. THE SISTERS 394
  • IX. THE PRECEPTOR HUSBAND 419
  • X. THE OLD BACHELOR 430
  • XI. THE MAID’S STORY 451
  • TALES.
  • TO HER GRACE ISABELLA
  • DUCHESS DOWAGER OF RUTLAND.
  • MADAM,
  • The dedication of works of literature to persons of superior worth
  • and eminence appears to have been a measure early adopted, and
  • continued to the present time; so that, whatever objections have been
  • made to the language of dedicators, such addresses must be considered
  • as perfectly consistent with reason and propriety; in fact, superior
  • rank and elevated situation in life naturally and justly claim such
  • respect and it is the prerogative of greatness to give countenance
  • and favour to all who appear to merit and to need them; it is
  • likewise the prerogative of every kind of superiority and celebrity,
  • of personal merit when peculiar or extraordinary, of dignity,
  • elegance, wealth, and beauty, certainly of superior intellect and
  • intellectual acquirements; every such kind of eminence has its
  • privilege, and, being itself an object of distinguished approbation,
  • it gains attention for whomsoever its possessor distinguishes and
  • approves.
  • Yet the causes and motives for an address of this kind rest not
  • entirely with the merit of the patron, the feelings of the author
  • himself having their weight and consideration in the choice he makes;
  • he may have gratitude for benefits received, or pride not illaudable
  • in aspiring to the favour of those whose notice confers honour; or
  • he may entertain a secret but strong desire of seeing a name in the
  • entrance of his work which he is accustomed to utter with peculiar
  • satisfaction, and to hear mentioned with veneration and delight.
  • Such, madam, are the various kinds of eminence for which an author
  • on these occasions would probably seek, and they meet in your grace;
  • such too are the feelings by which he would be actuated, and they
  • centre in me: let me therefore entreat your grace to take this book
  • into your favour and protection, and to receive it as an offering of
  • the utmost respect and duty, from,
  • May it please Your Grace,
  • Your Grace’s
  • Most obedient, humble,
  • And devoted servant,
  • GEORGE CRABBE.
  • Muston, July 31, 1812.
  • PREFACE.
  • That the appearance of the present work before the public is
  • occasioned by a favourable reception of the former two, I hesitate
  • not to acknowledge; because, while the confession may be regarded
  • as some proof of gratitude, or at least of attention from an author
  • to his readers, it ought not to be considered as an indication of
  • vanity. It is unquestionably very pleasant to be assured that our
  • labours are well received; but, nevertheless, this must not be taken
  • for a just and full criterion of their merit: publications of great
  • intrinsic value have been met with so much coolness, that a writer
  • who succeeds in obtaining some degree of notice should look upon
  • himself rather as one favoured than meritorious, as gaining a prize
  • from Fortune, and not a recompense for desert; and, on the contrary,
  • as it is well known that books of very inferior kind have been at
  • once pushed into the strong current of popularity, and are there
  • kept buoyant by the force of the stream, the writer who acquires not
  • this adventitious help may be reckoned rather as unfortunate than
  • undeserving; and from these opposite considerations it follows, that
  • a man may speak of his success without incurring justly the odium of
  • conceit, and may likewise acknowledge a disappointment without an
  • adequate cause for humiliation or self-reproach.
  • But were it true that something of the complacency of
  • self-approbation would insinuate itself into an author’s mind with
  • the idea of success, the sensation would not be that of unalloyed
  • pleasure; it would perhaps assist him to bear, but it would not
  • enable him to escape, the mortification he must encounter from
  • censures, which, though he may be unwilling to admit, yet he finds
  • himself unable to confute; as well as from advice, which, at the same
  • time that he cannot but approve, he is compelled to reject.
  • Reproof and advice, it is probable, every author will receive, if
  • we except those who merit so much of the former, that the latter is
  • contemptuously denied them; now of these, reproof, though it may
  • cause more temporary uneasiness, will in many cases create less
  • difficulty, since errors may be corrected when opportunity occurs;
  • but advice, I repeat, may be of such nature, that it will be painful
  • to reject, and yet impossible to follow it; and in this predicament
  • I conceive myself to be placed. There has been recommended to me,
  • and from authority which neither inclination nor prudence leads me
  • to resist, in any new work I might undertake, an unity of subject,
  • and that arrangement of my materials which connects the whole and
  • gives additional interest to every part; in fact, if not an Epic
  • Poem, strictly so denominated, yet such composition as would possess
  • a regular succession of events, and a catastrophe to which every
  • incident should be subservient, and which every character, in a
  • greater or less degree, should conspire to accomplish.
  • In a Poem of this nature, the principal and inferior characters in
  • some degree resemble a general and his army, where no one pursues his
  • peculiar objects and adventures, [but] pursues them in unison with
  • the movements and grand purposes of the whole body; where there is a
  • community of interests and a subordination of actors; and it was upon
  • this view of the subject, and of the necessity for such distribution
  • of persons and events, that I found myself obliged to relinquish
  • an undertaking, for which the characters I could command, and the
  • adventures I could describe, were altogether unfitted.
  • But if these characters which seemed to be at my disposal were not
  • such as would coalesce into one body, nor were of a nature to be
  • commanded by one mind, so neither on examination did they appear as
  • an unconnected multitude, accidentally collected, to be suddenly
  • dispersed; but rather beings of whom might be formed groups and
  • smaller societies, the relations of whose adventures and pursuits
  • might bear that kind of similitude to an Heroic Poem, which these
  • minor associations of men (as pilgrims on the way to their saint,
  • or parties in search of amusement, travellers excited by curiosity,
  • or adventurers in pursuit of gain) have in points of connexion and
  • importance with a regular and disciplined army.
  • Allowing this comparison, it is manifest that while much is lost for
  • want of unity of subject and grandeur of design, something is gained
  • by greater variety of incident and more minute display of character,
  • by accuracy of description and diversity of scene: in these
  • narratives we pass from gay to grave, from lively to severe, not only
  • without impropriety, but with manifest advantage. In one continued
  • and connected Poem, the reader is, in general, highly gratified or
  • severely disappointed; by many independent narratives, he has the
  • renovation of hope, although he has been dissatisfied, and a prospect
  • of reiterated pleasure, should he find himself entertained.
  • I mean not, however, to compare these different modes of writing
  • as if I were balancing their advantages and defects before I could
  • give preference to either; with me the way I take is not a matter of
  • choice, but of necessity; I present not my Tales to the reader as
  • if I had chosen the best method of ensuring his approbation, but as
  • using the only means I possessed of engaging his attention.
  • It may probably be remarked that Tales, however dissimilar, might
  • have been connected by some associating circumstance to which the
  • whole number might bear equal affinity, and that examples of such
  • union are to be found in Chaucer, in Boccace, and other collectors
  • and inventors of Tales, which, considered in themselves, are
  • altogether independent; and to this idea I gave so much consideration
  • as convinced me that I could not avail myself of the benefit of
  • such artificial mode of affinity. To imitate the English poet,
  • characters must be found adapted to their several relations, and
  • this is a point of great difficulty and hazard; much allowance seems
  • to be required even for Chaucer himself, since it is difficult to
  • conceive that on any occasion the devout and delicate Prioress, the
  • courtly and valiant Knight, and “the poure good Man the persone of
  • a Towne,” would be the voluntary companions of the drunken Miller,
  • the licentious Sompnour, and “the Wanton Wife of Bath,” and enter
  • into that colloquial and travelling intimacy which, if a common
  • pilgrimage to the shrine of St. Thomas may be said to excuse, I know
  • nothing beside (and certainly nothing in these times) that would
  • produce such effect. Boccace, it is true, avoids all difficulty of
  • this kind, by not assigning to the ten relators of his hundred
  • Tales any marked or peculiar characters; nor, though there are male
  • and female in company, can the sex of the narrator be distinguished
  • in the narration. To have followed the method of Chaucer might have
  • been of use, but could scarcely be adopted, from its difficulty; and
  • to have taken that of the Italian writer would have been perfectly
  • easy, but could be of no service: the attempt at union therefore
  • has been relinquished, and these relations are submitted to the
  • public, connected by no other circumstance than their being the
  • productions of the same author, and devoted to the same purpose, the
  • entertainment of his readers.
  • It has been already acknowledged, that these compositions have no
  • pretensions to be estimated with the more lofty and heroic kind
  • of poems, but I feel great reluctance in admitting that they have
  • not a fair and legitimate claim to the poetic character. In vulgar
  • estimation, indeed, all that is not prose passes for poetry, but
  • I have not ambition of so humble a kind as to be satisfied with a
  • concession which requires nothing in the poet, except his ability
  • for counting syllables, and I trust something more of the poetic
  • character will be allowed to the succeeding pages than what the
  • heroes of the Dunciad might share with the author; nor was I aware
  • that by describing, as faithfully as I could, men, manners, and
  • things, I was forfeiting a just title to a name which has been freely
  • granted to many whom to equal, and even to excel, is but very stinted
  • commendation.
  • In this case it appears that the usual comparison between poetry and
  • painting entirely fails: the artist who takes an accurate likeness of
  • individuals, or a faithful representation of scenery, may not rank
  • so high in the public estimation as one who paints an historical
  • event, or an heroic action; but he is nevertheless a painter, and his
  • accuracy is so far from diminishing his reputation, that it procures
  • for him in general both fame and emolument; nor is it perhaps with
  • strict justice determined that the credit and reputation of those
  • verses which strongly and faithfully delineate character and manners,
  • should be lessened in the opinion of the public by the very accuracy
  • which gives value and distinction to the productions of the pencil.
  • Nevertheless, it must be granted that the pretensions of any
  • composition to be regarded as poetry will depend upon that definition
  • of the poetic character which he who undertakes to determine the
  • question has considered as decisive; and it is confessed also that
  • one of great authority may be adopted, by which the verses now before
  • the reader, and many others which have probably amused and delighted
  • him, must be excluded: a definition like this will be found in the
  • words which the greatest of poets, not divinely inspired, has given
  • to the most noble and valiant Duke of Athens--
  • “The poet’s eye, in a fine frenzy rolling,
  • Doth glance from heaven to earth, from earth to heaven;
  • And as Imagination bodies forth
  • The forms of things unknown, the poet’s pen
  • Turns them to shapes, and gives to airy nothing
  • A local habitation, and a name[1].”
  • [1] Midsummer Night’s Dream, Act V. Scene 1.
  • Hence we observe the poet is one who, in the excursions of his
  • fancy between heaven and earth, lights upon a kind of fairyland, in
  • which he places a creation of his own, where he embodies shapes,
  • and gives action and adventure to his ideal offspring; taking
  • captive the imagination of his readers, he elevates them above the
  • grossness of actual being, into the soothing and pleasant atmosphere
  • of supra-mundane existence: there he obtains for his visionary
  • inhabitants the interest that engages a reader’s attention without
  • ruffling his feelings, and excites that moderate kind of sympathy
  • which the realities of nature oftentimes fail to produce, either
  • because they are so familiar and insignificant that they excite no
  • determinate emotion, or are so harsh and powerful that the feelings
  • excited are grating and distasteful.
  • Be it then granted that (as Duke Theseus observes) “such tricks
  • hath strong Imagination,” and that such poets “are of imagination
  • all compact;” let it be further conceded, that theirs is a higher
  • and more dignified kind of composition, nay, the only kind that
  • has pretensions to inspiration: still, that these poets should so
  • entirely engross the title as to exclude those who address their
  • productions to the plain sense and sober judgment of their readers,
  • rather than to their fancy and imagination, I must repeat that I am
  • unwilling to admit--because I conceive that, by granting such right
  • of exclusion, a vast deal of what has been hitherto received as
  • genuine poetry would no longer be entitled to that appellation.
  • All that kind of satire wherein character is skillfully delineated
  • must (this criterion being allowed) no longer be esteemed as genuine
  • poetry; and for the same reason many affecting narratives which
  • are founded on real events, and borrow no aid whatever from the
  • imagination of the writer, must likewise be rejected: a considerable
  • part of the poems, as they have hitherto been denominated, of
  • Chaucer, are of this naked and unveiled character; and there are
  • in his Tales many pages of coarse, accurate, and minute, but very
  • striking description. Many small poems in a subsequent age, of most
  • impressive kind, are adapted and addressed to the common sense of
  • the reader, and prevail by the strong language of truth and nature;
  • they amused our ancestors, and they continue to engage our interest,
  • and excite our feelings, by the same powerful appeals to the heart
  • and affections. In times less remote, Dryden has given us much
  • of this poetry, in which the force of expression and accuracy of
  • description have neither needed nor obtained assistance from the
  • fancy of the writer; the characters in his Absalom and Achitophel are
  • instances of this, and more especially those of Doeg and Og in the
  • second part: these, with all their grossness, and almost offensive
  • accuracy, are found to possess that strength and spirit which has
  • preserved from utter annihilation the dead bodies of Tate, to whom
  • they were inhumanly bound, happily with a fate the reverse of that
  • caused by the cruelty of Mezentius; for there the living perished
  • in the putrefaction of the dead, and here the dead are preserved
  • by the vitality of the living. And, to bring forward one other
  • example, it will be found that Pope himself has no small portion of
  • this actuality of relation, this nudity of description, and poetry
  • without an atmosphere; the lines beginning, “In the worst inn’s worst
  • room,” are an example, and many others may be seen in his Satires,
  • Imitations, and above all in his Dunciad: the frequent absence of
  • those “Sports of Fancy,” and “Tricks of strong Imagination,” have
  • been so much observed, that some have ventured to question whether
  • even this writer were a poet; and though, as Dr. Johnson has
  • remarked, it would be difficult to form a definition of one in which
  • Pope should not be admitted, yet they who doubted his claim, had,
  • it is likely, provided for his exclusion by forming that kind of
  • character for their poet, in which this elegant versifier, for so he
  • must be then named, should not be comprehended.
  • These things considered, an author will find comfort in his expulsion
  • from the rank and society of poets, by reflecting that men much his
  • superiors were likewise shut out, and more especially when he finds
  • also that men not much his superiors are entitled to admission.
  • But in whatever degree I may venture to differ from any others in
  • my notions of the qualifications and character of the true poet, I
  • most cordially assent to their opinion who assert that his principal
  • exertions must be made to engage the attention of his readers; and
  • further, I must allow that the effect of poetry should be to lift
  • the mind from the painful realities of actual existence, from its
  • every-day concerns, and its perpetually occurring vexations, and
  • to give it repose by substituting objects in their place which it
  • may contemplate with some degree of interest and satisfaction; but
  • what is there in all this, which may not be effected by a fair
  • representation of existing character? nay, by a faithful delineation
  • of those painful realities, those every-day concerns, and those
  • perpetually-occurring vexations themselves, provided they be not
  • (which is hardly to be supposed) the very concerns and distresses of
  • the reader? for, when it is admitted that they have no particular
  • relation to him, but are the troubles and anxieties of other men,
  • they excite and interest his feelings as the imaginary exploits,
  • adventures, and perils of romance;--they soothe his mind, and keep
  • his curiosity pleasantly awake; they appear to have enough of
  • reality to engage his sympathy, but possess not interest sufficient
  • to create painful sensations. Fiction itself, we know, and every
  • work of fancy, must for a time have the effect of realities; nay,
  • the very enchanters, spirits, and monsters of Ariosto and Spenser
  • must be present in the mind of the reader while he is engaged by
  • their operations, or they would be as the objects and incidents of
  • a nursery tale to a rational understanding, altogether despised and
  • neglected: in truth, I can but consider this pleasant effect upon
  • the mind of a reader as depending neither upon the events related
  • (whether they be actual or imaginary), nor upon the characters
  • introduced (whether taken from life or fancy), but upon the manner
  • in which the poem itself is conducted; let that be judiciously
  • managed, and the occurrences actually copied from life will have the
  • same happy effect as the inventions of a creative fancy;--while, on
  • the other hand, the imaginary persons and incidents to which the
  • poet has given “a local habitation, and a name,” will make upon the
  • concurring feelings of the reader the same impressions with those
  • taken from truth and nature, because they will appear to be derived
  • from that source, and therefore of necessity will have a similar
  • effect.
  • Having thus far presumed to claim for the ensuing pages the rank and
  • title of poetry, I attempt no more, nor venture to class or compare
  • them with any other kinds of poetical composition; their place will
  • doubtless be found for them.
  • A principal view and wish of the poet must be to engage the mind of
  • his readers, as, failing in that point, he will scarcely succeed in
  • any other: I therefore willingly confess that much of my time and
  • assiduity has been devoted to this purpose; but, to the ambition of
  • pleasing, no other sacrifices have, I trust, been made, than of my
  • own labour and care. Nothing will be found that militates against the
  • rules of propriety and good manners, nothing that offends against
  • the more important precepts of morality and religion; and with this
  • negative kind of merit, I commit my book to the judgment and taste of
  • the reader--not being willing to provoke his vigilance by professions
  • of accuracy, nor to solicit his indulgence by apologies for mistakes.
  • TALE I.
  • _THE DUMB ORATORS_; OR, THE BENEFIT OF SOCIETY.
  • [In] fair round belly with good capon lined,
  • With eyes severe . . .
  • Full of wise saws and modern instances.
  • _As you Like it_, Act II. Scene 7.
  • Deep shame hath struck me dumb.
  • _King John_, Act IV. Scene 2.
  • He gives the bastinado with his tongue,
  • Our ears are cudgell’d.
  • _King John_, Act IV. Scene 1.
  • Let’s kill all the lawyers;
  • Now show yourselves men: ’tis for liberty:
  • We will not leave one lord or gentleman.
  • _2 Henry VI._ Act IV. Scene 2.
  • And thus the whirligig of time brings in his revenges.
  • _Twelfth Night_, Act V. Scene last.
  • TALE I. _THE DUMB ORATORS._
  • That all men would be cowards if they dare,
  • Some men we know have courage to declare;
  • And this the life of many an hero shows,
  • That like the tide, man’s courage ebbs and flows:
  • With friends and gay companions round them, then
  • Men boldly speak and have the hearts of men;
  • Who, with opponents seated, miss the aid
  • Of kind applauding looks, and grow afraid;
  • Like timid trav’llers in the night, they fear
  • Th’ assault of foes, when not a friend is near. 10
  • In contest mighty and of conquest proud
  • Was Justice Bolt, impetuous, warm, and loud;
  • His fame, his prowess all the country knew,
  • And disputants, with one so fierce, were few.
  • He was a younger son, for law design’d,
  • With dauntless look and persevering mind;
  • While yet a clerk, for disputation famed,
  • No efforts tired him, and no conflicts tamed.
  • Scarcely he bade his master’s desk adieu,
  • When both his brothers from the world withdrew. 20
  • An ample fortune he from them possess’d,
  • And was with saving care and prudence bless’d.
  • Now would he go and to the country give
  • Example how an English ’squire should live;
  • How bounteous, yet how frugal man may be,
  • By a well-order’d hospitality;
  • He would the rights of all so well maintain,
  • That none should idle be, and none complain.
  • All this and more he purposed--and what man
  • Could do, he did to realize his plan; 30
  • But time convinced him that we cannot keep
  • A breed of reasoners like a flock of sheep;
  • For they, so far from following as we lead,
  • Make that a cause why they will not proceed.
  • Man will not follow where a rule is shown,
  • But loves to take a method of his own;
  • Explain the way with all your care and skill,
  • This will he quit, if but to prove he will.--
  • Yet had our Justice honour--and the crowd,
  • Awed by his presence, their respect avow’d. 40
  • In later years he found his heart incline,
  • More than in youth, to gen’rous food and wine;
  • But no indulgence check’d the powerful love
  • He felt to teach, to argue, and reprove.
  • Meetings, or public calls, he never miss’d--
  • To dictate often, always to assist.
  • Oft he the clergy join’d, and not a cause
  • Pertain’d to them but he could quote the laws;
  • He upon tithes and residence display’d
  • A fund of knowledge for the hearer’s aid; 50
  • And could on glebe and farming, wool and grain,
  • A long discourse, without a pause, maintain.
  • To his experience and his native sense
  • He join’d a bold imperious eloquence;
  • The grave, stern look of men inform’d and wise, }
  • A full command of feature, heart, and eyes, }
  • An awe-compelling frown, and fear-inspiring size. }
  • When at the table, not a guest was seen
  • With appetite so ling’ring, or so keen;
  • But when the outer man no more required, 60
  • The inner waked, and he was man inspired.
  • His subjects then were those, a subject true
  • Presents in fairest form to public view;
  • Of Church and State, of Law, with mighty strength
  • Of words he spoke, in speech of mighty length;
  • And now, into the vale of years declined,
  • He hides too little of the monarch-mind;
  • He kindles anger by untimely jokes,
  • And opposition by contempt provokes;
  • Mirth he suppresses by his awful frown, 70
  • And humble spirits, by disdain, keeps down;
  • Blamed by the mild, approved by the severe,
  • The prudent fly him, and the valiant fear.
  • For overbearing is his proud discourse,
  • And overwhelming of his voice the force;
  • And overpowering is he when he shows
  • What floats upon a mind that always overflows.
  • This ready man at every meeting rose,
  • Something to hint, determine, or propose;
  • And grew so fond of teaching, that he taught 80
  • Those who instruction needed not or sought.
  • Happy our hero, when he could excite
  • Some thoughtless talker to the wordy fight:
  • Let him a subject at his pleasure choose,
  • Physic or Law, Religion or the Muse;
  • On all such themes he was prepared to shine,
  • Physician, poet, lawyer, and divine.
  • Hemm’d in by some tough argument, borne down
  • By press of language and the awful frown,
  • In vain for mercy shall the culprit plead; 90
  • His crime is past, and sentence must proceed:
  • Ah! suffering man, have patience, bear thy woes--
  • For lo! the clock--at ten the Justice goes.
  • This powerful man, on business or to please
  • A curious taste, or weary grown of ease,
  • On a long journey travell’d many a mile
  • Westward, and halted midway in our isle;
  • Content to view a city large and fair,
  • Though none had notice what a man was there!
  • Silent two days, he then began to long 100
  • Again to try a voice so loud and strong;
  • To give his favourite topics some new grace,
  • And gain some glory in such distant place;
  • To reap some present pleasure, and to sow
  • Seeds of fair fame, in after-time to grow:
  • Here will men say, “We heard, at such an hour,
  • The best of speakers--wonderful his power.”
  • Inquiry made, he found that day would meet
  • A learned club, and in the very street:
  • Knowledge to gain and give, was the design; 110
  • To speak, to hearken, to debate, and dine:
  • This pleased our traveller, for he felt his force
  • In either way, to eat or to discourse.
  • Nothing more easy than to gain access
  • To men like these, with his polite address:
  • So he succeeded, and first look’d around,
  • To view his objects and to take his ground;
  • And therefore silent chose awhile to sit,
  • Then enter boldly by some lucky hit,
  • Some observation keen or stroke severe, 120
  • To cause some wonder or excite some fear.
  • Now, dinner past, no longer he suppress’d
  • His strong dislike to be a silent guest;
  • Subjects and words were now at his command--
  • When disappointment frown’d on all he plann’d;
  • For, hark!--he heard, amazed, on every side,
  • His church insulted and her priests belied;
  • The laws reviled, the ruling power abused,
  • The land derided, and its foes excused:--
  • He heard and ponder’d.--What, to men so vile, 130
  • Should be his language? For his threat’ning style
  • They were too many;--if his speech were meek,
  • They would despise such poor attempts to speak:
  • At other times with every word at will,
  • He now sat lost, perplex’d, astonish’d, still.
  • Here were Socinians, Deists, and indeed }
  • All who, as foes to England’s church, agreed; }
  • But still with creeds unlike, and some without a creed: }
  • Here, too, fierce friends of liberty he saw,
  • Who own’d no prince and who obey no law; 140
  • There were Reformers of each different sort,
  • Foes to the laws, the priesthood, and the court;
  • Some on their favourite plans alone intent,
  • Some purely angry and malevolent:
  • The rash were proud to blame their country’s laws;
  • The vain, to seem supporters of a cause;
  • One call’d for change that he would dread to see;
  • Another sigh’d for Gallic liberty!
  • And numbers joining with the forward crew,
  • For no one reason--but that numbers do. 150
  • “How,” said the Justice, “can this trouble rise,
  • This shame and pain, from creatures I despise?”
  • And conscience answer’d--“The prevailing cause
  • Is thy delight in listening to applause;
  • Here, thou art seated with a tribe, who spurn
  • Thy favourite themes, and into laughter turn
  • Thy fears and wishes; silent and obscure,
  • Thyself, shalt thou the long harangue endure;
  • And learn, by feeling, what it is to force
  • On thy unwilling friends the long discourse. 160
  • What though thy thoughts be just, and these, it seems,
  • Are traitors’ projects, idiots’ empty schemes:
  • Yet minds like bodies cramm’d, reject their food,
  • Nor will be forced and tortured for their good!”
  • At length, a sharp, shrewd, sallow man arose,
  • And begg’d he briefly might his mind disclose;
  • “It was his duty, in these worst of times,
  • T’ inform the govern’d of their rulers’ crimes.”
  • This pleasant subject to attend, they each
  • Prepared to listen, and forbore to teach. 170
  • Then, voluble and fierce, the wordy man
  • Through a long chain of favourite horrors ran:--
  • First, of the church, from whose enslaving power
  • He was deliver’d, and he bless’d the hour;
  • “Bishops and deans, and prebendaries all,”
  • He said, “were cattle fatt’ning in the stall;
  • Slothful and pursy, insolent and mean,
  • Were every bishop, prebendary, dean,
  • And wealthy rector; curates, poorly paid,
  • Were only dull;--he would not them upbraid.” 180
  • From priests he turn’d to canons, creeds, and prayers,
  • Rubrics and rules, and all our church affairs;
  • Churches themselves, desk, pulpit, altar, all
  • The Justice reverenced--and pronounced their fall.
  • Then from religion Hammond turn’d his view,
  • To give our rulers the correction due;
  • Not one wise action had these triflers plann’d;
  • There was, it seem’d, no wisdom in the land;
  • Save in this patriot tribe, who meet at times
  • To show the statesman’s errors and his crimes. 190
  • Now here was Justice Bolt compell’d to sit,
  • To hear the deist’s scorn, the rebel’s wit;
  • The fact mis-stated, the envenom’d lie,
  • And staring, spell-bound, made not one reply.
  • Then were our laws abused--and with the laws,
  • All who prepare, defend, or judge a cause:
  • “We have no lawyer whom a man can trust,”
  • Proceeded Hammond--“if the laws were just;
  • But they are evil; ’tis the savage state
  • Is only good, and ours sophisticate! 200
  • See! the free creatures in their woods and plains,
  • Where without laws each happy monarch reigns,
  • King of himself--while we a number dread,
  • By slaves commanded and by dunces led;
  • Oh, let the name with either state agree--
  • Savage our own we’ll name, and civil theirs shall be.”
  • The silent Justice still astonish’d sate,
  • And wonder’d much whom he was gazing at;
  • Twice he essay’d to speak--but in a cough
  • The faint, indignant, dying speech went off: 210
  • “But who is this?” thought he--“a dæmon vile,
  • With wicked meaning and a vulgar style:
  • Hammond they call him; they can give the name
  • Of man to devils.--Why am I so tame?
  • Why crush I not the viper?”--Fear replied,
  • “Watch him awhile, and let his strength be tried;
  • He will be foil’d, if man; but if his aid
  • Be from beneath, ’tis well to be afraid.”
  • “We are call’d free!” said Hammond--“doleful times
  • When rulers add their insult to their crimes; 220
  • For, should our scorn expose each powerful vice,
  • It would be libel, and we pay the price.”
  • Thus with licentious words the man went on,
  • Proving that liberty of speech was gone;
  • That all were slaves--nor had we better chance
  • For better times than as allies to France.
  • Loud groan’d the stranger--Why, he must relate,
  • And own’d, “In sorrow for his country’s fate.”
  • “Nay, she were safe,” the ready man replied,
  • “Might patriots rule her, and could reasoners guide; 230
  • When all to vote, to speak, to teach, are free,
  • Whate’er their creeds or their opinions be;
  • When books of statutes are consumed in flames,
  • And courts and copyholds are empty names;
  • Then will be times of joy--but ere they come,
  • Havock, and war, and blood must be our doom.”
  • The man here paused--then loudly for reform
  • He call’d, and hail’d the prospect of the storm;
  • The wholesome blast, the fertilizing flood--
  • Peace gain’d by tumult, plenty bought with blood: 240
  • Sharp means, he own’d; but when the land’s disease
  • Asks cure complete, no med’cines are like these.
  • Our Justice now, more led by fear than rage,
  • Saw it in vain with madness to engage;
  • With imps of darkness no man seeks to fight,
  • Knaves to instruct, or set deceivers right.
  • Then, as the daring speech denounced these woes,
  • Sick at the soul, the grieving guest arose;
  • Quick on the board his ready cash he threw,
  • And from the dæmons to his closet flew. 250
  • There when secured, he pray’d with earnest zeal,
  • That all they wish’d these patriot-souls might feel;
  • “Let them to France, their darling country, haste,
  • And all the comforts of a Frenchman taste;
  • Let them his safety, freedom, pleasure know, }
  • Feel all their rulers on the land bestow; }
  • And be at length dismiss’d by one unerring blow; }
  • Not hack’d and hew’d by one afraid to strike,
  • But shorn by that which shears all men alike;
  • Nor, as in Britain, let them curse delay } 260
  • Of law, but borne without a form away-- }
  • Suspected, tried, condemn’d, and carted in a day; }
  • Oh! let them taste what they so much approve,
  • These strong fierce freedoms of the land they love[2].”
  • Home came our hero, to forget no more
  • The fear he felt and ever most deplore:
  • For, though he quickly join’d his friends again,
  • And could with decent force his themes maintain,
  • Still it occurr’d that, in a luckless time,
  • He fail’d to fight with heresy and crime; 270
  • It was observed his words were not so strong,
  • His tones so powerful, his harangues so long,
  • As in old times--for he would often drop
  • The lofty look, and of a sudden stop;
  • When conscience whisper’d, that he once was still,
  • And let the wicked triumph at their will;
  • And therefore now, when not a foe was near,
  • He had no right so valiant to appear.
  • Some years had pass’d, and he perceived his fears
  • Yield to the spirit of his earlier years-- 280
  • When at a meeting, with his friends beside,
  • He saw an object that awaked his pride;
  • His shame, wrath, vengeance, indignation--all
  • Man’s harsher feelings did that sight recall.
  • For lo! beneath him fix’d, our man of law
  • That lawless man the foe of order saw--
  • Once fear’d, now scorn’d; once dreaded, now abhorr’d;
  • A wordy man, and evil every word.
  • Again he gazed--“It is,” said he, “the same;
  • Caught and secure: his master owes him shame:” 290
  • So thought our hero, who each instant found
  • His courage rising, from the numbers round.
  • As when a felon has escaped and fled,
  • So long, that law conceives the culprit dead;
  • And back recall’d her myrmidons, intent
  • On some new game, and with a stronger scent;
  • Till she beholds him in a place, where none
  • Could have conceived the culprit would have gone;
  • There he sits upright in his seat, secure,
  • As one whose conscience is correct and pure; 300
  • This rouses anger for the old offence,
  • And scorn for all such seeming and pretence:
  • So on this Hammond look’d our hero bold,
  • Rememb’ring well that vile offence of old;
  • And now he saw the rebel dared t’ intrude }
  • Among the pure, the loyal, and the good; }
  • The crime provoked his wrath, the folly stirr’d his blood. }
  • Nor wonder was it if so strange a sight
  • Caused joy with vengeance, terror with delight;
  • Terror like this a tiger might create, } 310
  • A joy like that to see his captive state, }
  • At once to know his force and then decree his fate. }
  • Hammond, much praised by numerous friends, was come
  • To read his lectures, so admired at home:
  • Historic lectures, where he loved to mix
  • His free plain hints on modern politics.
  • Here, he had heard, that numbers had design,
  • Their business finish’d, to sit down and dine;
  • This gave him pleasure, for he judged it right
  • To show by day, that he could speak at night. 320
  • Rash the design--for he perceived, too late,
  • Not one approving friend beside him sate;
  • The greater number, whom he traced around,
  • Were men in black, and he conceived they frown’d.
  • “I will not speak,” he thought; “no pearls of mine
  • Shall be presented to this herd of swine;”
  • Not this avail’d him, when he cast his eye
  • On Justice Bolt; he could not fight, nor fly.
  • He saw a man to whom he gave the pain,
  • Which now he felt must be return’d again; 330
  • His conscience told him with what keen delight
  • He, at that time, enjoy’d a stranger’s fright;
  • That stranger now befriended--he alone,
  • For all his insult, friendless, to atone;
  • Now he could feel it cruel that a heart
  • Should be distress’d, and none to take its part;
  • “Though one by one,” said Pride, “I would defy }
  • Much greater men, yet meeting every eye, }
  • I do confess a fear--but he will pass me by.” }
  • Vain hope! the Justice saw the foe’s distress, 340
  • With exultation he could not suppress;
  • He felt the fish was hook’d--and so forbore,
  • In playful spite, to draw it to the shore.
  • Hammond look’d round again; but none were near,
  • With friendly smile, to still his growing fear;
  • But all above him seem’d a solemn row
  • Of priests and deacons, so they seem’d below;
  • He wonder’d who his right-hand man might be--
  • Vicar of Holt cum Uppingham was he;
  • And who the man of that dark frown possess’d-- 350
  • Rector of Bradley and of Barton-west;
  • “A pluralist,” he growl’d--but check’d the word,
  • That warfare might not, by his zeal, be stirr’d.
  • But now began the man above to show
  • Fierce looks and threat’nings to the man below;
  • Who had some thoughts his peace by flight to seek--
  • But how then lecture, if he dared not speak!--
  • Now as the Justice for the war prepared,
  • He seem’d just then to question if he dared:
  • “He may resist, although his power be small, 360
  • And growing desperate may defy us all;
  • One dog attack, and he prepares for flight--
  • Resist another, and he strives to bite;
  • Nor can I say, if this rebellious cur
  • Will fly for safety, or will scorn to stir.”
  • Alarm’d by this, he lash’d his soul to rage,
  • Burn’d with strong shame, and hurried to engage.
  • As a male turkey straggling on the green,
  • When by fierce harriers, terriers, mongrels seen,
  • He feels the insult of the noisy train, 370
  • And sculks aside, though moved by much disdain;
  • But when that turkey, at his own barn-door,
  • Sees one poor straying puppy and no more,
  • (A foolish puppy who had left the pack,
  • Thoughtless what foe was threat’ning at his back,)
  • He moves about, as ship prepared to sail,
  • He hoists his proud rotundity of tail,
  • The half-seal’d eyes and changeful neck he shows,
  • Where, in its quick’ning colours, vengeance glows;
  • From red to blue the pendant wattles turn, 380
  • Blue mix’d with red, as matches when they burn;
  • And thus th’ intruding snarler to oppose,
  • Urged by enkindling wrath, he gobbling goes.
  • So look’d our hero in his wrath, his cheeks
  • Flush’d with fresh fires and glow’d in tingling streaks;
  • His breath by passion’s force awhile restrain’d,
  • Like a stopp’d current, greater force regain’d;
  • So spoke, so look’d he, every eye and ear
  • Were fix’d to view him, or were turn’d to hear.
  • “My friends, you know me, you can witness all, 390
  • How, urged by passion, I restrain my gall;
  • And every motive to revenge withstand--
  • Save when I hear abused my native land.
  • “Is it not known, agreed, confirm’d, confess’d,
  • That of all people, we are govern’d best?
  • We have the force of monarchies; are free,
  • As the most proud republicans can be;
  • And have those prudent counsels that arise
  • In grave and cautious aristocracies;
  • And live there those, in such all-glorious state, 400
  • Traitors protected in the land they hate?
  • Rebels, still warring with the laws that give
  • To them subsistence?--Yes, such wretches live.
  • “Ours is a church reform’d, and now no more
  • Is aught for man to mend or to restore;
  • ’Tis pure in doctrines, ’tis correct in creeds,
  • Has nought redundant, and it nothing needs;
  • No evil is therein--no wrinkle, spot,
  • Stain, blame, or blemish:--I affirm there’s not.
  • “All this you know--now mark what once befell, 410
  • With grief I bore it, and with shame I tell;
  • I was entrapp’d--yes, so it came to pass,
  • ’Mid heathen rebels, a tumultuous class;
  • Each to his country bore a hellish mind,
  • Each like his neighbour was of cursèd kind;
  • The land that nursed them they blasphemed; the laws,
  • Their sovereign’s glory, and their country’s cause;
  • And who their mouth, their master-fiend, and who
  • Rebellion’s oracle?----You, caitiff, you!”
  • He spoke, and standing stretch’d his mighty arm, 420
  • And fix’d the man of words, as by a charm.
  • “How raved that railer! Sure some hellish power
  • Restrain’d my tongue in that delirious hour,
  • Or I had hurl’d the shame and vengeance due
  • On him, the guide of that infuriate crew;
  • But to mine eyes such dreadful looks appear’d,
  • Such mingled yell of lying words I heard,
  • That I conceived around were dæmons all,
  • And till I fled the house, I fear’d its fall.
  • “Oh! could our country from our coasts expel 430
  • Such foes! to nourish those who wish her well:
  • This her mild laws forbid, but we may still
  • From us eject them by our sovereign will;
  • This let us do.”--He said, and then began
  • A gentler feeling for the silent man;
  • Ev’n in our hero’s mighty soul arose
  • A touch of pity for experienced woes;
  • But this was transient, and with angry eye
  • He sternly look’d, and paused for a reply.
  • ’Twas then the man of many words would speak-- 440
  • But, in his trial, had them all to seek:
  • To find a friend he look’d the circle round,
  • But joy or scorn in every feature found;
  • He sipp’d his wine, but in those times of dread
  • Wine only adds confusion to the head;
  • In doubt he reason’d with himself--“And how
  • Harangue at night, if I be silent now?”
  • From pride and praise received he sought to draw
  • Courage to speak, but still remain’d the awe;
  • One moment rose he with a forced disdain, 450
  • And then, abash’d, sunk sadly down again;
  • While in our hero’s glance he seem’d to read,
  • “Slave and insurgent! what hast thou to plead?”--
  • By desperation urged, he now began:
  • “I seek no favour--I--the Rights of Man!
  • Claim; and I--nay!--but give me leave--and I
  • Insist--a man--that is--and, in reply,
  • I speak.”--Alas! each new attempt was vain:
  • Confused he stood, he sate, he rose again;
  • At length he growl’d defiance, sought the door, 460
  • Cursed the whole synod, and was seen no more.
  • “Laud we,” said Justice Bolt, “the Powers above;
  • Thus could our speech the sturdiest foe remove.”
  • Exulting now he gain’d new strength of fame,
  • And lost all feelings of defeat and shame.
  • “He dared not strive, you witness’d--dared not lift
  • His voice, nor drive at his accursed drift:
  • So all shall tremble, wretches who oppose
  • Our church or state--thus be it to our foes.”
  • He spoke, and, seated with his former air, 470
  • Look’d his full self, and fill’d his ample chair;
  • Took one full bumper to each favourite cause, }
  • And dwelt all night on politics and laws, }
  • With high applauding voice, that gain’d him high applause. }
  • [2] The reader will perceive in these and the preceding verses
  • allusions to the state of France, as that country was circumstanced
  • some years since, rather than as it appears to be in the present
  • date; several years elapsing between the alarm of the loyal
  • magistrate on the occasion now related, and a subsequent event that
  • farther illustrates the remark with which the narrative commences.
  • TALE II.
  • _THE PARTING HOUR._
  • I did not take my leave of him, but had
  • Most pretty things to say: ere I could tell him
  • How I would think of him, at certain hours,
  • Such thoughts and such [. . . . . . . . . . . . .
  • . . . . . .] or ere I could
  • Give him that parting kiss, which I had set
  • Betwixt two charming words--comes in my father--
  • _Cymbeline_, Act I. Scene 3.
  • Grief hath changed me since you saw me last,
  • And careful hours with Time’s deformèd hand
  • Have written strange defeatures [in] my face.
  • _Comedy of Errors_, Act V. Scene 1.
  • Oh! if thou be the same [Ægeon], speak,
  • And speak unto the same [Æmilia].
  • _Comedy of Errors_, Act V. Scene 1.
  • I ran it through, ev’n from my boyish days
  • To the very moment that [he bade] me tell it,
  • Wherein I spake of most disastrous chances,
  • Of moving accidents, by flood, and field;
  • Of being taken by [the] insolent foe
  • And sold to slavery.
  • _Othello_, Act I. Scene 3.
  • An old man, broken with the storms of [state],
  • Is come to lay his weary bones among [ye];
  • Give him a little earth for charity.
  • _Henry VIII._ Act IV. Scene 2.
  • TALE II.
  • _THE PARTING HOUR._
  • Minutely trace man’s life; year after year,
  • Through all his days let all his deeds appear,
  • And then, though some may in that life be strange,
  • Yet there appears no vast nor sudden change;
  • The links that bind those various deeds are seen,
  • And no mysterious void is left between.
  • But let these binding links be all destroy’d,
  • All that through years he suffer’d or enjoy’d;
  • Let that vast gap be made, and then behold--
  • This was the youth, and he is thus when old; 10
  • Then we at once the work of Time survey,
  • And in an instant see a life’s decay:
  • Pain[s] mix’d with pity in our bosoms rise,
  • And sorrow takes new sadness from surprise.
  • Beneath yon tree, observe an ancient pair-- }
  • A sleeping man; a woman in her chair, }
  • Watching his looks with kind and pensive air; }
  • No wife, nor sister she, nor is the name
  • Nor kindred of this friendly pair the same;
  • Yet so allied are they, that few can feel 20
  • Her constant, warm, unwearied, anxious zeal,
  • Their years and woes, although they long have loved,
  • Keep their good name and conduct unreproved;
  • Thus life’s small comforts they together share,
  • And while life lingers for the grave prepare.
  • No other subjects on their spirits press,
  • Nor gain such int’rest as the past distress;
  • Grievous events that from the mem’ry drive
  • Life’s common cares, and those alone survive,
  • Mix with each thought, in every action share, 30
  • Darken each dream, and blend with every prayer.
  • To David Booth, his fourth and last-born boy,
  • Allen his name, was more than common joy;
  • And as the child grew up, there seem’d in him
  • A more than common life in every limb;
  • A strong and handsome stripling he became,
  • And the gay spirit answer’d to the frame;
  • A lighter, happier lad was never seen,
  • For ever easy, cheerful, or serene;
  • His early love he fix’d upon a fair 40
  • And gentle maid--they were a handsome pair.
  • They at an infant-school together play’d,
  • Where the foundation of their love was laid;
  • The boyish champion would his choice attend
  • In every sport, in every fray defend.
  • As prospects open’d and as life advanced,
  • They walk’d together, they together danced;
  • On all occasions, from their early years,
  • They mix’d their joys and sorrows, hopes and fears;
  • Each heart was anxious, till it could impart 50
  • Its daily feelings to its kindred heart;
  • As years increased, unnumber’d petty wars
  • Broke out between them; jealousies and jars;
  • Causeless indeed, and follow’d by a peace,
  • That gave to love--growth, vigour, and increase.
  • Whilst yet a boy, when other minds are void,
  • Domestic thoughts young Allen’s hours employ’d;
  • Judith in gaining hearts had no concern,
  • Rather intent the matron’s part to learn;
  • Thus early prudent and sedate they grew, 60
  • While lovers, thoughtful--and, though children, true.
  • To either parents not a day appear’d,
  • When with this love they might have interfered:
  • Childish at first, they cared not to restrain;
  • And strong at last, they saw restriction vain;
  • Nor knew they when that passion to reprove--
  • Now idle fondness, now resistless love.
  • So, while the waters rise, the children tread
  • On the broad estuary’s sandy bed;
  • But soon the channel fills, from side to side 70
  • Comes danger rolling with the deep’ning tide;
  • Yet none who saw the rapid current flow
  • Could the first instant of that danger know.
  • The lovers waited till the time should come
  • When they together could possess a home:
  • In either house were men and maids unwed,
  • Hopes to be soothed, and tempers to be led.
  • Then Allen’s mother of his favourite maid
  • Spoke from the feelings of a mind afraid:
  • “Dress and amusements were her sole employ,” 80
  • She said--“entangling her deluded boy;”
  • And yet, in truth, a mother’s jealous love
  • Had much imagined and could little prove;
  • Judith had beauty--and, if vain, was kind,
  • Discreet, and mild, and had a serious mind.
  • Dull was their prospect--when the lovers met,
  • They said, we must not--dare not venture yet:
  • “Oh! could I labour for thee,” Allen cried,
  • “Why should our friends be thus dissatisfied?
  • On my own arm I could depend, but they } 90
  • Still urge obedience--must I yet obey?” }
  • Poor Judith felt the grief, but grieving begg’d delay. }
  • At length a prospect came that seem’d to smile,
  • And faintly woo them, from a Western Isle.
  • A kinsman there a widow’s hand had gain’d,
  • “Was old, was rich, and childless yet remain’d;
  • Would some young Booth to his affairs attend,
  • And wait awhile, he might expect a friend.”
  • The elder brothers, who were not in love,
  • Fear’d the false seas, unwilling to remove; 100
  • But the young Allen, an enamour’d boy,
  • Eager an independence to enjoy,
  • Would through all perils seek it--by the sea--
  • Through labour, danger, pain, or slavery.
  • The faithful Judith his design approved;
  • For both were sanguine, they were young and loved.
  • The mother’s slow consent was then obtain’d;
  • The time arrived, to part alone remain’d.
  • All things prepared, on the expected day
  • Was seen the vessel anchor’d in the bay. 110
  • From her would seamen in the evening come,
  • To take th’ advent’rous Allen from his home;
  • With his own friends the final day he pass’d,
  • And every painful hour, except the last.
  • The grieving father urged the cheerful glass,
  • To make the moments with less sorrow pass;
  • Intent the mother look’d upon her son,
  • And wish’d th’ assent withdrawn, the deed undone;
  • The younger sister, as he took his way,
  • Hung on his coat, and begg’d for more delay: 120
  • But his own Judith call’d him to the shore,
  • Whom he must meet, for they might meet no more;--
  • And there he found her--faithful, mournful, true,
  • Weeping and waiting for a last adieu!
  • The ebbing tide had left the sand, and there
  • Moved with slow steps the melancholy pair:
  • Sweet were the painful moments--but how sweet,
  • And without pain, when they again should meet!
  • Now either spoke, as hope and fear impress’d
  • Each their alternate triumph in the breast. 130
  • Distance alarm’d the maid--she cried, “’Tis far!”
  • And danger too--“it is a time of war.
  • Then, in those countries are diseases strange,
  • And women gay, and men are prone to change;
  • What, then, may happen in a year, when things
  • Of vast importance every moment brings!
  • But hark! an oar!” she cried, yet none appear’d--
  • ’Twas love’s mistake, who fancied what it fear’d;
  • And she continued--“Do, my Allen, keep
  • Thy heart from evil, let thy passions sleep; 140
  • Believe it good, nay glorious, to prevail,
  • And stand in safety where so many fail;
  • And do not, Allen, or for shame, or pride,
  • Thy faith abjure, or thy profession hide;
  • Can I believe _his_ love will lasting prove,
  • Who has no rev’rence for the God I love?
  • I know thee well! how good thou art and kind;
  • But strong the passions that invade thy mind.--
  • Now, what to me hath Allen to commend?”--
  • “Upon my mother,” said the youth, “attend; 150
  • Forget her spleen, and in my place appear;
  • Her love to me will make my Judith dear:
  • Oft I shall think (such comfort lovers seek),
  • Who speaks of me, and fancy what they speak;
  • Then write on all occasions, always dwell
  • On hope’s fair prospects, and be kind and well,
  • And ever choose the fondest, tenderest style.”
  • She answer’d, “No,” but answer’d with a smile.
  • “And now, my Judith, at so sad a time,
  • Forgive my fear, and call it not my crime; 160
  • When with our youthful neighbours ’tis thy chance
  • To meet in walks, the visit or the dance,
  • When every lad would on my lass attend,
  • Choose not a smooth designer for a friend;
  • That fawning Philip!--nay, be not severe,
  • A rival’s hope must cause a lover’s fear.”
  • Displeased she felt, and might in her reply
  • Have mix’d some anger, but the boat was nigh,
  • Now truly heard!--it soon was full in sight;--
  • Now the sad farewell, and the long good-night; 170
  • For, see!--his friends come hast’ning to the beach,
  • And now the gunwale is within the reach;
  • “Adieu!--farewell!--remember!”--and what more
  • Affection taught, was utter’d from the shore!
  • But Judith left them with a heavy heart,
  • Took a last view, and went to weep apart!
  • And now his friends went slowly from the place,
  • Where she stood still, the dashing oar to trace,
  • Till all were silent!--for the youth she pray’d,
  • And softly then return’d the weeping maid. 180
  • They parted, thus by hope and fortune led,
  • And Judith’s hours in pensive pleasure fled.
  • But when return’d the youth?--the youth no more
  • Return’d exulting to his native shore.
  • But forty years were past, and then there came }
  • A worn-out man with wither’d limbs and lame, }
  • His mind oppress’d with woes, and bent with age his frame: }
  • Yes! old and grieved, and trembling with decay, }
  • Was Allen landing in his native bay, }
  • Willing his breathless form should blend with kindred clay. }
  • In an autumnal eve he left the beach, 191
  • In such an eve he chanced the port to reach.
  • He was alone; he press’d the very place
  • Of the sad parting, of the last embrace:
  • There stood his parents, there retired the maid,
  • So fond, so tender, and so much afraid;
  • And on that spot, through many a year, his mind
  • Turn’d mournful back, half sinking, half resign’d.
  • No one was present; of its crew bereft,
  • A single boat was in the billows left; 200
  • Sent from some anchor’d vessel in the bay,
  • At the returning tide to sail away.
  • O’er the black stern the moonlight softly play’d,
  • The loosen’d foresail flapping in the shade;
  • All silent else on shore; but from the town
  • A drowsy peal of distant bells came down;
  • From the tall houses here and there, a light
  • Served some confused remembrance to excite:
  • “There,” he observed, and new emotions felt,
  • “Was my first home--and yonder Judith dwelt; 210
  • Dead! dead are all! I long--I fear to know,”
  • He said, and walk’d impatient, and yet slow.
  • Sudden there broke upon his grief a noise
  • Of merry tumult and of vulgar joys:
  • Seamen returning to their ship, were come,
  • With idle numbers straying from their home;
  • Allen among them mix’d, and in the old
  • Strove some familiar features to behold;
  • While fancy aided memory;--“Man! what cheer?”
  • A sailor cried; “Art thou at anchor here?” 220
  • Faintly he answer’d, and then tried to trace
  • Some youthful features in some aged face;
  • A swarthy matron he beheld, and thought
  • She might unfold the very truths he sought;
  • Confused and trembling, he the dame address’d:
  • “The Booths! yet live they?” pausing and oppress’d;
  • Then spake again:--“Is there no ancient man,
  • David his name?--assist me, if you can.--
  • Flemmings there were--and Judith, doth she live?”
  • The woman gazed, nor could an answer give; 230
  • Yet wond’ring stood, and all were silent by,
  • Feeling a strange and solemn sympathy.
  • The woman musing said--“She knew full well
  • Where the old people came at last to dwell;
  • They had a married daughter and a son,
  • But they were dead, and now remain’d not one.”
  • “Yes,” said an elder, who had paused intent
  • On days long past, “there was a sad event;--
  • One of these Booths--it was my mother’s tale--
  • Here left his lass, I know not where to sail; 240
  • She saw their parting, and observed the pain;
  • But never came th’ unhappy man again.”
  • “The ship was captured”--Allen meekly said,
  • “And what became of the forsaken maid?”
  • The woman answer’d: “I remember now,
  • She used to tell the lasses of her vow,
  • And of her lover’s loss, and I have seen
  • The gayest hearts grow sad where she has been;
  • Yet in her grief she married, and was made
  • Slave to a wretch, whom meekly she obey’d 250
  • And early buried--but I know no more.
  • And hark! our friends are hast’ning to the shore.”
  • Allen soon found a lodging in the town,
  • And walk’d, a man unnoticed, up and down.
  • This house, and this, he knew, and thought a face
  • He sometimes could among a number trace;
  • Of names remember’d there remain’d a few,
  • But of no favourites, and the rest were new;
  • A merchant’s wealth, when Allen went to sea,
  • Was reckon’d boundless.--Could he living be? 260
  • Or lived his son? for one he had, the heir
  • To a vast business, and a fortune fair.
  • No! but that heir’s poor widow, from her shed,
  • With crutches went to take her dole of bread.
  • There was a friend whom he had left a boy,
  • With hope to sail the master of a hoy;
  • Him, after many a stormy day, he found
  • With his great wish, his life’s whole purpose, crown’d.
  • This hoy’s proud captain look’d in Allen’s face;--
  • “Yours is, my friend,” said he, “a woful case; 270
  • We cannot all succeed; I now command
  • The Betsy sloop, and am not much at land;
  • But when we meet, you shall your story tell
  • Of foreign parts--I bid you now farewell!”
  • Allen so long had left his native shore,
  • He saw but few whom he had seen before;
  • The older people, as they met him, cast
  • A pitying look, oft speaking as they pass’d:--
  • “The man is Allen Booth, and it appears
  • He dwelt among us in his early years; 280
  • We see the name engraved upon the stones,
  • Where this poor wanderer means to lay his bones.”
  • Thus where he lived and loved--unhappy change!--
  • He seems a stranger, and finds all are strange.
  • But now a widow, in a village near,
  • Chanced of the melancholy man to hear;
  • Old as she was, to Judith’s bosom came
  • Some strong emotions at the well-known name;
  • He was her much-loved Allen, she had stay’d
  • Ten troubled years, a sad afflicted maid; 290
  • Then was she wedded, of his death assured,
  • And much of mis’ry in her lot endured;
  • Her husband died; her children sought their bread
  • In various places, and to her were dead.
  • The once fond lovers met; not grief nor age,
  • Sickness or pain, their hearts could disengage:
  • Each had immediate confidence; a friend
  • Both now beheld, on whom they might depend:
  • “Now is there one to whom I can express
  • My nature’s weakness and my soul’s distress.” 300
  • Allen look’d up, and with impatient heart:--
  • “Let me not lose thee--never let us part;
  • So Heaven this comfort to my sufferings give,
  • It is not all distress to think and live.”
  • Thus Allen spoke--for time had not removed
  • The charms attach’d to one so fondly loved;
  • Who with more health, the mistress of their cot,
  • Labours to soothe the evils of his lot.
  • To her, to her alone, his various fate,
  • At various times, ’tis comfort to relate; 310
  • And yet his sorrow she too loves to hear
  • What wrings her bosom, and compels the tear.
  • First he related how he left the shore,
  • Alarm’d with fears that they should meet no more;
  • Then, ere the ship had reach’d her purposed course,
  • They met and yielded to the Spanish force;
  • Then ’cross th’ Atlantic seas they bore their prey,
  • Who grieving landed from their sultry bay;
  • And, marching many a burning league, he found
  • Himself a slave upon a miner’s ground: 320
  • There a good priest his native language spoke,
  • And gave some ease to his tormenting yoke;
  • Kindly advanced him in his master’s grace,
  • And he was station’d in an easier place.
  • There, hopeless ever to escape the land,
  • He to a Spanish maiden gave his hand;
  • In cottage shelter’d from the blaze of day
  • He saw his happy infants round him play;
  • Where summer shadows, made by lofty trees,
  • Waved o’er his seat, and soothed his reveries; 330
  • E’en then he thought of England, nor could sigh,
  • But his fond Isabel demanded, “Why?”
  • Grieved by the story, she the sigh repaid,
  • And wept in pity for the English maid:
  • Thus twenty years were pass’d, and pass’d his views
  • Of further bliss, for he had wealth to lose.
  • His friend now dead, some foe had dared to paint
  • “His faith as tainted: he his spouse would taint;
  • Make all his children infidels, and found
  • An English heresy on Christian ground.” 340
  • “Whilst I was poor,” said Allen, “none would care
  • What my poor notions of religion were;
  • None ask’d me whom I worshipp’d, how I pray’d,
  • If due obedience to the laws were paid:
  • My good adviser taught me to be still,
  • Nor to make converts had I power or will.
  • I preached no foreign doctrine to my wife,
  • And never mention’d Luther in my life;
  • I, all they said, say what they would, allow’d,
  • And when the fathers bade me bow, I bow’d; 350
  • Their forms I follow’d, whether well or sick,
  • And was a most obedient Catholic.
  • But I had money, and these pastors found
  • My notions vague, heretical, unsound:
  • A wicked book they seized; the very Turk
  • Could not have read a more pernicious work;
  • To me pernicious, who if it were good
  • Or evil question’d not, nor understood:
  • Oh! had I little but the book possess’d,
  • I might have read it, and enjoy’d my rest.” 360
  • Alas! poor Allen, through his wealth was seen
  • Crimes that by poverty conceal’d had been:
  • Faults that in dusty pictures rest unknown
  • Are in an instant through the varnish shown.
  • He told their cruel mercy: how at last,
  • In Christian kindness for the merits past,
  • They spared his forfeit life, but bade him fly,
  • Or for his crime and contumacy die;
  • Fly from all scenes, all objects of delight; }
  • His wife, his children, weeping in his sight, } 370
  • All urging him to flee, he fled, and cursed his flight.}
  • He next related how he found a way,
  • Guideless and grieving, to Campeachy Bay:
  • There in the woods he wrought, and there, among
  • Some lab’ring seamen, heard his native tongue.
  • The sound, one moment, broke upon his pain
  • With joyful force; he long’d to hear again;
  • Again he heard; he seized an offer’d hand,
  • “And when beheld you last our native land?”
  • He cry’d, “and in what county? quickly say!”-- 380
  • The seamen answer’d, strangers all were they;
  • One only at his native port had been;
  • He, landing once, the quay and church had seen,
  • For that esteem’d; but nothing more he knew.
  • Still more to know, would Allen join the crew,
  • Sail where they sail’d; and, many a peril past,
  • They at his kinsman’s isle their anchor cast;
  • But him they found not, nor could one relate
  • Aught of his will, his wish, or his estate.
  • This grieved not Allen; then again he sail’d 390
  • For England’s coast, again his fate prevail’d:
  • War raged, and he, an active man and strong,
  • Was soon impress’d, and served his country long.
  • By various shores he pass’d, on various seas,
  • Never so happy as when void of ease.--
  • And then he told how, in a calm distress’d,
  • Day after day his soul was sick of rest;
  • When as a log upon the deep they stood,
  • Then roved his spirit to the inland wood;
  • Till, while awake, he dream’d, that on the seas 400
  • Were his loved home, the hill, the stream, the trees.
  • He gazed, he pointed to the scenes:--“There stand
  • My wife, my children, ’tis my lovely land;
  • See! there my dwelling--oh! delicious scene
  • Of my best life--unhand me--are ye men?”
  • And thus the frenzy ruled him, till the wind
  • Brush’d the fond pictures from the stagnant mind.
  • He told of bloody fights, and how at length
  • The rage of battle gave his spirits strength.
  • ’Twas in the Indian seas his limb he lost, 410
  • And he was left half-dead upon the coast;
  • But living gain’d, ’mid rich aspiring men,
  • A fair subsistence by his ready pen.
  • “Thus,” he continued, “pass’d unvaried years,
  • Without events producing hopes or fears.”
  • Augmented pay procured him decent wealth,
  • But years advancing undermined his health;
  • Then oft-times in delightful dream he flew
  • To England’s shore, and scenes his childhood knew:
  • He saw his parents, saw his fav’rite maid, 420
  • No feature wrinkled, not a charm decay’d;
  • And, thus excited, in his bosom rose
  • A wish so strong, it baffled his repose;
  • Anxious he felt on English earth to lie;
  • To view his native soil, and there to die.
  • He then described the gloom, the dread he found,
  • When first he landed on the chosen ground,
  • Where undefined was all he hoped and fear’d,
  • And how confused and troubled all appear’d;
  • His thoughts in past and present scenes employ’d, 430
  • All views in future blighted and destroy’d:
  • His were a medley of bewild’ring themes,
  • Sad as realities, and wild as dreams.
  • Here his relation closes, but his mind
  • Flies back again, some resting-place to find;
  • Thus silent, musing through the day, he sees
  • His children sporting by those lofty trees,
  • Their mother singing in the shady scene,
  • Where the fresh springs burst o’er the lively green;--
  • So strong his eager fancy, he affrights 440
  • The faithful widow by its powerful flights;
  • For what disturbs him he aloud will tell,
  • And cry--“’Tis she, my wife! my Isabel!
  • Where are my children?”--Judith grieves to hear
  • How the soul works in sorrows so severe;
  • Assiduous all his wishes to attend,
  • Deprived of much, he yet may boast a friend;
  • Watch’d by her care, in sleep, his spirit takes
  • Its flight, and watchful finds her when he wakes.
  • ’Tis now her office; her attention see! 450
  • While her friend sleeps beneath that shading tree,
  • Careful she guards him from the glowing heat,
  • And pensive muses at her Allen’s feet.
  • And where is he? Ah! doubtless in those scenes
  • Of his best days, amid the vivid greens,
  • Fresh with unnumber’d rills, where ev’ry gale
  • Breathes the rich fragrance of the neighb’ring vale;
  • Smiles not his wife, and listens as there comes
  • The night-bird’s music from the thickening glooms?
  • And as he sits with all these treasures nigh, } 460
  • Blaze not with fairy light the phosphor-fly, }
  • When like a sparkling gem it wheels illumined by? }
  • This is the joy that now so plainly speaks
  • In the warm transient flushing of his cheeks;
  • For he is list’ning to the fancied noise
  • Of his own children, eager in their joys:
  • All this he feels, a dream’s delusive bliss
  • Gives the expression, and the glow like this.
  • And now his Judith lays her knitting by,
  • These strong emotions in her friend to spy; 470
  • For she can fully of their nature deem---- }
  • But see! he breaks the long-protracted theme, }
  • And wakes and cries--“My God! ’twas but a dream.” }
  • TALE III.
  • _THE GENTLEMAN FARMER_.
  • Pause [there . . .]
  • And weigh thy value with an even hand;
  • If thou beest rated by thy estimation,
  • Thou dost deserve enough.
  • _Merchant of Venice_, Act II. Scene 7.
  • Because I will not do them wrong to mistrust any, I will do myself
  • the right to trust none; and the fine is (for which I may go the
  • finer), I will live a bachelor.
  • _Much Ado about Nothing_, Act I. Scene 1.
  • Throw physic to the dogs, I’ll none of it.
  • _Macbeth_, Act V. Scene 3.
  • His promises are, as he then was, mighty;
  • And his performance, as he now is, nothing.
  • _Henry VIII_. Act IV. Scene 2.
  • TALE III.
  • _THE GENTLEMAN FARMER._
  • Gwyn was a farmer, whom the farmers all,
  • Who dwelt around, the Gentleman would call;
  • Whether in pure humility or pride,
  • They only knew, and they would not decide.
  • Far diff’rent he from that dull plodding tribe,
  • Whom it was his amusement to describe;
  • Creatures no more enliven’d than a clod,
  • But treading still as their dull fathers trod;
  • Who lived in times when not a man had seen
  • Corn sown by drill, or thresh’d by a machine: 10
  • He was of those whose skill assigns the prize
  • For creatures fed in pens, and stalls, and sties;
  • And who, in places where improvers meet,
  • To fill the land with fatness, had a seat;
  • Who in large mansions live like petty kings,
  • And speak of farms but as amusing things;
  • Who plans encourage, and who journals keep,
  • And talk with lords about a breed of sheep.
  • Two are the species in this genus known;
  • One, who is rich in his profession grown, 20
  • Who yearly finds his ample stores increase,
  • From fortune’s favours and a favouring lease;
  • Who rides his hunter, who his house adorns;
  • Who drinks his wine, and his disbursements scorns,
  • Who freely lives, and loves to show he can--
  • This is the farmer, made the gentleman.
  • The second species from the world is sent,
  • Tired with its strife, or with his wealth content;
  • In books and men beyond the former read,
  • To farming solely by a passion led, 30
  • Or by a fashion; curious in his land;
  • Now planning much, now changing what he plann’d;
  • Pleased by each trial, not by failures vex’d,
  • And ever certain to succeed the next;
  • Quick to resolve, and easy to persuade--
  • This is the gentleman, a farmer made.
  • Gwyn was of these; he from the world withdrew
  • Early in life, his reasons known to few;
  • Some disappointment said, some pure good sense,
  • The love of land, the press of indolence; 40
  • His fortune known, and coming to retire,
  • If not a farmer, men had call’d him ’squire.
  • Forty and five his years, no child or wife
  • Cross’d the still tenour of his chosen life;
  • Much land he purchased, planted far around,
  • And let some portions of superfluous ground
  • To farmers near him, not displeased to say,
  • “My tenants,” nor, “our worthy landlord,” they.
  • Fix’d in his farm, he soon display’d his skill
  • In small-boned lambs, the horse-hoe, and the drill; 50
  • From these he rose to themes of nobler kind,
  • And show’d the riches of a fertile mind;
  • To all around their visits he repaid,
  • And thus his mansion and himself display’d.
  • His rooms were stately, rather fine than neat,
  • And guests politely call’d his house a seat;
  • At much expense was each apartment graced,
  • His taste was gorgeous, but it still was taste;
  • In full festoons the crimson curtains fell,
  • The sofas rose in bold elastic swell; 60
  • Mirrors in gilded frames display’d the tints
  • Of glowing carpets and of colour’d prints;
  • The weary eye saw every object shine,
  • And all was costly, fanciful, and fine.
  • As with his friends he pass’d the social hours,
  • His generous spirit scorn’d to hide its powers;
  • Powers unexpected, for his eye and air
  • Gave no sure signs that eloquence was there;
  • Oft he began with sudden fire and force,
  • As loth to lose occasion for discourse; 70
  • Some, ’tis observed, who feel a wish to speak,
  • Will a due place for introduction seek;
  • On to their purpose step by step they steal,
  • And all their way, by certain signals, feel;
  • Others plunge in at once, and never heed
  • Whose turn they take, whose purpose they impede;
  • Resolved to shine, they hasten to begin,
  • Of ending thoughtless--and of these was Gwyn.
  • And thus he spake:
  • ----“It grieves me to the soul
  • To see how man submits to man’s control; 80
  • How overpower’d and shackled minds are led
  • In vulgar tracks, and to submission bred;
  • The coward never on himself relies,
  • But to an equal for assistance flies;
  • Man yields to custom as he bows to fate,
  • In all things ruled--mind, body, and estate;
  • In pain, in sickness, we for cure apply
  • To them we know not, and we know not why;
  • But that the creature has some jargon read,
  • And got some Scotchman’s system in his head; 90
  • Some grave impostor, who will health insure,
  • Long as your patience or your wealth endure;
  • But mark them well, the pale and sickly crew,
  • They have not health, and can they give it you?
  • These solemn cheats their various methods choose;
  • A system fires them, as a bard his muse:
  • Hence wordy wars arise; the learn’d divide,
  • And groaning patients curse each erring guide.
  • “Next, our affairs are govern’d, buy or sell,
  • Upon the deed the law must fix its spell; 100
  • Whether we hire or let, we must have still
  • The dubious aid of an attorney’s skill;
  • They take a part in every man’s affairs,
  • And in all business some concern is theirs;
  • Because mankind in ways prescribed are found,
  • Like flocks that follow on a beaten ground,
  • Each abject nature in the way proceeds,
  • That now to shearing, now to slaughter leads.
  • “Should you offend, though meaning no offence,
  • You have no safety in your innocence; 110
  • The statute broken then is placed in view,
  • And men must pay for crimes they never knew.
  • Who would by law regain his plunder’d store,
  • Would pick up fallen merc’ry from the floor;
  • If he pursue it, here and there it slides;
  • He would collect it, but it more divides;
  • This part and this he stops, but still in vain,
  • It slips aside, and breaks in parts again;
  • Till, after time and pains, and care and cost,
  • He finds his labour and his object lost. 120
  • “But most it grieves me, (friends alone are round,)
  • To see a man in priestly fetters bound;
  • Guides to the soul, these friends of Heaven contrive,
  • Long as man lives, to keep his fears alive;
  • Soon as an infant breathes, their rites begin;
  • Who knows not sinning, must be freed from sin;
  • Who needs no bond must yet engage in vows;
  • Who has no judgment, must a creed espouse:
  • Advanced in life, our boys are bound by rules, }
  • Are catechised in churches, cloisters, schools, } 130
  • And train’d in thraldom to be fit for tools; }
  • The youth grown up, he now a partner needs,
  • And lo! a priest, as soon as he succeeds.
  • What man of sense can marriage-rites approve?
  • What man of spirit can be bound to love?
  • Forced to be kind! compell’d to be sincere!
  • Do chains and fetters make companions dear?
  • Pris’ners indeed we bind; but though the bond
  • May keep them safe, it does not make them fond:
  • The ring, the vow, the witness, licence, prayers, 140
  • All parties known! made public all affairs!
  • Such forms men suffer, and from these they date
  • A deed of love begun with all they hate.
  • Absurd, that none the beaten road should shun,
  • But love to do what other dupes have done!
  • “Well, now your priest has made you one of twain,
  • Look you for rest? Alas! you look in vain.
  • If sick, he comes; you cannot die in peace,
  • Till he attends to witness your release;
  • To vex your soul, and urge you to confess 150
  • The sins you feel, remember, or can guess;
  • Nay, when departed, to your grave he goes,
  • But there indeed he hurts not your repose.
  • “Such are our burthens; part we must sustain,
  • But need not link new grievance to the chain.
  • Yet men like idiots will their frames surround
  • With these vile shackles, nor confess they’re bound;
  • In all that most confines them they confide,
  • Their slavery boast, and make their bonds their pride;
  • E’en as the pressure galls them, they declare, 160
  • (Good souls!) how happy and how free they are!
  • As madmen, pointing round their wretched cells,
  • Cry, ‘Lo! the palace where our honour dwells.’
  • “Such is our state: but I resolve to live
  • By rules my reason and my feelings give;
  • No legal guards shall keep enthrall’d my mind,
  • No slaves command me, and no teachers blind.
  • “Tempted by sins, let me their strength defy,
  • But have no second in a surplice by
  • No bottle-holder, with officious aid, 170
  • To comfort conscience, weaken’d and afraid:
  • Then if I yield, my frailty is not known;
  • And, if I stand, the glory is my own.
  • “When Truth and Reason are our friends, we seem
  • Alive! awake!--the superstitious dream.
  • “Oh! then, fair Truth, for thee alone I seek,
  • Friend to the wise, supporter of the weak;
  • From thee we learn whate’er is right and just;
  • Forms to despise, professions to distrust;
  • Creeds to reject, pretensions to deride, 180
  • And, following thee, to follow none beside.”
  • Such was the speech; it struck upon the ear
  • Like sudden thunder, none expect to hear.
  • He saw men’s wonder with a manly pride,
  • And gravely smiled at guest electrified;
  • “A farmer this!” they said, “Oh! let him seek
  • That place where he may for his country speak;
  • On some great question to harangue for hours,
  • While speakers hearing, envy nobler powers!”
  • Wisdom like this, as all things rich and rare, 190
  • Must be acquired with pains, and kept with care;
  • In books he sought it, which his friends might view,
  • When their kind host the guarding curtain drew.
  • There were historic works for graver hours,
  • And lighter verse, to spur the languid powers;
  • There metaphysics, logic there had place;
  • But of devotion not a single trace--
  • Save what is taught in Gibbon’s florid page,
  • And other guides of this inquiring age;
  • There Hume appear’d, and, near, a splendid book 200
  • Composed by Gay’s good Lord of Bolingbroke:
  • With these were mix’d the light, the free, the vain,
  • And from a corner peep’d the sage Tom Paine:
  • Here four neat volumes ‘Chesterfield’ were named,
  • For manners much and easy morals famed;
  • With chaste Memoirs of Females, to be read
  • When deeper studies had confused the head.
  • Such his resources, treasures where he sought
  • For daily knowledge till his mind was fraught:
  • Then, when his friends were present, for their use 210
  • He would the riches he had stored produce;
  • He found his lamp burn clearer, when each day
  • He drew for all he purposed to display.
  • For these occasions, forth his knowledge sprung,
  • As mustard quickens on a bed of dung;
  • All was prepared, and guests allow’d the praise,
  • For what they saw he could so quickly raise.
  • Such this new friend; and, when the year came round,
  • The same impressive, reasoning sage was found:
  • Then, too, was seen the pleasant mansion graced 220
  • With a fair damsel--his no vulgar taste:
  • The neat Rebecca--sly, observant, still;
  • Watching his eye, and waiting on his will;
  • Simple yet smart her dress, her manners meek,
  • Her smiles spoke for her, she would seldom speak;
  • But watch’d each look, each meaning to detect,
  • And (pleas’d with notice) felt for all neglect.
  • With her lived Gwyn a sweet harmonious life,
  • Who, forms excepted, was a charming wife.
  • The wives indeed, so made by vulgar law, 230
  • Affected scorn, and censured what they saw;
  • And what they saw not, fancied; said ’twas sin,
  • And took no notice of the wife of Gwyn.
  • But he despised their rudeness, and would prove
  • Theirs was compulsion and distrust, not love;
  • “Fools as they were! could they conceive that rings
  • And parsons’ blessings were substantial things?”
  • They answer’d “Yes;” while he contemptuous spoke
  • Of the low notions held by simple folk;
  • Yet, strange that anger in a man so wise } 240
  • Should from the notions of these fools arise; }
  • Can they so vex us, whom we so despise? }
  • Brave as he was, our hero felt a dread
  • Lest those who saw him kind should think him led;
  • If to his bosom fear a visit paid,
  • It was, lest he should be supposed afraid.
  • Hence sprang his orders; not that he desired
  • The things when done: obedience he required;
  • And thus, to prove his absolute command,
  • Ruled every heart, and moved each subject hand; 250
  • Assent he ask’d for every word and whim,
  • To prove that _he alone was king of him_.
  • The still Rebecca, who her station knew,
  • With ease resign’d the honours not her due;
  • Well pleased, she saw that men her board would grace,
  • And wish’d not there to see a female face;
  • When by her lover she his spouse was styled,
  • Polite she thought it, and demurely smiled;
  • But when he wanted wives and maidens round
  • So to regard her, she grew grave, and frown’d; 260
  • And sometimes whisper’d--“Why should you respect
  • These people’s notions, yet their forms reject?”
  • Gwyn, though from marriage bond and fetter free,
  • Still felt abridgment in his liberty;
  • Something of hesitation he betray’d,
  • And in her presence thought of what he said.
  • Thus fair Rebecca, though she walk’d astray,
  • His creed rejecting, judged it right to pray;
  • To be at church, to sit with serious looks,
  • To read her Bible and her Sunday-books. 270
  • She hated all those new and daring themes,
  • And call’d his free conjectures “devil’s dreams;”
  • She honour’d still the priesthood in her fall,
  • And claim’d respect and reverence for them all;
  • Call’d them “of sin’s destructive power the foes,
  • And not such blockheads as he might suppose.”
  • Gwyn to his friends would smile, and sometimes say,
  • “’Tis a kind fool, why vex her in her way?”
  • Her way she took, and still had more in view,
  • For she contrived that he should take it too. 280
  • The daring freedom of his soul, ’twas plain,
  • In part was lost in a divided reign:
  • A king and queen, who yet in prudence sway’d
  • Their peaceful state, and were in turn obey’d.
  • Yet such our fate that, when we plan the best,
  • Something arises to disturb our rest:
  • For, though in spirits high, in body strong,
  • Gwyn something felt--he knew not what--was wrong;
  • He wish’d to know, for he believed the thing,
  • If unremoved, would other evil bring: 290
  • She must perceive, of late he could not eat,
  • And when he walk’d, he trembled on his feet;
  • He had forebodings, and he seem’d as one
  • Stopp’d on the road, or threatened by a dun;
  • He could not live, and yet, should he apply
  • To those physicians--he must sooner die.”
  • The mild Rebecca heard with some disdain,
  • And some distress, her friend and lord complain:
  • His death she fear’d not, but had painful doubt
  • What his distemper’d nerves might bring about; 300
  • With power like hers she dreaded an ally,
  • And yet there was a person in her eye;--
  • She thought, debated, fix’d--“Alas!” she said,
  • A case like yours must be no more delay’d.
  • You hate these doctors; well! but were a friend
  • And doctor one, your fears would have an end.
  • My cousin Mollet--Scotland holds him now--
  • Is above all men skilful, all allow:
  • Of late a doctor, and within a while
  • He means to settle in this favour’d isle; 310
  • Should he attend you, with his skill profound,
  • You must be safe, and shortly would be sound.”
  • When men in health against physicians rail,
  • They should consider that their nerves may fail;
  • Who calls a lawyer rogue, may find, too late,
  • On one of these depends his whole estate;
  • Nay, when the world can nothing more produce,
  • The priest, th’ insulted priest, may have his use.
  • Ease, health, and comfort, lift a man so high,
  • These powers are dwarfs that he can scarcely spy; 320
  • Pain, sickness, languor, keep a man so low,
  • That these neglected dwarfs to giants grow.
  • Happy is he who through the medium sees
  • Of clear good sense--but Gwyn was not of these.
  • He heard and he rejoiced: “Ah! let him come,
  • And, till he fixes, make my house his home.”
  • Home came the doctor--he was much admired;
  • He told the patient what his case required;
  • His hours for sleep, his time to eat and drink;
  • When he should ride, read, rest, compose, or think. 330
  • Thus join’d peculiar skill and art profound,
  • To make the fancy-sick no more than fancy-sound.
  • With such attention, who could long be ill?
  • Returning health proclaim’d the doctor’s skill.
  • Presents and praises from a grateful heart
  • Were freely offer’d on the patient’s part;
  • In high repute the doctor seem’d to stand,
  • But still had got no footing in the land;
  • And, as he saw the seat was rich and fair,
  • He felt disposed to fix his station there. 340
  • To gain his purpose, he perform’d the part
  • Of a good actor, and prepared to start--
  • Not like a traveller in a day serene,
  • When the sun shone and when the roads were clean;
  • Not like the pilgrim, when the morning gray,
  • The ruddy eve succeeding, sends his way;
  • But in a season when the sharp east wind
  • Had all its influence on a nervous mind.
  • When past the parlour’s front it fiercely blew, }
  • And Gwyn sat pitying every bird that flew, } 350
  • This strange physician said--“Adieu! adieu! }
  • Farewell!--Heaven bless you!--if you should--but no,
  • You need not fear--farewell! ’tis time to go.”
  • The doctor spoke; and as the patient heard,
  • His old disorders (dreadful train!) appear’d;
  • He felt the tingling tremor, and the stress
  • Upon his nerves that he could not express;
  • Should his good friend forsake him, he perhaps
  • Might meet his death, and surely a relapse.”
  • So, as the doctor seem’d intent to part, 360
  • He cried in terror--“Oh! be where thou art:
  • Come, thou art young, and unengaged; oh! come,
  • Make me thy friend, give comfort to mine home;
  • I have now symptoms that require thine aid,
  • Do, doctor, stay”--th’ obliging doctor stay’d.
  • Thus Gwyn was happy; he had now a friend,
  • And a meek spouse on whom he could depend.
  • But now, possess’d of male and female guide,
  • Divided power he thus must subdivide:
  • In earlier days he rode, or sat at ease 370
  • Reclined, and having but himself to please;
  • Now, if he would a fav’rite nag bestride,
  • He sought permission--“Doctor, may I ride?”--
  • (Rebecca’s eye her sovereign pleasure told,)--
  • “I think you may; but, guarded from the cold,
  • Ride forty minutes.”--Free and happy soul!
  • He scorn’d submission, and a man’s control;
  • But where such friends in every care unite
  • All for his good, obedience is delight.
  • Now Gwyn, a sultan, bade affairs adieu, 380
  • Led and assisted by the faithful two;
  • The favourite fair, Rebecca, near him sat,
  • And whisper’d whom to love, assist, or hate;
  • While the chief vizier eased his lord of cares,
  • And bore himself the burden of affairs.
  • No dangers could from such alliance flow,
  • But from that law that changes all below.
  • When wint’ry winds with leaves bestrew’d the ground,
  • And men were coughing all the village round;
  • When public papers of invasion told, 390
  • Diseases, famines, perils new and old;
  • When philosophic writers fail’d to clear
  • The mind of gloom, and lighter works to cheer;
  • Then came fresh terrors on our hero’s mind--
  • Fears unforeseen, and feelings undefined.
  • “In outward ills,” he cried, “I rest assured
  • Of my friend’s aid; they will in time be cured:
  • But can his art subdue, resist, control
  • These inward griefs and troubles of the soul?
  • Oh! my Rebecca! my disorder’d mind 400
  • No help in study, none in thought can find;
  • What must I do, Rebecca?” She proposed
  • The parish-guide; but what could be disclosed
  • To a proud priest?--“No! him have I defied,
  • Insulted, slighted--shall he be my guide?
  • But one there is, and if report be just,
  • A wise good man, whom I may safely trust;
  • Who goes from house to house, from ear to ear, }
  • To make his truths, his Gospel truths, appear; }
  • True if indeed they be, ’tis time that I should hear. } 410
  • Send for that man; and if report be just,
  • I, like Cornelius, will the teacher trust;
  • But, if deceiver, I the vile deceit
  • Shall soon discover, and discharge the cheat.”
  • To Doctor Mollet was the grief confess’d,
  • While Gwyn the freedom of his mind express’d;
  • Yet own’d it was to ills and errors prone,
  • And he for guilt and frailty must atone.
  • “My books, perhaps,” the wav’ring mortal cried,
  • “Like men deceive--I would be satisfied; 420
  • And to my soul the pious man may bring
  • Comfort and light--do let me try the thing.”
  • The cousins met; what pass’d with Gwyn was told;
  • “Alas!” the doctor said; “how hard to hold
  • These easy minds, where all impressions made
  • At first sink deeply, and then quickly fade;
  • For while so strong these new-born fancies reign,
  • We must divert them, to oppose is vain.
  • You see him valiant now, he scorns to heed
  • The bigot’s threat’nings or the zealot’s creed; 430
  • Shook by a dream, he next for truth receives
  • What frenzy teaches, and what fear believes;
  • And this will place him in the power of one
  • Whom we must seek, because we cannot shun.”
  • Wisp had been ostler at a busy inn,
  • Where he beheld and grew in dread of sin;
  • Then to a Baptists’ meeting found his way,
  • Became a convert, and was taught to pray;
  • Then preach’d; and, being earnest and sincere,
  • Brought other sinners to religious fear. 440
  • Together grew his influence and his fame,
  • Till our dejected hero heard his name;
  • His little failings were a grain of pride,
  • Raised by the numbers he presumed to guide:
  • A love of presents, and of lofty praise
  • For his meek spirit and his humble ways;
  • But though this spirit would on flattery feed,
  • No praise could blind him and no arts mislead.
  • To him the doctor made the wishes known
  • Of his good patron, but concealed his own; 450
  • He of all teachers had distrust and doubt,
  • And was reserved in what he came about;
  • Though on a plain and simple message sent,
  • He had a secret and a bold intent.
  • Their minds at first were deeply veil’d; disguise
  • Form’d the slow speech, and op’d the eager eyes;
  • Till by degrees sufficient light was thrown
  • On every view, and all the business shown.
  • Wisp, as a skilful guide who led the blind, }
  • Had powers to rule and awe the vapourish mind, } 460
  • But not the changeful will, the wavering fear to bind; }
  • And, should his conscience give him leave to dwell
  • With Gwyn, and every rival power expel,
  • (A dubious point,) yet he, with every care,
  • Might soon the lot of the rejected share,
  • And other Wisps be found like him to reign,
  • And then be thrown upon the world again.
  • He thought it prudent, then, and felt it just,
  • The present guides of his new friend to trust;
  • True, he conceived, to touch the harder heart 470
  • Of the cool doctor, was beyond his art;
  • But mild Rebecca he could surely sway,
  • While Gwyn would follow where she led the way:
  • So, to do good, (and why a duty shun,
  • Because rewarded for the good when done?)
  • He with his friends would join in all they plann’d,
  • Save when his faith or feelings should withstand;
  • There he must rest, sole judge of his affairs,
  • While they might rule exclusively in theirs.
  • When Gwyn his message to the teacher sent, 480
  • He fear’d his friends would show their discontent;
  • And prudent seem’d it to th’ attendant pair,
  • Not all at once to show an aspect fair.
  • On Wisp they seem’d to look with jealous eye,
  • And fair Rebecca was demure and shy;
  • But by degrees the teacher’s worth they knew,
  • And were so kind, they seem’d converted too.
  • Wisp took occasion to the nymph to say,
  • “You must be married: will you name the day?”
  • She smiled,--“’Tis well; but, should he not comply, 490
  • Is it quite safe th’ experiment to try?”--
  • “My child,” the teacher said, “who feels remorse,
  • (And feels not he?) must wish relief of course;
  • And can he find it, while he fears the crime?--
  • You must be married; will you name the time?”
  • Glad was the patron as a man could be, }
  • Yet marvell’d too, to find his guides agree; }
  • “But what the cause?” he cried; “’tis genuine love for me.” }
  • Each found his part, and let one act describe
  • The powers and honours of th’ accordant tribe:-- 500
  • A man for favour to the mansion speeds,
  • And cons his threefold task as he proceeds;
  • To teacher Wisp he bows with humble air,
  • And begs his interest for a barn’s repair;
  • Then for the doctor he inquires, who loves
  • To hear applause for what his skill improves,
  • And gives, for praise, assent,--and to the fair
  • He brings of pullets a delicious pair;
  • Thus sees a peasant, with discernment nice,
  • A love of power, conceit, and avarice. 510
  • Lo! now the change complete: the convert Gwyn
  • Has sold his books, and has renounced his sin;
  • Mollet his body orders, Wisp his soul,
  • And o’er his purse the lady takes control;
  • No friends beside he needs, and none attend--
  • Soul, body, and estate, has each a friend;
  • And fair Rebecca leads a virtuous life--
  • She rules a mistress, and she reigns a wife.
  • TALE IV.
  • _PROCRASTINATION._
  • Heaven witness
  • I have been to you [a true and humble wife.]
  • _Henry VIII_. Act II. Scene 4.
  • Gentle lady,
  • When first I did impart my love to you,
  • I freely told you all the wealth I had.
  • _Merchant of Venice_, Act III. Scene 2.
  • [The leisure and the fearful time]
  • Cuts off [the ceremonious] vows of love,
  • And ample interchange of sweet discourse,
  • Which so long sunder’d friends should dwell upon.
  • _Richard III_. Act V. Scene 3.
  • I know thee not, old man; fall to thy prayers.
  • 2 _Henry IV_. Act V. Scene 5.
  • Farewell,
  • Thou pure impiety [and] impious purity;
  • For thee I’ll lock up all the gates of love.
  • _Much Ado about Nothing_, Act IV. Scene 1.
  • TALE IV.
  • _PROCRASTINATION._
  • Love will expire; the gay, the happy dream
  • Will turn to scorn, indiff’rence, or esteem.
  • Some favour’d pairs, in this exchange, are bless’d,
  • Nor sigh for raptures in a state of rest;
  • Others, ill match’d, with minds unpair’d, repent
  • At once the deed, and know no more content;
  • From joy to anguish they, in haste, decline,
  • And with their fondness, their esteem resign.
  • More luckless still their fate, who are the prey
  • Of long-protracted hope and dull delay; 10
  • ’Mid plans of bliss the heavy hours pass on,
  • Till love is wither’d, and till joy is gone.
  • This gentle flame two youthful hearts possess’d,
  • The sweet disturber of unenvied rest:
  • The prudent Dinah was the maid beloved,
  • And the kind Rupert was the swain approved.
  • A wealthy aunt her gentle niece sustain’d,
  • He, with a father, at his desk remain’d;
  • The youthful couple, to their vows sincere, }
  • Thus loved expectant; year succeeding year, } 20
  • With pleasant views and hopes, but not a prospect near. }
  • Rupert some comfort in his station saw,
  • But the poor virgin lived in dread and awe;
  • Upon her anxious looks the widow smiled,
  • And bade her wait, “for she was yet a child.”
  • She for her neighbour had a due respect,
  • Nor would his son encourage or reject;
  • And thus the pair, with expectations vain,
  • Beheld the seasons change and change again.
  • Meantime the nymph her tender tales perused, 30
  • Where cruel aunts impatient girls refused;
  • While hers, though teasing, boasted to be kind,
  • And she, resenting, to be all resign’d.
  • The dame was sick, and, when the youth applied
  • For her consent, she groan’d, and cough’d, and cried;
  • Talk’d of departing, and again her breath
  • Drew hard, and cough’d, and talk’d again of death:
  • “Here you may live, my Dinah! here the boy
  • And you together my estate enjoy.”
  • Thus to the lovers was her mind express’d, 40
  • Till they forbore to urge the fond request.
  • Servant, and nurse, and comforter, and friend,
  • Dinah had still some duty to attend;
  • But yet their walk, when Rupert’s evening call
  • Obtain’d an hour, made sweet amends for all;
  • So long they now each other’s thoughts had known,
  • That nothing seem’d exclusively their own;
  • But with the common wish, the mutual fear,
  • They now had travell’d to their thirtieth year.
  • At length a prospect open’d--but, alas!
  • Long time must yet before the union pass; 50
  • Rupert was call’d in other clime, t’increase
  • Another’s wealth, and toil for future peace;
  • Loth were the lovers; but the aunt declared
  • ’Twas fortune’s call, and they must be prepared:
  • “You now are young, and for this brief delay,
  • And Dinah’s care, what I bequeath will pay;
  • All will be yours; nay, love, suppress that sigh;
  • The kind must suffer, and the best must die.”
  • Then came the cough, and strong the signs it gave
  • Of holding long contention with the grave. 60
  • The lovers parted with a gloomy view,
  • And little comfort but that both were true;
  • He for uncertain duties doom’d to steer,
  • While hers remained too certain and severe.
  • Letters arrived, and Rupert fairly told
  • “His cares were many, and his hopes were cold;
  • The view more clouded, that was never fair,
  • And love alone preserved him from despair.”
  • In other letters brighter hopes he drew, 70
  • “His friends were kind, and he believed them true.”
  • When the sage widow Dinah’s grief descried,
  • She wonder’d much why one so happy sigh’d;
  • Then bade her see how her poor aunt sustain’d
  • The ills of life, nor murmur’d nor complain’d.
  • To vary pleasures, from the lady’s chest
  • Were drawn the pearly string and tabby vest;
  • Beads, jewels, laces, all their value shown,
  • With the kind notice--“They will be your own.”
  • This hope, these comforts cherish’d day by day, 80
  • To Dinah’s bosom made a gradual way;
  • Till love of treasure had as large a part
  • As love of Rupert in the virgin’s heart.
  • Whether it be that tender passions fail
  • From their own nature, while the strong prevail;
  • Or whether av’rice, like the poison-tree[3],
  • Kills all beside it, and alone will be:
  • Whatever cause prevail’d, the pleasure grew
  • In Dinah’s soul--she loved the hoards to view;
  • With lively joy those comforts she survey’d, 90
  • And love grew languid in the careful maid.
  • Now the grave niece partook the widow’s cares;
  • Look’d to the great and ruled the small affairs;
  • Saw clean’d the plate, arranged the china show,
  • And felt her passion for a shilling grow.
  • Th’ indulgent aunt increased the maid’s delight,
  • By placing tokens of her wealth in sight;
  • She loved the value of her bonds to tell,
  • And spake of stocks, and how they rose and fell.
  • This passion grew, and gain’d at length such sway, 100
  • That other passions shrank to make it way;
  • Romantic notions now the heart forsook,
  • She read but seldom, and she changed her book;
  • And for the verses she was wont to send,
  • Short was her prose, and she was Rupert’s friend.
  • Seldom she wrote, and then the widow’s cough,
  • And constant call, excused her breaking off;
  • Who now, oppress’d, no longer took the air,
  • But sate and dozed upon an easy chair.
  • The cautious doctor saw the case was clear, 110
  • But judged it best to have companions near;
  • They came, they reason’d, they prescribed--at last,
  • Like honest men, they said their hopes were past;
  • Then came a priest--’tis comfort to reflect,
  • When all is over, there was no neglect;
  • And all was over--by her husband’s bones,
  • The widow rests beneath the sculptured stones,
  • That yet record their fondness and their fame,
  • While all they left the virgin’s care became:
  • Stock, bonds, and buildings;--it disturb’d her rest, 120
  • To think what load of troubles she possess’d.
  • Yet, if a trouble, she resolved to take
  • Th’ important duty, for the donor’s sake;
  • She too was heiress to the widow’s taste,
  • Her love of hoarding, and her dread of waste.
  • Sometimes the past would on her mind intrude,
  • And then a conflict full of care ensued;
  • The thoughts of Rupert on her mind would press,
  • His worth she knew, but doubted his success;
  • Of old she saw him heedless; what the boy 130
  • Forbore to save, the man would not enjoy;
  • Oft had he lost the chance that care would seize,
  • Willing to live, but more to live at ease;
  • Yet could she not a broken vow defend,
  • And Heav’n, perhaps, might yet enrich her friend.
  • Month after month was pass’d, and all were spent
  • In quiet comfort and in rich content:
  • Miseries there were, and woes the world around,
  • But these had not her pleasant dwelling found;
  • She knew that mothers grieved, and widows wept, 140
  • And she was sorry, said her prayers, and slept.
  • Thus pass’d the seasons, and to Dinah’s board
  • Gave what the seasons to the rich afford;
  • For she indulged, nor was her heart so small,
  • That one strong passion should engross it all.
  • A love of splendour now with av’rice strove,
  • And oft appear’d to be the stronger love;
  • A secret pleasure fill’d the widow’s breast,
  • When she reflected on the hoards possess’d;
  • But livelier joy inspired th’ ambitious maid, 150
  • When she the purchase of those hoards display’d.
  • In small but splendid room she loved to see
  • That all was placed in view and harmony;
  • There, as with eager glance she look’d around,
  • She much delight in every object found;
  • While books devout were near her--to destroy,
  • Should it arise, an overflow of joy.
  • Within that fair apartment, guests might see
  • The comforts cull’d for wealth by vanity.
  • Around the room an Indian paper blazed, 160
  • With lively tint and figures boldly raised;
  • Silky and soft upon the floor below,
  • Th’ elastic carpet rose with crimson glow;
  • All things around implied both cost and care;
  • What met the eye was elegant or rare.
  • Some curious trifles round the room were laid,
  • By hope presented to the wealthy maid:
  • Within a costly case of varnish’d wood,
  • In level rows, her polish’d volumes stood;
  • Shown as a favour to a chosen few, 170
  • To prove what beauty for a book could do;
  • A silver urn with curious work was fraught;
  • A silver lamp from Grecian pattern wrought;
  • Above her head, all gorgeous to behold,
  • A time-piece stood on feet of burnish’d gold;
  • A stag’s-head crest adorn’d the pictured case,
  • Through the pure crystal shone th’ enamell’d face;
  • And, while on brilliants moved the hands of steel,
  • It click’d from pray’r to pray’r, from meal to meal.
  • Here as the lady sate, a friendly pair 180
  • Stept in t’ admire the view, and took their chair.
  • They then related how the young and gay
  • Were thoughtless wandering in the broad highway;
  • How tender damsels sail’d in tilted boats,
  • And laugh’d with wicked men in scarlet coats;
  • And how we live in such degen’rate times
  • That men conceal their wants, and show their crimes;
  • While vicious deeds are screen’d by fashion’s name,
  • And what was once our pride is now our shame.
  • Dinah was musing, as her friends discoursed, 190
  • When these last words a sudden entrance forced
  • Upon her mind, and what was once her pride
  • And now her shame, some painful views supplied;
  • Thoughts of the past within her bosom press’d,
  • And there a change was felt, and was confess’d.
  • While thus the virgin strove with secret pain,
  • Her mind was wandering o’er the troubled main;
  • Still she was silent, nothing seem’d to see,
  • But sate and sigh’d in pensive reverie.
  • The friends prepared new subjects to begin, 200
  • When tall Susannah, maiden starch, stalk’d in;
  • Not in her ancient mode, sedate and slow,
  • As when she came, the mind she knew to know;
  • Nor as, when list’ning half an hour before,
  • She twice or thrice tapp’d gently at the door;
  • But, all decorum cast in wrath aside,
  • “I think the devil’s in the man!” she cried;
  • “A huge tall sailor, with his tawny cheek,
  • And pitted face, will with my lady speak;
  • He grinn’d an ugly smile, and said he knew, 210
  • Please you, my lady, ’twould be joy to you;
  • What must I answer?”--Trembling and distress’d
  • Sank the pale Dinah, by her fears oppress’d;
  • When thus alarm’d, and brooking no delay,
  • Swift to her room the stranger made his way.
  • “Revive, my love!” said he, “I’ve done thee harm,
  • Give me thy pardon,” and he look’d alarm;
  • Meantime the prudent Dinah had contrived
  • Her soul to question, and she then revived.
  • “See! my good friend,” and then she raised her head, } 220
  • “The bloom of life, the strength of youth is fled; }
  • Living we die; to us the world is dead. }
  • We parted bless’d with health, and I am now
  • Age-struck and feeble, so I find art thou;
  • Thine eye is sunken, furrow’d is thy face,
  • And downward look’st thou--so we run our race;
  • And happier they, whose race is nearly run,
  • Their troubles over, and their duties done.”--
  • “True, lady, true, we are not girl and boy;
  • But time has left us something to enjoy.”-- 230
  • “What! thou hast learn’d my fortune?--yes, I live
  • To feel how poor the comforts wealth can give;
  • Thou too perhaps art wealthy; but our fate
  • Still mocks our wishes, wealth is come too late.”--
  • “To me nor late nor early; I am come
  • Poor as I left thee to my native home:
  • Nor yet,” said Rupert, “will I grieve; ’tis mine
  • To share thy comforts, and the glory thine;
  • For thou wilt gladly take that generous part
  • That both exalts and gratifies the heart; 240
  • While mine rejoices.”--“Heavens!” return’d the maid,
  • “This talk to one so wither’d and decayed?
  • No! all my care is now to fit my mind
  • For other spousal, and to die resign’d.
  • As friend and neighbour, I shall hope to see
  • These noble views, this pious love in thee;
  • That we together may the change await,
  • Guides and spectators in each other’s fate;
  • When fellow-pilgrims, we shall daily crave
  • The mutual prayer that arms us for the grave.” 250
  • Half angry, half in doubt, the lover gazed
  • On the meek maiden, by her speech amazed.
  • “Dinah,” said he, “dost thou respect thy vows?
  • What spousal mean’st thou?--thou art Rupert’s spouse;
  • The chance is mine to take, and thine to give;
  • But trifling this, if we together live.
  • Can I believe, that, after all the past,
  • Our vows, our loves, thou wilt be false at last?
  • Something thou hast--I know not what--in view;
  • I find thee pious--let me find thee true.”-- 260
  • “Ah! cruel this; but do, my friend, depart;
  • And to its feelings leave my wounded heart.”--
  • “Nay, speak at once; and, Dinah, let me know,
  • Mean’st thou to take me, now I’m wreck’d, in tow?
  • Be fair; nor longer keep me in the dark;
  • Am I forsaken for a trimmer spark?
  • Heav’n’s spouse thou art not; nor can I believe
  • That God accepts her who will man deceive.
  • True, I am shatter’d; I have service seen,
  • And service done, and have in trouble been; 270
  • My cheek (it shames me not) has lost its red,
  • And the brown buff is o’er my features spread;
  • Perchance my speech is rude; for I among
  • Th’ untamed have been, in temper and in tongue;
  • Have been trepann’d, have lived in toil and care,
  • And wrought for wealth I was not doom’d to share;
  • It touch’d me deeply, for I felt a pride
  • In gaining riches for my destined bride.
  • Speak, then, my fate; for these my sorrows past,
  • Time lost, youth fled, hope wearied, and at last 280
  • This doubt of thee--a childish thing to tell,
  • But certain truth--my very throat they swell;
  • They stop the breath, and but for shame could I
  • Give way to weakness, and with passion cry;
  • These are unmanly struggles, but I feel
  • This hour must end them, and perhaps will heal.”--
  • Here Dinah sigh’d as if afraid to speak--
  • And then repeated--“They were frail and weak;
  • His soul she loved, and hoped he had the grace
  • To fix his thoughts upon a better place.” 290
  • She ceased;--with steady glance, as if to see
  • The very root of this hypocrisy,
  • He her small fingers moulded in his hard
  • And bronzed broad hand; then told her, his regard,
  • His best respect were gone, but love had still
  • Hold in his heart, and govern’d yet the will--
  • Or he would curse her;--saying this, he threw }
  • The hand in scorn away, and bade adieu }
  • To every lingering hope, with every care in view. }
  • Proud and indignant, suffering, sick, and poor, 300
  • He grieved unseen, and spoke of love no more--
  • Till all he felt in indignation died,
  • As hers had sunk in avarice and pride.
  • In health declining, as in mind distress’d,
  • To some in power his troubles he confess’d,
  • And shares a parish-gift;--at prayers he sees
  • The pious Dinah dropp’d upon her knees;
  • Thence as she walks the street with stately air,
  • As chance directs, oft meet the parted pair.
  • When he, with thickset coat of badge-man’s blue, 310
  • Moves near her shaded silk of changeful hue;
  • When his thin locks of grey approach her braid,
  • A costly purchase made in beauty’s aid;
  • When his frank air, and his unstudied pace, }
  • Are seen with her soft manner, air, and grace. }
  • And his plain artless look with her sharp meaning face: }
  • It might some wonder in a stranger move,
  • How these together could have talk’d of love.
  • Behold them now!--see, there a tradesman stands,
  • And humbly hearkens to some fresh commands; 320
  • He moves to speak, she interrupts him--“Stay,”
  • Her air expresses--“Hark to what I say!”
  • Ten paces off, poor Rupert on a seat
  • Has taken refuge from the noon-day heat,
  • His eyes on her intent, as if to find
  • What were the movements of that subtle mind;
  • How still! how earnest is he!--it appears
  • His thoughts are wand’ring through his earlier years;
  • Through years of fruitless labour, to the day
  • When all his earthly prospects died away. 330
  • “Had I,” he thinks, “been wealthier of the two, }
  • Would she have found me so unkind, untrue? }
  • Or knows not man, when poor, what man when rich will do? }
  • Yes, yes! I feel that I had faithful proved,
  • And should have soothed and raised her, bless’d and loved.”
  • But Dinah moves--she had observed before
  • The pensive Rupert at an humble door.
  • Some thoughts of pity raised by his distress,
  • Some feeling touch of ancient tenderness;
  • Religion, duty, urged the maid to speak 340
  • In terms of kindness to a man so weak;
  • But pride forbad, and to return would prove
  • She felt the shame of his neglected love;
  • Nor wrapp’d in silence could she pass, afraid
  • Each eye should see her, and each heart upbraid.
  • One way remain’d--the way the Levite took,
  • Who without mercy could on misery look,
  • (A way perceived by craft, approved by pride):
  • She cross’d, and pass’d him on the other side.
  • [3] Allusion is here made, not to the well-known species of _sumach,_
  • called the poison-oak, or _toxicodendron_, but to the _upas_, or
  • poison-tree of Java; whether it be real or imaginary, this is no
  • proper place for inquiry.
  • TALE V.
  • _THE PATRON._
  • It were all one,
  • That I should love a bright [particular] star,
  • And think to wed it; [he] is so much above me:
  • In [his] bright radiance and collateral heat
  • Must I be comforted, not in [his] sphere.
  • _All’s Well that Ends Well_, Act I. Scene 1.
  • Poor wretches, that depend
  • On greatness’ favours, dream as I have done,--
  • Wake, and find nothing.
  • _Cymbeline_, Act V. Scene 4.
  • And since . . .
  • Th’ affliction of my mind amends, with which
  • I fear a madness held me.
  • _[The] Tempest_, Act V.
  • TALE V.
  • _THE PATRON._
  • A borough-bailiff, who to law was train’d,
  • A wife and sons in decent state maintain’d;
  • He had his way in life’s rough ocean steer’d,
  • And many a rock and coast of danger clear’d;
  • He saw where others fail’d, and care had he
  • Others in him should not such failings see;
  • His sons in various busy states were placed,
  • And all began the sweets of gain to taste,
  • Save John, the younger; who, of sprightly parts,
  • Felt not a love for money-making arts. 10
  • In childhood feeble, he, for country air,
  • Had long resided with a rustic pair;
  • All round whose room were doleful ballads, songs,
  • Of lovers’ sufferings and of ladies’ wrongs;
  • Of peevish ghosts who came at dark midnight,
  • For breach of promise guilty men to fright;
  • Love, marriage, murder, were the themes, with these,
  • All that on idle, ardent spirits seize;
  • Robbers at land and pirates on the main,
  • Enchanters foil’d, spells broken, giants slain; 20
  • Legends of love, with tales of halls and bowers, }
  • Choice of rare songs, and garlands of choice flowers, }
  • And all the hungry mind without a choice devours. }
  • From village-children kept apart by pride,
  • With such enjoyments, and without a guide,
  • Inspired by feelings all such works infused,
  • John snatch’d a pen, and wrote as he perused:
  • With the like fancy he could make his knight
  • Slay half an host and put the rest to flight;
  • With the like knowledge, he could make him ride 30
  • From isle to isle at Parthenissa’s side;
  • And with a heart yet free, no busy brain }
  • Form’d wilder notions of delight and pain, }
  • The raptures smiles create, the anguish of disdain. }
  • Such were the fruits of John’s poetic toil--
  • Weeds, but still proofs of vigour in the soil.
  • He nothing purposed but with vast delight,
  • Let Fancy loose, and wonder’d at her flight;
  • His notions of poetic worth were high,
  • And of his own still-hoarded poetry.-- 40
  • These to his father’s house he bore with pride,
  • A miser’s treasure, in his room to hide;
  • Till, spurr’d by glory, to a reading friend
  • He kindly show’d the sonnets he had penn’d.
  • With erring judgment, though with heart sincere,
  • That friend exclaim’d, “These beauties must appear.”
  • In Magazines they claim’d their share of fame,
  • Though undistinguish’d by their author’s name;
  • And with delight the young enthusiast found
  • The muse of ‘Marcus’ with applauses crown’d. 50
  • This heard the father, and with some alarm;
  • “The boy,” said he, “will neither trade nor farm;
  • He for both law and physic is unfit;
  • Wit he may have, but cannot live on wit:
  • Let him his talents then to learning give,
  • Where verse is honour’d, and where poets live.”
  • John kept his terms at college unreproved,
  • Took his degree, and left the life he loved;
  • Not yet ordain’d, his leisure he employ’d
  • In the light labours he so much enjoy’d; 60
  • His favourite notions and his daring views
  • Were cherish’d still, and he adored the Muse.
  • “A little time, and he should burst to light,
  • And admiration of the world excite;
  • And every friend, now cool and apt to blame
  • His fond pursuit, would wonder at his fame.”
  • When led by fancy, and from view retired,
  • He call’d before him all his heart desired;
  • “Fame shall be mine, then wealth shall I possess,
  • And beauty next an ardent lover bless; 70
  • For me the maid shall leave her nobler state,
  • Happy to raise and share her poet’s fate.”
  • He saw each day his father’s frugal board
  • With simple fare by cautious prudence stored;
  • Where each indulgence was foreweigh’d with care,
  • And the grand maxims were to save and spare.
  • Yet in his walks, his closet, and his bed,
  • All frugal cares and prudent counsels fled;
  • And bounteous Fancy for his glowing mind
  • Wrought various scenes, and all of glorious kind; 80
  • Slaves of the _ring_ and _lamp_! what need of you,
  • When Fancy’s self such magic deeds can do?
  • Though rapt in visions of no vulgar kind,
  • To common subjects stoop’d our poet’s mind;
  • And oft, when wearied with more ardent flight,
  • He felt a spur satiric song to write;
  • A rival burgess his bold muse attack’d,
  • And whipp’d severely for a well-known fact;
  • For, while he seem’d to all demure and shy,
  • Our poet gazed at what was passing by; 90
  • And ev’n his father smiled when playful wit,
  • From his young bard, some haughty object hit.
  • From ancient times the borough where they dwelt
  • Had mighty contest at elections felt.
  • Sir Godfrey Ball, ’tis true, had held in pay
  • Electors many for the trying day;
  • But in such golden chains to bind them all
  • Required too much for e’en Sir Godfrey Ball.
  • A member died, and, to supply his place,
  • Two heroes enter’d for th’ important race; 100
  • Sir Godfrey’s friend and Earl Fitzdonnel’s son,
  • Lord Frederick Damer, both prepared to run;
  • And partial numbers saw with vast delight
  • Their good young lord oppose the proud old knight.
  • Our poet’s father, at a first request,
  • Gave the young lord his vote and interest,
  • And, what he could, our poet; for he stung
  • The foe by verse satiric, said and sung.
  • Lord Frederick heard of all this youthful zeal,
  • And felt as lords upon a canvass feel; 110
  • He read the satire, and he saw the use }
  • That such cool insult, and such keen abuse, }
  • Might on the wavering minds of voting men produce; }
  • Then, too, his praises were in contrast seen,
  • “A lord as noble as the knight was mean.”
  • “I much rejoice,” he cried, “such worth to find;
  • To this the world must be no longer blind;
  • His glory will descend from sire to son,
  • The Burns of English race, the happier Chatterton.”
  • Our poet’s mind, now hurried and elate, 120
  • Alarm’d the anxious parent for his fate;
  • Who saw with sorrow, should their friend succeed,
  • That much discretion would the poet need.
  • Their friend succeeded, and repaid the zeal
  • The poet felt, and made opposers feel,
  • By praise (from lords how soothing and how sweet!)
  • And invitation to his noble seat.
  • The father ponder’d, doubtful if the brain
  • Of his proud boy such honour could sustain;
  • Pleased with the favours offer’d to a son, 130
  • But seeing dangers few so ardent shun.
  • Thus, when they parted, to the youthful breast
  • The father’s fears were by his love impress’d:
  • “There you will find, my son, the courteous ease
  • That must subdue the soul it means to please;
  • That soft attention which ev’n beauty pays
  • To wake our passions, or provoke our praise;
  • There all the eye beholds will give delight,
  • Where every sense is flatter’d like the sight.
  • This is your peril; can you from such scene 140
  • Of splendour part, and feel your mind serene,
  • And in the father’s humble state resume
  • The frugal diet and the narrow room?”
  • To this the youth with cheerful heart replied,
  • Pleased with the trial, but as yet untried;
  • And while professing patience, should he fail,
  • He suffer’d hope o’er reason to prevail.
  • Impatient, by the morning mail convey’d,
  • The happy guest his promised visit paid;
  • And now, arriving at the hall, he tried 150
  • For air composed, serene and satisfied;
  • As he had practised in his room alone,
  • And there acquired a free and easy tone.
  • There he had said, “Whatever the degree
  • A man obtains, what more than man is he?”
  • And when arrived--“This room is but a room;
  • Can aught we see the steady soul o’ercome?
  • Let me in all a manly firmness show,
  • Upheld by talents, and their value know.”
  • This reason urged; but it surpass’d his skill 160
  • To be in act as manly as in will:
  • When he his lordship and the lady saw,
  • Brave as he was, he felt oppress’d with awe;
  • And spite of verse, that so much praise had won,
  • The poet found he was the bailiff’s son.
  • But dinner came, and the succeeding hours
  • Fix’d his weak nerves, and raised his failing powers;
  • Praised and assured, he ventured once or twice
  • On some remark, and bravely broke the ice;
  • So that at night, reflecting on his words, 170
  • He found in time, he might converse with lords.
  • Now was the sister of his patron seen--
  • A lovely creature, with majestic mien;
  • Who, softly smiling while she look’d so fair,
  • Praised the young poet with such friendly air;
  • Such winning frankness in her looks express’d,
  • And such attention to her brother’s guest,
  • That so much beauty, join’d with speech so kind,
  • Raised strong emotions in the poet’s mind;
  • Till reason fail’d his bosom to defend 180
  • From the sweet power of this enchanting friend.--
  • Rash boy! what hope thy frantic mind invades?
  • What love confuses, and what pride persuades?
  • Awake to truth! shouldst thou deluded feed
  • On hopes so groundless, thou art mad indeed.
  • What say’st thou, wise-one? “that all-powerful love
  • Can fortune’s strong impediments remove;
  • Nor is it strange that worth should wed to worth,
  • The pride of genius with the pride of birth.”
  • While thou art dreaming thus, the beauty spies 190
  • Love in thy tremor, passion in thine eyes;
  • And, with th’ amusement pleased, of conquest vain,
  • She seeks her pleasure, careless of thy pain;
  • She gives thee praise to humble and confound,
  • Smiles to ensnare, and flatters thee to wound.
  • Why has she said that in the lowest state
  • The noble mind insures a noble fate?
  • And why thy daring mind to glory call?
  • That thou may’st dare and suffer, soar and fall.
  • Beauties are tyrants, and if they can reign, 200
  • They have no feeling for their subject’s pain;
  • Their victim’s anguish gives their charms applause,
  • And their chief glory is the woe they cause.
  • Something of this was felt, in spite of love,
  • Which hope, in spite of reason, would remove.
  • Thus lived our youth, with conversation, books,
  • And Lady Emma’s soul-subduing looks;
  • Lost in delight, astonish’d at his lot, }
  • All prudence banish’d, all advice forgot-- }
  • Hopes, fears, and every thought, were fix’d upon the spot.} 210
  • ’Twas autumn yet, and many a day must frown
  • On Brandon-Hall, ere went my lord to town;
  • Meantime the father, who had heard his boy
  • Lived in a round of luxury and joy,
  • And, justly thinking that the youth was one
  • Who, meeting danger, was unskill’d to shun;
  • Knowing his temper, virtue, spirit, zeal,
  • How prone to hope and trust, believe and feel:
  • These on the parent’s soul their weight impress’d,
  • And thus he wrote the counsels of his breast. 220
  • “John, thou’rt a genius; thou hast some pretence,
  • I think, to wit, but hast thou sterling sense?
  • That which, like gold, may through the world go forth,
  • And always pass for what ’tis truly worth?
  • Whereas this genius, like a bill, must take
  • Only the value our opinions make.
  • “Men famed for wit, of dangerous talents vain,
  • Treat those of common parts with proud disdain;
  • The powers that wisdom would, improving, hide,
  • They blaze abroad with inconsid’rate pride; 230
  • While yet but mere probationers for fame,
  • They seize the honour they should then disclaim:
  • Honour so hurried to the light must fade;
  • The lasting laurels flourish in the shade.
  • “Genius is jealous; I have heard of some
  • Who, if unnoticed, grew perversely dumb;
  • Nay, different talents would their envy raise;
  • Poets have sicken’d at a dancer’s praise;
  • And one, the happiest writer of his time,
  • Grew pale at hearing Reynolds was sublime; 240
  • That Rutland’s duchess wore a heavenly smile--
  • And I, said he, neglected all the while!
  • “A waspish tribe are these, on gilded wings,
  • Humming their lays, and brandishing their stings;
  • And thus they move their friends and foes among,
  • Prepared for soothing or satiric song.
  • “Hear me, my boy; thou hast a virtuous mind--
  • But be thy virtues of the sober kind;
  • Be not a Quixote, ever up in arms
  • To give the guilty and the great alarms: 250
  • If never heeded, thy attack is vain;
  • And if they heed thee, they’ll attack again;
  • Then, too, in striking at that heedless rate,
  • Thou in an instant may’st decide thy fate.
  • “Leave admonition--let the vicar give
  • Rules how the nobles of his flock should live;
  • Nor take that simple fancy to thy brain,
  • That thou canst cure the wicked and the vain.
  • “Our Pope, they say, once entertain’d the whim,
  • Who fear’d not God should be afraid of him; 260
  • But grant they fear’d him, was it further said,
  • That he reform’d the hearts he made afraid?
  • Did Chartres mend? Ward, Waters, and a score
  • Of flagrant felons, with his floggings sore?
  • Was Cibber silenced? No; with vigour bless’d,
  • And brazen front, half earnest, half in jest,
  • He dared the bard to battle, and was seen
  • In all his glory match’d with Pope and spleen;
  • Himself he stripp’d, the harder blow to hit,
  • Then boldly match’d his ribaldry with wit; 270
  • The poet’s conquest Truth and Time proclaim,
  • But yet the battle hurt his peace and fame.
  • “Strive not too much for favour; seem at ease,
  • And rather pleased thyself, than bent to please:
  • Upon thy lord with decent care attend,
  • But not too near; thou canst not be a friend;
  • And favourite be not, ’tis a dangerous post--
  • Is gain’d by labour, and by fortune lost.
  • Talents like thine may make a man approved,
  • But other talents trusted and beloved. 280
  • Look round, my son, and thou wilt early see
  • The kind of man thou art not form’d to be.
  • “The real favourites of the great are they
  • Who to their views and wants attention pay,
  • And pay it ever; who, with all their skill,
  • Dive to the heart, and learn the secret will;
  • If that be vicious, soon can they provide
  • The favourite ill, and o’er the soul preside;
  • For vice is weakness, and the artful know
  • Their power increases as the passions grow; 290
  • If indolent the pupil, hard their task;
  • Such minds will ever for amusement ask;
  • And great the labour for a man to choose
  • Objects for one whom nothing can amuse!
  • For ere those objects can the soul delight,
  • They must to joy the soul herself excite;
  • Therefore it is, this patient, watchful kind
  • With gentle friction stir the drowsy mind;
  • Fix’d on their end, with caution they proceed,
  • And sometimes give, and sometimes take the lead; 300
  • Will now a hint convey, and then retire,
  • And let the spark awake the lingering fire;
  • Or seek new joys and livelier pleasures bring,
  • To give the jaded sense a quick’ning spring.
  • “These arts, indeed, my son must not pursue;
  • Nor must he quarrel with the tribe that do:
  • It is not safe another’s crimes to know,
  • Nor is it wise our proper worth to show.--
  • ‘My lord,’ you say, ‘engaged me for that worth;’--
  • True, and preserve it ready to come forth: 310
  • If question’d, fairly answer--and, that done,
  • Shrink back, be silent, and thy father’s son;
  • For they who doubt thy talents scorn thy boast,
  • But they who grant them will dislike thee most.
  • Observe the prudent; they in silence sit,
  • Display no learning, and affect no wit;
  • They hazard nothing, nothing they assume,
  • But know the useful art of _acting dumb_.
  • Yet to their eyes each varying look appears,
  • And every word finds entrance at their ears. 320
  • “Thou art religion’s advocate--take heed,
  • Hurt not the cause thy pleasure ’tis to plead;
  • With wine before thee, and with wits beside,
  • Do not in strength of reas’ning powers confide;
  • What seems to thee convincing, certain, plain,
  • They will deny, and dare thee to maintain;
  • And thus will triumph o’er thy eager youth,
  • While thou wilt grieve for so disgracing truth.
  • “With pain I’ve seen, these wrangling wits among,
  • Faith’s weak defenders, passionate and young; 330
  • Weak thou art not, yet not enough on guard,
  • Where wit and humour keep their watch and ward:
  • Men gay and noisy will o’erwhelm thy sense,
  • Then loudly laugh at Truth’s and thy expense;
  • While the kind ladies will do all they can
  • To check their mirth, and cry, ‘_The good young man_!’
  • “Prudence, my boy, forbids thee to commend
  • The cause or party of thy noble friend;
  • What are his praises worth, who must be known
  • To take a patron’s maxims for his own? 340
  • When ladies sing, or in thy presence play,
  • Do not, dear John, in rapture melt away;
  • ’Tis not thy part, there will be list’ners round,
  • To cry ‘_divine_!’ and dote upon the sound;
  • Remember too, that though the poor have ears,
  • They take not in the music of the spheres;
  • They must not feel the warble and the thrill,
  • Or be dissolved in ecstacy at will;
  • Beside, ’tis freedom in a youth like thee
  • To drop his awe, and deal in ecstacy! 350
  • “In silent ease, at least in silence, dine,
  • Nor one opinion start of food or wine:
  • Thou know’st that all the science thou canst boast
  • Is of thy father’s simple boil’d and roast;
  • Nor always these; he sometimes saved his cash,
  • By interlinear days of frugal hash.
  • Wine hadst thou seldom; wilt thou be so vain
  • As to decide on claret or champagne?
  • Dost thou from me derive this taste sublime,
  • Who order port the dozen at a time; 360
  • When (every glass held precious in our eyes)
  • We judged the value by the bottle’s size?
  • Then, never merit for thy praise assume,
  • Its worth well knows each servant in the room.
  • “Hard, boy, thy task, to steer thy way among
  • That servile, supple, shrewd, insidious throng;
  • Who look upon thee as of doubtful race,
  • An interloper, one who wants a place:
  • Freedom with these let thy free soul condemn,
  • Nor with thy heart’s concerns associate them. 370
  • “Of all be cautious--but be most afraid
  • Of the pale charms that grace my lady’s maid;
  • Of those sweet dimples, of that fraudful eye, }
  • The frequent glance, design’d for thee to spy; }
  • The soft bewitching look, the fond bewailing sigh. }
  • Let others frown and envy; she the while
  • (Insidious syren!) will demurely smile;
  • And, for her gentle purpose, every day
  • Inquire thy wants, and meet thee in thy way;
  • She has her blandishments, and, though so weak, 380
  • Her person pleases, and her actions speak.
  • At first her folly may her aim defeat;
  • But kindness shown at length will kindness meet.
  • Have some offended? them will she disdain,
  • And, for thy sake, contempt and pity feign;
  • She hates the vulgar, she admires to look
  • On woods and groves, and dotes upon a book;
  • Let her once see thee on her features dwell,
  • And hear one sigh--then, liberty, farewell.
  • “But, John, remember, we cannot maintain 390
  • A poor, proud girl, extravagant and vain.
  • “Doubt much of friendship: shouldst thou find a friend
  • Pleased to advise thee, anxious to commend;
  • Should he the praises he has heard report,
  • And confidence (in thee confiding) court;
  • Much of neglectful patrons should he say,
  • And then exclaim--‘How long must merit stay;’
  • Then show how high thy modest hopes may stretch,
  • And point to stations far beyond thy reach:
  • Let such designer, by thy conduct, see 400
  • (Civil and cool) he makes no dupe of thee;
  • And he will quit thee, as a man too wise
  • For him to ruin first, and then despise.
  • “Such are thy dangers;--yet, if thou canst steer
  • Past all the perils, all the quicksands clear,
  • Then may’st thou profit; but if storms prevail,
  • If foes beset thee, if thy spirits fail--
  • No more of winds or waters be the sport,
  • But in thy father’s mansion find a port.”
  • Our poet read.--“It is, in truth,” said he, 410
  • “Correct in part, but what is _this_ to me?
  • I love a foolish Abigail! in base
  • And sordid office! fear not such disgrace:
  • Am I so blind?”--“Or thou wouldst surely see
  • That lady’s fall, if she should stoop to thee.”--
  • “The cases differ.”--“True! for what surprise
  • Could from thy marriage with the maid arise?
  • But through the island would the shame be spread,
  • Should the fair mistress deign with thee to wed.”
  • John saw not this; and many a week had pass’d, 420
  • While the vain beauty held her victim fast;
  • The noble friend still condescension show’d,
  • And, as before, with praises overflow’d;
  • But his grave lady took a silent view
  • Of all that pass’d, and, smiling, pitied too.
  • Cold grew the foggy morn; the day was brief;
  • Loose on the cherry hung the crimson leaf;
  • The dew dwelt ever on the herb; the woods
  • Roar’d with strong blasts, with mighty showers the floods;
  • All green was vanish’d, save of pine and yew, 430
  • That still display’d their melancholy hue;
  • Save the green holly with its berries red,
  • And the green moss that o’er the gravel spread.
  • To public views my lord must soon attend;
  • And soon the ladies--would they leave their friend?
  • The time was fix’d--approach’d--was near--was come,
  • The trying time that fill’d his soul with gloom.
  • Thoughtful our poet in the morning rose,
  • And cried, “One hour my fortune will disclose;
  • Terrific hour! from thee have I to date 440
  • Life’s loftier views, or my degraded state;
  • For now to be what I have been before
  • Is so to fall, that I can rise no more.”
  • The morning meal was past, and all around
  • The mansion rang with each discordant sound;
  • Haste was in every foot, and every look
  • The trav’ller’s joy for London-journey spoke.
  • Not so our youth; whose feelings, at the noise
  • Of preparation, had no touch of joys;
  • He pensive stood, and saw each carriage drawn, 450
  • With lackeys mounted, ready on the lawn.
  • The ladies came; and John in terror threw
  • One painful glance, and then his eyes withdrew;
  • Not with such speed, but he in other eyes
  • With anguish read--“I pity but despise--
  • Unhappy boy! presumptuous scribbler!--you
  • To dream such dreams!--be sober, and adieu!”
  • Then came the noble friend--“And will my lord
  • Vouchsafe no comfort? drop no soothing word?
  • Yes, he must speak:” he speaks, “My good young friend,--
  • You know my views; upon my care depend; 461
  • My hearty thanks to your good father pay,
  • And be a student.--Harry, drive away.”
  • Stillness reign’d all around; of late so full,
  • The busy scene deserted now and dull.
  • Stern is his nature who forbears to feel
  • Gloom o’er his spirits on such trials steal;
  • Most keenly felt our poet as he went
  • From room to room without a fix’d intent;
  • “And here,” he thought, “I was caress’d; admired 470
  • Were here my songs; she smiled, and I aspired:
  • The change how grievous!” As he mused, a dame
  • Busy and peevish to her duties came;
  • Aside the tables and the chairs she drew,
  • And sang and mutter’d in the poet’s view:--
  • “This was her fortune; here they leave the poor;
  • Enjoy themselves, and think of us no more;
  • I had a promise--” here his pride and shame
  • Urged him to fly from this familiar dame;
  • He gave one farewell look, and by a coach 480
  • Reach’d his own mansion at the night’s approach.
  • His father met him with an anxious air,
  • Heard his sad tale, and check’d what seem’d despair;
  • Hope was in him corrected, but alive;
  • My lord would something for a friend contrive;
  • His word was pledged; our hero’s feverish mind
  • Admitted this, and half his grief resign’d.
  • But when three months had fled, and every day
  • Drew from the sickening hopes their strength away,
  • The youth became abstracted, pensive, dull; 490
  • He utter’d nothing, though his heart was full.
  • Teased by inquiring words and anxious looks,
  • And all forgetful of his muse and books,
  • Awake he mourn’d, but in his sleep perceived
  • A lovely vision that his pain relieved;
  • His soul transported, hail’d the happy seat,
  • Where once his pleasure was so pure and sweet;
  • Where joys departed came in blissful view,
  • Till reason wak’d, and not a joy he knew.
  • Questions now vex’d his spirit, most from those 500
  • Who are called friends, because they are not foes.
  • “John!” they would say; he, starting, turn’d around;
  • “John!” there was something shocking in the sound;
  • Ill brook’d he then the pert familiar phrase,
  • The untaught freedom, and th’ inquiring gaze;
  • Much was his temper touch’d, his spleen provoked,
  • When ask’d how ladies talk’d, or walk’d, or look’d?
  • What said my lord of politics? how spent
  • He there his time? and was he glad he went?”
  • At length a letter came, both cool and brief, 510
  • But still it gave the burthen’d heart relief:
  • Though not inspired by lofty hopes, the youth
  • Placed much reliance on Lord Frederick’s truth;
  • Summon’d to town, he thought the visit one
  • Where something fair and friendly would be done;
  • Although he judged not, as before his fall,
  • When all was love and promise at the hall.
  • Arrived in town, he early sought to know
  • The fate such dubious friendship would bestow;
  • At a tall building, trembling, he appear’d, 520
  • And his low rap was indistinctly heard;
  • A well-known servant came--“A while,” said he,
  • “Be pleased to wait; my lord has company.”
  • Alone our hero sate; the news in hand,
  • Which, though he read, he could not understand.
  • Cold was the day; in days so cold as these
  • There needs a fire, where minds and bodies freeze;
  • The vast and echoing room, the polish’d grate,
  • The crimson chairs, the sideboard with its plate;
  • The splendid sofa, which, though made for rest, 530
  • He then had thought it freedom to have press’d;
  • The shining tables, curiously inlaid,
  • Were all in comfortless proud style display’d;
  • And to the troubled feelings terror gave,
  • That made the once-dear friend the sick’ning slave.
  • “Was he forgotten?” Thrice upon his ear
  • Struck the loud clock, yet no relief was near;
  • Each rattling carriage, and each thundering stroke
  • On the loud door, the dream of fancy broke;
  • Oft as a servant chanced the way to come, 540
  • “Brings he a message?” no! he pass’d the room.
  • At length ’tis certain; “Sir you will attend
  • At twelve on Thursday!” Thus the day had end.
  • Vex’d by these tedious hours of needless pain,
  • John left the noble mansion with disdain;
  • For there was something in that still, cold place,
  • That seem’d to threaten and portend disgrace.
  • Punctual again the modest rap declared
  • The youth attended; then was all prepared:
  • For the same servant, by his lord’s command, 550
  • A paper offer’d to his trembling hand.
  • “No more!” he cried; “disdains he to afford
  • One kind expression, one consoling word?”
  • With troubled spirit he began to read
  • That “In the church my lord could not succeed;”
  • Who had “to peers of either kind applied,
  • And was with dignity and grace denied;
  • While his own livings were by men possess’d,
  • Not likely in their chancels yet to rest;
  • And therefore, all things weigh’d (as he, my lord, 560
  • Had done maturely, and he pledged his word),
  • Wisdom it seem’d for John to turn his view
  • To busier scenes, and bid the church adieu!”
  • Here grieved the youth; he felt his father’s pride
  • Must with his own be shock’d and mortified;
  • But when he found his future comforts placed
  • Where he, alas! conceived himself disgraced--
  • In some appointment on the London quays,
  • He bade farewell to honour and to ease;
  • His spirit fell; and, from that hour assured 570
  • How vain his dreams, he suffer’d and was cured.
  • Our poet hurried on, with wish to fly
  • From all mankind, to be conceal’d, and die.
  • Alas! what hopes, what high romantic views }
  • Did that one visit to the soul infuse, }
  • Which cherish’d with such love, ’twas worse than death to lose! }
  • Still he would strive, though painful was the strife,
  • To walk in this appointed road of life;
  • On these low duties duteous he would wait,
  • And patient bear the anguish of his fate. 580
  • Thanks to the patron, but of coldest kind,
  • Express’d the sadness of the poet’s mind;
  • Whose heavy hours were pass’d with busy men,
  • In the dull practice of th’ official pen;
  • Who to superiors must in time impart
  • (The custom this) his progress in their art.
  • But so had grief on his perception wrought,
  • That all unheeded were the duties taught;
  • No answers gave he when his trial came,
  • Silent he stood, but suffering without shame; 590
  • And they observed that words severe or kind
  • Made no impression on his wounded mind;
  • For all perceived from whence his failure rose--
  • Some grief whose cause he deign’d not to disclose.
  • A soul averse from scenes and works so new;
  • Fear, ever shrinking from the vulgar crew;
  • Distaste for each mechanic law and rule,
  • Thoughts of past honour and a patron cool;
  • A grieving parent, and a feeling mind,
  • Timid and ardent, tender and refined: 600
  • These all with mighty force the youth assail’d,
  • Till his soul fainted, and his reason fail’d.
  • When this was known, and some debate arose
  • How they who saw it should the fact disclose,
  • He found their purpose, and in terror fled
  • From unseen kindness, with mistaken dread.
  • Meantime the parent was distress’d to find
  • His son no longer for a priest design’d;
  • But still he gain’d some comfort by the news
  • Of John’s promotion, though with humbler views; 610
  • For he conceived that in no distant time
  • The boy would learn to scramble and to climb.
  • He little thought a son, his hope and pride,
  • His favour’d boy, was now a home denied:
  • Yes! while the parent was intent to trace
  • How men in office climb from place to place,
  • By day, by night, o’er moor and heath and hill, }
  • Roved the sad youth, with ever-changing will, }
  • Of every aid bereft, exposed to every ill. }
  • Thus as he sate, absorb’d in all the care 620
  • And all the hope that anxious fathers share,
  • A friend abruptly to his presence brought,
  • With trembling hand, the subject of his thought,
  • Whom he had found afflicted and subdued
  • By hunger, sorrow, cold, and solitude.
  • Silent he enter’d the forgotten room
  • As ghostly forms may be conceived to come;
  • With sorrow-shrunken face and hair upright,
  • He look’d dismay, neglect, despair, affright;
  • But, dead to comfort, and on misery thrown, 630
  • His parent’s loss he felt not, nor his own.
  • The good man, struck with horror, cried aloud,
  • And drew around him an astonish’d crowd;
  • The sons and servants to the father ran,
  • To share the feelings of the grieved old man.
  • “Our brother, speak!” they all exclaim’d; “explain
  • Thy grief, thy suffering;”--but they ask’d in vain:
  • The friend told all he knew; and all was known,
  • Save the sad causes whence the ills had grown.
  • But, if obscure the cause, they all agreed 640
  • From rest and kindness must the cure proceed:
  • And he was cured; for quiet, love, and care,
  • Strove with the gloom, and broke on the despair.
  • Yet slow their progress; and, as vapours move
  • Dense and reluctant from the wintry grove;
  • All is confusion till the morning light
  • Gives the dim scene obscurely to the sight;
  • More and yet more defined the trunks appear,
  • Till the wild prospect stands distinct and clear--
  • So the dark mind of our young poet grew 650
  • Clear and sedate; the dreadful mist withdrew;
  • And he resembled that bleak wintry scene,
  • Sad, though unclouded; dismal, though serene.
  • At times he utter’d, “What a dream was mine!
  • And what a prospect! glorious and divine!
  • Oh! in that room, and on that night, to see
  • These looks, that sweetness beaming all on me;
  • That syren-flattery--and to send me then,
  • Hope-raised and soften’d, to those heartless men;
  • That dark-brow’d stern director, pleased to show 660
  • Knowledge of subjects I disdain’d to know;
  • Cold and controlling--but ’tis gone, ’tis past;
  • I had my trial, and have peace at last.”
  • Now grew the youth resign’d; he bade adieu
  • To all that hope, to all that fancy drew;
  • His frame was languid, and the hectic heat
  • Flush’d on his pallid face, and countless beat
  • The quick’ning pulse, and faint the limbs that bore
  • The slender form that soon would breathe no more.
  • Then hope of holy kind the soul sustain’d, 670
  • And not a lingering thought of earth remain’d;
  • Now Heaven had all, and he could smile at love,
  • And the wild sallies of his youth reprove;
  • Then could he dwell upon the tempting days,
  • The proud aspiring thought, the partial praise;
  • Victorious now, his worldly views were closed,
  • And on the bed of death the youth reposed.
  • The father grieved--but, as the poet’s heart
  • Was all unfitted for his earthly part;
  • As, he conceived, some other haughty fair 680
  • Would, had he lived, have led him to despair;
  • As, with this fear, the silent grave shut out
  • All feverish hope, and all tormenting doubt;
  • While the strong faith the pious youth possess’d,
  • His hope enlivening, gave his sorrows rest:
  • Soothed by these thoughts, he felt a mournful joy
  • For his aspiring and devoted boy.
  • Meantime the news through various channels spread:
  • The youth, once favour’d with such praise, was dead.
  • “Emma,” the lady cried, “my words attend, 690
  • Your syren-smiles have kill’d your humble friend;
  • The hope you raised can now delude no more,
  • Nor charms, that once inspired, can now restore.”
  • Faint was the flush of anger and of shame,
  • That o’er the cheek of conscious beauty came.
  • “You censure not,” said she, “the sun’s bright rays,
  • When fools imprudent dare the dangerous gaze;
  • And, should a stripling look till he were blind,
  • You would not justly call the light unkind.--
  • But is he dead? and am I to suppose 700
  • The power of poison in such looks as those?”
  • She spoke, and, pointing to the mirror, cast
  • A pleased gay glance, and curtsied as she pass’d.
  • My lord, to whom the poet’s fate was told,
  • Was much affected, for a man so cold.
  • “Dead!” said his lordship, “run distracted, mad!
  • Upon my soul I’m sorry for the lad;
  • And now, no doubt, th’ obliging world will say
  • That my harsh usage help’d him on his way.
  • What! I suppose, I should have nursed his muse, 710
  • And with champagne have brighten’d up his views:
  • Then had he made me famed my whole life long,
  • And stunn’d my ears with gratitude and song.
  • Still, should the father hear that I regret
  • Our joint misfortune--Yes! I’ll not forget.”--
  • Thus they.--The father to his grave convey’d
  • The son he loved, and his last duties paid.
  • “There lies my boy,” he cried, “of care bereft,
  • And, Heav’n be praised, I’ve not a genius left:
  • No one among ye, sons! is doom’d to live 720
  • On high-raised hopes of what the great may give;
  • None, with exalted views and fortunes mean,
  • To die in anguish, or to live in spleen.
  • Your pious brother soon escaped the strife
  • Of such contention, but it cost his life;
  • You then, my sons, upon yourselves depend,
  • And in your own exertions find the friend.”
  • TALE VI.
  • _THE FRANK COURTSHIP._
  • Yes, faith; it is my cousin’s duty to make curtsy, and say, “Father,
  • as it please you;” but [yet] for all that, cousin, let him be a
  • handsome fellow, or else make another curtsy, and say, “Father, as it
  • pleases me.”
  • _Much Ado about Nothing,_ Act II. Scene 1.
  • He cannot flatter, he!
  • An honest mind and plain--he must speak truth.
  • _King Lear_, Act II. Scene 2.
  • God hath given you one face, and you make yourselves another;
  • you jig, you amble, [and you lisp, and] nick-name God’s creatures,
  • and make your wantonness your ignorance.
  • _Hamlet_, Act III. Scene 1.
  • What fire is in mine ears? Can this be true?
  • [Stand I condemn’d] for pride and scorn so much?
  • _Much Ado about Nothing_, Act III. Scene 1.
  • TALE VI.
  • _THE FRANK COURTSHIP._
  • Grave Jonas Kindred, Sybil Kindred’s sire,
  • Was six feet high, and look’d six inches higher;
  • Erect, morose, determined, solemn, slow,
  • Who knew the man, could never cease to know;
  • His faithful spouse, when Jonas was not by,
  • Had a firm presence and a steady eye;
  • But with her husband dropp’d her look and tone,
  • And Jonas ruled unquestion’d and alone.
  • He read, and oft would quote the sacred words,
  • How pious husbands of their wives were lords; 10
  • Sarah called Abraham lord! and who could be,
  • So Jonas thought, a greater man than he?
  • Himself he view’d with undisguised respect,
  • And never pardon’d freedom or neglect.
  • They had one daughter, and this favourite child
  • Had oft the father of his spleen beguiled;
  • Soothed by attention from her early years,
  • She gain’d all wishes by her smiles or tears:
  • But Sybil then was in that playful time,
  • When contradiction is not held a crime; 20
  • When parents yield their children idle praise
  • For faults corrected in their after days.
  • Peace in the sober house of Jonas dwelt,
  • Where each his duty and his station felt:
  • Yet not that peace some favour’d mortals find,
  • In equal views and harmony of mind;
  • Not the soft peace that blesses those who love,
  • Where all with one consent in union move;
  • But it was that which one superior will
  • Commands, by making all inferiors still; 30
  • Who bids all murmurs, all objections cease,
  • And with imperious voice announces--Peace!
  • They were, to wit, a remnant of that crew,
  • Who, as their foes maintain, their sovereign slew:
  • An independent race, precise, correct,
  • Who ever married in the kindred sect.
  • No son or daughter of their order wed
  • A friend to England’s king who lost his head;
  • Cromwell was still their saint, and, when they met,
  • They mourn’d that saints[4] were not our rulers yet. 40
  • Fix’d were their habits; they arose betimes,
  • Then pray’d their hour, and sang their party-rhymes:
  • Their meals were plenteous, regular, and plain;
  • The trade of Jonas brought him constant gain;
  • Vender of hops and malt, of coals and corn--
  • And, like his father, he was merchant born.
  • Neat was their house; each table, chair, and stool,
  • Stood in its place, or moving moved by rule;
  • No lively print or picture graced the room;
  • A plain brown paper lent its decent gloom; 50
  • But here the eye, in glancing round, survey’d
  • A small recess that seem’d for china made;
  • Such pleasing pictures seem’d this pencill’d ware,
  • That few would search for nobler objects there--
  • Yet, turn’d by chosen friends, and there appear’d
  • His stern, strong features, whom they all revered;
  • For there in lofty air was seen to stand
  • The bold protector of the conquer’d land;
  • Drawn in that look with which he wept and swore,
  • Turn’d out the members, and made fast the door, 60
  • Ridding the house of every knave and drone;
  • Forced, though it grieved his soul, to rule alone.
  • The stern, still smile each friend, approving, gave;
  • Then turn’d the view, and all again were grave.
  • [4] This appellation is here used not ironically, nor with malignity;
  • but it is taken merely to designate a morosely devout people, with
  • peculiar austerity of manners.
  • There stood a clock, though small the owner’s need--
  • For habit told when all things should proceed.
  • Few their amusements, but, when friends appear’d,
  • They with the world’s distress their spirits cheer’d;
  • The nation’s guilt, that would not long endure
  • The reign of men so modest and so pure. 70
  • Their town was large, and seldom pass’d a day
  • But some had fail’d, and others gone astray;
  • Clerks had absconded, wives eloped, girls flown
  • To Gretna-Green, or sons rebellious grown;
  • Quarrels and fires arose;--and it was plain
  • The times were bad; the saints had ceased to reign!
  • A few yet lived to languish and to mourn
  • For good old manners, never to return.
  • Jonas had sisters, and of these was one
  • Who lost a husband and an only son: 80
  • Twelve months her sables she in sorrow wore,
  • And mourn’d so long that she could mourn no more.
  • Distant from Jonas, and from all her race,
  • She now resided in a lively place;
  • There, by the sect unseen, at whist she play’d,
  • Nor was of churchmen or their church afraid.
  • If much of this the graver brother heard,
  • He something censured, but he little fear’d;
  • He knew her rich and frugal; for the rest,
  • He felt no care, or, if he felt, suppress’d; 90
  • Nor, for companion when she ask’d her niece,
  • Had he suspicions that disturbed his peace;
  • Frugal and rich, these virtues as a charm
  • Preserved the thoughtful man from all alarm;
  • An infant yet, she soon would home return,
  • Nor stay the manners of the world to learn;
  • Meantime his boys would all his care engross,
  • And be his comforts if he felt the loss.
  • The sprightly Sybil, pleased and unconfined,
  • Felt the pure pleasure of the op’ning mind: 100
  • All here was gay and cheerful--all at home
  • Unvaried quiet and unruffled gloom.
  • There were no changes, and amusements few;
  • Here, all was varied, wonderful, and new;
  • There were plain meals, plain dresses, and grave looks--
  • Here, gay companions and amusing books;
  • And the young beauty soon began to taste
  • The light vocations of the scene she graced.
  • A man of business feels it as a crime
  • On calls domestic to consume his time; 110
  • Yet this grave man had not so cold a heart,
  • But with his daughter he was grieved to part;
  • And he demanded that in every year
  • The aunt and niece should at his house appear.
  • “Yes! we must go, my child, and by our dress
  • A grave conformity of mind express;
  • Must sing at meeting, and from cards refrain,
  • The more t’ enjoy when we return again.”
  • Thus spake the aunt, and the discerning child
  • Was pleased to learn how fathers are beguiled. 120
  • Her artful part the young dissembler took,
  • And from the matron caught th’ approving look.
  • When thrice the friends had met, excuse was sent
  • For more delay, and Jonas was content;
  • Till a tall maiden by her sire was seen,
  • In all the bloom and beauty of sixteen;
  • He gazed admiring;--she, with visage prim,
  • Glanced an arch look of gravity on him;
  • For she was gay at heart, but wore disguise,
  • And stood a vestal in her father’s eyes-- 130
  • Pure, pensive, simple, sad; the damsel’s heart,
  • When Jonas praised, reproved her for the part;
  • For Sybil, fond of pleasure, gay and light,
  • Had still a secret bias to the right;
  • Vain as she was--and flattery made her vain--
  • Her simulation gave her bosom pain.
  • Again return’d, the matron and the niece
  • Found the late quiet gave their joy increase;
  • The aunt, infirm, no more her visits paid,
  • But still with her sojourn’d the favourite maid. 140
  • Letters were sent when franks could be procured;
  • And, when they could not, silence was endured.
  • All were in health, and, if they older grew,
  • It seem’d a fact that none among them knew;
  • The aunt and niece still led a pleasant life,
  • And quiet days had Jonas and his wife.
  • Near him a widow dwelt of worthy fame:
  • Like his her manners, and her creed the same.
  • The wealth her husband left her care retain’d
  • For one tall youth, and widow she remained; 150
  • His love respectful all her care repaid,
  • Her wishes watch’d, and her commands obey’d.
  • Sober he was and grave from early youth,
  • Mindful of forms, but more intent on truth;
  • In a light drab he uniformly dress’d,
  • And look serene th’ unruffled mind express’d;
  • A hat with ample verge his brows o’erspread,
  • And his brown locks curl’d graceful on his head;
  • Yet might observers in his speaking eye }
  • Some observation, some acuteness spy; } 160
  • The friendly thought it keen, the treacherous deem’d }
  • it sly. }
  • Yet not a crime could foe or friend detect;
  • His actions all were, like his speech, correct;
  • And they who jested on a mind so sound,
  • Upon his virtues must their laughter found:
  • ‘Chaste, sober, solemn,’ and ‘devout’ they named
  • Him who was thus, and not of _this_ ashamed.
  • Such were the virtues Jonas found in one
  • In whom he warmly wish’d to find a son.
  • Three years had pass’d since he had Sybil seen; 170
  • But she was doubtless what she once had been--
  • Lovely and mild, obedient and discreet:
  • The pair must love whenever they should meet;
  • Then, ere the widow or her son should choose
  • Some happier maid, he would explain his views.
  • Now she, like him, was politic and shrewd,
  • With strong desire of lawful gain embued;
  • To all he said, she bow’d with much respect,
  • Pleased to comply, yet seeming to reject;
  • Cool, and yet eager, each admired the strength 180
  • Of the opponent, and agreed at length.
  • As a drawn battle shows to each a force,
  • Powerful as his, he honours it of course:
  • So in these neighbours, each the power discern’d,
  • And gave the praise that was to each return’d.
  • Jonas now ask’d his daughter; and the aunt,
  • Though loth to lose her, was obliged to grant.--
  • But would not Sybil to the matron cling,
  • And fear to leave the shelter of her wing?
  • No! in the young there lives a love of change, 190
  • And to the easy they prefer the strange!
  • Then too the joys she once pursued with zeal,
  • From whist and visits sprung, she ceased to feel;
  • When with the matrons Sybil first sat down,
  • To cut for partners and to stake her crown,
  • This to the youthful maid preferment seem’d,
  • Who thought [that] woman she was then esteem’d;
  • But in few years, when she perceived, indeed,
  • The real woman to the girl succeed,
  • No longer tricks and honours fill’d her mind, 200
  • But other feelings, not so well defined.
  • She then reluctant grew, and thought it hard,
  • To sit and ponder o’er an ugly card;
  • Rather the nut-tree shade the nymph preferr’d,
  • Pleased with the pensive gloom and evening bird;
  • Thither, from company retired, she took
  • The silent walk, or read the fav’rite book.
  • The father’s letter, sudden, short, and kind,
  • Awaked her wonder, and disturb’d her mind;
  • She found new dreams upon her fancy seize, 210
  • Wild roving thoughts and endless reveries.
  • The parting came;--and, when the aunt perceived
  • The tears of Sybil, and how much she grieved,
  • To love for her that tender grief she laid,
  • That various, soft, contending passions made.
  • When Sybil rested in her father’s arms,
  • His pride exulted in a daughter’s charms;
  • A maid accomplish’d he was pleased to find,
  • Nor seem’d the form more lovely than the mind.
  • But when the fit of pride and fondness fled, 220
  • He saw his judgment by his hopes misled;
  • High were the lady’s spirits, far more free
  • Her mode of speaking than a maid’s should be;
  • Too much, as Jonas thought, she seem’d to know,
  • And all her knowledge was disposed to show:
  • “Too gay her dress, like theirs who idly dote
  • On a young coxcomb, or a coxcomb’s coat;
  • In foolish spirits when our friends appear,
  • And vainly grave when not a man is near.”
  • Thus Jonas, adding to his sorrow blame, 230
  • And terms disdainful to his sister’s name:--
  • “The sinful wretch has by her arts defiled
  • The ductile spirit of my darling child.”
  • “The maid is virtuous,” said the dame.--Quoth he,
  • “Let her give proof, by acting virtuously:
  • Is it in gaping when the elders pray?
  • In reading nonsense half a summer’s day?
  • In those mock forms that she delights to trace,
  • Or her loud laughs in Hezekiah’s face?
  • She--O Susannah!--to the world belongs; } 240
  • She loves the follies of its idle throngs, }
  • And reads soft tales of love, and sings love’s }
  • soft’ning songs. }
  • But, as our friend is yet delay’d in town,
  • We must prepare her till the youth comes down;
  • You shall advise the maiden; I will threat;
  • Her fears and hopes may yield us comfort yet.”
  • Now the grave father took the lass aside,
  • Demanding sternly, “Wilt thou be a bride?”
  • She answer’d, calling up an air sedate,
  • “I have not vow’d against the holy state.” 250
  • “No folly, Sybil,” said the parent; “know
  • What to their parents virtuous maidens owe:
  • A worthy, wealthy youth, whom I approve,
  • Must thou prepare to honour and to love.
  • Formal to thee his air and dress may seem,
  • But the good youth is worthy of esteem;
  • Shouldst thou with rudeness treat him, of disdain
  • Should he with justice or of slight complain,
  • Or of one taunting speech give certain proof:
  • Girl! I reject thee from my sober roof.” 260
  • “My aunt,” said Sybil, “will with pride protect
  • One whom a father can for this reject;
  • Nor shall a formal, rigid, soul-less boy
  • My manners alter, or my views destroy!”
  • Jonas [then] lifted up his hands on high, }
  • And, utt’ring something ’twixt a groan and sigh, }
  • Left the determined maid her doubtful mother by. }
  • “Hear me,” she said; “incline thy heart, my child,
  • And fix thy fancy on a man so mild;
  • Thy father, Sybil, never could be moved 270
  • By one who loved him, or by one he loved.
  • Union like ours is but a bargain made
  • By slave and tyrant--he will be obey’d,
  • Then calls the quiet comfort;--but thy youth
  • Is mild by nature, and as frank as truth.”
  • “But will he love?” said Sybil; “I am told
  • That these mild creatures are by nature cold.”
  • “Alas!” the matron answer’d, “much I dread
  • That dangerous love by which the young are led!
  • That love is earthy; you the creature prize, 280
  • And trust your feelings and believe your eyes:
  • Can eyes and feelings inward worth descry?
  • No! my fair daughter, on our choice rely!
  • Your love, like that display’d upon the stage,
  • Indulged is folly, and opposed is rage;--
  • More prudent love our sober couples show,
  • All that to mortal beings mortals owe.
  • All flesh is grass--before you give a heart,
  • Remember, Sybil, that in death you part;
  • And, should your husband die before your love, 290
  • What needless anguish must a widow prove!
  • No! my fair child, let all such visions cease;
  • Yield but esteem, and only try for peace.”
  • “I must be loved,” said Sybil; “I must see
  • The man in terrors who aspires to me;
  • At my forbidding frown his heart must ache,
  • His tongue must falter, and his frame must shake;
  • And, if I grant him at my feet to kneel,
  • What trembling, fearful pleasure must he feel;
  • Nay, such the raptures that my smiles inspire, 300
  • That reason’s self must for a time retire.”
  • “Alas! for good Josiah,” said the dame,
  • “These wicked thoughts would fill his soul with shame.
  • He kneel and tremble at a thing of dust!
  • He cannot, child.”--The child replied, “He must.”
  • They ceased; the matron left her with a frown;
  • So Jonas met her when the youth came down.
  • “Behold,” said he, “thy future spouse attends;
  • Receive him, daughter, as the best of friends;
  • Observe, respect him--humble be each word, 310
  • That welcomes home thy husband and thy lord.”
  • Forewarn’d, thought Sybil, with a bitter smile,
  • I shall prepare my manner and my style.
  • Ere yet Josiah enter’d on his task,
  • The father met him:--“Deign to wear a mask
  • A few dull days, Josiah--but a few--
  • It is our duty, and the sex’s due;
  • I wore it once, and every grateful wife
  • Repays it with obedience through her life:
  • Have no regard to Sybil’s dress, have none } 320
  • To her pert language, to her flippant tone: }
  • Henceforward thou shalt rule unquestion’d and alone; }
  • And she thy pleasure in thy looks shall seek--
  • How she shall dress, and whether she may speak.”
  • A sober smile return’d the youth, and said,
  • “Can I cause fear, who am myself afraid?”
  • Sybil, meantime, sat thoughtful in her room,
  • And often wonder’d--“Will the creature come?
  • Nothing shall tempt, shall force me to bestow
  • My hand upon him--yet I wish to know.” 330
  • The door unclosed, and she beheld her sire
  • Lead in the youth, then hasten to retire.
  • “Daughter, my friend--my daughter, friend,” he cried,
  • And gave a meaning look, and stepp’d aside;
  • That look contain’d a mingled threat and prayer,
  • “Do take him, child--offend him, if you dare.”
  • The couple gazed--were silent; and the maid
  • Look’d in his face, to make the man afraid;
  • The man, unmoved, upon the maiden cast
  • A steady view--so salutation pass’d; 340
  • But in this instant Sybil’s eye had seen
  • The tall fair person, and the still staid mien;
  • The glow that temp’rance o’er the cheek had spread,
  • Where the soft down half veil’d the purest red;
  • And the serene deportment that proclaim’d
  • A heart unspotted, and a life unblamed.
  • But then with these she saw attire too plain,
  • The pale brown coat, though worn without a stain;
  • The formal air, and something of the pride
  • That indicates the wealth it seems to hide; 350
  • And looks that were not, she conceived, exempt
  • From a proud pity, or a sly contempt.
  • Josiah’s eyes had their employment too,
  • Engaged and soften’d by so bright a view:
  • A fair and meaning face, an eye of fire,
  • That check’d the bold, and made the free retire.
  • But then with these he mark’d the studied dress
  • And lofty air, that scorn or pride express;
  • With that insidious look, that seem’d to hide
  • In an affected smile the scorn and pride; 360
  • And if his mind the virgin’s meaning caught, }
  • He saw a foe with treacherous purpose fraught-- }
  • Captive the heart to take, and to reject it caught. }
  • Silent they sate--thought Sybil, that he seeks
  • Something, no doubt; I wonder if he speaks.
  • Scarcely she wonder’d, when these accents fell
  • Slow in her ear--“Fair maiden, art thou well?”--
  • “Art thou physician?” she replied; “my hand,
  • My pulse, at least, shall be at thy command.”
  • She said--and saw, surprised, Josiah kneel, 370
  • And gave his lips the offer’d pulse to feel;
  • The rosy colour rising in her cheek
  • Seem’d that surprise, unmix’d with wrath, to speak;
  • Then sternness she assumed, and--“Doctor, tell,
  • Thy words cannot alarm me--am I well?”
  • “Thou art,” said he; “and yet thy dress so light,
  • I do conceive, some danger must excite.”
  • “In whom?” said Sybil, with a look demure;
  • “In more,” said he, “than I expect to cure.
  • I, in thy light luxuriant robe, behold }
  • Want and excess, abounding and yet cold: }
  • Here needed, there display’d, in many a wanton fold; }
  • Both health and beauty, learned authors show,
  • From a just medium in our clothing flow.”
  • “Proceed, good doctor; if so great my need,
  • What is thy fee? Good doctor! pray proceed.”
  • “Large is my fee, fair lady, but I take
  • None till some progress in my cure I make.
  • Thou hast disease, fair maiden; thou art vain;
  • Within that face sit insult and disdain; 390
  • Thou art enamour’d of thyself; my art
  • Can see the naughty malice of thy heart;
  • With a strong pleasure would thy bosom move,
  • Were I to own thy power, and ask thy love;
  • And such thy beauty, damsel, that I might, }
  • But for thy pride, feel danger in thy sight, }
  • And lose my present peace in dreams of vain delight.” }
  • “And can thy patients,” said the nymph, “endure
  • Physic like this? and will it work a cure?”
  • “Such is my hope, fair damsel; thou, I find, 400
  • Hast the true tokens of a noble mind;
  • But the world wins thee, Sybil, and thy joys
  • Are placed in trifles, fashions, follies, toys;
  • Thou hast sought pleasure in the world around,
  • That in thine own pure bosom should be found.
  • Did all that world admire thee, praise and love,
  • Could it the least of nature’s pains remove?
  • Could it for errors, follies, sins atone,
  • Or give thee comfort, thoughtful and alone?
  • It has, believe me, maid, no power to charm 410
  • Thy soul from sorrow, or thy flesh from harm:
  • Turn then, fair creature, from a world of sin,
  • And seek the jewel happiness within.”
  • “Speak’st thou at meeting?” said the nymph; “thy speech
  • Is that of mortal very prone to teach;
  • But wouldst thou, doctor, from the patient learn
  • Thine own disease?--The cure is thy concern.”
  • “Yea, with good will.”--“Then know, ’tis thy complaint,
  • That, for a sinner, thou’rt too much a saint;
  • Hast too much show of the sedate and pure, 420
  • And without cause art formal and demure:
  • This makes a man unsocial, unpolite;
  • Odious when wrong, and insolent if right.
  • Thou may’st be good, but why should goodness be
  • Wrapt in a garb of such formality?
  • Thy person well might please a damsel’s eye,
  • In decent habit with a scarlet dye;
  • But, jest apart--what virtue canst thou trace
  • In that broad brim that hides thy sober face?
  • Does that long-skirted drab, that over-nice 430
  • And formal clothing, prove a scorn of vice?
  • Then for thine accent--what in sound can be
  • So void of grace as dull monotony?
  • Love has a thousand varied notes to move
  • The human heart--thou may’st not speak of love
  • Till thou hast cast thy formal ways aside,
  • And those becoming youth and nature tried;
  • Not till exterior freedom, spirit, ease,
  • Prove it thy study and delight to please;
  • Not till these follies meet thy just disdain, 440
  • While yet thy virtues and thy worth remain.”
  • “This is severe!--Oh! maiden, wilt not thou
  • Something for habits, manners, modes, allow?”--
  • “Yes! but allowing much, I much require,
  • In my behalf, for manners, modes, attire!”
  • “True, lovely Sybil; and, this point agreed,
  • Let me to those of greater weight proceed:
  • Thy father”--“Nay,” she quickly interposed,
  • “Good doctor, here our conference is closed!”
  • Then left the youth, who, lost in his retreat, 450
  • Pass’d the good matron on her garden-seat;
  • His looks were troubled, and his air, once mild
  • And calm, was hurried:--“My audacious child!”
  • Exclaim’d the dame, “I read what she has done
  • In thy displeasure--Ah! the thoughtless one;
  • But yet, Josiah, to my stern good man
  • Speak of the maid as mildly as you can.
  • Can you not seem to woo a little while
  • The daughter’s will, the father to beguile,
  • So that his wrath in time may wear away? 460
  • Will you preserve our peace, Josiah? say!”
  • “Yes! my good neighbour,” said the gentle youth,
  • “Rely securely on my care and truth;
  • And, should thy comfort with my efforts cease,
  • And only then--perpetual is thy peace.”
  • The dame had doubts: she well his virtues knew,
  • His deeds were friendly, and his words were true;
  • “But to address this vixen is a task
  • He is ashamed to take, and I to ask.”
  • Soon as the father from Josiah learn’d 470
  • What pass’d with Sybil, he the truth discern’d.
  • “He loves,” the man exclaim’d, “he loves, ’tis plain,
  • The thoughtless girl, and shall he love in vain?
  • She may be stubborn, but she shall be tried,
  • Born as she is of wilfulness and pride.”
  • With anger fraught, but willing to persuade,
  • The wrathful father met the smiling maid.
  • “Sybil,” said he, “I long, and yet I dread
  • To know thy conduct--hath Josiah fled,
  • And, grieved and fretted by thy scornful air, 480
  • For his lost peace betaken him to prayer?
  • Couldst thou his pure and modest mind distress, }
  • By vile remarks upon his speech, address, }
  • Attire, and voice?”--“All this I must confess.”-- }
  • “Unhappy child! what labour will it cost
  • To win him back!”--“I do not think him lost.”
  • “Courts he then, trifler, insult and disdain?”--
  • “No: but from these he courts me to refrain.”--
  • “Then hear me, Sybil: should Josiah leave
  • Thy father’s house?”--“My father’s child would grieve.”--
  • “That is of grace; and if he come again 491
  • To speak of love?”--“I might from grief refrain.”--
  • “Then wilt thou, daughter, our design embrace?”--
  • “Can I resist it, if it be of grace?”--
  • “Dear child! in three plain words thy mind express--
  • Wilt thou have this good youth?”--“Dear father! yes.”
  • TALE VII.
  • _THE WIDOW’S TALE._
  • Ah me! for aught that I could ever read,
  • [Could] ever hear by tale or history,
  • The course of true love never did run smooth;
  • But, either it was different in blood, [. . .]
  • Or else misgrafted in respect of years, [. . .]
  • Or else it stood upon the choice of friends, [. . .]
  • Or if there were a sympathy in choice,
  • War, death, or sickness did lay siege to it.
  • _Midsummer Night’s Dream_, Act I. Scene 1.
  • Oh! thou didst then ne’er love so heartily,
  • If thou rememberest not the slightest folly
  • That ever love did make thee run into . . .
  • _As You Like It_, Act II. Scene 4.
  • Cry the man mercy; love him; take his offer.
  • _As You Like It_, Act III. Scene 5.
  • TALE VII.
  • _THE WIDOW’S TALE._
  • To farmer Moss, in Langar Vale, came down
  • His only daughter, from her school in town;
  • A tender, timid maid! who knew not how
  • To pass a pig-sty, or to face a cow:
  • Smiling she came, with petty talents graced,
  • A fair complexion, and a slender waist.
  • Used to spare meals, disposed in manner pure,
  • Her father’s kitchen she could ill endure;
  • Where by the steaming beef he hungry sat,
  • And laid at once a pound upon his plate; 10
  • Hot from the field, her eager brother seized
  • An equal part, and hunger’s rage appeased;
  • The air, surcharged with moisture, flagg’d around,
  • And the offended damsel sigh’d and frown’d;
  • The swelling fat in lumps conglomerate laid,
  • And fancy’s sickness seized the loathing maid.
  • But, when the men beside their station took,
  • The maidens with them, and with these the cook;
  • When one huge wooden bowl before them stood,
  • Fill’d with huge balls of farinaceous food; 20
  • With bacon, mass saline, where never lean
  • Beneath the brown and bristly rind was seen;
  • When from a single horn the party drew
  • Their copious draughts of heavy ale and new;
  • When the coarse cloth she saw, with many a stain,
  • Soil’d by rude hinds who cut and came again--
  • She could not breathe; but, with a heavy sigh,
  • Rein’d the fair neck, and shut th’ offended eye;
  • She minced the sanguine flesh in frustums fine,
  • And wonder’d much to see the creatures dine: 30
  • When she resolved her father’s heart to move,
  • If hearts of farmers were alive to love.
  • She now entreated by herself to sit
  • In the small parlour, if papa thought fit,
  • And there to dine, to read, to work alone.--
  • “No!” said the farmer, in an angry tone;
  • “These are your school-taught airs; your mother’s pride
  • Would send you there; but I am now your guide.--
  • Arise betimes, our early meal prepare,
  • And, this despatch’d, let business be your care; 40
  • Look to the lasses, let there not be one
  • Who lacks attention, till her tasks be done;
  • In every household work your portion take,
  • And what you make not, see that others make.
  • At leisure times attend the wheel, and see
  • The whit’ning web be sprinkled on the [lea];
  • When thus employ’d, should our young neighbour view
  • An useful lass, you may have more to do.”
  • Dreadful were these commands; but worse than these
  • The parting hint--a farmer could not please: 50
  • ’Tis true she had without abhorrence seen
  • Young Harry Carr, when he was smart and clean;
  • But to be married--be a farmer’s wife--
  • A slave! a drudge!--she could not, for her life.
  • With swimming eyes the fretful nymph withdrew,
  • And, deeply sighing, to her chamber flew;
  • There on her knees, to Heav’n she grieving pray’d
  • For change of prospect to a tortured maid.
  • Harry, a youth whose late-departed sire
  • Had left him all industrious men require, 60
  • Saw the pale beauty--and her shape and air
  • Engaged him much, and yet he must forbear:
  • “For my small farm what can the damsel do?”
  • He said--then stopp’d to take another view:
  • “Pity so sweet a lass will nothing learn
  • Of household cares--for what can beauty earn
  • By those small arts which they at school attain,
  • That keep them useless, and yet make them vain?”
  • This luckless damsel look’d the village round,
  • To find a friend, and one was quickly found; 70
  • A pensive widow--whose mild air and dress }
  • Pleased the sad nymph, who wish’d her soul’s distress }
  • To one so seeming kind, confiding, to confess.-- }
  • “What lady that?” the anxious lass inquired,
  • Who then beheld the one she most admired.
  • “Here,” said the brother, “are no ladies seen--
  • That is a widow dwelling on the green;
  • A dainty dame, who can but barely live
  • On her poor pittance, yet contrives to give;
  • She happier days has known, but seems at ease, 80
  • And you may call her lady, if you please.
  • But if you wish, good sister, to improve,
  • You shall see twenty better worth your love.”
  • These Nancy met; but, spite of all they taught,
  • This useless widow was the one she sought.
  • The father growl’d; but said he knew no harm
  • In such connexion that could give alarm;
  • “And if we thwart the trifler in her course,
  • ’Tis odds against us she will take a worse.”
  • Then met the friends; the widow heard the sigh 90
  • That ask’d at once compassion and reply:--
  • “Would you, my child, converse with one so poor,
  • Yours were the kindness--yonder is my door;
  • And, save the time that we in public pray,
  • From that poor cottage I but rarely stray.”
  • There went the nymph, and made her strong complaints,
  • Painting her wo as injured feeling paints.
  • “Oh, dearest friend! do think how one must feel,
  • Shock’d all day long, and sicken’d every meal;
  • Could you behold our kitchen (and to you 100
  • A scene so shocking must indeed be new),
  • A mind like yours, with true refinement graced,
  • Would let no vulgar scenes pollute your taste;
  • And yet, in truth, from such a polish’d mind
  • All base ideas must resistance find,
  • And sordid pictures from the fancy pass,
  • As the breath startles from the polish’d glass.
  • “Here you enjoy a sweet romantic scene,
  • Without so pleasant, and within so clean;
  • These twining jess’mines, what delicious gloom 110
  • And soothing fragrance yield they to the room!
  • What lovely garden! there you oft retire,
  • And tales of wo and tenderness admire:
  • In that neat case, your books, in order placed,
  • Soothe the full soul, and charm the cultured taste;
  • And thus, while all about you wears a charm,
  • How must you scorn the farmer and the farm!”
  • The widow smiled, and “Know you not,” said she, }
  • “How much these farmers scorn or pity me; }
  • Who see what you admire, and laugh at all they see? } 120
  • True, their opinion alters not my fate,
  • By falsely judging of an humble state:
  • This garden, you with such delight behold,
  • Tempts not a feeble dame who dreads the cold;
  • These plants, which please so well your livelier sense,
  • To mine but little of their sweets dispense;
  • Books soon are painful to my failing sight,
  • And oftener read from duty than delight;
  • (Yet let me own, that I can sometimes find
  • Both joy and duty in the act combined;) 130
  • But view me rightly, you will see no more
  • Than a poor female, willing to be poor;
  • Happy indeed, but not in books nor flowers,
  • Not in fair dreams, indulged in earlier hours,
  • Of never-tasted joys--such visions shun,
  • My youthful friend, nor scorn the farmer’s son.”
  • “Nay,” said the damsel, nothing pleased to see
  • A friend’s advice could like a father’s be;
  • “Bless’d in your cottage, you must surely smile
  • At those who live in our detested style. 140
  • To my Lucinda’s sympathizing heart
  • Could I my prospects and my griefs impart,
  • She would console me; but I dare not show
  • Ills that would wound her tender soul to know:
  • And I confess, it shocks my pride to tell
  • The secrets of the prison where I dwell;
  • For that dear maiden would be shock’d to feel
  • The secrets I should shudder to reveal;
  • When told her friend was by a parent ask’d,
  • ‘Fed you the swine?’--Good heav’n! how I am task’d! 150
  • What! can you smile? Ah! smile not at the grief
  • That woos your pity and demands relief.”
  • “Trifles, my love; you take a false alarm;
  • Think, I beseech you, better of the farm:
  • Duties in every state demand your care,
  • And light are those that will require it there:
  • Fix on the youth a favouring eye, and these,
  • To him pertaining, or as his, will please.”
  • “What words,” the lass replied, “offend my ear!
  • Try you my patience? Can you be sincere? 160
  • And am I told a willing hand to give
  • To a rude farmer, and with rustic live?
  • Far other fate was yours--some gentle youth
  • Admired your beauty, and avow’d his truth;
  • The power of love prevail’d, and freely both
  • Gave the fond heart, and pledged the binding oath;
  • And then the rivals’ plot, the parent’s power,
  • And jealous fears, drew on the happy hour:
  • Ah! let not memory lose the blissful view,
  • But fairly show what love has done for you.” 170
  • “Agreed, my daughter; what my heart has known
  • Of love’s strange power shall be with frankness shown:
  • But let me warn you, that experience finds
  • Few of the scenes that lively hope designs.”--
  • “Mysterious all,” said Nancy; “you, I know,
  • Have suffer’d much; now deign the grief to show--
  • I am your friend, and so prepare my heart
  • In all your sorrows to receive a part.”
  • The widow answer’d: “I had once, like you,
  • Such thoughts of love; no dream is more untrue. 180
  • You judge it fated and decreed to dwell }
  • In youthful hearts, which nothing can expel, }
  • A passion doom’d to reign, and irresistible. }
  • The struggling mind, when once subdued, in vain
  • Rejects the fury or defies the pain;
  • The strongest reason fails the flame t’ allay,
  • And resolution droops and faints away:
  • Hence, when the destined lovers meet, they prove
  • At once the force of this all-powerful love;
  • Each from that period feels the mutual smart, 190
  • Nor seeks to cure it--heart is changed for heart;
  • Nor is there peace till they delighted stand,
  • And, at the altar, hand is join’d to hand.
  • “Alas! my child, there are who, dreaming so,
  • Waste their fresh youth, and waking feel the wo;
  • There is no spirit sent the heart to move
  • With such prevailing and alarming love;
  • Passion to reason will submit--or why
  • Should wealthy maids the poorest swains deny?
  • Or how could classes and degrees create 200
  • The slightest bar to such resistless fate?
  • Yet high and low, you see, forbear to mix;
  • No beggars’ eyes the heart of kings transfix;
  • And who but am’rous peers or nobles sigh
  • When titled beauties pass triumphant by?
  • For reason wakes, proud wishes to reprove;
  • You cannot hope, and therefore dare not love:
  • All would be safe, did we at first inquire--
  • ‘Does reason sanction what our hearts desire?’
  • But, quitting precept, let example show 210
  • What joys from love uncheck’d by prudence flow.
  • “A youth my father in his office placed,
  • Of humble fortune, but with sense and taste;
  • But he was thin and pale, had downcast looks;
  • He studied much, and pored upon his books:
  • Confused he was when seen, and, when he saw
  • Me or my sisters, would in haste withdraw;
  • And had this youth departed with the year,
  • His loss had cost us neither sigh nor tear.
  • “But with my father still the youth remain’d, 220
  • And more reward and kinder notice gain’d:
  • He often, reading, to the garden stray’d,
  • Where I by books or musing was delay’d;
  • This to discourse in summer evenings led,
  • Of these same evenings, or of what we read.
  • On such occasions we were much alone;
  • But, save the look, the manner, and the tone,
  • (These might have meaning,) all that we discuss’d
  • We could with pleasure to a parent trust.
  • “At length ’twas friendship--and my friend and I 230
  • Said we were happy, and began to sigh;
  • My sisters first, and then my father, found
  • That we were wandering o’er enchanted ground;
  • But he had troubles in his own affairs,
  • And would not bear addition to his cares.
  • With pity moved, yet angry, ‘Child,’ said he,
  • ‘Will you embrace contempt and beggary?
  • Can you endure to see each other cursed
  • By want, of every human wo the worst?
  • Warring for ever with distress, in dread 240
  • Either of begging or of wanting bread;
  • While poverty, with unrelenting force,
  • Will your own offspring from your love divorce;
  • They, through your folly, must be doom’d to pine,
  • And you deplore your passion, or resign;
  • For, if it die, what good will then remain?
  • And if it live, it doubles every pain.’”--
  • “But you were true,” exclaim’d the lass, “and fled }
  • The tyrant’s power who fill’d your soul with dread?”-- }
  • “But,” said the smiling friend, “he fill’d my mouth }
  • with bread; } 250
  • And in what other place that bread to gain
  • We long consider’d, and we sought in vain.
  • This was my twentieth year--at thirty-five
  • Our hope was fainter, yet our love alive;
  • So many years in anxious doubt had pass’d.”--
  • “Then,” said the damsel, “you were bless’d at last?”
  • A smile again adorn’d the widow’s face,
  • But soon a starting tear usurp’d its place.--
  • “Slow pass’d the heavy years, and each had more
  • Pains and vexations than the years before. 260
  • My father fail’d; his family was rent,
  • And to new states his grieving daughters sent;
  • Each to more thriving kindred found a way,
  • Guests without welcome--servants without pay;
  • Our parting hour was grievous; still I feel
  • The sad, sweet converse at our final meal:
  • Our father then reveal’d his former fears,
  • Cause of his sternness, and then join’d our tears;
  • Kindly he strove our feelings to repress,
  • But died, and left us heirs to his distress. 270
  • The rich, as humble friends, my sisters chose;
  • I with a wealthy widow sought repose;
  • Who with a chilling frown her friend received,
  • Bade me rejoice, and wonder’d that I grieved:
  • In vain my anxious lover tried his skill
  • To rise in life, he was dependent still;
  • We met in grief, nor can I paint the fears
  • Of these unhappy, troubled, trying years:
  • Our dying hopes and stronger fears between,
  • We felt no season peaceful or serene; 280
  • Our fleeting joys, like meteors in the night,
  • Shone on our gloom with inauspicious light;
  • And then domestic sorrows, till the mind,
  • Worn with distresses, to despair inclined;
  • Add too the ill that from the passion flows,
  • When its contemptuous frown the world bestows--
  • The peevish spirit caused by long delay,
  • When being gloomy we contemn the gay,
  • When, being wretched, we incline to hate
  • And censure others in a happier state; 290
  • Yet loving still, and still compell’d to move
  • In the sad labyrinth of ling’ring love:
  • While you, exempt from want, despair, alarm,
  • May wed--oh! take the farmer and the farm.”
  • “Nay,” said the nymph, “joy smiled on you at last!”
  • “Smiled for a moment,” she replied, “and pass’d:
  • My lover still the same dull means pursued,
  • Assistant call’d, but kept in servitude;
  • His spirits wearied in the prime of life,
  • By fears and wishes in eternal strife; 300
  • At length he urged impatient--‘Now consent;
  • With thee united, fortune may relent.’
  • I paused, consenting; but a friend arose,
  • Pleased a fair view, though distant, to disclose;
  • From the rough ocean we beheld a gleam
  • Of joy, as transient as the joys we dream;
  • By lying hopes deceived, my friend retired,
  • And sail’d--was wounded--reach’d us--and expired!
  • You shall behold his grave, and, when I die,
  • There--but ’tis folly--I request to lie.” 310
  • “Thus,” said the lass, “to joy you bade adieu!
  • But how a widow?--that cannot be true;
  • Or was it force, in some unhappy hour,
  • That placed you, grieving, in a tyrant’s power?”
  • “Force, my young friend, when forty years are fled,
  • Is what a woman seldom has to dread;
  • She needs no brazen locks nor guarding walls,
  • And seldom comes a lover, though she calls.
  • Yet moved by fancy, one approved my face,
  • Though time and tears had wrought it much disgrace. 320
  • “The man I married was sedate and meek,
  • And spoke of love as men in earnest speak;
  • Poor as I was, he ceaseless sought, for years,
  • A heart in sorrow and a face in tears;
  • That heart I gave not; and ’twas long before
  • I gave attention, and then nothing more;
  • But in my breast some grateful feeling rose
  • For one whose love so sad a subject chose;
  • Till long delaying, fearing to repent,
  • But grateful still, I gave a cold assent. 330
  • “Thus we were wed; no fault had I to find,
  • And he but one; my heart could not be kind:
  • Alas! of every early hope bereft,
  • There was no fondness in my bosom left;
  • So had I told him, but had told in vain,
  • He lived but to indulge me and complain.
  • His was this cottage, he inclosed this ground,
  • And planted all these blooming shrubs around;
  • He to my room these curious trifles brought,
  • And with assiduous love my pleasure sought; 340
  • He lived to please me, and I oft-times strove
  • Smiling, to thank his unrequited love;
  • ‘Teach me,’ he cried, ‘that pensive mind to ease,
  • For all my pleasure is the hope to please.’
  • “Serene, though heavy, were the days we spent,
  • Yet kind each word, and gen’rous each intent;
  • But his dejection lessen’d every day,
  • And to a placid kindness died away.
  • In tranquil ease we pass’d our latter years,
  • By griefs untroubl’d, unassail’d by fears. 350
  • “Let not romantic views your bosom sway,
  • Yield to your duties, and their call obey:
  • Fly not a youth, frank, honest, and sincere;
  • Observe his merits, and his passion hear!
  • ’Tis true, no hero, but a farmer sues--
  • Slow in his speech, but worthy in his views;
  • With him you cannot that affliction prove,
  • That rends the bosom of the poor in love;
  • Health, comfort, competence, and cheerful days,
  • Your friends’ approval, and your father’s praise, 360
  • Will crown the deed, and you escape _their_ fate
  • Who plan so wildly, and are wise too late.”
  • The damsel heard; at first th’ advice was strange,
  • Yet wrought a happy, nay, a speedy change.
  • “I have no care,” she said, when next they met,
  • “But one may wonder he is silent yet;
  • He looks around him with his usual stare,
  • And utters nothing--not that I shall care.”
  • This pettish humour pleased th’ experienced friend--
  • None need despair, whose silence can offend; 370
  • “Should I,” resumed the thoughtful lass, “consent
  • To hear the man, the man may now repent.
  • Think you my sighs shall call him from the plough,
  • Or give one hint, that ‘You may woo me now?’”
  • “Persist, my love,” replied the friend, “and gain
  • A parent’s praise, _that_ cannot be in vain.”
  • The father saw the change, but not the cause,
  • And gave the alter’d maid his fond applause.
  • The coarser manners she in part removed,
  • In part endured, improving and improved; 380
  • She spoke of household works, she rose betimes,
  • And said neglect and indolence were crimes;
  • The various duties of their life she weigh’d,
  • And strict attention to her dairy paid;
  • The names of servants now familiar grew,
  • And fair Lucinda’s from her mind withdrew.
  • As prudent travellers for their ease assume
  • _Their_ modes and language to whose lands they come:
  • So to the farmer this fair lass inclined,
  • Gave to the business of the farm her mind; 390
  • To useful arts she turn’d her hand and eye;
  • And by her manners told him--“You may try.”
  • Th’ observing lover more attention paid,
  • With growing pleasure, to the alter’d maid;
  • He fear’d to lose her, and began to see
  • That a slim beauty might a helpmate be;
  • ’Twixt hope and fear he now the lass address’d,
  • And in his Sunday robe his love express’d.
  • She felt no chilling dread, no thrilling joy,
  • Nor was too quickly kind, too slowly coy; 400
  • But still she lent an unreluctant ear
  • To all the rural business of the year;
  • Till love’s strong hopes endured no more delay,
  • And Harry ask’d, and Nancy named the day.
  • “A happy change! my boy,” the father cried:
  • “How lost your sister all her school-day pride?”
  • The youth replied, “It is the widow’s deed:
  • The cure is perfect, and was wrought with speed.”--
  • “And comes there, boy, this benefit of books,
  • Of that smart dress, and of those dainty looks? 410
  • We must be kind--some offerings from the farm
  • To the white cot will speak our feelings warm;
  • Will show that people, when they know the fact,
  • Where they have judged severely, can retract.
  • Oft have I smil’d, when I beheld her pass
  • With cautious step, as if she hurt the grass;
  • Where if a snail’s retreat she chanced to storm,
  • She look’d as begging pardon of the worm;
  • And what, said I, still laughing at the view,
  • Have these weak creatures in the world to do? 420
  • But some are made for action, some to speak; }
  • And, while she looks so pitiful and meek, }
  • Her words are weighty, though her nerves are weak.” }
  • Soon told the village-bells the rite was done,
  • That join’d the school-bred miss and farmer’s son;
  • Her former habits some slight scandal raised,
  • But real worth was soon perceived and praised;
  • She, her neat taste imparted to the farm,
  • And he, th’ improving skill and vigorous arm.
  • TALE VIII.
  • _THE MOTHER._
  • What though you have beauty,
  • Must you be therefore proud and pitiless?
  • _As You Like It_, Act III. Scene 5.
  • I would not marry her, though she were endow’d with all that Adam had
  • left him before he transgress’d.
  • _Much Ado about Nothing_, Act II. Scene 1.
  • Wilt thou love such a woman? What! to make thee an instrument, and
  • play false strains upon thee!--Not to be endured.
  • _As You Like It_, Act IV. Scene 3.
  • Your son,
  • As mad in folly, lack’d the sense to know
  • Her estimation [home].
  • _All’s Well that Ends Well_, Act V, Scene 3.
  • He [lost] a wife
  • . . . whose words all ears took captive,
  • Whose dear perfection, hearts that scorn’d to serve
  • Humbly call’d mistress. . . .
  • Be this sweet Helen’s knell.
  • _All’s Well that Ends Well_, Act V. Scene 3.
  • TALE VIII.
  • _THE MOTHER._
  • There was a worthy, but a simple pair,
  • Who nursed a daughter, fairest of the fair.
  • Sons they had lost, and she alone remain’d,
  • Heir to the kindness they had all obtain’d;
  • Heir to the fortune they design’d for all,
  • Nor had th’ allotted portion then been small;
  • But now, by fate enrich’d with beauty rare,
  • They watch’d their treasure with peculiar care.
  • The fairest features they could early trace, }
  • And, blind with love, saw merit in her face-- } 10
  • Saw virtue, wisdom, dignity, and grace; }
  • And Dorothea, from her infant years,
  • Gain’d all her wishes from their pride or fears;
  • She wrote a billet, and a novel read,
  • And with her fame her vanity was fed;
  • Each word, each look, each action was a cause
  • For flattering wonder, and for fond applause;
  • She rode or danced, and ever glanced around,
  • Seeking for praise, and smiling when she found.
  • The yielding pair to her petitions gave 20
  • An humble friend to be a civil slave;
  • Who for a poor support herself resign’d
  • To the base toil of a dependent mind.
  • By nature cold, our heiress stoop’d to art,
  • To gain the credit of a tender heart;
  • Hence at her door must suppliant paupers stand,
  • To bless the bounty of her beauteous hand.
  • And now, her education all complete,
  • She talk’d of virtuous love and union sweet;
  • She was indeed by no soft passion moved, 30
  • But wish’d, with all her soul, to be beloved.
  • Here on the favour’d beauty fortune smiled;
  • Her chosen husband was a man so mild,
  • So humbly temper’d, so intent to please, }
  • It quite distress’d her to remain at ease, }
  • Without a cause to sigh, without pretence to tease. }
  • She tried his patience in a thousand modes,
  • And tired it not upon the roughest roads.
  • Pleasure she sought, and, disappointed, sigh’d
  • For joys, she said, “to her alone denied;” 40
  • And she was “sure her parents, if alive,
  • Would many comforts for their child contrive.”
  • The gentle husband bade her name him one;--
  • “No--that,” she answer’d, “should for her be done;
  • How could she say what pleasures were around?
  • But she was certain many might be found.”--
  • “Would she some sea-port, Weymouth, Scarborough, grace?”--
  • “He knew she hated every watering-place.”--
  • “The town?”--“What! now ’twas empty, joyless, dull?”
  • --“In winter?”--“No; she liked it worse when full.” 50
  • She talk’d of building--“Would she plan a room?”--
  • “No! she could live, as he desired, in gloom.”--
  • “Call then our friends and neighbours?”--“He might call, }
  • And they might come and fill his ugly hall; }
  • A noisy vulgar set, he knew she scorn’d them all.”-- }
  • “Then, might their two dear girls the time employ,
  • And their improvement yield a solid joy?”--
  • “Solid indeed! and heavy--oh! the bliss
  • Of teaching letters to a lisping Miss!”--
  • “My dear, my gentle Dorothea, say, 60
  • Can I oblige you?”--“You may go away.”
  • Twelve heavy years this patient soul sustain’d }
  • This wasp’s attacks, and then her praise obtain’d, }
  • Graved on a marble tomb, where he at peace remain’d. }
  • Two daughters wept their loss: the one a child
  • With a plain face, strong sense, and temper mild,
  • Who keenly felt the mother’s angry taunt,
  • “Thou art the image of thy pious aunt.”
  • Long time had Lucy wept her slighted face,
  • And then began to smile at her disgrace. 70
  • Her father’s sister, who the world had seen
  • Near sixty years when Lucy saw sixteen,
  • Begg’d the plain girl: the gracious mother smiled,
  • And freely gave her grieved but passive child;
  • And with her elder-born, the [beauty-bless’d,]
  • This parent rested, if such minds can rest.
  • No miss her waxen babe could so admire,
  • Nurse with such care, or with such pride attire;
  • They were companions meet, with equal mind,
  • Bless’d with one love, and to one point inclined: 80
  • Beauty to keep, adorn, increase, and guard,
  • Was their sole care, and had its full reward.
  • In rising splendor with the one it reign’d, }
  • And in the other was by care sustain’d, }
  • The daughter’s charms increased, the parent’s yet remain’d.-- }
  • Leave we these ladies to their daily care,
  • To see how meekness and discretion fare.
  • A village maid, unvex’d by want or love,
  • Could not with more delight than Lucy move;
  • The village-lark, high mounted in the spring, 90
  • Could not with purer joy than Lucy sing;
  • Her cares all light, her pleasures all sincere,
  • Her duty joy, and her companion dear;
  • In tender friendship and in true respect
  • Lived aunt and niece, no flattery, no neglect--
  • They read, walk’d, visited--together pray’d,
  • Together slept the matron and the maid.
  • There was such goodness, such pure nature seen
  • In Lucy’s looks, a manner so serene;
  • Such harmony in motion, speech, and air, 100
  • That without fairness she was more than fair;
  • Had more than beauty in each speaking grace,
  • That lent their cloudless glory to the face;
  • Where mild good sense in placid looks were shown,
  • And felt in every bosom but her own.
  • The one presiding feature in her mind,
  • Was the pure meekness of a will resign’d;
  • A tender spirit, freed from all pretence
  • Of wit, and pleased in mild benevolence;
  • Bless’d in protecting fondness she reposed, 110
  • With every wish indulged though undisclosed;
  • But love, like zephyr on the limpid lake, }
  • Was now the bosom of the maid to shake, }
  • And in that gentle mind a gentle strife to make. }
  • Among their chosen friends, a favour’d few,
  • The aunt and niece a youthful rector knew;
  • Who, though a younger brother, might address
  • A younger sister, fearless of success.
  • His friends, a lofty race, their native pride
  • At first display’d, and their assent denied; 120
  • But, pleased such virtues and such love to trace,
  • They own’d she would adorn the loftiest race.
  • The aunt, a mother’s caution to supply,
  • Had watch’d the youthful priest with jealous eye;
  • And, anxious for her charge, had view’d unseen
  • The cautious life that keeps the conscience clean.
  • In all she found him all she wish’d to find,
  • With slight exception of a lofty mind:
  • A certain manner that express’d desire,
  • To be received as brother to the ’squire. 130
  • Lucy’s meek eye had beam’d with many a tear,
  • Lucy’s soft heart had beat with many a fear,
  • Before he told (although his looks, she thought,
  • Had oft confess’d) that he her favour sought;
  • But when he kneel’d, (she wish’d him not to kneel,)
  • And spoke the fears and hopes that lovers feel;
  • When too the prudent aunt herself confess’d,
  • Her wishes on the gentle youth would rest;
  • The maiden’s eye with tender passion beam’d,
  • She dwelt with fondness on the life she schemed-- 140
  • The household cares, the soft and lasting ties
  • Of love, with all his binding charities;
  • Their village taught, consoled, assisted, fed,
  • Till the young zealot tears of pleasure shed.
  • But would her mother? Ah! she fear’d it wrong
  • To have indulged these forward hopes so long;
  • Her mother loved, but was not used to grant
  • Favours so freely as her gentle aunt.--
  • Her gentle aunt, with smiles that angels wear,
  • Dispell’d her Lucy’s apprehensive tear: 150
  • Her prudent foresight the request had made
  • To one whom none could govern, few persuade;
  • She doubted much if one in earnest woo’d
  • A girl with not a single charm endued;
  • The sister’s nobler views she then declared,
  • And what small sum for Lucy could be spared;
  • “If more than this the foolish priest requires,
  • Tell him,” she wrote, “to check his vain desires.”
  • At length, with many a cold expression mix’d,
  • With many a sneer on girls so fondly fix’d, 160
  • There came a promise--should they not repent, }
  • But take with grateful minds the portion meant, }
  • And wait the sister’s day--the mother might consent. }
  • And here, might pitying hope o’er truth prevail,
  • Or love o’er fortune, we would end our tale:
  • For who more bless’d than youthful pair removed
  • From fear of want--by mutual friends approved--
  • Short time to wait, and in that time to live
  • With all the pleasures hope and fancy give;
  • Their equal passion raised on just esteem, 170
  • When reason sanctions all that love can dream?
  • Yes! reason sanctions what stern fate denies:
  • The early prospect in the glory dies,
  • As the soft smiles on dying infants play
  • In their mild features, and then pass away.
  • The beauty died, ere she could yield her hand
  • In the high marriage by the mother plann’d:
  • Who grieved indeed, but found a vast relief
  • In a cold heart, that ever warr’d with grief.
  • Lucy was present when her sister died, 180
  • Heiress to duties that she ill supplied:
  • There were no mutual feelings, sister arts,
  • No kindred taste, nor intercourse of hearts;
  • When in the mirror play’d the matron’s smile,
  • The maiden’s thoughts were travelling all the while;
  • And, when desired to speak, she sigh’d to find
  • Her pause offended:--“Envy made her blind;
  • Tasteless she was, nor had a claim in life
  • Above the station of a rector’s wife;
  • Yet as an heiress, she must shun disgrace, 190
  • Although no heiress to her mother’s face:
  • It is your duty,” said th’ imperious dame, }
  • “(Advanced your fortune) to advance your name, }
  • And with superior rank, superior offers claim. }
  • Your sister’s lover, when his sorrows die,
  • May look upon you, and for favour sigh;
  • Nor can you offer a reluctant hand;
  • His birth is noble, and his seat is grand.”
  • Alarm’d was Lucy, was in tears--“A fool!
  • Was she a child in love?--a miss at school? 200
  • Doubts any mortal, if a change of state
  • Dissolves all claims and ties of earlier date?”
  • The rector doubted, for he came to mourn
  • A sister dead, and with a wife return.
  • Lucy with heart unchanged received the youth,
  • True in herself, confiding in his truth;
  • But own’d her mother’s change: the haughty dame
  • Pour’d strong contempt upon the youthful flame;
  • She firmly vow’d her purpose to pursue,
  • Judged her own cause, and bade the youth adieu! 210
  • The lover begg’d, insisted, urged his pain;
  • His brother wrote to threaten and complain;
  • Her sister, reasoning, proved the promise made,
  • Lucy, appealing to a parent, pray’d;
  • But all opposed th’ event that she design’d,
  • And all in vain--she never changed her mind;
  • But coldly answer’d in her wonted way,
  • That she “would rule, and Lucy must obey.”
  • With peevish fear, she saw her health decline,
  • And cried, “Oh! monstrous, for a man to pine; 220
  • But if your foolish heart must yield to love,
  • Let him possess it whom I now approve;
  • This is my pleasure.”--Still the rector came
  • With larger offers and with bolder claim;
  • But the stern lady would attend no more--
  • She frown’d, and rudely pointed to the door;
  • Whate’er he wrote, he saw unread return’d,
  • And he, indignant, the dishonour spurn’d;
  • Nay, fix’d suspicion where he might confide,
  • And sacrificed his passion to his pride. 230
  • Lucy, meantime, though threaten’d and distress’d,
  • Against her marriage made a strong protest.
  • All was domestic war: the aunt rebell’d
  • Against the sovereign will, and was expell’d;
  • And every power was tried and every art,
  • To bend to falsehood one determined heart;
  • Assail’d, in patience it received the shock,
  • Soft as the wave, unshaken as the rock;
  • But while th’ unconquer’d soul endures the storm
  • Of angry fate, it preys upon the form. 240
  • With conscious virtue she resisted still,
  • And conscious love gave vigour to her will;
  • But Lucy’s trial was at hand; with joy
  • The mother cried--“Behold your constant boy--
  • Thursday--was married--take the paper, sweet,
  • And read the conduct of your reverend cheat;
  • See with what pomp of coaches, in what crowd
  • The creature married--of his falsehood proud!
  • False, did I say?--at least no whining fool;
  • And thus will hopeless passions ever cool: 250
  • But shall his bride your single state reproach?
  • No! give him crowd for crowd, and coach for coach.
  • Oh! you retire; reflect then, gentle miss,
  • And gain some spirit in a cause like this.”
  • Some spirit Lucy gain’d; a steady soul,
  • Defying all persuasion, all control:
  • In vain reproach, derision, threats were tried; }
  • The constant mind all outward force defied, }
  • By vengeance vainly urged, in vain assail’d by pride. }
  • Fix’d in her purpose, perfect in her part, 260
  • She felt the courage of a wounded heart;
  • The world receded from her rising view,
  • When Heaven approach’d as earthly things withdrew;
  • Not strange before, for in the days of love,
  • Joy, hope, and pleasure, she had thoughts above;
  • Pious when most of worldly prospects fond,
  • When they best pleased her she could look beyond;
  • Had the young priest a faithful lover died,
  • Something had been her bosom to divide;
  • Now Heaven had all, for in her holiest views 270
  • She saw the matron whom she fear’d to lose;
  • While from her parent the dejected maid
  • Forced the unpleasant thought, or thinking pray’d.
  • Surprised, the mother saw the languid frame,
  • And felt indignant, yet forbore to blame.
  • Once with a frown she cried, “And do you mean
  • To die of love--the folly of fifteen?”
  • But as her anger met with no reply,
  • She let the gentle girl in quiet die;
  • And to her sister wrote, impell’d by pain, 280
  • “Come quickly, Martha, or you come in vain.”
  • Lucy meantime profess’d with joy sincere,
  • That nothing held, employ’d, engaged her here.--
  • “I am an humble actor, doom’d to play
  • A part obscure, and then to glide away;
  • Incurious how the great or happy shine,
  • Or who have parts obscure and sad as mine;
  • In its best prospect I but wish’d, for life,
  • To be th’ assiduous, gentle, useful wife;
  • That lost, with wearied mind, and spirit poor, 290
  • I drop my efforts, and can act no more;
  • With growing joy I feel my spirits tend
  • To that last scene where all my duties end.”
  • Hope, ease, delight, the thoughts of dying gave,
  • Till Lucy spoke with fondness of the grave;
  • She smiled with wasted form, but spirit firm,
  • And said, she left but little for the worm.
  • As toll’d the bell, “There’s one,” she said, “hath press’d
  • Awhile before me to the bed of rest;”
  • And she beside her with attention spread 300
  • The decorations of the maiden dead.
  • While quickly thus the mortal part declined,
  • The happiest visions fill’d the active mind;
  • A soft, religious melancholy gain’d
  • Entire possession, and for ever reign’d;
  • On holy writ her mind reposing dwelt,
  • She saw the wonders, she the mercies felt;
  • Till in a bless’d and glorious reverie, }
  • She seem’d the Saviour as on earth to see, }
  • And, fill’d with love divine, th’ attending }
  • friend to be; } 310
  • Or she, who trembling, yet confiding, stole
  • Near to the garment, touch’d it, and was whole;
  • When, such th’ intenseness of the working thought,
  • On her it seem’d the very deed was wrought;
  • She the glad patient’s fear and rapture found,
  • The holy transport, and the healing wound;
  • This was so fix’d, so grafted in the heart,
  • That she adopted, nay became, the part.
  • But one chief scene was present to her sight:
  • Her Saviour resting in the tomb by night; 320
  • Her fever rose, and still her wedded mind
  • Was to that scene, that hallow’d cave, confined--
  • Where in the shade of death the body laid,
  • There watch’d the spirit of the wandering maid;
  • Her looks were fix’d, entranced, illumed, serene,
  • In the still glory of the midnight scene;
  • There at her Saviour’s feet, in visions bless’d,
  • Th’ enraptured maid a sacred joy possess’d;
  • In patience waiting for the first-born ray
  • Of that all-glorious and triumphant day. 330
  • To this idea all her soul she gave,
  • Her mind reposing by the sacred grave;
  • Then sleep would seal the eye, the vision close,
  • And steep the solemn thoughts in brief repose.
  • Then grew the soul serene, and all its powers,
  • Again restored illumed the dying hours;
  • But reason dwelt where fancy stray’d before,
  • And the mind wander’d from its views no more;
  • Till death approach’d, when every look express’d
  • A sense of bliss, till every sense had rest. 340
  • The mother lives, and has enough to buy
  • Th’ attentive ear and the submissive eye
  • Of abject natures--these are daily told,
  • How triumph’d beauty in the days of old;
  • How, by her window seated, crowds have cast
  • Admiring glances, wondering as they pass’d;
  • How from her carriage as she stepp’d to pray,
  • Divided ranks would humbly make her way;
  • And how each voice in the astonish’d throng
  • Pronounced her peerless as she moved along. 350
  • Her picture then the greedy dame displays;
  • Touch’d by no shame, she now demands its praise;
  • In her tall mirror then she shows a face,
  • Still coldly fair with unaffecting grace;
  • These she compares: “It has the form,” she cries,
  • “But wants the air, the spirit, and the eyes;
  • This, as a likeness, is correct and true,
  • But there alone the living grace we view.”
  • This said, th’ applauding voice the dame required,
  • And, gazing, slowly from the glass retired. 360
  • TALE IX.
  • _ARABELLA._
  • Thrice blessed they that master so their blood--
  • [. . . . . . . .]
  • But earthly happier is the rose distill’d,
  • Than that which, withering on the virgin thorn,
  • Grows, lives, and dies in single blessedness.
  • _Midsummer Night’s Dream_, Act I. Scene 1.
  • I [something] do excuse the thing I hate,
  • For his advantage whom I dearly love.
  • _Measure for Measure_, Act II. Scene 4.
  • Contempt, farewell! and maiden pride, adieu!
  • _Much Ado about Nothing_, Act III. Scene 1.
  • TALE IX.
  • _ARABELLA._
  • Of a fair town, where Doctor Rack was guide,
  • His only daughter was the boast and pride;
  • Wise Arabella--yet not wise alone,
  • She like a bright and polish’d brilliant shone;
  • Her father own’d her for his prop and stay,
  • Able to guide, yet willing to obey;
  • Pleased with her learning while discourse could please,
  • And with her love in languor and disease.
  • To every mother were her virtues known,
  • And to their daughters as a pattern shown; 10
  • Who in her youth had all that age requires,
  • And, with her prudence, all that youth admires.
  • These odious praises made the damsels try
  • Not to obtain such merits, but deny;
  • For, whatsoever wise mammas might say,
  • To guide a daughter this was not the way;
  • From such applause disdain and anger rise,
  • And envy lives where emulation dies.
  • In all his strength contends the noble horse
  • With one who just precedes him on the course; 20
  • But when the rival flies too far before,
  • His spirit fails, and he attempts no more.
  • This reasoning maid, above her sex’s dread,
  • Had dared to read, and dared to say she read;
  • Not the last novel, not the new-born play;
  • Not the mere trash and scandal of the day;
  • But (though her young companions felt the shock)
  • She studied Berkeley, Bacon, Hobbes, and Locke:
  • Her mind within the maze of history dwelt,
  • And of the moral muse the beauty felt; 30
  • The merits of the Roman page she knew,
  • And could converse with Moore and Montagu:
  • Thus she became the wonder of the town,
  • From that she reap’d, to that she gave, renown;
  • And strangers, coming, all were taught t’ admire
  • The learned lady, and the lofty spire.
  • Thus fame in public fix’d the maid, where all
  • Might throw their darts, and see the idol fall;
  • A hundred arrows came with vengeance keen,
  • From tongues envenom’d, and from arms unseen; 40
  • A thousand eyes were fix’d upon the place,
  • That, if she fell, she might not fly disgrace.
  • But malice vainly throws the poison’d dart,
  • Unless our frailty shows the peccant part;
  • And Arabella still preserved her name
  • Untouch’d, and shone with undisputed fame;
  • Her very notice some respect would cause,
  • And her esteem was honour and applause.
  • Men she avoided--not in childish fear,
  • As if she thought some savage foe was near; 50
  • Not as a prude, who hides that man should seek,
  • Or who by silence hints that they should speak;
  • But with discretion all the sex she view’d,
  • Ere yet engaged, pursuing, or pursued;
  • Ere love had made her to his vices blind,
  • Or hid the favourite’s failings from her mind.
  • Thus was the picture of the man portray’d,
  • By merit destined for so rare a maid;
  • At whose request she might exchange her state,
  • Or still be happy in a virgin’s fate. 60
  • He must be one with manners like her own,
  • His life unquestion’d, his opinions known;
  • His stainless virtue must all tests endure,
  • His honour spotless, and his bosom pure;
  • She no allowance made for sex or times,
  • Of lax opinion--crimes were ever crimes;
  • No wretch forsaken must his frailty curse,
  • No spurious offspring drain his private purse:
  • He at all times his passions must command,
  • And yet possess--or be refused her hand. 70
  • All this without reserve the maiden told,
  • And some began to weigh the rector’s gold;
  • To ask what sum a prudent man might gain,
  • Who had such store of virtues to maintain?
  • A Doctor Campbell, north of Tweed, came forth,
  • Declared his passion, and proclaim’d his worth;
  • Not unapproved, for he had much to say
  • On every cause, and in a pleasant way;
  • Not all his trust was in a pliant tongue,
  • His form was good, and ruddy he, and young. 80
  • But, though the Doctor was a man of parts,
  • He read not deeply male or female hearts;
  • But judged that all whom he esteem’d as wise
  • Must think alike, though some assumed disguise;
  • That every reasoning Bramin, Christian, Jew,
  • Of all religions took their liberal view;
  • And of her own, no doubt, this learned maid
  • Denied the substance, and the forms obey’d;
  • And thus persuaded, he his thoughts express’d
  • Of her opinions, and his own profess’d: 90
  • “All states demand this aid, the vulgar need
  • Their priests and pray’rs, their sermons and their creed;
  • And those of stronger minds should never speak
  • (In his opinion) what might hurt the weak.
  • A man may smile, but still he should attend }
  • His hour at church, and be the church’s friend, }
  • What there he thinks conceal, and what he hears commend.” }
  • Frank was the speech, but heard with high disdain,
  • Nor had the Doctor leave to speak again;
  • A man who own’d, nay gloried in deceit, 100
  • “He might despise her, but he should not cheat.”
  • Then Vicar Holmes appear’d; he heard it said
  • That ancient men best pleased the prudent maid;
  • And true it was her ancient friends she loved;
  • Servants when old she favour’d and approved;
  • Age in her pious parents she revered,
  • And neighbours were by length of days endear’d;
  • But, if her husband too must ancient be,
  • The good old Vicar found it was not he.
  • On Captain Bligh her mind in balance hung-- 110
  • Though valiant, modest; and reserved, though young:
  • Against these merits must defects be set--
  • Though poor, imprudent; and though proud, in debt:
  • In vain the Captain close attention paid;
  • She found him wanting, whom she fairly weigh’d.
  • Then came a youth, and all their friends agreed,
  • That Edward Huntly was the man indeed;
  • Respectful duty he had paid awhile,
  • Then ask’d her hand, and had a gracious smile:
  • A lover now declared, he led the fair 120
  • To woods and fields, to visits and to pray’r;
  • Then whisper’d softly--“Will you name the day?”
  • She softly whisper’d--“If you love me, stay.”--
  • “Oh! try me not beyond my strength,” he cried;--
  • “Oh! be not weak,” the prudent maid replied;
  • “But by some trial your affection prove--
  • Respect and not impatience argues love;
  • And love no more is by impatience known,
  • Than Ocean’s depth is by its tempests shown.
  • He whom a weak and fond impatience sways, } 130
  • But for himself with all his fervour prays, }
  • And not the maid he woos, but his own will obeys; }
  • And will she love the being who prefers,
  • With so much ardour, his desire to hers?”
  • Young Edward grieved, but let not grief be seen;
  • He knew obedience pleased his fancy’s queen:
  • Awhile he waited, and then cried--“Behold!
  • The year advancing, be no longer cold!”
  • For she had promised--“Let the flowers appear,
  • And I will pass with thee the smiling year.” 140
  • Then pressing grew the youth; the more he press’d,
  • The less inclined the maid to his request:
  • “Let June arrive.”--Alas! when April came,
  • It brought a stranger, and the stranger, shame;
  • Nor could the lover from his house persuade
  • A stubborn lass whom he had mournful made;
  • Angry and weak, by thoughtless vengeance moved,
  • She told her story to the fair beloved;
  • In strongest words th’ unwelcome truth was shown,
  • To blight his prospects, careless of her own. 150
  • Our heroine grieved, but had too firm a heart
  • For him to soften, when she swore to part;
  • In vain his seeming penitence and pray’r,
  • His vows, his tears: she left him in despair.
  • His mother fondly laid her grief aside,
  • And to the reason of the nymph applied--
  • “It well becomes thee, lady, to appear,
  • But not to be, in very truth, severe;
  • Although the crime be odious in thy sight,
  • That daring sex is taught such things to slight: 160
  • His heart is thine, although it once was frail;
  • Think of his grief, and let his love prevail!--”
  • “Plead thou no more,” the lofty lass return’d;
  • “Forgiving woman is deceived and spurn’d.
  • Say that the crime is common--shall I take
  • A common man my wedded lord to make?
  • See! a weak woman by his arts betray’d,
  • An infant born his father to upbraid;
  • Shall I forgive his vileness, take his name,
  • Sanction his error, and partake his shame? 170
  • No! this assent would kindred frailty prove,
  • A love for him would be a vicious love:
  • Can a chaste maiden secret counsel hold
  • With one whose crime by every mouth is told?
  • Forbid it spirit, prudence, virtuous pride;
  • He must despise me, were he not denied.
  • The way from vice the erring mind to win }
  • Is with presuming sinners to begin, }
  • And show, by scorning them, a just contempt for sin.” }
  • The youth, repulsed, to one more mild convey’d 180
  • His heart, and smiled on the remorseless maid;
  • The maid, remorseless in her pride, the while
  • Despised the insult, and return’d the smile.
  • First to admire, to praise her, and defend,
  • Was (now in years advanced) a virgin friend:
  • Much she preferr’d, she cried, a single state,
  • “It was her choice”--it surely was her fate;
  • And much it pleased her in the train to view
  • A maiden vot’ress, wise and lovely too.
  • Time to the yielding mind his change imparts, 190
  • He varies notions, and he alters hearts;
  • ’Tis right, ’tis just to feel contempt for vice,
  • But he that shows it may be over-nice:
  • There are who feel, when young, the false sublime,
  • And proudly love to show disdain for crime;
  • To whom the future will new thoughts supply,
  • The pride will soften, and the scorn will die;
  • Nay, where they still the vice itself condemn,
  • They bear the vicious, and consort with them.
  • Young Captain Grove, when one had changed his side, 200
  • Despised the venal turn-coat, and defied;
  • Old Colonel Grove now shakes him by the hand,
  • Though he who bribes may still his vote command.
  • Why would not Ellen to Belinda speak,
  • When she had flown to London for a week,
  • And then return’d, to every friend’s surprise,
  • With twice the spirit, and with half the size?
  • She spoke not then--but, after years had flown,
  • A better friend had Ellen never known:
  • Was it the lady her mistake had seen? 210
  • Or had she also such a journey been?
  • No: ’twas the gradual change in human hearts,
  • That time, in commerce with the world, imparts;
  • That on the roughest temper throws disguise,
  • And steals from virtue her asperities.
  • The young and ardent, who with glowing zeal
  • Felt wrath for trifles, and were proud to feel,
  • Now find those trifles all the mind engage,
  • To soothe dull hours, and cheat the cares of age;
  • As young Zelinda, in her quaker-dress, 220
  • Disdain’d each varying fashion’s vile excess,
  • And now her friends on old Zelinda gaze,
  • Pleased in rich silks and orient gems to blaze.
  • Changes like these ’tis folly to condemn,
  • So virtue yields not, nor is changed with them.
  • Let us proceed:--Twelve brilliant years were past,
  • Yet each with less of glory than the last;
  • Whether these years to this fair virgin gave
  • A softer mind--effect they often have;
  • Whether the virgin-state was not so bless’d 230
  • As that good maiden in her zeal profess’d;
  • Or whether lovers falling from her train,
  • Gave greater price to those she could retain,
  • Is all unknown;--but Arabella now
  • Was kindly listening to a merchant’s vow;
  • Who offer’d terms so fair, against his love
  • To strive was folly; so she never strove.--
  • Man in his earlier days we often find
  • With a too easy and unguarded mind;
  • But, by increasing years and prudence taught, 240
  • He grows reserved, and locks up every thought.
  • Not thus the maiden, for in blooming youth
  • She hides her thought, and guards the tender truth;
  • This, when no longer young, no more she hides,
  • But frankly in the favour’d swain confides.
  • Man, stubborn man, is like the growing tree,
  • That longer standing, still will harder be;
  • And like its fruit the virgin, first austere,
  • Then kindly softening with the ripening year.
  • Now was the lover urgent, and the kind 250
  • And yielding lady to his suit inclined:
  • “A little time, my friend, is just, is right;
  • We must be decent in our neighbours’ sight:”
  • Still she allow’d him of his hopes to speak,
  • And in compassion took off week by week;
  • Till few remain’d, when, wearied with delay,
  • She kindly meant to take off day by day.
  • That female friend who gave our virgin praise
  • For flying man and all his treacherous ways,
  • Now heard with mingled anger, shame and fear, 260
  • Of one accepted, and a wedding near;
  • But she resolved again with friendly zeal
  • To make the maid her scorn of wedlock feel;
  • For she was grieved to find her work undone,
  • And like a sister mourn’d the failing nun.
  • Why are these gentle maidens prone to make
  • Their sister-doves the tempting world forsake?
  • Why all their triumph when a maid disdains
  • The tyrant-sex, and scorns to wear its chains?
  • Is it pure joy to see a sister flown 270
  • From the false pleasures they themselves have known?
  • Or do they, as the call-birds in the cage,
  • Try, in pure envy, others to engage;
  • And therefore paint their native woods and groves,
  • As scenes of dangerous joys and naughty loves?
  • Strong was the maiden’s hope; her friend was proud,
  • And had her notions to the world avow’d;
  • And, could she find the Merchant weak and frail,
  • With power to prove it, then she must prevail;
  • For she aloud would publish his disgrace, 280
  • And save his victim from a man so base.
  • When all inquiries had been duly made,
  • Came the kind friend her burthen to unlade:--
  • “Alas! my dear! not all our care and art
  • Can tread the maze of man’s deceitful heart:
  • Look not surprise--nor let resentment swell
  • Those lovely features, all will yet be well;
  • And thou, from love’s and man’s deceptions free,
  • Wilt dwell in virgin-state, and walk to heav’n with me.”
  • The maiden frown’d, and then conceived “that wives 290
  • Could walk as well, and lead as holy lives
  • As angry prudes who scorn’d the marriage-chain,
  • Or luckless maids who sought it still in vain.”
  • The friend was vex’d--she paused, at length she cried:
  • “Know your own danger, then your lot decide;
  • That traitor Beswell, while he seeks your hand,
  • Has, I affirm, a wanton at command;
  • A slave, a creature from a foreign place,
  • The nurse and mother of a spurious race;
  • Brown, ugly bastards--(Heaven the word forgive, 300
  • And the deed punish!)--in his cottage live;
  • To town if business calls him, there he stays
  • In sinful pleasures wasting countless days;
  • Nor doubt the facts, for I can witness call
  • For every crime, and prove them one and all.”
  • Here ceased th’ informer; Arabella’s look
  • Was like a school-boy’s puzzled by his book;
  • Intent she cast her eyes upon the floor,
  • Paused--then replied--
  • “I wish to know no more:
  • I question not your motive, zeal, or love, 310
  • But must decline such dubious points to prove.--
  • All is not true, I judge, for who can guess
  • Those deeds of darkness men with care suppress?
  • He brought a slave perhaps to England’s coast,
  • And made her free; it is our country’s boast!
  • And she perchance too grateful--good and ill
  • Were sown at first, and grow together still;
  • The colour’d infants on the village-green,
  • What are they more than we have often seen?
  • Children half-clothed who round their village stray, } 320
  • In sun or rain, now starved, now beaten, they }
  • Will the dark colour of their fate betray; }
  • Let us in Christian love for all account,
  • And then behold to what such tales amount.”
  • “His heart is evil,” said th’ impatient friend--
  • “My duty bids me try that heart to mend,”
  • Replied the virgin--“We may be too nice,
  • And lose a soul in our contempt of vice;
  • If false the charge, I then shall show regard
  • For a good man, and be his just reward; 330
  • And what for virtue can I better do
  • Than to reclaim him, if the charge be true?”
  • She spoke, nor more her holy work delay’d;
  • ’Twas time to lend an erring mortal aid:
  • “The noblest way,” she judged, “a soul to win, }
  • Was with an act of kindness to begin, }
  • To make the sinner sure, and then t’ attack the sin[5].” }
  • [5] As the author’s purpose in this Tale may be mistaken, he wishes
  • to observe, that conduct like that of the lady’s here described must
  • be meritorious or censurable just as the motives to it are pure or
  • selfish; that these motives may in a great measure be concealed from
  • the mind of the agent; and that we often take credit to our virtue
  • for actions which spring originally from our tempers, inclinations,
  • or our indifference. It cannot therefore be improper, much less
  • immoral, to give an instance of such self-deception.
  • TALE X.
  • _THE LOVER’S JOURNEY._
  • The sun is in the [heaven], and the proud day,
  • Attended with the pleasures of the world,
  • Is all too wanton.
  • _King John_, Act III. Scene 3.
  • The lunatic, the lover, and the poet,
  • Are of imagination all compact.
  • _Midsummer Night’s Dream_, Act V. Scene 2.
  • Oh! how the spring of love resembleth
  • Th’ uncertain glory of an April day,
  • Which now shows all her beauty to the sun,
  • And by and by a cloud bears all away.
  • And happily I have arrived at last
  • Unto the wished haven of my bliss.
  • _Taming of the Shrew_, Act V. Scene 1.
  • TALE X.
  • _THE LOVER’S JOURNEY._
  • It is the soul that sees; the outward eyes }
  • Present the object, but the mind descries; }
  • And thence delight, disgust, or cool indiff’rence rise: }
  • When minds are joyful, then we look around,
  • And what is seen is all on fairy ground;
  • Again they sicken, and on every view
  • Cast their own dull and melancholy hue;
  • Or, if absorb’d by their peculiar cares,
  • The vacant eye on viewless matter glares,
  • Our feelings still upon our views attend, 10
  • And their own natures to the objects lend;
  • Sorrow and joy are in their influence sure,
  • Long as the passion reigns th’ effects endure;
  • But love in minds his various changes makes,
  • And clothes each object with the change he takes;
  • His light and shade on every view he throws,
  • And on each object, what he feels, bestows.
  • Fair was the morning, and the month was June,
  • When rose a lover; love awakens soon;
  • Brief his repose, yet much he dreamt the while 20
  • Of that day’s meeting, and his Laura’s smile;
  • Fancy and love that name assign’d to her,
  • Call’d Susan in the parish-register;
  • And he no more was John--his Laura gave
  • The name Orlando to her faithful slave.
  • Bright shone the glory of the rising day,
  • When the fond traveller took his favourite way;
  • He mounted gaily, felt his bosom light,
  • And all he saw was pleasing in his sight.
  • “Ye hours of expectation, quickly fly, 30
  • And bring on hours of blest reality;
  • When I shall Laura see, beside her stand,
  • Hear her sweet voice, and press her yielded hand.”
  • First o’er a barren heath beside the coast
  • Orlando rode, and joy began to boast.
  • “This neat low gorse,” said he, “with golden bloom,
  • Delights each sense, is beauty, is perfume;
  • And this gay ling, with all its purple flowers,
  • A man at leisure might admire for hours;
  • This green-fringed cup-moss has a scarlet tip, 40
  • That yields to nothing but my Laura’s lip;
  • And then how fine this herbage! men may say
  • A heath is barren; nothing is so gay:
  • Barren or bare to call such charming scene
  • Argues a mind possess’d by care and spleen.”
  • Onward he went, and fiercer grew the heat,
  • Dust rose in clouds before the horse’s feet;
  • For now he pass’d through lanes of burning sand,
  • Bounds to thin crops or yet uncultured land;
  • Where the dark poppy flourished on the dry 50
  • And sterile soil, and mock’d the thin-set rye.
  • “How lovely this!” the rapt Orlando said;
  • “With what delight is labouring man repaid!
  • The very lane has sweets that all admire,
  • The rambling suckling and the vigorous brier;
  • See! wholesome wormwood grows beside the way,
  • Where dew-press’d yet the dog-rose bends the spray;
  • Fresh herbs the fields, fair shrubs the banks adorn,
  • And snow-white bloom falls flaky from the thorn;
  • No fostering hand they need, no sheltering wall; 60
  • They spring uncultured and they bloom for all.”
  • The lover rode as hasty lovers ride,
  • And reach’d a common pasture wild and wide;
  • Small black-legg’d sheep devour with hunger keen
  • The meagre herbage, fleshless, lank, and lean;
  • Such o’er thy level turf, Newmarket! stray,
  • And there, with other _black-legs_ find their prey.
  • He saw some scatter’d hovels; turf was piled
  • In square brown stacks; a prospect bleak and wild!
  • A mill, indeed, was in the centre found, 70
  • With short sear herbage withering all around;
  • A smith’s black shed opposed a wright’s long shop,
  • And join’d an inn where humble travellers stop.
  • “Ay, this is Nature,” said the gentle ’squire;
  • “This ease, peace, pleasure--who would not admire?
  • With what delight these sturdy children play,
  • And joyful rustics at the close of day;
  • Sport follows labour, on this even space
  • Will soon commence the wrestling and the race;
  • Then will the village-maidens leave their home, 80
  • And to the dance with buoyant spirits come;
  • No affectation in their looks is seen,
  • Nor know they what disguise or flattery mean;
  • Nor aught to move an envious pang they see--
  • Easy their service, and their love is free;
  • Hence early springs that love, it long endures,
  • And life’s first comfort, while they live, ensures.
  • They the low roof and rustic comforts prize,
  • Nor cast on prouder mansions envying eyes;
  • Sometimes the news at yonder town they hear, 90
  • And learn what busier mortals feel and fear;
  • Secure themselves, although by tales amazed
  • Of towns bombarded and of cities razed;
  • As if they doubted, in their still retreat,
  • The very news that makes their quiet sweet,
  • And their days happy--happier only knows
  • He on whom Laura her regard bestows.”
  • On rode Orlando, counting all the while
  • The miles he pass’d and every coming mile;
  • Like all attracted things, he quicker flies, 100
  • The place approaching where th’ attraction lies;
  • When next appear’d a _dam_--so call the place--
  • Where lies a road confined in narrow space;
  • A work of labour, for on either side }
  • Is level fen, a prospect wild and wide, }
  • With dikes on either hand by ocean’s self supplied. }
  • Far on the right the distant sea is seen,
  • And salt the springs that feed the marsh between;
  • Beneath an ancient bridge, the straiten’d flood
  • Rolls through its sloping banks of slimy mud; 110
  • Near it a sunken boat resists the tide,
  • That frets and hurries to th’ opposing side;
  • The rushes sharp, that on the borders grow, }
  • Bend their brown flow’rets to the stream below, }
  • Impure in all its course, in all its progress slow: }
  • Here a grave Flora[6] scarcely deigns to bloom,
  • Nor wears a rosy blush, nor sheds perfume;
  • The few dull flowers that o’er the place are spread
  • Partake the nature of their fenny bed;
  • Here on its wiry stem, in rigid bloom, 120
  • Grows the salt lavender that lacks perfume;
  • Here the dwarf sallows creep, the septfoil harsh,
  • And the soft slimy mallow of the marsh;
  • Low on the ear the distant billows sound,
  • And just in view appears their stony bound;
  • No hedge nor tree conceals the glowing sun, }
  • Birds, save a wat’ry tribe, the district shun, }
  • Nor chirp among the reeds where bitter waters run. }
  • “Various as beauteous, Nature, is thy face,”
  • Exclaim’d Orlando: “all that grows has grace; 130
  • All are appropriate--bog, and marsh, and fen,
  • Are only poor to undiscerning men;
  • Here may the nice and curious eye explore
  • How Nature’s hand adorns the rushy moor;
  • Here the rare moss in secret shade is found,
  • Here the sweet myrtle of the shaking ground;
  • Beauties are these that from the view retire,
  • But well repay th’ attention they require;
  • For these my Laura will her home forsake,
  • And all the pleasures they afford partake.” 140
  • Again the country was enclosed, a wide
  • And sandy road has banks on either side;
  • Where, lo! a hollow on the left appear’d,
  • And there a gipsy-tribe their tent had rear’d;
  • ’Twas open spread, to catch the morning sun,
  • And they had now their early meal begun,
  • When two brown boys just left their grassy seat,
  • The early trav’ller with their pray’rs to greet.
  • While yet Orlando held his pence in hand,
  • He saw their sister on her duty stand; 150
  • Some twelve years old, demure, affected, sly,
  • Prepared the force of early powers to try;
  • Sudden a look of languor he descries,
  • And well-feign’d apprehension in her eyes;
  • Train’d but yet savage, in her speaking face
  • He mark’d the features of her vagrant race;
  • When a light laugh and roguish leer express’d
  • The vice implanted in her youthful breast.
  • Forth from the tent her elder brother came,
  • Who seem’d offended, yet forbore to blame 160
  • The young designer, but could only trace
  • The looks of pity in the trav’ller’s face;
  • Within, the father, who from fences nigh }
  • Had brought the fuel for the fire’s supply, }
  • Watch’d now the feeble blaze, and stood dejected by; }
  • On ragged rug, just borrow’d from the bed,
  • And by the hand of coarse indulgence fed,
  • In dirty patchwork negligently dress’d,
  • Reclined the wife, an infant at her breast;
  • In her wild face some touch of grace remain’d, 170
  • Of vigour palsied and of beauty stain’d;
  • Her bloodshot eyes on her unheeding mate
  • Were wrathful turn’d, and seem’d her wants to state,
  • Cursing his tardy aid--her mother there
  • With gipsy-state engross’d the only chair;
  • Solemn and dull her look; with such she stands,
  • And reads the milk-maid’s fortune in her hands,
  • Tracing the lines of life; assumed through years,
  • Each feature now the steady falsehood wears;
  • With hard and savage eye she views the food, 180
  • And, grudging, pinches their intruding brood;
  • Last in the group, the worn-out grandsire sits
  • Neglected, lost, and living but by fits;
  • Useless, despised, his worthless labours done,
  • And half protected by the vicious son,
  • Who half supports him; he with heavy glance
  • Views the young ruffians who around him dance;
  • And, by the sadness in his face, appears
  • To trace the progress of their future years:
  • Through what strange course of misery, vice, deceit, 190
  • Must wildly wander each unpractised cheat!
  • What shame and grief, what punishment and pain,
  • Sport of fierce passions, must each child sustain--
  • Ere they like him approach their latter end,
  • Without a hope, a comfort, or a friend!
  • But this Orlando felt not; “Rogues,” said he,
  • “Doubtless they are, but merry rogues they be;
  • They wander round the land, and be it true,
  • They break the laws--then let the laws pursue
  • The wanton idlers; for the life they live, 200
  • Acquit I cannot, but I can forgive.”
  • This said, a portion from his purse was thrown,
  • And every heart seem’d happy like his own.
  • He hurried forth, for now the town was nigh--
  • “The happiest man of mortal men am I.”
  • Thou art! but change in every state is near,
  • (So, while the wretched hope, the blest may fear);
  • “Say, where is Laura!”--“That her words must show,”
  • A lass replied; “read this, and thou shalt know!”
  • “What, gone!”--Her friend insisted--forced to go-- 210
  • Is vex’d, was teased, could not refuse her!--“No?”--
  • “But you can follow;”--“Yes;”--“The miles are few,
  • The way is pleasant; will you come?--Adieu!
  • Thy Laura!” “No! I feel I must resign
  • The pleasing hope; thou hadst been here, if mine.
  • A lady was it?--Was no brother there?
  • But why should I afflict me if there were?
  • ‘The way is pleasant.’”--What to me the way?
  • I cannot reach her till the close of day.
  • My dumb companion! is it thus we speed? 220
  • Not I from grief nor thou from toil art freed;
  • Still art thou doom’d to travel and to pine,
  • For my vexation--What a fate is mine!
  • “Gone to a friend, she tells me; I commend
  • Her purpose; means she to a female friend?
  • By Heaven, I wish she suffer’d half the pain
  • Of hope protracted through the day in vain:
  • Shall I persist to see th’ ungrateful maid?
  • Yes, I will see her, slight her, and upbraid.
  • What! in the very hour? She knew the time, 230
  • And doubtless chose it to increase her crime.”
  • Forth rode Orlando by a river’s side, }
  • Inland and winding, smooth, and full and wide, }
  • That roll’d majestic on, in one soft-flowing tide; }
  • The bottom gravel, flow’ry were the banks,
  • Tall willows, waving in their broken ranks;
  • The road, now near, now distant, winding led
  • By lovely meadows which the waters fed;
  • He pass’d the way-side inn, the village spire,
  • Nor stopp’d to gaze, to question, or admire; 240
  • On either side the rural mansions stood, }
  • With hedge-row trees, and hills high-crown’d with wood, }
  • And many a devious stream that reach’d the nobler flood. }
  • “I hate these scenes,” Orlando angry cried,
  • “And these proud farmers! yes, I hate their pride.
  • See! that sleek fellow, how he strides along,
  • Strong as an ox, and ignorant as strong;
  • Can yon close crops a single eye detain
  • But his who counts the profits of the grain?
  • And these vile beans with deleterious smell, 250
  • Where is their beauty? can a mortal tell?
  • These deep fat meadows I detest; it shocks
  • One’s feelings there to see the grazing ox--
  • For slaughter fatted, as a lady’s smile
  • Rejoices man, and means his death the while.
  • Lo! now the sons of labour! every day
  • Employ’d in toil, and vex’d in every way;
  • Theirs is but mirth assumed, and they conceal,
  • In their affected joys, the ills they feel:
  • I hate these long green lanes; there’s nothing seen 260
  • In this vile country but eternal green;
  • Woods! waters! meadows! Will they never end?
  • ’Tis a vile prospect.--Gone to see a friend!”--
  • Still on he rode! a mansion fair and tall
  • Rose on his view--the pride of Loddon-Hall:
  • Spread o’er the park he saw the grazing steer,
  • The full-fed steed, the herds of bounding deer;
  • On a clear stream the vivid sunbeams play’d, }
  • Through noble elms, and on the surface made }
  • That moving picture, checker’d light and shade; } 270
  • Th’ attended children, there indulged to stray,
  • Enjoy’d and gave new beauty to the day;
  • Whose happy parents from their room were seen
  • Pleased with the sportive idlers on the green.
  • “Well!” said Orlando, “and for one so bless’d, }
  • A thousand reasoning wretches are distress’d; }
  • Nay, these so seeming glad, are grieving like the rest: }
  • Man is a cheat--and all but strive to hide
  • Their inward misery by their outward pride.
  • What do yon lofty gates and walls contain, 280
  • But fruitless means to soothe unconquer’d pain?
  • The parents read each infant daughter’s smile,
  • Form’d to seduce, encouraged to beguile;
  • They view the boys unconscious of their fate,
  • Sure to be tempted, sure to take the bait;
  • These will be Lauras, sad Orlandos these--
  • There’s guilt and grief in all one hears and sees.”
  • Our trav’ller, lab’ring up a hill, look’d down
  • Upon a lively, busy, pleasant town;
  • All he beheld were there alert, alive, 290
  • The busiest bees that ever stock’d a hive:
  • A pair were married, and the bells aloud
  • Proclaim’d their joy, and joyful seem’d the crowd;
  • And now proceeding on his way, he spied,
  • Bound by strong ties, the bridegroom and the bride;
  • Each by some friends attended, near they drew,
  • And spleen beheld them with prophetic view.
  • “Married! nay, mad!” Orlando cried in scorn;
  • “Another wretch on this unlucky morn!
  • What are this foolish mirth, these idle joys? 300
  • Attempts to stifle doubt and fear by noise:
  • To me these robes, expressive of delight,
  • Foreshow distress, and only grief excite;
  • And for these cheerful friends, will they behold
  • Their wailing brood in sickness, want, and cold;
  • And his proud look, and her soft languid air
  • Will--but I spare you--go, unhappy pair!”
  • And now approaching to the journey’s end, }
  • His anger fails, his thoughts to kindness tend, }
  • He less offended feels, and rather fears t’ offend: } 310
  • Now gently rising, hope contends with doubt,
  • And casts a sunshine on the views without;
  • And still reviving joy and lingering gloom
  • Alternate empire o’er his soul assume;
  • Till, long perplex’d, he now began to find
  • The softer thoughts engross the settling mind.
  • He saw the mansion, and should quickly see
  • His Laura’s self--and angry could he be?
  • No! the resentment melted all away--
  • “For this my grief a single smile will pay,” 320
  • Our trav’ller cried;--“And why should it offend,
  • That one so good should have a pressing friend?
  • Grieve not, my heart! to find a favourite guest }
  • Thy pride and boast--ye selfish sorrows, rest; }
  • She will be kind, and I again be blest.” }
  • While gentler passions thus his bosom sway’d,
  • He reach’d the mansion, and he saw the maid;
  • “My Laura!”--“My Orlando!--this is kind;
  • In truth I came persuaded, not inclined.
  • Our friends’ amusement let us now pursue, 330
  • And I to-morrow will return with you.”
  • Like man entranced, the happy lover stood--
  • “As Laura wills, for she is kind and good;
  • Ever the truest, gentlest, fairest, best--
  • As Laura wills, I see her and am blest.”
  • Home went the lovers through that busy place,
  • By Loddon-Hall, the country’s pride and grace;
  • By the rich meadows where the oxen fed,
  • Through the green vale that form’d the river’s bed;
  • And by unnumber’d cottages and farms, 340
  • That have for musing minds unnumber’d charms,
  • And how affected by the view of these
  • Was then Orlando--did they pain or please?
  • Nor pain nor pleasure could they yield--and why? }
  • The mind was fill’d, was happy, and the eye }
  • Roved o’er the fleeting views, that but appear’d to die. }
  • Alone Orlando on the morrow paced
  • The well-known road; the [gipsy]-tent he traced;
  • The dam high-raised, the reedy dikes between,
  • The scatter’d hovels on the barren green, 350
  • The burning sand, the fields of thin-set rye,
  • Mock’d by the useless Flora, blooming by;
  • And last the heath with all its various bloom,
  • And the close lanes that led the trav’ller home.
  • Then could these scenes the former joys renew?
  • Or was there now dejection in the view?--
  • Nor one or other would they yield--and why? }
  • The mind was absent, and the vacant eye }
  • Wander’d o’er viewless scenes, that but appear’d to die. }
  • [6] The ditches of a fen so near the ocean are lined with irregular
  • patches of a coarse and stained lava; a muddy sediment rests on the
  • horse-tail and other perennial herbs, which in part conceal the
  • shallowness of the stream; a fat-leaved pale-flowering scurvy-grass
  • appears early in the year, and the razor-edged bull-rush in the
  • summer and autumn. The fen itself has a dark and saline herbage;
  • there are rushes and _arrow-head_, and in a few patches the flakes
  • of the cotton-grass are seen, but more commonly the _sea-aster_,
  • the dullest of that numerous and hardy genus; a _thrift_, blue in
  • flower, but withering and remaining withered till the winter scatters
  • it; the _saltwort_, both simple and shrubby; a few kinds of grass
  • changed by their soil and atmosphere, and low plants of two or three
  • denominations undistinguished in a general view of the scenery;--such
  • is the vegetation of the fen when it is at a small distance from
  • the ocean; and in this case there arise from it effluvia strong and
  • peculiar, half-saline, half-putrid, which would be considered by most
  • people as offensive, and by some as dangerous; but there are others
  • to whom singularity of taste or association of ideas has rendered it
  • agreeable and pleasant.
  • TALE XI.
  • _EDWARD SHORE._
  • Seem they grave or learned?
  • Why, so didst thou [. . . . . .
  • . . . . . .] seem they religious?
  • Why, so didst thou; or are they spare in diet,
  • Free from gross passion or of mirth or anger,
  • Constant in spirit, not swerving with the blood,
  • Garnish’d and deck’d in modest compliment,
  • Not working with the eye without the ear,
  • And but [in] purged judgment trusting neither?
  • Such and so finely bolted didst thou seem.
  • _Henry V_. Act II. Scene 2.
  • Better I were distract:
  • So should my thoughts be sever’d from my griefs,
  • And woes by strong imagination lose
  • The knowledge of themselves.
  • _Lear_, Act IV. Scene 6.
  • TALE XI.
  • _EDWARD SHORE._
  • Genius! thou gift of Heav’n! thou light divine!
  • Amid what dangers art thou doom’d to shine!
  • Oft will the body’s weakness check thy force,
  • Oft damp thy vigour, and impede thy course;
  • And trembling nerves compel thee to restrain
  • Thy nobler efforts, to contend with pain;
  • Or Want (sad guest!) will in thy presence come,
  • And breathe around her melancholy gloom;
  • To life’s low cares will thy proud thought confine,
  • And make her sufferings, her impatience, thine. 10
  • Evil and strong, seducing passions prey
  • On soaring minds, and win them from their way;
  • Who then to vice the subject spirits give,
  • And in the service of the conqu’ror live;
  • Like captive Samson making sport for all,
  • Who fear’d their strength, and glory in their fall.
  • Genius, with virtue, still may lack the aid
  • Implored by humble minds and hearts afraid;
  • May leave to timid souls the shield and sword
  • Of the tried faith, and the resistless word; 20
  • Amid a world of dangers venturing forth,
  • Frail, but yet fearless, proud in conscious worth,
  • Till strong temptation, in some fatal time,
  • Assails the heart, and wins the soul to crime;
  • When, left by honour, and by sorrow spent,
  • Unused to pray, unable to repent,
  • The nobler powers that once exalted high
  • Th’ aspiring man, shall then degraded lie:
  • Reason, through anguish, shall her throne forsake,
  • And strength of mind but stronger madness make. 30
  • When EDWARD SHORE had reach’d his twentieth year,
  • He felt his bosom light, his conscience clear;
  • Applause at school the youthful hero gain’d,
  • And trials there with manly strength sustain’d;
  • With prospects bright upon the world he came,
  • Pure love of virtue, strong desire of fame;
  • Men watch’d the way his lofty mind would take,
  • And all foretold the progress he would make.
  • Boast of these friends, to older men a guide,
  • Proud of his parts, but gracious in his pride; 40
  • He bore a gay good-nature in his face,
  • And in his air were dignity and grace;
  • Dress that became his state and years he wore,
  • And sense and spirit shone in Edward Shore.
  • Thus while admiring friends the youth beheld,
  • His own disgust their forward hopes repell’d;
  • For he unfix’d, unfixing, look’d around,
  • And no employment but in seeking found;
  • He gave his restless thoughts to views refined,
  • And shrank from worldly cares with wounded mind. 50
  • Rejecting trade, awhile he dwelt on laws,
  • “But who could plead, if unapproved the cause?”
  • A doubting, dismal tribe physicians seem’d;
  • Divines o’er texts and disputations dream’d;
  • War and its glory he perhaps could love,
  • But there again he must the cause approve.
  • Our hero thought no deed should gain applause,
  • Where timid virtue found support in laws;
  • He to all good would soar, would fly all sin,
  • By the pure prompting of the will within; 60
  • “Who needs a law that binds him not to steal,”
  • Ask’d the young teacher, “can he rightly feel?
  • To curb the will, or arm in honour’s cause,
  • Or aid the weak--are these enforced by laws?
  • Should we a foul, ungenerous action dread,
  • Because a law condemns th’ adulterous bed?
  • Or fly pollution, not for fear of stain,
  • But that some statute tells us to refrain?
  • The grosser herd in ties like these we bind,
  • In virtue’s freedom moves th’ enlighten’d mind.” 70
  • “Man’s heart deceives him,” said a friend. “Of course,”
  • Replied the youth, “but, has it power to force?
  • Unless it forces, call it as you will,
  • It is but wish, and proneness to the ill.”
  • “Art thou not tempted?” “Do I fall?” said Shore:
  • “The pure have fallen.”--“Then are pure no more.
  • While reason guides me, I shall walk aright,
  • Nor need a steadier hand, or stronger light;
  • Nor this in dread of awful threats, design’d
  • For the weak spirit and the grov’ling mind, 80
  • But that, engaged by thoughts and views sublime,
  • I wage free war with grossness and with crime.”
  • Thus look’d he proudly on the vulgar crew,
  • Whom statutes govern, and whom fears subdue.
  • Faith, with his virtue, he indeed profess’d,
  • But doubts deprived his ardent mind of rest;
  • Reason, his sovereign mistress, fail’d to show
  • Light through the mazes of the world below;
  • Questions arose, and they surpass’d the skill
  • Of his sole aid, and would be dubious still; 90
  • These to discuss he sought no common guide,
  • But to the doubters in his doubts applied;
  • When all together might in freedom speak,
  • And their loved truth with mutual ardour seek.
  • Alas! though men who feel their eyes decay
  • Take more than common pains to find their way,
  • Yet, when for this they ask each other’s aid,
  • Their mutual purpose is the more delay’d:
  • Of all their doubts, their reasoning clear’d not one,
  • Still the same spots were present in the sun; 100
  • Still the same scruples haunted Edward’s mind,
  • Who found no rest, nor took the means to find.
  • But though with shaken faith, and slave to fame,
  • Vain and aspiring on the world he came;
  • Yet was he studious, serious, moral, grave,
  • No passion’s victim, and no system’s slave;
  • Vice he opposed, indulgence he disdain’d,
  • And o’er each sense in conscious triumph reign’d.
  • Who often reads, will sometimes wish to write,
  • And Shore would yield instruction and delight: 110
  • A serious drama he design’d, but found
  • ’Twas tedious travelling in that gloomy ground;
  • A deep and solemn story he would try,
  • But grew ashamed of ghosts, and laid it by;
  • Sermons he wrote, but they who knew his creed,
  • Or knew it not, were ill disposed to read;
  • And he would lastly be the nation’s guide,
  • But, studying, fail’d to fix upon a side;
  • Fame he desired, and talents he possess’d,
  • But loved not labour, though he could not rest, 120
  • Nor firmly fix the vacillating mind,
  • That, ever working, could no centre find.
  • ’Tis thus a sanguine reader loves to trace
  • The Nile forth rushing on his glorious race;
  • Calm and secure the fancied traveller goes
  • Through sterile deserts and by threat’ning foes;
  • He thinks not then of Afric’s scorching sands,
  • Th’ Arabian sea, the Abyssinian bands;
  • Fasils[7] and Michaels, and the robbers all,
  • Whom we politely chiefs and heroes call: 130
  • He of success alone delights to think, }
  • He views that fount, he stands upon the brink, }
  • And drinks a fancied draught, exulting so to drink. }
  • In his own room, and with his books around,
  • His lively mind its chief employment found;
  • Then idly busy, quietly employ’d,
  • And, lost to life, his visions were enjoy’d;
  • Yet still he took a keen inquiring view
  • Of all that crowds neglect, desire, pursue;
  • And thus abstracted, curious, still, serene, 140
  • He, unemploy’d, beheld life’s shifting scene;
  • Still more averse from vulgar joys and cares,
  • Still more unfitted for the world’s affairs.
  • There was a house where Edward oft-times went,
  • And social hours in pleasant trifling spent;
  • He read, conversed and reason’d, sang and play’d,
  • And all were happy while the idler stay’d;
  • Too happy one, for thence arose the pain,
  • Till this engaging trifler came again.
  • But did he love? We answer, day by day, 150
  • The loving feet would take th’ accustom’d way;
  • The amorous eye would rove as if in quest
  • Of something rare, and on the mansion rest;
  • The same soft passion touch’d the gentle tongue,
  • And Anna’s charms in tender notes were sung;
  • The ear too seem’d to feel the common flame,
  • Sooth’d and delighted with the fair one’s name;
  • And thus as love each other part possess’d,
  • The heart, no doubt, its sovereign power confess’d.
  • Pleased in her sight, the youth required no more; 160
  • Not rich himself, he saw the damsel poor;
  • And he too wisely, nay, too kindly loved,
  • To pain the being whom his soul approved.
  • A serious friend our cautious youth possess’d,
  • And at his table sat a welcome guest;
  • Both unemploy’d, it was their chief delight
  • To read what free and daring authors write;
  • Authors who loved from common views to soar,
  • And seek the fountains never traced before;
  • Truth they profess’d, yet often left the true 170
  • And beaten prospect, for the wild and new.
  • His chosen friend his fiftieth year had seen,
  • His fortune easy, and his air serene;
  • Deist and atheist call’d; for few agreed
  • What were his notions, principles, or creed;
  • His mind reposed not, for he hated rest,
  • But all things made a query or a jest;
  • Perplex’d himself, he ever sought to prove
  • That man is doom’d in endless doubt to rove;
  • Himself in darkness he profess’d to be, 180
  • And would maintain that not a man could see.
  • The youthful friend, dissentient, reason’d still
  • Of the soul’s prowess, and the subject will;
  • Of virtue’s beauty, and of honour’s force,
  • And a warm zeal gave life to his discourse;
  • Since from his feelings all his fire arose,
  • And he had interest in the themes he chose.
  • The friend, indulging a sarcastic smile,
  • Said--“Dear enthusiast! thou wilt change thy style,
  • When man’s delusions, errors, crimes, deceit, 190
  • No more distress thee, and no longer cheat.”
  • Yet lo! this cautious man, so coolly wise,
  • On a young beauty fix’d unguarded eyes;
  • And her he married. Edward at the view
  • Bade to his cheerful visits long adieu;
  • But haply err’d, for this engaging bride
  • No mirth suppress’d, but rather cause supplied;
  • And, when she saw the friends, by reasoning long,
  • Confused if right, and positive if wrong,
  • With playful speech and smile, that spoke delight, 200
  • She made them careless both of wrong and right.
  • This gentle damsel gave consent to wed,
  • With school and school-day dinners in her head:
  • She now was promised choice of daintiest food,
  • And costly dress, that made her sovereign good;
  • With walks on hilly heath to banish spleen,
  • And summer-visits when the roads were clean.
  • All these she loved, to these she gave consent,
  • And she was married to her heart’s content.
  • Their manner this--the friends together read, 210
  • Till books a cause for disputation bred;
  • Debate then follow’d, and the vapour’d child
  • Declared they argued till her head was wild;
  • And strange to her it was that mortal brain
  • Could seek the trial, or endure the pain.
  • Then, as the friend reposed, the younger pair
  • Sat down to cards, and play’d beside his chair;
  • Till he, awaking, to his books applied,
  • Or heard the music of th’ obedient bride.
  • If mild the evening, in the fields they stray’d, 220
  • And their own flock with partial eye survey’d;
  • But oft the husband, to indulgence prone,
  • Resumed his book, and bade them walk alone.
  • “Do, my kind Edward! I must take mine ease,
  • Name the dear girl the planets and the trees;
  • Tell her what warblers pour their evening song,
  • What insects flutter, as you walk along;
  • Teach her to fix the roving thoughts, to bind
  • The wandering sense, and methodize the mind.”
  • This was obey’d; and oft when this was done, 230
  • They calmly gazed on the declining sun;
  • In silence saw the glowing landscape fade,
  • Or, sitting, sang beneath the arbour’s shade:
  • Till rose the moon, and on each youthful face
  • Shed a soft beauty, and a dangerous grace.
  • When the young wife beheld in long debate
  • The friends, all careless as she seeming sate;
  • It soon appear’d, there was in one combined
  • The nobler person and the richer mind:
  • He wore no wig, no grisly beard was seen, 240
  • And none beheld him careless or unclean;
  • Or watch’d him sleeping--we indeed have heard
  • Of sleeping beauty, and it has appear’d;
  • ’Tis seen in infants; there indeed we find
  • The features soften’d by the slumbering mind--
  • But other beauties, when disposed to sleep,
  • Should from the eye of keen inspector keep:
  • The lovely nymph who would her swain surprise,
  • May close her mouth, but not conceal her eyes;
  • Sleep from the fairest face some beauty takes, 250
  • And all the homely features homelier makes;
  • So thought our wife, beholding with a sigh
  • Her sleeping spouse, and Edward smiling by.
  • A sick relation for the husband sent;
  • Without delay the friendly sceptic went;
  • Nor fear’d the youthful pair, for he had seen
  • The wife untroubled, and the friend serene;
  • No selfish purpose in his roving eyes,
  • No vile deception in her fond replies:
  • So judged the husband, and with judgment true, 260
  • For neither yet the guilt or danger knew.
  • What now remain’d? but they again should play
  • Th’ accustom’d game, and walk th’ accustom’d way;
  • With careless freedom should converse or read,
  • And the friend’s absence neither fear nor heed.
  • But rather now they seem’d confused, constrain’d; }
  • Within their room still restless they remain’d, }
  • And painfully they felt, and knew each other pain’d.-- }
  • Ah! foolish men! how could ye thus depend,
  • One on himself, the other on his friend? 270
  • The youth with troubled eye the lady saw,
  • Yet felt too brave, too daring to withdraw;
  • While she, with tuneless hand the jarring keys
  • Touching, was not one moment at her ease.
  • Now would she walk, and call her friendly guide,
  • Now speak of rain, and cast her cloak aside;
  • Seize on a book, unconscious what she read,
  • And restless still, to new resources fled;
  • Then laugh’d aloud, then tried to look serene,
  • And ever changed, and every change was seen. 280
  • Painful it is to dwell on deeds of shame--
  • The trying day was past, another came;
  • The third was all remorse, confusion, dread,
  • And (all too late!) the fallen hero fled.
  • Then felt the youth, in that seducing time,
  • How feebly honour guards the heart from crime:
  • Small is his native strength; man needs the stay,
  • The strength imparted in the trying day;
  • For all that honour brings against the force
  • Of headlong passion, aids its rapid course; 290
  • Its slight resistance but provokes the fire,
  • As wood-work stops the flame, and then conveys it higher.
  • The husband came; a wife by guilt made bold
  • Had, meeting, sooth’d him, as in days of old;
  • But soon this fact transpired; her strong distress,
  • And his friend’s absence, left him nought to guess.
  • Still cool, though grieved, thus prudence bade him write--
  • “I cannot pardon, and I will not fight;
  • Thou art too poor a culprit for the laws,
  • And I too faulty to support my cause. 300
  • All must be punish’d; I must sigh alone,
  • At home thy victim for her guilt atone;
  • And thou, unhappy! virtuous now no more,
  • Must loss of fame, peace, purity deplore;
  • Sinners with praise will pierce thee to the heart,
  • And saints deriding, tell thee what thou art.”
  • Such was his fall; and Edward, from that time,
  • Felt in full force the censure and the crime--
  • Despised, ashamed; his noble views before,
  • And his proud thoughts, degraded him the more. 310
  • Should he repent--would that conceal his shame?
  • Could peace be his? It perish’d with his fame.
  • Himself he scorn’d, nor could his crime forgive;
  • He fear’d to die, yet felt ashamed to live;
  • Grieved, but not contrite was his heart--oppress’d,
  • Not broken; not converted, but distress’d;
  • He wanted will to bend the stubborn knee, }
  • He wanted light the cause of ill to see, }
  • To learn how frail is man, how humble then should be; }
  • For faith he had not, or a faith too weak 320
  • To gain the help that humbled sinners seek;
  • Else had he pray’d--to an offended God
  • His tears had flown a penitential flood;
  • Though far astray, he would have heard the call
  • Of mercy--“Come! return, thou prodigal;”
  • Then, though confused, distress’d, ashamed, afraid,
  • Still had the trembling penitent obey’d;
  • Though faith had fainted, when assail’d by fear,
  • Hope to the soul had whisper’d, “Persevere!”
  • Till, in his Father’s house an humbled guest, 330
  • He would have found forgiveness, comfort, rest.
  • But all this joy was to our youth denied
  • By his fierce passions and his daring pride;
  • And shame and doubt impell’d him in a course,
  • Once so abhorr’d, with unresisted force.
  • Proud minds and guilty, whom their crimes oppress,
  • Fly to new crimes for comfort and redress;
  • So found our fallen youth a short relief
  • In wine, the opiate guilt applies to grief--
  • From fleeting mirth that o’er the bottle lives; 340
  • From the false joy its inspiration gives;
  • And from associates, pleased to find a friend
  • With powers to lead them, gladden, and defend,
  • In all those scenes where transient ease is found
  • For minds whom sins oppress, and sorrows wound.
  • Wine is like anger; for it makes us strong,
  • Blind and impatient, and it leads us wrong; }
  • The strength is quickly lost, we feel the error long. }
  • Thus led, thus strengthen’d in an evil cause, }
  • For folly pleading, sought the youth applause; 350
  • Sad for a time, then eloquently wild,
  • He gaily spoke as his companions smiled;
  • Lightly he rose, and with his former grace
  • Proposed some doubt, and argued on the case;
  • Fate and fore-knowledge were his favourite themes--
  • How vain man’s purpose, how absurd his schemes:
  • “Whatever is, was ere our birth decreed; }
  • We think our actions from ourselves proceed, }
  • And idly we lament th’ inevitable deed; }
  • It seems our own, but there’s a power above 360
  • Directs the motion, nay, that makes us move;
  • Nor good nor evil can you beings name,
  • Who are but rooks and castles in the game;
  • Superior natures with their puppets play,
  • Till, bagg’d or buried, all are swept away.”
  • Such were the notions of a mind to ill
  • Now prone, but ardent and determined still.
  • Of joy now eager, as before of fame,
  • And screen’d by folly when assail’d by shame,
  • Deeply he sank; obey’d each passion’s call, 370
  • And used his reason to defend them all.
  • Shall I proceed, and step by step relate
  • The odious progress of a sinner’s fate?
  • No--let me rather hasten to the time
  • (Sure to arrive) when misery waits on crime.
  • With virtue, prudence fled; what Shore possess’d
  • Was sold, was spent, and he was now distress’d;
  • And Want, unwelcome stranger, pale and wan,
  • Met with her haggard looks the hurried man;
  • His pride felt keenly what he must expect 380
  • From useless pity and from cold neglect.
  • Struck by new terrors, from his friends he fled,
  • And wept his woes upon a restless bed;
  • Retiring late, at early hour to rise,
  • With shrunken features, and with bloodshot eyes.
  • If sleep one moment closed the dismal view,
  • Fancy her terrors built upon the true;
  • And night and day had their alternate woes,
  • That baffled pleasure, and that mock’d repose;
  • Till to despair and anguish was consign’d 390
  • The wreck and ruin of a noble mind.
  • Now seized for debt, and lodged within a jail,
  • He tried his friendships, and he found them fail;
  • Then fail’d his spirits, and his thoughts were all
  • Fix’d on his sins, his sufferings, and his fall.
  • His ruffled mind was pictured in his face,
  • Once the fair seat of dignity and grace;
  • Great was the danger of a man so prone
  • To think of madness, and to think alone;
  • Yet pride still lived, and struggled to sustain 400
  • The drooping spirit and the roving brain;
  • But this too fail’d: a friend his freedom gave,
  • And sent him help the threat’ning world to brave;
  • Gave solid counsel what to seek or flee,
  • But still would stranger to his person be:
  • In vain! the truth determined to explore,
  • He traced the friend whom he had wrong’d before.
  • This was too much; both aided and advised
  • By one who shunn’d him, pitied, and despised,
  • He bore it not; ’twas a deciding stroke, 410
  • And on his reason like a torrent broke:
  • In dreadful stillness he appear’d awhile,
  • With vacant horror and a ghastly smile;
  • Then rose at once into the frantic rage,
  • That force controll’d not, nor could love assuage.
  • Friends now appear’d, but in the man was seen
  • The angry maniac, with vindictive mien;
  • Too late their pity gave to care and skill
  • The hurried mind and ever-wandering will;
  • Unnoticed pass’d all time, and not a ray 420
  • Of reason broke on his benighted way;
  • But now he spurn’d the straw in pure disdain,
  • And now laugh’d loudly at the clinking chain.
  • Then, as its wrath subsided, by degrees
  • The mind sank slowly to infantine ease;
  • To playful folly, and to causeless joy,
  • Speech without aim, and without end, employ;
  • He drew fantastic figures on the wall,
  • And gave some wild relation of them all;
  • With brutal shape he join’d the human face, 430
  • And idiot smiles approved the motley race.
  • Harmless at length th’ unhappy man was found,
  • The spirit settled, but the reason drown’d;
  • And all the dreadful tempest died away,
  • To the dull stillness of the misty day.
  • And now his freedom he attain’d--if free,
  • The lost to reason, truth, and hope, can be;
  • His friends, or wearied with the charge, or sure
  • The harmless wretch was now beyond a cure,
  • Gave him to wander where he pleased, and find 440
  • His own resources for the eager mind;
  • The playful children of the place he meets,
  • Playful with them he rambles through the streets;
  • In all they need, his stronger arm he lends,
  • And his lost mind to these approving friends.
  • That gentle maid, whom once the youth had loved,
  • Is now with mild religious pity moved;
  • Kindly she chides his boyish flights, while he
  • Will for a moment fix’d and pensive be;
  • And, as she trembling speaks, his lively eyes 450
  • Explore her looks, he listens to her sighs;
  • Charm’d by her voice, th’ harmonious sounds invade
  • His clouded mind, and for a time persuade:
  • Like a pleased infant, who has newly caught
  • From the maternal glance a gleam of thought;
  • He stands enrapt, the half-known voice to hear,
  • And starts, half-conscious, at the falling tear.
  • Rarely from town, nor then unwatch’d, he goes,
  • In darker mood, as if to hide his woes;
  • Returning soon, he with impatience seeks 460
  • His youthful friends, and shouts, and sings, and speaks;
  • Speaks a wild speech with action all as wild--
  • The children’s leader, and himself a child;
  • He spins their top, or, at their bidding, bends
  • His back, while o’er it leap his laughing friends;
  • Simple and weak, he acts the boy once more,
  • And heedless children call him Silly Shore.
  • [7] Fasil was a rebel chief, and Michael the general of the royal
  • army in Abyssinia, when Mr. Bruce visited that country. In all
  • other respects their characters were nearly similar. They are both
  • represented as cruel and treacherous; and even the apparently strong
  • distinction of loyal and rebellious is in a great measure set aside,
  • when we are informed that Fasil was an open enemy, and Michael an
  • insolent and ambitious controller of the royal person and family.
  • TALE XII.
  • _’SQUIRE THOMAS_; OR, THE PRECIPITATE CHOICE.
  • Such smiling rogues as these,
  • Like rats, oft bite the holy cords in twain,
  • Too intrinsicate t’ unloose----
  • _Lear_, Act II. Scene 2.
  • My other self, my counsel’s consistory,
  • My oracle, my prophet, . . .
  • I as a child will go by thy direction.
  • _Richard III_. Act II. Scene 2.
  • If I do not have pity [of] her, I’m a villain; if I do not love her,
  • I am a Jew.
  • _Much Ado about Nothing_, Act II. Scene 3.
  • Women are soft, mild, [pitiful and] flexible;
  • [Thou stern,] obdurate, flinty, rough, remorseless.
  • 3 _Henry VI_. Act I. Scene 4.
  • He must be told of it, and he shall; the office
  • Becomes a woman best; I’ll take it upon me;
  • If I prove honey-mouth’d, let my tongue blister.
  • _Winter’s Tale_, Act II. Scene 2.
  • Disguise--I see thou art a wickedness.
  • _Twelfth Night_, Act II. Scene 2.
  • TALE XII.
  • _’SQUIRE THOMAS_.
  • ’Squire Thomas flatter’d long a wealthy aunt,
  • Who left him all that she could give or grant:
  • Ten years he tried, with all his craft and skill,
  • To fix the sovereign lady’s varying will;
  • Ten years enduring at her board to sit,
  • He meekly listen’d to her tales and wit;
  • He took the meanest office man can take,
  • And his aunt’s vices for her money’s sake.
  • By many a threat’ning hint she waked his fear,
  • And he was pain’d to see a rival near; 10
  • Yet all the taunts of her contemptuous pride
  • He bore, nor found his grov’ling spirit tried;
  • Nay, when she wish’d his parents to traduce,
  • Fawning he smiled, and justice call’d th’ abuse;
  • “They taught you nothing; are you not, at best,” }
  • Said the proud dame, “a trifler, and a jest? }
  • Confess you are a fool!”--he bow’d, and he confess’d. }
  • This vex’d him much, but could not always last:
  • The dame is buried, and the trial past.
  • There was a female, who had courted long 20
  • Her cousin’s gifts, and deeply felt the wrong;
  • By a vain boy forbidden to attend
  • The private councils of her wealthy friend,
  • She vow’d revenge, nor should that crafty boy
  • In triumph undisturb’d his spoils enjoy;
  • He heard, he smiled, and when the will was read,
  • Kindly dismiss’d the kindred of the dead;
  • “The dear deceased,” he call’d her, and the crowd
  • Moved off with curses deep and threat’nings loud.
  • The youth retired, and, with a mind at ease, 30
  • Found he was rich, and fancied he must please.
  • He might have pleased, and to his comfort found
  • The wife he wish’d, if he had sought around;
  • For there were lasses of his own degree,
  • With no more hatred to the state than he;
  • But he had courted spleen and age so long,
  • His heart refused to woo the fair and young;
  • So long attended on caprice and whim,
  • He thought attention now was due to him;
  • And as his flattery pleased the wealthy dame, 40
  • Heir to the wealth he might the flattery claim;
  • But this the fair with one accord denied,
  • Nor waved for man’s caprice the sex’s pride.
  • There is a season when to them is due
  • Worship and awe, and they will claim it too:
  • “Fathers,” they cry, “long hold us in their chain,
  • Nay, tyrant brothers claim a right to reign;
  • Uncles and guardians we in turn obey,
  • And husbands rule with ever-during sway;
  • Short is the time when lovers at the feet 50
  • Of beauty kneel, and own the slavery sweet;
  • And shall we this our triumph, this the aim
  • And boast of female power, forbear to claim?
  • No! we demand that homage, that respect,
  • Or the proud rebel punish and reject.”
  • Our hero, still too indolent, too nice
  • To pay for beauty the accustom’d price,
  • No less forbore t’ address the humbler maid,
  • Who might have yielded with the price unpaid;
  • But lived, himself to humour and to please, 60
  • To count his money, and enjoy his ease.
  • It pleased a neighbouring ’squire to recommend
  • A faithful youth, as servant to his friend;
  • Nay, more than servant, whom he praised for parts
  • Ductile yet strong, and for the best of hearts;
  • One who might ease him in his small affairs,
  • With tenants, tradesmen, taxes, and repairs;
  • Answer his letters, look to all his dues,
  • And entertain him with discourse and news.
  • The ’squire believed, and found the trusted youth 70
  • A very pattern for his care and truth;
  • Not for his virtues to be praised alone,
  • But for a modest mien and humble tone;
  • Assenting always, but as if he meant
  • Only to strength of reasons to assent:
  • For was he stubborn, and retain’d his doubt,
  • Till the more subtle ’squire had forced it out;
  • Nay, still was right, but he perceived that strong
  • And powerful minds could make the right the wrong.
  • When the ’squire’s thoughts on some fair damsel dwelt, 80
  • The faithful friend his apprehensions felt;
  • It would rejoice his faithful heart to find
  • A lady suited to his master’s mind;
  • But who deserved that master? who would prove
  • That hers was pure, uninterested love?
  • Although a servant, he would scorn to take
  • A countess, till she suffer’d for his sake;
  • Some tender spirit, humble, faithful, true,
  • Such, my dear master! must be sought for you.
  • Six months had pass’d, and not a lady seen, 90
  • With just this love, ’twixt fifty and fifteen;
  • All seem’d his doctrine or his pride to shun,
  • All would be woo’d, before they would be won;
  • When the chance naming of a race and fair
  • Our ’squire disposed to take his pleasure there.
  • The friend profess’d, “although he first began
  • To hint the thing, it seem’d a thoughtless plan:
  • The roads, he fear’d, were foul, the days were short,
  • The village far, and yet there might be sport.”
  • “What! you of roads and starless nights afraid? 100
  • You think to govern! you to be obey’d!”
  • Smiling he spoke; the humble friend declared
  • His soul’s obedience, and to go prepared.
  • The place was distant, but with great delight
  • They saw a race, and hail’d the glorious sight:
  • The ’squire exulted, and declared the ride
  • Had amply paid, and he was satisfied.
  • They gazed, they feasted, and, in happy mood,
  • Homeward return’d, and hastening as they rode;
  • For short the day, and sudden was the change 110
  • From light to darkness, and the way was strange;
  • Our hero soon grew peevish, then distress’d;
  • He dreaded darkness, and he sigh’d for rest:
  • Going, they pass’d a village; but, alas!
  • Returning saw no village to repass;
  • The ’squire remember’d too a noble hall,
  • Large as a church, and whiter than its wall:
  • This he had noticed as they rode along,
  • And justly reason’d that their road was wrong.
  • George, full of awe, was modest in reply-- 120
  • “The fault was his, ’twas folly to deny;
  • And of his master’s safety were he sure,
  • There was no grievance he would not endure.”
  • This made his peace with the relenting ’squire,
  • Whose thoughts yet dwelt on supper and a fire;
  • When, as they reach’d a long and pleasant green,
  • Dwellings of men, and next a man, were seen.
  • “My friend,” said George, “to travellers astray
  • Point out an inn, and guide us on the way.”
  • The man look’d up; “Surprising! can it be 130
  • My master’s son? as I’m alive, ’tis he.”
  • “How! Robin,” George replied, “and are we near
  • My father’s house? how strangely things appear!--
  • Dear sir, though wanderers, we at last are right:
  • Let us proceed, and glad my father’s sight;
  • We shall at least be fairly lodged and fed,
  • I can ensure a supper and a bed;
  • Let us this night, as one of pleasure date,
  • And of surprise: it is an act of fate.”
  • “Go on,” the ’squire in happy temper cried; 140
  • “I like such blunder! I approve such guide.”
  • They ride, they halt; the farmer comes in haste;
  • Then tells his wife how much their house is graced;
  • They bless the chance, they praise the lucky son,
  • That caused the error.--Nay! it was not one,
  • But their good fortune--Cheerful grew the ’squire,
  • Who found dependants, flattery, wine, and fire;
  • He heard the jack turn round; the busy dame }
  • Produced her damask; and with supper came }
  • The daughter, dress’d with care, and full of }
  • maiden-shame. } 150
  • Surprised, our hero saw the air and dress,
  • And strove his admiration to express;
  • Nay! felt it too--for Harriot was, in truth,
  • A tall fair beauty in the bloom of youth;
  • And, from the pleasure and surprise, a grace
  • Adorn’d the blooming damsel’s form and face;
  • Then too, such high respect and duty paid
  • By all--such silent reverence in the maid;
  • Vent’ring with caution, yet with haste, a glance;
  • Loth to retire, yet trembling to advance, 160
  • Appear’d the nymph, and in her gentle guest
  • Stirr’d soft emotions till the hour of rest.
  • Sweet was his sleep, and in the morn again
  • He felt a mixture of delight and pain:
  • “How fair, how gentle,” said the ’squire, “how meek,
  • And yet how sprightly, when disposed to speak!
  • Nature has bless’d her form, and Heaven her mind,
  • But in her favours Fortune is unkind;
  • Poor is the maid--nay, poor she cannot prove
  • Who is enrich’d with beauty, worth, and love.” 170
  • The ’squire arose, with no precise intent
  • To go or stay--uncertain what he meant.
  • He moved to part--they begg’d him first to dine;
  • And who could then escape from love and wine?
  • As came the night, more charming grew the fair,
  • And seem’d to watch him with a two-fold care:
  • On the third morn, resolving not to stay,
  • Though urged by love, he bravely rode away.
  • Arrived at home, three pensive days he gave
  • To feelings fond and meditations grave; 180
  • Lovely she was, and, if he did not err,
  • As fond of him as his fond heart of her;
  • Still he delay’d, unable to decide
  • Which was the master-passion, love or pride:
  • He sometimes wonder’d how his friend could make,
  • And then exulted in, the night’s mistake;
  • Had she but fortune, “doubtless then,” he cried,
  • “Some happier man had won the wealthy bride.”
  • While thus he hung in balance, now inclined
  • To change his state, and then to change his mind-- 190
  • That careless George dropp’d idly on the ground
  • A letter, which his crafty master found;
  • The stupid youth confess’d his fault, and pray’d
  • The generous ’squire to spare a gentle maid;
  • Of whom her tender mother, full of fears,
  • Had written much--“She caught her oft in tears,
  • For ever thinking on a youth above
  • Her humble fortune--still she own’d not love;
  • Nor can define, dear girl! the cherish’d pain,
  • But would rejoice to see the cause again. 200
  • That neighbouring youth, whom she endured before,
  • She now rejects, and will behold no more;
  • Raised by her passion, she no longer stoops
  • To her own equals, but she pines and droops:
  • Like to a lily, on whose sweets the sun
  • Has withering gazed--she saw and was undone.
  • His wealth allured her not--nor was she moved
  • By his superior state, himself she loved:
  • So mild, so good, so gracious, so genteel-- }
  • But spare your sister, and her love conceal; } 210
  • We must the fault forgive, since she the pain }
  • must feel.” }
  • “Fault!” said the ’squire, “there’s coarseness in the mind
  • That thus conceives of feelings so refined;
  • Here end my doubts, nor blame yourself, my friend,
  • Fate made you careless--here my doubts have end.”
  • The way is plain before us--there is now
  • The lover’s visit first, and then the vow
  • Mutual and fond, the marriage-rite, the bride
  • Brought to her home with all a husband’s pride;
  • The ’squire receives the prize his merits won, 220
  • And the glad parents leave the patron-son.
  • But in short time he saw with much surprise, }
  • First gloom, then grief, and then resentment rise, }
  • From proud, commanding frowns and anger-darting eyes: }
  • “Is there in Harriot’s humble mind this fire,
  • This fierce impatience?” ask’d the puzzled ’squire:
  • “Has marriage changed her? or the mask she wore
  • Has she thrown by, and is herself once more?”
  • Hour after hour, when clouds on clouds appear,
  • Dark and more dark, we know the tempest near; 230
  • And thus the frowning brow, the restless form,
  • And threat’ning glance, forerun domestic storm:
  • So read the husband, and, with troubled mind,
  • Reveal’d his fears--“My love, I hope you find
  • All here is pleasant--but I must confess }
  • You seem offended, or in some distress; }
  • Explain the grief you feel, and leave me to redress.” }
  • “Leave it to you?” replied the nymph--“indeed!
  • What--to the cause from whence the ills proceed?
  • Good Heaven! to take me from a place, where I 240
  • Had every comfort underneath the sky;
  • And then immure me in a gloomy place,
  • With the grim monsters of your ugly race,
  • That from their canvas staring, make me dread
  • Through the dark chambers where they hang to tread!
  • No friend nor neighbour comes to give that joy,
  • Which all things here must banish or destroy:
  • Where is the promised coach? the pleasant ride?
  • Oh! what a fortune has a farmer’s bride!
  • Your sordid pride has placed me just above 250
  • Your hired domestics--and what pays me? love!
  • A selfish fondness I endure each hour,
  • And share unwitness’d pomp, unenvied power;
  • I hear your folly, smile at your parade,
  • And see your favourite dishes duly made;
  • Then am I richly dress’d for you t’ admire,
  • Such is my duty and my lord’s desire;
  • Is this a life for youth, for health, for joy?
  • Are these my duties--this my base employ?
  • No! to my father’s house will I repair, 260
  • And make your idle wealth support me there;
  • Was it your wish to have an humble bride
  • For bondage thankful? Curse upon your pride!
  • Was it a slave you wanted? You shall see,
  • That, if not happy, I at least am free;
  • Well, sir, your answer!”--silent stood the ’squire,
  • As looks a miser at his house on fire;
  • Where all he deems is vanish’d in that flame,
  • Swept from the earth his substance and his name:
  • So, lost to every promised joy of life, 270
  • Our ’squire stood gaping at his angry wife;--
  • His fate, his ruin, where he saw it vain
  • To hope for peace, pray, threaten, or complain;
  • And thus, betwixt his wonder at the ill
  • And his despair--there stood he gaping still.
  • “Your answer, sir--shall I depart a spot
  • I thus detest?”--“Oh, miserable lot!”
  • Exclaim’d the man; “Go, serpent! nor remain
  • To sharpen wo by insult and disdain:
  • A nest of harpies was I doom’d to meet; 280
  • What plots, what combinations of deceit!
  • I see it now--all plann’d, design’d, contrived;
  • Served by that villain--by this fury wived--
  • What fate is mine! What wisdom, virtue, truth,
  • Can stand, if dæmons set their traps for youth?
  • He lose his way! vile dog! he cannot lose
  • The way a villain through his life pursues;
  • And thou, deceiver! thou, afraid to move,
  • And hiding close the serpent in the dove!
  • I saw--but, fated to endure disgrace, 290
  • Unheeding saw, the fury in thy face;
  • And call’d it spirit--Oh! I might have found
  • Fraud and imposture--all the kindred round!
  • A nest of vipers”----
  • “Sir, I’ll not admit
  • These wild effusions of your angry wit:
  • Have you that value, that we all should use
  • Such mighty arts for such important views?
  • Are you such prize--and is my state so fair,
  • That they should sell their souls to get me there?
  • Think you that we alone our thoughts disguise? } 300
  • When in pursuit of some contended prize, }
  • Mask we alone the heart, and soothe whom we despise? }
  • Speak you of craft and subtle schemes, who know
  • That all your wealth you to deception owe;
  • Who play’d for ten dull years a scoundrel-part,
  • To worm yourself into a widow’s heart?
  • Now, when you guarded, with superior skill,
  • That lady’s closet, and preserved her will,
  • Blind in your craft, you saw not one of those
  • Opposed by you might you in turn oppose; 310
  • Or watch your motions, and by art obtain
  • Share of that wealth you gave your peace to gain?
  • Did conscience never”----
  • “Cease, Tormentor, cease--
  • Or reach me poison--let me rest in peace!”
  • “Agreed--but hear me--let the truth appear”--
  • “Then state your purpose--I’ll be calm and hear”--
  • “Know then, this wealth, sole object of your care,
  • I had some right, without your hand, to share;
  • My mother’s claim was just--but soon she saw
  • Your power, compell’d, insulted, to withdraw: 320
  • ’Twas then my father, in his anger, swore
  • You should divide the fortune, or restore;
  • Long we debated--and you find me now
  • Heroic victim to a father’s vow;
  • Like Jephtha’s daughter, but in different state,
  • And both decreed to mourn our early fate;
  • Hence was my brother servant to your pride,
  • Vengeance made him your slave--and me your bride.
  • Now all is known--a dreadful price I pay
  • For our revenge--but still we have our day; 330
  • All that you love you must with others share,
  • Or all you dread from their resentment dare!
  • Yet terms I offer--let contention cease:
  • Divide the spoil, and let us part in peace.”
  • Our hero trembling heard--he sat--he rose--
  • Nor could his motions nor his mind compose;
  • He paced the room--and, stalking to her side, }
  • Gazed on the face of his undaunted bride; }
  • And nothing there but scorn and calm aversion spied. }
  • He would have vengeance, yet he fear’d the law: 340
  • Her friends would threaten, and their power he saw;
  • “Then let her go;”--but oh! a mighty sum
  • Would that demand, since he had let her come;
  • Nor from his sorrows could he find redress,
  • Save that which led him to a like distress,
  • And all his ease was in his wife to see
  • A wretch as anxious and distress’d as he.
  • Her strongest wish, the fortune to divide
  • And part in peace, his avarice denied;
  • And thus it happen’d, as in all deceit, 350
  • The cheater found the evil of the cheat;
  • The husband grieved--nor was the wife at rest;
  • Him she could vex, and he could her molest;
  • She could his passion into frenzy raise,
  • But, when the fire was kindled, fear’d the blaze:
  • As much they studied, so in time they found
  • The easiest way to give the deepest wound;
  • But then, like fencers, they were equal still,
  • Both lost in danger what they gain’d in skill;
  • Each heart a keener kind of rancour gain’d, 360
  • And paining more, was more severely pain’d;
  • And thus by both were equal vengeance dealt,
  • And both the anguish they inflicted felt.
  • TALE XIII.
  • _JESSE AND COLIN._
  • Then she plots, then she ruminates, then she devises; and what they
  • think in their hearts they may effect, they will break their hearts
  • but they will effect.
  • _Merry Wives of Windsor_, Act II. Scene 2.
  • She hath spoken that she should not, I am sure of that; Heaven knows
  • what she hath known.
  • _Macbeth_, Act V. Scene 1.
  • Our house is hell, and thou a merry devil.
  • _Merchant of Venice_, Act II. Scene 3.
  • And yet, for aught I see, they are as sick that surfeit of too much,
  • as they that starve with nothing; it is no mean happiness, therefore,
  • to be seated in the mean.
  • _Merchant of Venice_, Act I. Scene 2.
  • TALE XIII.
  • _JESSE AND COLIN._
  • A vicar died, and left his daughter poor--
  • It hurt her not, she was not rich before:
  • Her humble share of worldly goods she sold,
  • Paid every debt, and then her fortune told;
  • And found, with youth and beauty, hope and health,
  • Two hundred guineas was her worldly wealth;
  • It then remain’d to choose her path in life,
  • And first, said Jesse, “Shall I be a wife?--
  • Colin is mild and civil, kind and just,
  • I know his love, his temper I can trust; 10
  • But small his farm, it asks perpetual care,
  • And we must toil as well as trouble share.
  • True, he was taught in all the gentle arts
  • That raise the soul, and soften human hearts,
  • And boasts a parent, who deserves to shine
  • In higher class, and I could wish her mine;
  • Nor wants he will his station to improve,
  • A just ambition waked by faithful love;--
  • Still is he poor--and here my father’s friend
  • Deigns for his daughter, as her own, to send; 20
  • A worthy lady, who it seems has known
  • A world of griefs and troubles of her own.
  • I was an infant, when she came, a guest
  • Beneath my father’s humble roof to rest;
  • Her kindred all unfeeling, vast her woes;
  • Such her complaint, and there she found repose;
  • Enrich’d by fortune, now she nobly lives,
  • And nobly, from the blest abundance, gives;
  • The grief, the want of human life, she knows,
  • And comfort there and here relief bestows; 30
  • But are they not dependants?--Foolish pride!
  • Am I not honour’d by such friend and guide?
  • Have I a home,” (here Jesse dropp’d a tear,)
  • “Or friend beside?”--A faithful friend was near.
  • Now Colin came, at length resolved to lay
  • His heart before her and to urge her stay;
  • True, his own plough the gentle Colin drove,
  • An humble farmer with aspiring love;
  • Who, urged by passion, never dared till now,
  • Thus urged by fears, his trembling hopes avow. 40
  • Her father’s glebe he managed; every year
  • The grateful vicar held the youth more dear;
  • He saw indeed the prize in Colin’s view,
  • And wish’d his Jesse with a man so true;
  • Timid as true, he urged with anxious air
  • His tender hope, and made the trembling prayer;
  • When Jesse saw, nor could with coldness see,
  • Such fond respect, such tried sincerity,
  • Grateful for favours to her father dealt,
  • She more than grateful for his passion felt; 50
  • Nor could she frown on one so good and kind,
  • Yet fear’d to smile, and was unfix’d in mind;
  • But prudence placed the female friend in view--
  • What might not one so rich and grateful do?
  • So lately, too, the good old vicar died, }
  • His faithful daughter must not cast aside }
  • The signs of filial grief, and be a ready bride: }
  • Thus, led by prudence, to the lady’s seat
  • The village-beauty purposed to retreat;
  • But, as in hard-fought fields the victor knows 60
  • What to the vanquish’d he, in honour, owes,
  • So, in this conquest over powerful love,
  • Prudence resolved a generous foe to prove;
  • And Jesse felt a mingled fear and pain
  • In her dismission of a faithful swain,
  • Gave her kind thanks, and when she saw his wo,
  • Kindly betray’d that she was loth to go.
  • But would she promise, if abroad she met }
  • A frowning world, she would remember yet }
  • “Where dwelt a friend?”--“That could she not forget.” }
  • And thus they parted; but each faithful heart 71
  • Felt the compulsion, and refused to part.
  • Now by the morning mail the timid maid
  • Was to that kind and wealthy dame convey’d;
  • Whose invitation, when her father died,
  • Jesse as comfort to her heart applied.
  • She knew the days her generous friend had seen--
  • As wife and widow, evil days had been;
  • She married early, and for half her life
  • Was an insulted and forsaken wife; 80
  • Widow’d and poor, her angry father gave,
  • Mix’d with reproach, the pittance of a slave;
  • Forgetful brothers pass’d her, but she knew
  • Her humbler friends, and to their home withdrew;
  • The good old vicar to her sire applied
  • For help, and help’d her when her sire denied;
  • When in few years death stalk’d through bower and hall,
  • Sires, sons, and sons of sons, were buried all;
  • She then abounded, and had wealth to spare
  • For softening grief she once was doom’d to share; 90
  • Thus train’d in misery’s school, and taught to feel,
  • She would rejoice an orphan’s woes to heal.
  • So Jesse thought, who look’d within her breast,
  • And thence conceived how bounteous minds are bless’d.
  • From her vast mansion look’d the lady down
  • On humbler buildings of a busy town;
  • Thence came her friends of either sex, and all
  • With whom she lived on terms reciprocal.
  • They pass’d the hours with their accustom’d ease,
  • As guests inclined, but not compell’d to please; 100
  • But there were others in the mansion found,
  • For office chosen, and by duties bound;
  • Three female rivals, each of power possess’d,
  • Th’ attendant-maid, poor friend, and kindred-guest.
  • To these came Jesse, as a seaman thrown
  • By the rude storm upon a coast unknown:
  • The view was flattering, civil seem’d the race,
  • But all unknown the dangers of the place.
  • Few hours had pass’d, when, from attendants freed,
  • The lady utter’d--“This is kind indeed; 110
  • Believe me, love! that I for one like you
  • Have daily pray’d, a friend discreet and true;
  • Oh! wonder not that I on you depend,
  • You are mine own hereditary friend:
  • Hearken, my Jesse, never can I trust
  • Beings ungrateful, selfish, and unjust;
  • But you are present, and my load of care
  • Your love will serve to lighten and to share.
  • Come near me, Jesse--let not those below
  • Of my reliance on your friendship know; 120
  • Look as they look, be in their freedoms free--
  • But all they say do you convey to me.”
  • Here Jesse’s thoughts to Colin’s cottage flew,
  • And with such speed she scarce their absence knew.
  • “Jane loves her mistress, and should she depart,
  • I lose her service, and she breaks her heart;
  • My ways and wishes, looks and thoughts she knows,
  • And duteous care by close attention shows;
  • But is she faithful? in temptation strong?
  • Will she not wrong me? ah! I fear the wrong. 130
  • Your father loved me; now, in time of need,
  • Watch for my good, and to his place succeed.
  • “Blood doesn’t bind--that girl, who every day
  • Eats of my bread, would wish my life away;
  • I am her _dear relation_, and she thinks
  • To make her fortune, an ambitious minx!
  • She only courts me for the prospect’s sake,
  • Because she knows I have a will to make;
  • Yes, love! my will delay’d, I know not how--
  • But you are here, and I will make it now. 140
  • “That idle creature, keep her in your view,
  • See what she does, what she desires to do;
  • On her young mind may artful villains prey,
  • And to my plate and jewels find a way;
  • A pleasant humour has the girl; her smile
  • And cheerful manner tedious hours beguile;
  • But well observe her, ever near her be,
  • Close in your thoughts, in your professions free.
  • “Again, my Jesse, hear what I advise,
  • And watch a woman ever in disguise; 150
  • Issop, that widow, serious, subtle, sly--
  • But what of this?--I must have company.
  • She markets for me, and although she makes
  • Profit, no doubt, of all she undertakes,
  • Yet she is one I can to all produce,
  • And all her talents are in daily use;
  • Deprived of her, I may another find
  • As sly and selfish, with a weaker mind:
  • But never trust her, she is full of art,
  • And worms herself into the closest heart; 160
  • Seem then, I pray you, careless in her sight,
  • Nor let her know, my love, how we unite.
  • “Do, my good Jesse, cast a view around,
  • And let no wrong within my house be found;
  • That girl associates with--I know not who
  • Are her companions, nor what ill they do;
  • ’Tis then the widow plans, ’tis then she tries
  • Her various arts and schemes for fresh supplies;
  • ’Tis then, if ever, Jane her duty quits,
  • And, whom I know not, favours and admits: 170
  • Oh! watch their movements all; for me ’tis hard,
  • Indeed is vain, but you may keep a guard;
  • And I, when none your watchful glance deceive,
  • May make my will, and think what I shall leave.”
  • Jesse, with fear, disgust, alarm, surprise,
  • Heard of these duties for her ears and eyes;
  • Heard by what service she must gain her bread,
  • And went with scorn and sorrow to her bed.
  • Jane was a servant fitted for her place,
  • Experienced, cunning, fraudful, selfish, base; 180
  • Skill’d in those mean, humiliating arts
  • That make their way to proud and selfish hearts;
  • By instinct taught, she felt an awe, a fear,
  • For Jesse’s upright, simple character;
  • Whom with gross flattery she awhile assail’d,
  • And then beheld with hatred when it fail’d;
  • Yet, trying still upon her mind for hold,
  • She all the secrets of the mansion told;
  • And to invite an equal trust she drew
  • Of every mind a bold and rapid view; 190
  • But on the widow’d friend with deep disdain,
  • And rancorous envy, dwelt the treacherous Jane.--
  • In vain such arts; without deceit or pride,
  • With a just taste and feeling for her guide,
  • From all contagion Jesse kept apart,
  • Free in her manners, guarded in her heart.
  • Jesse one morn was thoughtful, and her sigh
  • The widow heard as she was passing by;
  • And--“Well!” she said, “is that some distant swain,
  • Or aught with us, that gives your bosom pain? 200
  • Come, we are fellow-sufferers, slaves in thrall,
  • And tasks and griefs are common to us all;
  • Think not my frankness strange: they love to paint
  • Their state with freedom, who endure restraint;
  • And there is something in that speaking eye
  • And sober mien, that prove I may rely.
  • You came a stranger; to my words attend,
  • Accept my offer, and you find a friend;
  • It is a labyrinth in which you stray,
  • Come, hold my clue, and I will lead the way. 210
  • “Good Heav’n! that one so jealous, envious, base,
  • Should be the mistress of so sweet a place;
  • She, who so long herself was low and poor,
  • Now broods suspicious on her useless store;
  • She loves to see us abject, loves to deal
  • Her insult round, and then pretends to feel;
  • Prepare to cast all dignity aside,
  • For know your talents will be quickly tried;
  • Nor think, from favours past, a friend to gain,
  • ’Tis but by duties we our posts maintain: 220
  • I read her novels, gossip through the town,
  • And daily go, for idle stories, down;
  • I cheapen all she buys, and bear the curse
  • Of honest tradesmen for my niggard-purse;
  • And, when for her this meanness I display,
  • She cries, ’I heed not what I throw away;’
  • Of secret bargains I endure the shame,
  • And stake my credit for our fish and game;
  • Oft has she smiled to hear, ’her generous soul
  • Would gladly give, but stoops to my control’; 230
  • Nay! I have heard her, when she chanced to come
  • Where I contended for a petty sum,
  • Affirm ’twas painful to behold such care,
  • ‘But Issop’s nature is to pinch and spare:’
  • Thus all the meanness of the house is mine,
  • And my reward--to scorn her, and to dine.
  • “See next that giddy thing, with neither pride
  • To keep her safe, nor principle to guide:
  • Poor, idle, simple flirt! as sure as fate
  • Her maiden-fame will have an early date. 240
  • Of her beware; for all who live below
  • Have faults they wish not all the world to know;
  • And she is fond of listening, full of doubt,
  • And stoops to guilt to find an error out.
  • “And now once more observe the artful maid,
  • A lying, prying, jilting, thievish jade;
  • I think, my love, you would not condescend
  • To call a low, illiterate girl your friend;
  • But in our troubles we are apt, you know,
  • To lean on all who some compassion show; 250
  • And she has flexile features, acting eyes,
  • And seems with every look to sympathise;
  • No mirror can a mortal’s grief express
  • With more precision, or can feel it less;
  • That proud, mean spirit, she by fawning courts,
  • By vulgar flattery, and by vile reports;
  • And by that proof she every instant gives
  • To one so mean, that yet a meaner lives.--
  • “Come, I have drawn the curtain, and you see
  • Your fellow-actors, all our company; 260
  • Should you incline to throw reserve aside,
  • And in my judgment and my love confide,
  • I could some prospects open to your view,
  • That ask attention--and, till then, adieu.”
  • “Farewell!” said Jesse, hastening to her room,
  • Where all she saw within, without, was gloom:
  • Confused, perplex’d, she pass’d a dreary hour,
  • Before her reason could exert its power;
  • To her all seem’d mysterious, all allied
  • To avarice, meanness, folly, craft, and pride; 270
  • Wearied with thought, she breathed the garden’s air,
  • Then came the laughing lass, and join’d her there.
  • “My sweetest friend has dwelt with us a week,
  • And does she love us? be sincere and speak;
  • My aunt you cannot--Lord! how I should hate
  • To be like her, all misery and state;
  • Proud, and yet envious, she disgusted sees
  • All who are happy, and who look at ease.
  • Let friendship bind us, I will quickly show
  • Some favourites near us you’ll be bless’d to know; 280
  • My aunt forbids it--but, can she expect,
  • To soothe her spleen, we shall ourselves neglect?
  • Jane and the widow were to watch and stay
  • My free-born feet; I watch’d as well as they;
  • Lo! what is this? this simple key explores
  • The dark recess that holds the spinster’s stores;
  • And led by her ill star, I chanced to see
  • Where Issop keeps her stock of ratafie;
  • Used in the hours of anger and alarm,
  • It makes her civil, and it keeps her warm; 290
  • Thus bless’d with secrets, both would choose to hide,
  • Their fears now grant me what their scorn denied.
  • “My freedom thus by their assent secured,
  • Bad as it is, the place may be endured;
  • And bad it is, but her estates, you know,
  • And her beloved hoards, she must bestow;
  • So we can slyly our amusements take,
  • And friends of dæmons, if they help us, make.”
  • “Strange creatures these,” thought Jesse, half inclined
  • To smile at one malicious and yet kind; 300
  • Frank and yet cunning, with a heart to love
  • And malice prompt--the serpent and the dove;
  • Here could she dwell? or could she yet depart?
  • Could she be artful? could she bear with art?--
  • This splendid mansion gave the cottage grace,
  • She thought a dungeon was a happier place;
  • And Colin pleading, when he pleaded best,
  • Wrought not such sudden change in Jesse’s breast.
  • The wondering maiden, who had only read
  • Of such vile beings, saw them now with dread; 310
  • Safe in themselves--for nature has design’d
  • The creature’s poison harmless to the kind;
  • But all beside who in the haunts are found
  • Must dread the poison, and must feel the wound.
  • Days full of care, slow weary weeks pass’d on;
  • Eager to go, still Jesse was not gone;
  • Her time in trifling or in tears she spent,
  • She never gave, she never felt content:
  • The lady wonder’d that her humble guest
  • Strove not to please, would neither lie nor jest; 320
  • She sought no news, no scandal would convey,
  • But walk’d for health, and was at church to pray;
  • All this displeased, and soon the widow cried:
  • “Let me be frank--I am not satisfied;
  • You know my wishes, I your judgment trust;
  • You can be useful, Jesse, and you must;
  • Let me be plainer, child--I want an ear,
  • When I am deaf, instead of mine to hear;
  • When mine is sleeping, let your eye awake;
  • When I observe not, observation take; 330
  • Alas! I rest not on my pillow laid,
  • Then threat’ning whispers make my soul afraid;
  • The tread of strangers to my ear ascends,
  • Fed at my cost, the minions of my friends;
  • While you, without a care, a wish to please,
  • Eat the vile bread of idleness and ease.”
  • Th’ indignant girl astonish’d answer’d--“Nay!
  • This instant, madam, let me haste away;
  • Thus speaks my father’s, thus an orphan’s, friend?
  • This instant, lady, let your bounty end.” 340
  • The lady frown’d indignant--“What!” she cried,
  • “A vicar’s daughter with a princess’ pride!
  • And pauper’s lot! but pitying I forgive;
  • How, simple Jesse, do you think to live?
  • Have I not power to help you, foolish maid?
  • To my concerns be your attention paid;
  • With cheerful mind th’ allotted duties take,
  • And recollect I have a will to make.”
  • Jesse, who felt as liberal natures feel,
  • When thus the baser their designs reveal, 350
  • Replied--“Those duties were to her unfit,
  • Nor would her spirit to her tasks submit.”
  • In silent scorn the lady sate awhile,
  • And then replied with stern contemptuous smile--
  • “Think you, fair madam, that you came to share
  • Fortunes like mine without a thought or care?
  • A guest, indeed! from every trouble free,
  • Dress’d by my help, with not a care for me.
  • When I a visit to your father made,
  • I for the poor assistance largely paid; 360
  • To his domestics I their tasks assign’d;
  • I fix’d the portion for his hungry hind;
  • And had your father (simple man!) obey’d
  • My good advice, and watch’d as well as pray’d,
  • He might have left you something with his prayers,
  • And lent some colour for these lofty airs.--
  • “In tears! my love! Oh, then my soften’d heart
  • Cannot resist--we never more will part;
  • I need your friendship--I will be your friend;
  • And thus determined, to my will attend.” 370
  • Jesse went forth, but with determined soul
  • To fly such love, to break from such control;
  • “I hear enough,” the trembling damsel cried;
  • “Flight be my care, and Providence my guide:
  • Ere yet a prisoner, I escape will make; }
  • Will, thus display’d, th’ insidious arts forsake, }
  • And, as the rattle sounds, will fly the fatal snake.” }
  • Jesse her thanks upon the morrow paid,
  • Prepared to go, determined though afraid.
  • “Ungrateful creature,” said the lady, “this 380
  • Could I imagine?--are you frantic, miss?
  • What! leave your friend, your prospects--is it true?”
  • This Jesse answer’d by a mild “Adieu!”
  • The dame replied, “Then houseless may you rove,
  • The starving victim to a guilty love;
  • Branded with shame, in sickness doom’d to nurse
  • An ill-form’d cub, your scandal and your curse;
  • Spurn’d by its scoundrel father, and ill fed
  • By surly rustics with the parish-bread!--
  • Relent you not?--speak--yet I can forgive; 390
  • Still live with me”--“With you,” said Jesse, “live?
  • No! I would first endure what you describe,
  • Rather than breathe with your detested tribe:
  • Who long have feign’d, till now their very hearts
  • Are firmly fix’d in their accursed parts;
  • Who all profess esteem, and feel disdain,
  • And all, with justice, of deceit complain;
  • Whom I could pity, but that, while I stay,
  • My terror drives all kinder thoughts away;
  • Grateful for this, that when I think of you, 400
  • I little fear what poverty can do.”
  • The angry matron her attendant Jane
  • Summon’d in haste to soothe the fierce disdain.
  • “A vile detested wretch!” the lady cried, }
  • “Yet shall she be, by many an effort, tried, }
  • And, clogg’d with debt and fear, against her will abide; }
  • And, once secured, she never shall depart
  • Till I have proved the firmness of her heart;
  • Then when she dares not, would not, cannot go,
  • I’ll make her feel what ’tis to use me so.” 410
  • The pensive Colin in his garden stray’d,
  • But felt not then the beauties it display’d;
  • There many a pleasant object met his view,
  • A rising wood of oaks behind it grew;
  • A stream ran by it, and the village-green
  • And public road were from the gardens seen;
  • Save where the pine and larch the bound’ry made,
  • And on the rose-beds threw a softening shade.
  • The mother sat beside the garden-door,
  • Dress’d as in times ere she and hers were poor; 420
  • The broad-laced cap was known in ancient days,
  • When madam’s dress compell’d the village praise;
  • And still she look’d as in the times of old,
  • Ere his last farm the erring husband sold;
  • While yet the mansion stood in decent state,
  • And paupers waited at the well-known gate.
  • “Alas! my son!” the mother cried, “and why
  • That silent grief and oft-repeated sigh?
  • True, we are poor, but thou hast never felt
  • Pangs to thy father for his error dealt; 430
  • Pangs from strong hopes of visionary gain,
  • For ever raised, and ever found in vain.
  • He rose unhappy! from his fruitless schemes,
  • As guilty wretches from their blissful dreams;
  • But thou wert then, my son, a playful child,
  • Wondering at grief, gay, innocent, and wild;
  • Listening at times to thy poor mother’s sighs,
  • With curious looks and innocent surprise;
  • Thy father dying, thou, my virtuous boy,
  • My comfort always, waked my soul to joy; 440
  • With the poor remnant of our fortune left,
  • Thou hast our station of its gloom bereft:
  • Thy lively temper, and thy cheerful air,
  • Have cast a smile on sadness and despair;
  • Thy active hand has dealt to this poor space
  • The bliss of plenty and the charm of grace;
  • And all around us wonder when they find
  • Such taste and strength, such skill and power combined;
  • There is no mother, Colin, no not one,
  • But envies me so kind, so good a son; 450
  • By thee supported on this failing side,
  • Weakness itself awakes a parent’s pride;
  • I bless the stroke that was my grief before,
  • And feel such joy that ’tis disease no more;
  • Shielded by thee, my want becomes my wealth--
  • And, soothed by Colin, sickness smiles at health;
  • The old men love thee, they repeat thy praise,
  • And say, like thee were youth in earlier days;
  • While every village-maiden cries, ’How gay,
  • How smart, how brave, how good is Colin Grey!’ 460
  • “Yet art thou sad; alas! my son, I know
  • Thy heart is wounded, and the cure is slow;
  • Fain would I think that Jesse still may come
  • To share the comforts of our rustic home:
  • She surely loved thee; I have seen the maid,
  • When thou hast kindly brought the vicar aid--
  • When thou hast eased his bosom of its pain,
  • Oh! I have seen her--she will come again.”
  • The matron ceased; and Colin stood the while
  • Silent, but striving for a grateful smile; 470
  • He then replied--“Ah! sure, had Jesse stay’d,
  • And shared the comforts of our sylvan shade,
  • The tenderest duty and the fondest love
  • Would not have fail’d that generous heart to move;
  • A grateful pity would have ruled her breast,
  • And my distresses would have made me blest.
  • “But she is gone, and ever has in view }
  • Grandeur and taste--and what will then ensue? }
  • Surprise and then delight in scenes so fair and new; }
  • For many a day, perhaps for many a week, 480
  • Home will have charms, and to her bosom speak;
  • But thoughtless ease, and affluence, and pride,
  • Seen day by day, will draw the heart aside:
  • And she at length, though gentle and sincere,
  • Will think no more of our enjoyments here.”
  • Sighing he spake--but hark! he hears th’ approach
  • Of rattling wheels! and lo! the evening-coach;
  • Once more the movement of the horses’ feet
  • Makes the fond heart with strong emotion beat;
  • Faint were his hopes, but ever had the sight 490
  • Drawn him to gaze beside his gate at night;
  • And when with rapid wheels it hurried by,
  • He grieved his parent with a hopeless sigh;
  • And could the blessing have been bought--what sum
  • Had he not offer’d, to have Jesse come!
  • She came--he saw her bending from the door,
  • Her face, her smile, and he beheld no more;
  • Lost in his joy--the mother lent her aid
  • T’ assist and to detain the willing maid;
  • Who thought her late, her present home to make, 500
  • Sure of a welcome for the vicar’s sake.
  • But the good parent was so pleased, so kind,
  • So pressing Colin, she so much inclined,
  • That night advanced; and then so long detain’d, }
  • No wishes to depart she felt, or feign’d; }
  • Yet long in doubt she stood, and then perforce remain’d. }
  • Here was a lover fond, a friend sincere;
  • Here was content and joy, for she was here:
  • In the mild evening, in the scene around,
  • The maid, now free, peculiar beauties found; 510
  • Blended with village-tones, the evening-gale
  • Gave the sweet night-bird’s warblings to the vale;
  • The youth embolden’d, yet abash’d, now told
  • His fondest wish, nor found the maiden cold;
  • The mother smiling whisper’d--“Let him go
  • And seek the licence!” Jesse answer’d, “No:”
  • But Colin went, I know not if they live
  • With all the comforts wealth and plenty give;
  • But with pure joy to envious souls denied,
  • To suppliant meanness and suspicious pride; 520
  • And village-maids of happy couples say,
  • “They live like Jesse Bourn and Colin Grey.”
  • TALE XIV.
  • _THE STRUGGLES OF CONSCIENCE._
  • I am a villain; yet I lie, I am not;
  • Fool! of thyself speak well:--Fool! do not flatter.
  • My Conscience hath a thousand several tongues,
  • And every tongue brings in a several tale.
  • _Richard III._ Act V. Scene 3.
  • My Conscience is but a kind of hard Conscience. . . . The fiend gives
  • the more friendly counsel.
  • _Merchant of Venice_, Act II. Scene 2.
  • Thou hast it now. . . .
  • . . . and I fear
  • Thou play’dst most foully [for’t].
  • _Macbeth_, Act III. Scene 1.
  • Canst thou not minister to a mind diseased,
  • Pluck from the memory a rooted sorrow,
  • Rase out the written troubles of the brain,
  • And with some sweet oblivious antidote
  • Cleanse the foul bosom of that perilous stuff
  • Which weighs upon the heart?
  • _Macbeth_, Act V. Scene 3.
  • Soft! I did but dream--
  • Oh! coward Conscience, how dost thou afflict me!
  • _Richard III._ Act V. Scene 3.
  • TALE XIV.
  • _THE STRUGGLES OF CONSCIENCE._
  • A serious toyman in the city dwelt,
  • Who much concern for his religion felt;
  • Reading, he changed his tenets, read again,
  • And various questions could with skill maintain;
  • Papist and quaker if we set aside,
  • He had the road of every traveller tried;
  • There walk’d awhile, and on a sudden turn’d
  • Into some by-way he had just discern’d:
  • He had a nephew, Fulham--Fulham went
  • His uncle’s way, with every turn content; 10
  • He saw his pious kinsman’s watchful care, }
  • And thought such anxious pains his own might spare, }
  • And he, the truth obtain’d, without the toil, might share. }
  • In fact, young Fulham, though he little read,
  • Perceived his uncle was by fancy led;
  • And smiled to see the constant care he took,
  • Collating creed with creed, and book with book.
  • At length the senior fix’d; I pass the sect
  • He call’d a church, ’twas precious and elect;
  • Yet the seed fell not in the richest soil, 20
  • For few disciples paid the preacher’s toil;
  • All in an attic-room were wont to meet,
  • These few disciples at their pastor’s feet;
  • With these went Fulham, who, discreet and grave,
  • Follow’d the light his worthy uncle gave;
  • Till a warm preacher found a way t’ impart
  • Awakening feelings to his torpid heart:
  • Some weighty truths, and of unpleasant kind,
  • Sank, though resisted, in his struggling mind;
  • He wish’d to fly them, but, compell’d to stay, 30
  • Truth to the waking Conscience found her way;
  • For though the youth was call’d a prudent lad,
  • And prudent was, yet serious faults he had;
  • Who now reflected--“Much am I surprised,
  • I find these notions cannot be despised;
  • No! there is something I perceive at last,
  • Although my uncle cannot hold it fast;
  • Though I the strictness of these men reject,
  • Yet I determine to be circumspect:
  • This man alarms me, and I must begin 40
  • To look more closely to the things within;
  • These sons of zeal have I derided long,
  • But now begin to think the laughers wrong;
  • Nay, my good uncle, by all teachers moved, }
  • Will be preferr’d to him who none approved: }
  • Better to love amiss than nothing to have loved.” }
  • Such were his thoughts, when Conscience first began
  • To hold close converse with th’ awaken’d man.
  • He from that time reserved and cautious grew,
  • And for his duties felt obedience due; 50
  • Pious he was not, but he fear’d the pain
  • Of sins committed, nor would sin again.
  • Whene’er he stray’d, he found his Conscience rose, }
  • Like one determined what was ill t’ oppose, }
  • What wrong t’ accuse, what secret to disclose; }
  • To drag forth every latent act to light,
  • And fix them fully in the actor’s sight:
  • This gave him trouble, but he still confess’d
  • The labour useful, for it brought him rest.
  • The uncle died, and when the nephew read 60
  • The will, and saw the substance of the dead--
  • Five hundred guineas, with a stock in trade--
  • He much rejoiced, and thought his fortune made;
  • Yet felt aspiring pleasure at the sight,
  • And, for increase, increasing appetite.
  • Desire of profit idle habits check’d,
  • (For Fulham’s virtue was to be correct);
  • He and his Conscience had their compact made--
  • “Urge me with truth, and you will soon persuade;
  • But not,” he cried, “for mere ideal things 70
  • Give me to feel those terror-breeding stings.”
  • “Let not such thoughts,” she said, “your mind confound;
  • Trifles may wake me, but they never wound;
  • In them indeed there is a wrong and right,
  • But you will find me pliant and polite;
  • Not like a Conscience of the dotard kind,
  • Awake to dreams, to dire offences blind.
  • Let all within be pure; in all beside
  • Be your own master, governor, and guide;
  • Alive to danger, in temptation strong-- 80
  • And I shall sleep our whole existence long.”
  • “Sweet be thy sleep,” said Fulham; “strong must be
  • The tempting ill that gains access to me;
  • Never will I to evil deed consent,
  • Or, if surprised, oh! how will I repent!
  • Should gain be doubtful, soon would I restore
  • The dangerous good, or give it to the poor;
  • Repose for them my growing wealth shall buy--
  • Or build--who knows?--an hospital like Guy.--
  • Yet why such means to soothe the smart within, 90
  • While firmly purposed to renounce the sin?”
  • Thus our young Trader and his Conscience dwelt
  • In mutual love, and great the joy they felt;
  • But yet in small concerns, in trivial things,
  • “She was,” he said, “too ready with the stings;”
  • And he too apt, in search of growing gains,
  • To lose the fear of penalties and pains:
  • Yet these were trifling bickerings, petty jars,
  • Domestic strifes, preliminary wars;
  • He ventured little, little she express’d 100
  • Of indignation, and they both had rest.
  • Thus was he fix’d to walk the worthy way,
  • When profit urged him to a bold essay.--
  • A time was that when all at pleasure gamed
  • In lottery-chances, yet of law unblamed;
  • This Fulham tried: who would to him advance
  • A pound or crown, he gave in turn a chance
  • For weighty prize--and should they nothing share,
  • They had their crown or pound in Fulham’s ware;
  • Thus the old stores within the shop were sold 110
  • For that which none refuses, new or old.
  • Was this unjust? Yet Conscience could not rest
  • But made a mighty struggle in the breast;
  • And gave th’ aspiring man an early proof,
  • That should they war he would have work enough:
  • “Suppose,” said she, “your vended numbers rise
  • The same with those which gain each real prize,
  • (Such your proposal,) can you ruin shun?”
  • “A hundred thousand,” he replied, “to one.”--
  • “Still it may happen.”--“I the sum must pay.”-- 120
  • “You know you cannot.”--“I can run away.”--
  • “That is dishonest.”--“Nay, but you must wink
  • At a chance-hit; it cannot be, I think.
  • Upon my conduct as a whole decide,
  • Such trifling errors let my virtues hide;
  • Fail I at meeting? am I sleepy there?
  • My purse refuse I with the priest to share?
  • Do I deny the poor a helping hand?
  • Or stop the wicked women in the Strand?
  • Or drink at club beyond a certain pitch? 130
  • Which are your charges? Conscience, tell me which.”
  • “’Tis well,” said she, “but--” “Nay, I pray, have done:
  • Trust me, I will not into danger run.”
  • The lottery drawn, not one demand was made;
  • Fulham gain’d profit and increase of trade.
  • “See now,” said he--for Conscience yet arose--
  • “How foolish ’tis such measures to oppose:
  • Have I not blameless thus my state advanced?”--
  • “Still,” mutter’d Conscience, “still it might have chanced.”--
  • “Might!” said our hero, “who is so exact 140
  • As to inquire what might have been a fact?”
  • Now Fulham’s shop contain’d a curious view
  • Of costly trifles, elegant and new:
  • The papers told where kind mammas might buy
  • The gayest toys to charm an infant’s eye;
  • Where generous beaux might gentle damsels please,
  • And travellers call who cross the land or seas,
  • And find the curious art, the neat device,
  • Of precious value and of trifling price.
  • Here Conscience rested: she was pleased to find 150
  • No less an active than an honest mind;
  • But, when he named his price, and when he swore,
  • His Conscience check’d him, that he ask’d no more--
  • When half he sought had been a large increase
  • On fair demand--she could not rest in peace
  • (Beside th’ affront to call th’ adviser in,
  • Who would prevent, to justify the sin.)
  • She therefore told him, that “he vainly tried
  • To soothe her anger, conscious that he lied;
  • If thus he grasp’d at such usurious gains, 160
  • He must deserve, and should expect, her pains.”
  • The charge was strong; he would in part confess
  • Offence there was--but, who offended less?
  • “What! is a mere assertion call’d a lie?
  • And if it be, are men compell’d to buy?
  • ’Twas strange that Conscience on such points should dwell, }
  • While he was acting (he would call it) well; }
  • He bought as others buy, he sold as others sell: }
  • There was no fraud, and he demanded cause
  • Why he was troubled, when he kept the laws?” 170
  • “My laws?” said Conscience: “What,” said he, “are thine?
  • Oral or written, human or divine?
  • Show me the chapter, let me see the text;
  • By laws uncertain subjects are perplex’d;
  • Let me my finger on the statute lay,
  • And I shall feel it duty to obey.”
  • “Reflect,” said Conscience, “’twas your own desire
  • That I should warn you--does the compact tire?
  • Repent you this? then bid me not advise,
  • And rather hear your passions as they rise; 180
  • So you may counsel and remonstrance shun,
  • But then remember it is war begun;
  • And you may judge from some attacks, my friend,
  • What serious conflicts will on war attend.”
  • “Nay, but,” at length the thoughtful man replied,
  • “I say not that; I wish you for my guide;
  • Wish for your checks and your reproofs--but then
  • Be like a Conscience of my fellow-men;
  • Worthy I mean, and men of good report,
  • And not the wretches who with conscience sport. 190
  • There’s Bice, my friend, who passes off his grease
  • Of pigs for bears’, in pots a crown apiece;
  • His Conscience never checks him when he swears
  • The fat he sells is honest fat of bears;
  • And so it is, for he contrives to give
  • A drachm to each--’tis thus that tradesmen live:
  • Now why should you and I be over-nice;
  • What man is held in more repute than Bice?”
  • Here ended the dispute; but yet ’twas plain
  • The parties both expected strife again. 200
  • Their friendship cool’d, he look’d about and saw
  • Numbers who seem’d unshackled by his awe;
  • While like a school-boy he was threaten’d still,
  • Now for the deed, now only for the will;
  • Here Conscience answer’d, “To thy neighbour’s guide
  • Thy neighbour leave, and in thine own confide.”
  • Such were each day the charges and replies,
  • When a new object caught the trader’s eyes;
  • A vestry-patriot, could he gain the name,
  • Would famous make him, and would pay the fame. 210
  • He knew full well the sums bequeath’d in charge
  • For schools, for alms-men, for the poor, were large;
  • Report had told, and he could feel it true,
  • That most unfairly dealt the trusted few;
  • No partners would they in their office take,
  • Nor clear accounts at annual meetings make;
  • Aloud our hero in the vestry spoke
  • Of hidden deeds, and vow’d to draw the cloak;
  • It was the poor man’s cause, and he for one
  • Was quite determined to see justice done. 220
  • His foes affected laughter, then disdain, }
  • They too were loud and threat’ning, but in vain; }
  • The pauper’s friend, their foe, arose and spoke again. }
  • Fiercely he cried, “Your garbled statements show
  • That you determine we shall nothing know;
  • But we shall bring your hidden crimes to light,
  • Give you to shame, and to the poor their right.”
  • Virtue like this might some approval ask--
  • But Conscience sternly said, “You wear a mask!”
  • “At least,” said Fulham, “if I have a view 230
  • To serve myself, I serve the public too.”
  • Fulham, though check’d, retain’d his former zeal,
  • And this the cautious rogues began to feel.
  • “Thus will he ever bark,” in peevish tone
  • An elder cried--“the cur must have a bone.”
  • They then began to hint--and to begin
  • Was all they needed: it was felt within;
  • In terms less veil’d an offer then was made,
  • Though distant still, it fail’d not to persuade;
  • More plainly then was every point proposed, 240
  • Approved, accepted, and the bargain closed.
  • “Th’ exulting paupers hail’d their friend’s success,
  • And bade adieu to murmurs and distress.”
  • Alas! their friend had now superior light,
  • And, view’d by that, he found that all was right;
  • “There were no errors, the disbursements small;
  • This was the truth, and truth was due to all.”
  • And rested Conscience? No! she would not rest,
  • Yet was content with making a protest.
  • Some acts she now with less resistance bore, 250
  • Nor took alarm so quickly as before;
  • Like those in towns besieged, who every ball
  • At first with terror view, and dread them all;
  • But, grown familiar with the scenes, they fear
  • The danger less, as it approaches near:
  • So Conscience, more familiar with the view
  • Of growing evils, less attentive grew;
  • Yet he who felt some pain, and dreaded more,
  • Gave a peace-offering to the angry poor.
  • Thus had he quiet--but the time was brief, 260
  • From his new triumph sprang a cause of grief;
  • In office join’d, and acting with the rest,
  • He must admit the sacramental test.
  • Now, as a sectary, who had all his life,
  • As he supposed, been with the church at strife
  • (No rules of hers, no laws had he perused,
  • Nor knew the tenets he by rote abused);
  • Yet Conscience here arose more fierce and strong,
  • Than when she told of robbery and wrong;
  • “Change his religion! No! he must be sure 270
  • That was a blow no conscience could endure.”
  • Though friend to virtue, yet she oft abides
  • In early notions, fix’d by erring guides,
  • And is more startled by a call from those,
  • Than when the foulest crimes her rest oppose;
  • By error taught, by prejudice misled,
  • She yields her rights, and fancy rules instead;
  • When Conscience all her stings and terror deals,
  • Not as truth dictates, but as fancy feels;
  • And thus within our hero’s troubled breast, 280
  • Crime was less torture than the odious test.
  • New forms, new measures, he must now embrace,
  • With sad conviction that they warr’d with grace;
  • To his new church no former friend would come,
  • They scarce preferr’d her to the church of Rome.
  • But, thinking much, and weighing guilt and gain,
  • Conscience and he commuted for her pain;
  • Then promised Fulham to retain his creed,
  • And their peculiar paupers still to feed;
  • Their attic-room (in secret) to attend, 290
  • And not forget he was the preacher’s friend;
  • Thus he proposed, and Conscience, troubled, tried,
  • And wanting peace, reluctantly complied.
  • Now care subdued, and apprehensions gone,
  • In peace our hero went aspiring on;
  • But short the period--soon a quarrel rose,
  • Fierce in the birth, and fatal in the close;
  • With times of truce between, which rather proved
  • That both were weary, than that either loved.
  • Fulham ev’n now disliked the heavy thrall, } 300
  • And for her death would in his anguish call, }
  • As Rome’s mistaken friend exclaim’d, }
  • _Let Carthage fall_! }
  • So felt our hero, so his wish express’d,
  • Against this powerful sprite--_delenda est_.
  • Rome in her conquest saw not danger near,
  • Freed from her rival, and without a fear;
  • So, Conscience conquer’d, men perceive how free,
  • But not how fatal, such a state must be.
  • Fatal, not free, our hero’s: foe or friend,
  • Conscience on him was destined to attend; 310
  • She [dozed] indeed, grew dull, nor seem’d to spy
  • Crime following crime, and each of deeper dye;
  • But all were noticed, and the reckoning time
  • With her account came on--crime following crime.
  • This, once a foe, now brother in the trust,
  • Whom Fulham late described as fair and just,
  • Was the sole guardian of a wealthy maid,
  • Placed in his power, and of his frown afraid:
  • Not quite an idiot, for her busy brain
  • Sought, by poor cunning, trifling points to gain; 320
  • Success in childish projects her delight,
  • She took no heed of each important right.
  • The friendly parties met--the guardian cried,
  • “I am too old; my sons have each a bride:
  • Martha, my ward, would make an easy wife;
  • On easy terms I’ll make her yours for life;
  • And then the creature is so weak and mild,
  • She may be soothed and threaten’d as a child--”
  • “Yet not obey,” said Fulham, “for your fools,
  • Female and male, are obstinate as mules.” 330
  • Some points adjusted, these new friends agreed,
  • Proposed the day, and hurried on the deed.
  • “’Tis a vile act,” said Conscience;--“It will prove,”
  • Replied the bolder man, “an act of love;
  • Her wicked guardian might the girl have sold
  • To endless misery for a tyrant’s gold;
  • Now may her life be happy--for I mean
  • To keep my temper even and serene.”
  • “I cannot thus compound,” the spirit cried,
  • “Nor have my laws thus broken and defied; 340
  • This is a fraud, a bargain for a wife;
  • Expect my vengeance, or amend your life.”
  • The wife was pretty, trifling, childish, weak;
  • She could not think, but would not cease to speak.
  • This he forbad--she took the caution ill,
  • And boldly rose against his sovereign will;
  • With idiot-cunning she would watch the hour,
  • When friends were present, to dispute his power:
  • With tyrant-craft, he then was still and calm,
  • But raised in private terror and alarm: 350
  • By many trials, she perceived how far
  • To vex and tease, without an open war;
  • And he discover’d that so weak a mind
  • No art could lead, and no compulsion bind;
  • The rudest force would fail such mind to tame,
  • And she was callous to rebuke and shame;
  • Proud of her wealth, the power of law she knew,
  • And would assist him in the spending too.
  • His threat’ning words with insult she defied,
  • To all his reasoning with a stare replied; 360
  • And when he begg’d her to attend, would say,
  • “Attend I will--but let me have my way.”
  • Nor rest had Conscience: “While you merit pain
  • From me,” she cried, “you seek redress in vain.”
  • His thoughts were grievous: “All that I possess
  • From this vile bargain adds to my distress;
  • To pass a life with one who will not mend, }
  • Who cannot love, nor save, nor wisely spend, }
  • Is a vile prospect, and I see no end; }
  • For if we part, I must of course restore 370
  • Much of her money, and must wed no more.
  • “Is there no way?”--here Conscience rose in power,
  • “Oh! fly the danger of this fatal hour;
  • I am thy Conscience, faithful, fond, and true,
  • Ah, fly this thought, or evil must ensue;
  • Fall on thy knees, and pray with all thy soul,
  • Thy purpose banish, thy design control;
  • Let every hope of such advantage cease,
  • Or never more expect a moment’s peace.”
  • Th’ affrighten’d man a due attention paid, 380
  • Felt the rebuke, and the command obey’d.
  • Again the wife rebell’d, again express’d
  • A love for pleasure--a contempt of rest;
  • “She, whom she pleased, would visit, would receive
  • Those who pleased her, nor deign to ask for leave.”
  • “One way there is,” said he; “I might contrive
  • Into a trap this foolish thing to drive:
  • Who pleased her, said she?--I’ll be certain who--”
  • “Take heed,” said Conscience, “what thou mean’st to do:
  • Ensnare thy wife?”--“Why yes,” he must confess, 390
  • “It might be wrong--but there was no redress;
  • Beside, to think,” said he, “is not to sin.”
  • “Mistaken man!” replied the power within.
  • No guest unnoticed to the lady came,
  • He judged th’ event with mingled joy and shame;
  • Oft he withdrew, and seem’d to leave her free.
  • But still as watchful as a lynx was he;
  • Meanwhile the wife was thoughtless, cool, and gay,
  • And, without virtue, had no wish to stray.
  • Though thus opposed, his plans were not resign’d; 400
  • “Revenge,” said he, “will prompt that daring mind;
  • Refused supplies, insulted and distress’d,
  • Enraged with me, and near a favourite guest--
  • Then will her vengeance prompt the daring deed,
  • And I shall watch, detect her, and be freed.”
  • There was a youth--but let me hide the name,
  • With all the progress of this deed of shame;
  • He had his views--on him the husband cast
  • His net, and saw him in his trammels fast.
  • “Pause but a moment--think what you intend,” 410
  • Said the roused sleeper; “I am yet a friend;
  • Must all our days in enmity be spent?”
  • “No!” and he paused--“I surely shall repent:”
  • Then hurried on--the evil plan was laid, }
  • The wife was guilty, and her friend betray’d, }
  • And Fulham gain’d his wish, and for his will was paid. }
  • Had crimes less weighty on the spirit press’d,
  • This troubled Conscience might have sunk to rest;
  • And, like a foolish guard, been bribed to peace,
  • By a false promise, that offence should cease; 420
  • Past faults had seem’d familiar to the view,
  • Confused if many, and obscure though true;
  • And Conscience, troubled with the dull account,
  • Had dropp’d her tale, and slumber’d o’er th’ amount.
  • But, struck by daring guilt, alert she rose,
  • Disturbed, alarm’d, and could no more repose;
  • All hopes of friendship, and of peace, were past,
  • And every view with gloom was overcast.
  • Hence from that day, that day of shame and sin,
  • Arose the restless enmity within; 430
  • On no resource could Fulham now rely,
  • Doom’d all expedients, and in vain, to try;
  • For Conscience, roused, sat boldly on her throne, }
  • Watch’d every thought, attack’d the foe alone, }
  • And with envenom’d sting drew forth the inward groan: }
  • Expedients fail’d that brought relief before, }
  • In vain his alms gave comfort to the poor: }
  • Give what he would, to him the comfort came no more. }
  • Not prayer avail’d, and when (his crimes confess’d)
  • He felt some ease, she said--“are they redress’d? 440
  • You still retain the profit, and be sure,
  • Long as it lasts, this anguish shall endure.”
  • Fulham still tried to soothe her, cheat, mislead; }
  • But Conscience laid her finger on the deed, }
  • And read the crime with power, and all that must succeed. }
  • He tried t’ expel her, but was sure to find
  • Her strength increased by all that he design’d;
  • Nor ever was his groan more loud and deep,
  • Than when refresh’d she rose from momentary sleep.
  • Now desperate grown, weak, harass’d, and afraid, 450
  • From new allies he sought for doubtful aid;
  • To thought itself he strove to bid adieu,
  • And from devotions to diversions flew;
  • He took a poor domestic for a slave,
  • (Though Avarice grieved to see the price he gave);
  • Upon his board, once frugal, press’d a load
  • Of viands rich, the appetite to goad;
  • The long-protracted meal, the sparkling cup,
  • Fought with his gloom, and kept his courage up;
  • Soon as the morning came, there met his eyes 460
  • Accounts of wealth, that he might reading rise;
  • To profit then he gave some active hours,
  • Till food and wine again should renovate his powers.
  • Yet, spite of all defence, of every aid,
  • The watchful foe her close attention paid;
  • In every thoughtful moment, on she press’d,
  • And gave at once her dagger to his breast;
  • He waked at midnight, and the fears of sin,
  • As waters through a bursten dam, broke in;
  • Nay, in the banquet, with his friends around, 470
  • When all their cares and half their crimes were drown’d,
  • Would some chance act awake the slumbering fear,
  • And care and crime in all their strength appear:
  • The news is read, a guilty victim swings,
  • And troubled looks proclaim the bosom-stings;
  • Some pair are wed; this brings the wife in view,
  • And some divorced: this shows the parting too;
  • Nor can he hear of evil word or deed,
  • But they to thought, and thought to sufferings lead.
  • Such was his life--no other changes came, 480
  • The hurrying day, the conscious night the same;
  • The night of horror--when he, starting, cried
  • To the poor startled sinner at his side:
  • “Is it in law? am I condemn’d to die?
  • Let me escape!--I’ll give--oh! let me fly--
  • How! but a dream--no judges! dungeon! chain!
  • Or these grim men!--I will not sleep again.--
  • Wilt thou, dread being! thus thy promise keep?
  • Day is thy time--and wilt thou murder sleep?
  • Sorrow and want repose, and wilt thou come, 490
  • Nor give one hour of pure untroubled gloom?
  • “Oh! Conscience! Conscience! man’s most faithful friend,
  • Him canst thou comfort, ease, relieve, defend;
  • But if he will thy friendly checks forego,
  • Thou art, oh! woe for me, his deadliest foe!”
  • TALE XV.
  • _ADVICE_; OR, THE ’SQUIRE AND THE PRIEST.
  • His hours fill’d up with riots, banquets, sports----
  • And never noted in him any study,
  • Any retirement, any sequestration.
  • _Henry V_. Act I. Scene 1.
  • I will converse with iron-witted fools,
  • With unrespective boys; none are for me,
  • Who look into me with considerate eyes.
  • _Richard III._ Act IV. Scene 2.
  • You cram these words into mine ears, against
  • The stomach of my sense.
  • _Tempest_, Act II. Scene 1.
  • TALE XV.
  • _THE ’SQUIRE AND THE PRIEST._
  • A wealthy lord of far-extended land
  • Had all that pleased him placed at his command;
  • Widow’d of late, but finding much relief
  • In the world’s comforts, he dismiss’d his grief;
  • He was by marriage of his daughters eased,
  • And knew his sons could marry if they pleased;
  • Meantime in travel he indulged the boys,
  • And kept no spy nor partner of his joys.
  • These joys, indeed, were of the grosser kind,
  • That fed the cravings of an earthly mind; 10
  • A mind that, conscious of its own excess,
  • Felt the reproach his neighbours would express.
  • Long at th’ indulgent board he loved to sit,
  • Where joy was laughter, and profaneness wit;
  • And such the guest and manners of the hall,
  • No wedded lady on the ’squire would call.
  • Here reign’d a favourite, and her triumph gain’d
  • O’er other favourites who before had reign’d;
  • Reserved and modest seem’d the nymph to be,
  • Knowing her lord was charm’d with modesty; 20
  • For he, a sportsman keen, the more enjoy’d,
  • The greater value had the thing destroy’d.
  • Our ’squire declared, that, from a wife released,
  • He would no more give trouble to a priest;
  • Seem’d it not, then, ungrateful and unkind,
  • That he should trouble from the priesthood find?
  • The church he honour’d, and he gave the due
  • And full respect to every son he knew;
  • But envied those who had the luck to meet
  • A gentle pastor, civil, and discreet; 30
  • Who never bold and hostile sermon penn’d,
  • To wound a sinner, or to shame a friend;
  • One whom no being either shunn’d or fear’d,
  • Such must be loved wherever they appear’d.
  • Not such the stern old rector of the time,
  • Who soothed no culprit, and who spared no crime;
  • Who would his fears and his contempt express,
  • For irreligion and licentiousness;
  • Of him our village lord, his guests among,
  • By speech vindictive proved his feelings stung. 40
  • “Were he a bigot,” said the ’squire, “whose zeal
  • Condemn’d us all, I should disdain to feel:
  • But when a man of parts, in college train’d,
  • Prates of our conduct--who would not be pain’d,
  • While he declaims (where no one dares reply) }
  • On men abandon’d, grov’ling in the sty }
  • (Like beasts in human shape) of shameless luxury? }
  • Yet with a patriot’s zeal I stand the shock
  • Of vile rebuke, example to his flock;
  • But let this rector, thus severe and proud, 50
  • Change his wide surplice for a narrow shroud,
  • And I will place within his seat a youth,
  • Train’d by the Graces, to explain the truth;
  • Then shall the flock with gentle hand be led,
  • By wisdom won, and by compassion fed.”
  • This purposed teacher was a sister’s son,
  • Who of her children gave the priesthood one;
  • And she had early train’d for this employ
  • The pliant talents of her college-boy.
  • At various times her letters painted all 60
  • Her brother’s views--the manners of the hall;
  • The rector’s harshness, and the mischief made
  • By chiding those whom preachers should persuade:
  • This led the youth to views of easy life,
  • A friendly patron, an obliging wife;
  • His tithe, his glebe, the garden and the steed,
  • With books as many as he wish’d to read.
  • All this accorded with the uncle’s will;
  • He loved a priest compliant, easy, still;
  • Sums he had often to his favourite sent, 70
  • “To be,” he wrote, “in manly freedom spent;
  • For well it pleased his spirit to assist
  • An honest lad, who scorn’d a Methodist.”
  • His mother too, in her maternal care,
  • Bade him of canting hypocrites beware;
  • Who from his duties would his heart seduce,
  • And make his talents of no earthly use.
  • Soon must a trial of his worth be made--
  • The ancient priest is to the tomb convey’d;
  • And the youth summon’d from a serious friend, 80
  • His guide and host, new duties to attend.
  • Three months before, the nephew and the ’squire
  • Saw mutual worth to praise and to admire;
  • And though the one too early left his wine,
  • The other still exclaim’d--“My boy will shine:
  • Yes, I perceive that he will soon improve,
  • And I shall form the very guide I love;
  • Decent abroad, he will my name defend,
  • And, when at home, be social and unbend.”
  • The plan was specious, for the mind of James 90
  • Accorded duly with his uncle’s schemes:
  • He then aspired not to a higher name
  • Than sober clerks of moderate talents claim;
  • Gravely to pray, and rev’rendly to preach,
  • Was all he saw, good youth! within his reach.
  • Thus may a mass of sulphur long abide,
  • Cold and inert, but, to the flame applied,
  • Kindling it blazes, and consuming turns
  • To smoke and poison, as it boils and burns.
  • James, leaving college, to a preacher stray’d; 100
  • What call’d, he knew not--but the call obey’d,
  • Mild, idle, pensive, ever led by those
  • Who could some specious novelty propose;
  • Humbly he listen’d, while the preacher dwelt
  • On touching themes, and strong emotions felt;
  • And in this night was fix’d that pliant will
  • To one sole point, and he retains it still.
  • At first his care was to himself confined;
  • Himself assured, he gave it to mankind:
  • His zeal grew active--honest, earnest zeal, 110
  • And comfort dealt to him, he long’d to deal;
  • He to his favourite preacher now withdrew,
  • Was taught to teach, instructed to subdue;
  • And train’d for ghostly warfare, when the call
  • Of his new duties reach’d him from the hall.
  • Now to the ’squire, although alert and stout,
  • Came unexpected an attack of gout;
  • And the grieved patron felt such serious pain,
  • He never thought to see a church again.
  • Thrice had the youthful rector taught the crowd, 120
  • Whose growing numbers spoke his powers aloud,
  • Before the patron could himself rejoice
  • (His pain still lingering) in the general voice;
  • For he imputed all this early fame
  • To graceful manner, and the well-known name;
  • And to himself assumed a share of praise,
  • For worth and talents he was pleased to raise.
  • A month had flown, and with it fled disease;
  • What pleased before, began again to please;
  • Emerging daily from his chamber’s gloom, 130
  • He found his old sensations hurrying home;
  • Then call’d his nephew, and exclaim’d, “My boy,
  • Let us again the balm of life enjoy;
  • The foe has left me, and I deem it right,
  • Should he return, to arm me for the fight.”
  • Thus spoke the ’squire, the favourite nymph stood by,
  • And view’d the priest with insult in her eye.
  • She thrice had heard him when he boldly spoke
  • On dangerous points, and fear’d he would revoke;
  • For James she loved not--and her manner told, 140
  • “This warm affection will be quickly cold.”
  • And still she fear’d impression might be made
  • Upon a subject nervous and decay’d;
  • She knew her danger, and had no desire
  • Of reformation in the gallant ’squire;
  • And felt an envious pleasure in her breast
  • To see the rector daunted and distress’d.
  • Again the uncle to the youth applied--
  • “Cast, my dear lad, that cursed gloom aside:
  • There are for all things time and place; appear 150
  • Grave in your pulpit, and be merry here.
  • Now take your wine--for woes a sure resource,
  • And the best prelude to a long discourse.”
  • James half obey’d, but cast an angry eye
  • On the fair lass, who still stood watchful by;
  • Resolving thus, “I have my fears--but still
  • I must perform my duties, and I will;
  • No love, no interest, shall my mind control;
  • Better to lose my comforts than my soul;
  • Better my uncle’s favour to abjure, 160
  • Than the upbraidings of my heart endure.”
  • He took his glass, and then address’d the ’squire:
  • “I feel not well, permit me to retire.”
  • The ’squire conceived that the ensuing day
  • Gave him these terrors for the grand essay,
  • When he himself should this young preacher try,
  • And stand before him with observant eye;
  • This raised compassion in his manly breast,
  • And he would send the rector to his rest;
  • Yet first, in soothing voice--“A moment stay, 170
  • And these suggestions of a friend obey;
  • Treasure these hints, if fame or peace you prize--
  • The bottle emptied, I shall close my eyes.
  • “On every priest a two-fold care attends,
  • To prove his talents, and insure his friends:
  • First, of the first--your stores at once produce,
  • And bring your reading to its proper use;
  • On doctrines dwell, and every point enforce
  • By quoting much, the scholar’s sure resource;
  • For he alone can show us on each head 180
  • What ancient schoolmen and sage fathers said:
  • No worth has knowledge, if you fail to show
  • How well you studied, and how much you know.
  • Is faith your subject, and you judge it right
  • On theme so dark to cast a ray of light:
  • Be it that faith the orthodox maintain,
  • Found in the rubrick, what the creeds explain;
  • Fail not to show us on this ancient faith
  • (And quote the passage) what some martyr saith.
  • Dwell not one moment on a faith that shocks 190
  • The minds of men sincere and orthodox:
  • That gloomy faith, that robs the wounded mind
  • Of all the comfort it was wont to find
  • From virtuous acts, and to the soul denies
  • Its proper due for alms and charities;
  • That partial faith, that, weighing sins alone,
  • Lets not a virtue for a fault atone;
  • That starving faith, that would our tables clear,
  • And make one dreadful Lent of all the year;
  • And cruel too, for this is faith that rends 200
  • Confiding beauties from protecting friends;
  • A faith that all embracing, what a gloom
  • Deep and terrific o’er the land would come!
  • What scenes of horror would that time disclose!
  • No sight but misery, and no sound but woes;
  • Your nobler faith, in loftier style convey’d,
  • Shall be with praise and admiration paid.
  • On points like these your hearers all admire
  • A preacher’s depth, and nothing more require;
  • Shall we a studious youth to college send, 210
  • That every clown his words may comprehend?
  • ’Tis for your glory, when your hearers own
  • Your learning matchless, but the sense unknown.
  • “Thus honour gain’d, learn now to gain a friend,
  • And the sure way is--never to offend;
  • For, James, consider--what your neighbours do
  • Is their own business, and concerns not you.
  • Shun all resemblance to that forward race
  • Who preach of sins before a sinner’s face;
  • And seem as if they overlook’d a pew, 220
  • Only to drag a failing man in view.
  • Much should I feel, when groaning in disease,
  • If a rough hand upon my limb should seize;
  • But great my anger, if this hand were found
  • The very doctor’s, who should make it sound;
  • So feel our minds, young priest, so doubly feel,
  • When hurt by those whose office is to heal.
  • “Yet of our duties you must something tell,
  • And must at times on sin and frailty dwell;
  • Here you may preach in easy, flowing style, 230
  • How errors cloud us, and how sins defile;
  • Here bring persuasive tropes and figures forth,
  • To show the poor that wealth is nothing worth;
  • That they, in fact, possess an ample share
  • Of the world’s good, and feel not half its care;
  • Give them this comfort, and, indeed, my gout
  • In its full vigour causes me some doubt;
  • And let it always, for your zeal, suffice,
  • That vice you combat, in the abstract--vice:
  • The very captious will be quiet then; 240
  • We all confess we are offending men.
  • In lashing sin, of every stroke beware,
  • For sinners feel, and sinners you must spare;
  • In general satire, every man perceives
  • A slight attack, yet neither fears nor grieves;
  • But name th’ offence, and you absolve the rest,
  • And point the dagger at a single breast.
  • “Yet are there sinners of a class so low,
  • That you with safety may the lash bestow:
  • Poachers, and drunkards, idle rogues, who feed 250
  • At others’ cost, a mark’d correction need;
  • And all the better sort, who see your zeal,
  • Will love and reverence for their pastor feel;
  • Reverence for one who can inflict the smart,
  • And love, because he deals them not a part.
  • “Remember well what love and age advise;
  • A quiet rector is a parish prize,
  • Who in his learning has a decent pride;
  • Who to his people is a gentle guide;
  • Who only hints at failings that he sees; } 260
  • Who loves his glebe, his patron, and his ease, }
  • And finds the way to fame and profit is to please.” }
  • The nephew answer’d not, except a sigh
  • And look of sorrow might be term’d reply;
  • He saw the fearful hazard of his state,
  • And held with truth and safety strong debate;
  • Nor long he reason’d, for the zealous youth
  • Resolved, though timid, to profess the truth;
  • And, though his friend should like a lion roar,
  • Truth would he preach, and neither less nor more. 270
  • The bells had toll’d--arrived the time of prayer,
  • The flock assembled, and the ’squire was there:
  • And now can poet sing, or proseman say,
  • The disappointment of that trying day?
  • As he who long had train’d a favourite steed
  • (Whose blood and bone gave promise of his speed),
  • Sanguine with hope, he runs with partial eye
  • O’er every feature, and his bets are high;
  • Of triumph sure, he sees the rivals start,
  • And waits their coming with exulting heart; 280
  • Forestalling glory, with impatient glance,
  • And sure to see his conquering steed advance;
  • The conquering steed advances--luckless day!
  • A rival’s Herod bears the prize away;
  • Nor second his, nor third, but lagging last,
  • With hanging head he comes, by all surpass’d;
  • Surprise and wrath the owner’s mind inflame,
  • Love turns to scorn, and glory ends in shame:--
  • Thus waited, high in hope, the partial ’squire,
  • Eager to hear, impatient to admire. 290
  • When the young preacher in the tones that find
  • A certain passage to the kindling mind,
  • With air and accent strange, impressive, sad,
  • Alarm’d the judge--he trembled for the lad;
  • But when the text announced the power of grace, }
  • Amazement scowl’d upon his clouded face, }
  • At this degenerate son of his illustrious race; }
  • Staring he stood, till hope again arose,
  • That James might well define the words he chose:
  • For this he listen’d--but, alas! he found 300
  • The preacher always on forbidden ground.
  • And now the uncle left the hated pew,
  • With James, and James’s conduct in his view.
  • A long farewell to all his favourite schemes! }
  • For now no crazed fanatic’s frantic dreams }
  • Seem’d vile as James’s conduct, or as James. }
  • All he had long derided, hated, fear’d,
  • This from the chosen youth the uncle heard--
  • The needless pause, the fierce disorder’d air,
  • The groan for sin, the vehemence of prayer, 310
  • Gave birth to wrath, that, in a long discourse
  • Of grace, triumphant rose to four-fold force.
  • He found his thoughts despised, his rules transgress’d; }
  • And, while the anger kindled in his breast, }
  • The pain must be endured that could not be express’d. }
  • Each new idea more inflamed his ire,
  • As fuel thrown upon a rising fire:
  • A hearer yet, he sought by threatening sign
  • To ease his heart, and awe the young divine;
  • But James refused those angry looks to meet, 320
  • Till he dismiss’d his flock, and left his seat.
  • Exhausted then he felt his trembling frame,
  • But fix’d his soul--his sentiments the same;
  • And therefore wise it seem’d to fly from rage,
  • And seek for shelter in his parsonage:
  • There, if forsaken, yet consoled to find
  • Some comforts left, though not a few resign’d;
  • There, if he lost an erring parent’s love,
  • An honest conscience must the cause approve;
  • If the nice palate were no longer fed, 330
  • The mind enjoy’d delicious thoughts instead;
  • And if some part of earthly good was flown,
  • Still was the tithe of ten good farms his own.
  • Fear now, and discord, in the village reign, }
  • The cool remonstrate, and the meek complain; }
  • But there is war within, and wisdom pleads in vain. }
  • Now dreads the uncle, and proclaims his dread,
  • Lest the boy-priest should turn each rustic head;
  • The certain converts cost him certain wo;
  • The doubtful fear lest they should join the foe; 340
  • Matrons of old, with whom he used to joke,
  • Now pass his Honour with a pious look;
  • Lasses, who met him once with lively airs,
  • Now cross his way, and gravely walk to prayers;
  • An old companion, whom he long has loved,
  • By coward fears confess’d his conscience moved;
  • As the third bottle gave its spirit forth.
  • And they bore witness to departed worth,
  • The friend arose, and he too would depart--
  • “Man,” said the ’squire, “thou wert not wont to start; 350
  • Hast thou attended to that foolish boy,
  • Who would abridge all comforts, or destroy?”
  • Yes, he had listen’d, who had slumber’d long,
  • And was convinced that something must be wrong;
  • But, though affected, still his yielding heart,
  • And craving palate, took the uncle’s part.
  • Wine now oppress’d him, who, when free from wine,
  • Could seldom clearly utter his design;
  • But, though by nature and indulgence weak,
  • Yet, half-converted, he resolved to speak; 360
  • And, speaking, own’d, “that in his mind the youth
  • Had gifts and learning, and that truth was truth.
  • The ’squire he honour’d, and, for his poor part,
  • He hated nothing like a hollow heart;
  • But ’twas a maxim he had often tried,
  • That right was right, and there he would abide;
  • He honour’d learning, and he would confess
  • The preacher had his talents--more or less:
  • Why not agree? he thought the young divine
  • Had no such strictness--they might drink and dine, 370
  • For them sufficient--but he said before,
  • That truth was truth, and he would drink no more.”
  • This heard the ’squire with mix’d contempt and pain;
  • He fear’d the priest this recreant sot would gain.
  • The favourite nymph, though not a convert made,
  • Conceived the man she scorn’d her cause would aid;
  • And when the spirits of her lord were low,
  • The lass presumed the wicked cause to show:
  • “It was the wretched life his Honour led,
  • And would draw vengeance on his guilty head; 380
  • Their loves (Heav’n knew how dreadfully distress’d
  • The thought had made her!) were as yet unbless’d:
  • And till the church had sanction’d”--here she saw
  • The wrath that forced her trembling to withdraw.
  • Add to these outward ills some inward light,
  • That show’d him all was not correct and right:
  • Though now he less indulged--and to the poor,
  • From day to day, sent alms from door to door;
  • Though he some ease from easy virtues found,
  • Yet conscience told him he could not compound; 390
  • But must himself the darling sin deny, }
  • Change the whole heart--but here a heavy sigh }
  • Proclaim’d, “How vast the toil! and ah! how weak am I!” }
  • James too has trouble--he divided sees
  • A parish, once harmonious and at ease:
  • With him united are the simply meek,
  • The warm, the sad, the nervous, and the weak;
  • The rest his uncle’s, save the few beside,
  • Who own no doctrine, and obey no guide;
  • With stragglers of each adverse camp, who lend 400
  • Their aid to both, but each in turn offend.
  • Though zealous still, yet he begins to feel
  • The heat too fierce, that glows in vulgar zeal;
  • With pain he hears his simple friends relate
  • Their week’s experience, and their woful state:
  • With small temptation struggling every hour,
  • And bravely battling with the tempting power;
  • His native sense is hurt by strange complaints
  • Of inward motions in these warring saints:
  • Who never cast on sinful bait a look 410
  • But they perceive the devil at the hook.
  • Grieved, yet compell’d to smile, he finds it hard
  • Against the blunders of conceit to guard;
  • He sighs to hear the jests his converts cause,
  • He cannot give their erring zeal applause;
  • But finds it inconsistent to condemn
  • The flights and follies he has nursed in them:
  • These, in opposing minds, contempt produce,
  • Or mirth occasion, or provoke abuse;
  • On each momentous theme disgrace they bring, 420
  • And give to Scorn her poison and her sting.
  • TALE XVI.
  • _THE CONFIDANT._
  • Think’st thou I’d make a life of jealousy,
  • To follow still the changes of the moon,
  • With fresh suspicion?
  • _Othello_, Act III. Scene 3.
  • Why hast thou lost the fresh blood in thy cheeks,
  • And given my treasure and my rights [of] thee
  • To thick-eyed musing and cursed melancholy?
  • 1 _Henry IV._ Act II. Scene 3.
  • It is excellent
  • To have a giant’s strength, but [it is] tyrannous
  • To use it as a giant.
  • _Measure for Measure_, Act II. Scene 2.
  • TALE XVI.
  • _THE CONFIDANT._
  • Anna was young and lovely--in her eye
  • The glance of beauty, in her cheek the dye;
  • Her shape was slender, and her features small,
  • But graceful, easy, unaffected all.
  • The liveliest tints her youthful face disclosed;
  • There beauty sparkled, and there health reposed;
  • For the pure blood that flush’d that rosy cheek
  • Spoke what the heart forbad the tongue to speak;
  • And told the feelings of that heart as well,
  • Nay, with more candour than the tongue could tell. 10
  • Though this fair lass had with the wealthy dwelt,
  • Yet like the damsel of the cot she felt;
  • And, at the distant hint or dark surmise,
  • The blood into the mantling cheek would rise.
  • Now Anna’s station frequent terrors wrought
  • In one whose looks were with such meaning fraught;
  • For on a lady, as an humble friend,
  • It was her painful office to attend.
  • Her duties here were of the usual kind--
  • And some the body harass’d, some the mind: 20
  • Billets she wrote, and tender stories read,
  • To make the lady sleepy in her bed;
  • She play’d at whist, but with inferior skill,
  • And heard the summons as a call to drill;
  • Music was ever pleasant till she play’d
  • At a request that no request convey’d;
  • The lady’s tales with anxious looks she heard,
  • For she must witness what her friend averr’d;
  • The lady’s taste she must in all approve,
  • Hate whom she hated, whom she loved must love; 30
  • These, with the various duties of her place,
  • With care she studied, and perform’d with grace;
  • She veil’d her troubles in a mask of ease,
  • And show’d her pleasure was a power to please.
  • Such were the damsel’s duties; she was poor--
  • Above a servant, but with service more.
  • Men on her face with careless freedom gazed,
  • Nor thought how painful was the glow they raised;
  • A wealthy few to gain her favour tried,
  • But not the favour of a grateful bride: 40
  • They spoke their purpose with an easy air,
  • That shamed and frighten’d the dependent fair:
  • Past time she view’d, the passing time to cheat,
  • But nothing found to make the present sweet;
  • With pensive soul she read life’s future page,
  • And saw dependent, poor, repining age.
  • But who shall dare t’ assert what _years_ may bring,
  • When wonders from the passing _hour_ may spring?--
  • There dwelt a yeoman in the place, whose mind
  • Was gentle, generous, cultivated, kind; 50
  • For thirty years he labour’d; fortune then
  • Placed the mild rustic with superior men:
  • A richer Stafford, who had lived to save,
  • What he had treasured to the poorer gave;
  • Who with a sober mind that treasure view’d,
  • And the slight studies of his youth renew’d.
  • He not profoundly, but discreetly read,
  • And a fair mind with useful culture fed;
  • Then thought of marriage--“But the great,” said he,
  • “I shall not suit, nor will the meaner me.” 60
  • Anna he saw, admired her modest air;
  • He thought her virtuous, and he knew her fair;
  • Love raised his pity for her humble state,
  • And prompted wishes for her happier fate;
  • No pride in money would his feelings wound,
  • Nor vulgar manners hurt him and confound:
  • He then the lady at the hall address’d,
  • Sought her consent, and his regard express’d;
  • Yet, if some cause his earnest wish denied,
  • He begg’d to know it; and he bow’d and sigh’d. 70
  • The lady own’d that she was loth to part,
  • But praised the damsel for her gentle heart,
  • Her pleasing person, and her blooming health;
  • But ended thus, “Her virtue is her wealth.”
  • “Then is she rich!” he cried, with lively air;
  • “But whence, so please you, came a lass so fair?”
  • “A placeman’s child was Anna, one who died
  • And left a widow by afflictions tried;
  • She to support her infant daughter strove,
  • But early left the object of her love; 80
  • Her youth, her beauty, and her orphan-state
  • Gave a kind countess interest in her fate;
  • With her she dwelt, and still might dwelling be,
  • When the earl’s folly caused the lass to flee;
  • A second friend was she compell’d to shun,
  • By the rude offers of an uncheck’d son;
  • I found her then, and with a mother’s love
  • Regard the gentle girl whom you approve.
  • Yet, e’en with me, protection is not peace;
  • Nor man’s designs, nor beauty’s trial, cease; 90
  • Like sordid boys by costly fruit they feel:
  • They will not purchase, but they try to steal.”
  • Now this good lady, like a witness true,
  • Told but the truth, and all the truth she knew;
  • And ’tis our duty and our pain to show
  • Truth this good lady had not means to know.
  • Yes, there was lock’d within the damsel’s breast
  • A fact important to be now confess’d;
  • Gently, my muse, th’ afflicting tale relate,
  • And have some feeling for a sister’s fate. 100
  • Where Anna dwelt, a conquering hero came--
  • An Irish captain, Sedley was his name;
  • And he too had that same prevailing art,
  • That gave soft wishes to the virgin’s heart.
  • In years they differ’d; he had thirty seen
  • When this young beauty counted just fifteen;
  • But still they were a lovely lively pair,
  • And trod on earth as if they trod on air.
  • On love, delightful theme! the captain dwelt
  • With force still growing with the hopes he felt; 110
  • But with some caution and reluctance told,
  • He had a father crafty, harsh, and old;
  • Who, as possessing much, would much expect,
  • Or both, for ever, from his love reject:
  • Why then offence to one so powerful give,
  • Who (for their comfort) had not long to live?
  • With this poor prospect the deluded maid,
  • In words confiding, was indeed betray’d;
  • And, soon as terrors in her bosom rose,
  • The hero fled; they hinder’d his repose. 120
  • Deprived of him, she to a parent’s breast
  • Her secret trusted, and her pains impress’d:
  • Let her to town (so prudence urged) repair,
  • To shun disgrace, at least to hide it there;
  • But ere she went, the luckless damsel pray’d
  • A chosen friend might lend her timely aid:
  • “Yes! my soul’s sister, my Eliza, come,
  • Hear her last sigh, and ease thy Anna’s doom:”
  • “’Tis a fool’s wish,” the angry father cried,
  • But, lost in troubles of his own, complied; 130
  • And dear Eliza to her friend was sent,
  • T’ indulge that wish, and be her punishment:
  • The time arrived, and brought a tenfold dread;
  • The time was past, and all the terror fled;
  • The infant died; the face resumed each charm,
  • And reason now brought trouble and alarm:
  • “Should her Eliza--no! she was too just,
  • Too good and kind--but ah! too young to trust.”
  • Anna return’d, her former place resumed,
  • And faded beauty with new grace re-bloom’d; 140
  • And, if some whispers of the past were heard,
  • They died innoxious, as no cause appear’d;
  • But other cares on Anna’s bosom press’d,
  • She saw her father gloomy and distress’d;
  • He died o’erwhelm’d with debt, and soon was shed }
  • The filial sorrow o’er a mother dead: }
  • She sought Eliza’s arms, that faithful friend was wed; }
  • Then was compassion by the countess shown,
  • And all th’ adventures of her life are known.
  • And now beyond her hopes--no longer tried 150
  • By slavish awe--she lived a yeoman’s bride;
  • Then bless’d her lot, and with a grateful mind
  • Was careful, cheerful, vigilant, and kind.
  • The gentle husband felt supreme delight,
  • Bless’d by her joy, and happy in her sight;
  • He saw with pride in every friend and guest
  • High admiration and regard express’d;
  • With greater pride, and with superior joy,
  • He look’d exulting on his first-born boy;
  • To her fond breast the wife her infant strain’d, 160
  • Some feelings utter’d, some were not explain’d;
  • And she enraptured with her treasure grew,
  • The sight familiar, but the pleasure new.
  • Yet there appear’d within that tranquil state
  • Some threat’ning prospect of uncertain fate;
  • Between the married when a secret lies,
  • It wakes suspicion from enforced disguise.
  • Still thought the wife upon her absent friend,
  • With all that must upon her truth depend:
  • “There is no being in the world beside, 170
  • Who can discover what that friend will hide;
  • Who knew the fact, knew not my name or state,
  • Who these can tell cannot the fact relate;
  • But thou, Eliza, canst the whole impart,
  • And all my safety is thy generous heart.”
  • Mix’d with these fears--but light and transient these--
  • Fled years of peace, prosperity, and ease;
  • So tranquil all that scarce a gloomy day
  • For days of gloom unmix’d prepared the way.
  • One eve, the wife, still happy in her state, 180
  • Sang gaily, thoughtless of approaching fate;
  • Then came a letter, that (received in dread
  • Not unobserved) she in confusion read;
  • The substance this--“Her friend rejoiced to find
  • That she had riches with a grateful mind;
  • While poor Eliza had from place to place
  • Been lured by hope to labour for disgrace;
  • That every scheme her wandering husband tried,
  • Pain’d while he lived, and perish’d when he died.”
  • She then of want in angry style complain’d: } 190
  • Her child a burthen to her life remain’d, }
  • Her kindred shunn’d her prayers, no friend her }
  • soul sustain’d. }
  • “Yet why neglected? Dearest Anna knew
  • Her worth once tried, her friendship ever true;
  • She hoped, she trusted, though by wants oppress’d,
  • To lock the treasured secret in her breast;
  • Yet, vex’d by trouble, must apply to one,
  • For kindness due to her for kindness done.”
  • In Anna’s mind was tumult; in her face
  • Flushings of dread had momentary place. 200
  • “I must,” she judged, “these cruel lines expose,
  • Or fears, or worse than fears, my crime disclose.”
  • The letter shown, he said, with sober smile--
  • “Anna, your friend has not a friendly style.
  • Say, where could you with this fair lady dwell,
  • Who boasts of secrets that she scorns to tell?”
  • “At school,” she answer’d; he “at school!” replied;
  • “Nay, then I know the secrets you would hide:
  • Some [early] longings these, without dispute;
  • Some youthful gaspings for forbidden fruit. 210
  • Why so disorder’d, love? are such the crimes
  • That give us sorrow in our graver times?
  • Come, take a present for your friend, and rest
  • In perfect peace--you find you are confess’d.”
  • This cloud, though past, alarm’d the conscious wife,
  • Presaging gloom and sorrow for her life;
  • Who to her answer join’d a fervent prayer,
  • That her Eliza would a sister spare:
  • If she again--but was there cause?--should send,
  • Let her direct--and then she named a friend.-- 220
  • A sad expedient, untried friends to trust,
  • And still to fear the tried may be unjust:
  • Such is his pain, who, by his debt oppress’d,
  • Seeks by new bonds a temporary rest.
  • Few were her peaceful days till Anna read
  • The words she dreaded, and had cause to dread:--
  • “Did she believe, did she, unkind, suppose
  • That thus Eliza’s friendship was to close?
  • No! though she tried, and her desire was plain,
  • To break the friendly bond, she strove in vain: 230
  • Ask’d she for silence? why so loud the call,
  • And yet the token of her love so small?
  • By means like these will you attempt to bind
  • And check the movements of an injured mind?
  • Poor as I am, I shall be proud to show
  • What dangerous secrets I may safely know.
  • Secrets, to men of jealous minds convey’d,
  • Have many a noble house in ruins laid;
  • Anna, I trust, although with wrongs beset,
  • And urged by want, I shall be faithful yet; 240
  • But what temptation may from these arise,
  • To take a slighted woman by surprise,
  • Becomes a subject for your serious care--
  • For who offends, must for offence prepare.”
  • Perplex’d, dismay’d, the wife foresaw her doom;
  • A day deferr’d was yet a day to come;
  • But still, though painful her suspended state,
  • She dreaded more the crisis of her fate;
  • Better to die than Stafford’s scorn to meet,
  • And her strange friend perhaps would be discreet. 250
  • Presents she sent, and made a strong appeal
  • To woman’s feelings, begging her to feel;
  • With too much force she wrote of jealous men,
  • And her tears falling spoke beyond the pen;
  • Eliza’s silence she again implored,
  • And promised all that prudence could afford.
  • For looks composed and careless Anna tried;
  • She seem’d in trouble, and unconscious sigh’d:
  • The faithful husband, who devoutly loved
  • His silent partner, with concern reproved: 260
  • “What secret sorrows on my Anna press,
  • That love may not partake, nor care redress?”
  • “None, none,” she answer’d, with a look so kind,
  • That the fond man determined to be blind.
  • A few succeeding weeks of brief repose
  • In Anna’s cheek revived the faded rose;
  • A hue like this the western sky displays,
  • That glows awhile, and withers as we gaze.
  • Again the friend’s tormenting letter came--
  • “The wants she suffer’d were affection’s shame; 270
  • She with her child a life of terrors led,
  • Unhappy fruit! but of a lawful bed.
  • Her friend was tasting every bliss in life,
  • The joyful mother, and the wealthy wife;
  • While she was placed in doubt, in fear, in want,
  • To starve on trifles that the happy grant;
  • Poorly for all her faithful silence paid,
  • And tantalized by ineffectual aid.
  • She could not thus a beggar’s lot endure;
  • She wanted something permanent and sure: 280
  • If they were friends, then equal be their lot,
  • And she was free to speak if they were not.”
  • Despair and terror seized the wife, to find
  • The artful workings of a vulgar mind:
  • Money she had not, but the hint of dress
  • Taught her new bribes, new terrors to redress;
  • She with such feeling then described her woes,
  • That envy’s self might on the view repose;
  • Then to a mother’s pains she made appeal,
  • And painted grief like one compell’d to feel. 290
  • Yes! so she felt, that in her air, her face,
  • In every purpose, and in every place;
  • In her slow motion, in her languid mien,
  • The grief, the sickness of her soul were seen.
  • Of some mysterious ill the husband sure,
  • Desired to trace it, for he hoped to cure;
  • Something he knew obscurely, and had seen
  • His wife attend a cottage on the green;
  • Love, loth to wound, endured conjecture long,
  • Till fear would speak, and spoke in language strong. 300
  • “All I must know, my Anna--truly know
  • Whence these emotions, terrors, troubles flow;
  • Give me thy grief, and I will fairly prove
  • Mine is no selfish, no ungenerous love.”
  • Now Anna’s soul the seat of strife became:
  • Fear with respect contended, love with shame;
  • But fear, prevailing, was the ruling guide,
  • Prescribing what to show and what to hide.
  • “It is my friend,” she said--“but why disclose
  • A woman’s weakness struggling with her woes? 310
  • Yes, she has grieved me by her fond complaints,
  • The wrongs she suffers, the distress she paints;
  • Something we do--but she afflicts me still,
  • And says, with power to help, I want the will.
  • This plaintive style I pity and excuse,
  • Help when I can, and grieve when I refuse;
  • But here my useless sorrows I resign,
  • And will be happy in a love like thine.”
  • The husband doubted; he was kind but cool:--
  • “’Tis a strong friendship to arise at school; 320
  • Once more then, love, once more the sufferer aid--
  • I too can pity, but I must upbraid;
  • Of these vain feelings then thy bosom free,
  • Nor be o’erwhelm’d by useless sympathy.”
  • The wife again despatch’d the useless bribe,
  • Again essay’d her terrors to describe;
  • Again with kindest words entreated peace,
  • And begg’d her offerings for a time might cease.
  • A calm succeeded, but too like the one
  • That causes terror ere the storm comes on: 330
  • A secret sorrow lived in Anna’s heart,
  • In Stafford’s mind a secret fear of art;
  • Not long they lasted--this determined foe
  • Knew all her claims, and nothing would forego;
  • Again her letter came, where Anna read,
  • “My child, one cause of my distress, is dead;
  • Heav’n has my infant.” “Heartless wretch!” she cried,
  • “Is this thy joy?”--“I am no longer tied:
  • Now will I, hast’ning to my friend, partake
  • Her cares and comforts, and no more forsake; 340
  • Now shall we both in equal station move,
  • Save that my friend enjoys a husband’s love.”
  • Complaint and threats so strong the wife amazed,
  • Who wildly on her cottage-neighbour gazed;
  • Her tones, her trembling, first betray’d her grief;
  • When floods of tears gave anguish its relief.
  • She fear’d that Stafford would refuse assent,
  • And knew her selfish friend would not relent;
  • She must petition, yet delay’d the task,
  • Ashamed, afraid, and yet compell’d to ask; 350
  • Unknown to him some object filled her mind,
  • And, once suspicious, he became unkind.--
  • They sate one evening, each absorb’d in gloom, }
  • When, hark! a noise and rushing to the room, }
  • The friend tripp’d lightly in, and laughing said, “I come.” }
  • Anna received her with an anxious mind,
  • And meeting whisper’d, “Is Eliza kind?”
  • Reserved and cool, the husband sought to prove
  • The depth and force of this mysterious love.
  • To nought that pass’d between the stranger-friend 360
  • And his meek partner seem’d he to attend;
  • But, anxious, listen’d to the lightest word
  • That might some knowledge of his guest afford;
  • And learn the reason one to him so dear
  • Should feel such fondness, yet betray such fear.
  • Soon he perceived this uninvited guest,
  • Unwelcome too, a sovereign power possess’d;
  • Lofty she was and careless, while the meek
  • And humbled Anna was afraid to speak:
  • As mute she listen’d with a painful smile, 370
  • Her friend sate laughing and at ease the while,
  • Telling her idle tales with all the glee
  • Of careless and unfeeling levity.
  • With calm good sense he knew his wife endued,
  • And now with wounded pride her conduct view’d;
  • Her speech was low, her every look convey’d--
  • “I am a slave, subservient and afraid.”
  • All trace of comfort vanish’d if she spoke;
  • The noisy friend upon her purpose broke,
  • To her remarks with insolence replied, 380
  • And her assertions doubted or denied;
  • While the meek Anna like an infant shook,
  • Wo-struck and trembling at the serpent’s look.
  • “There is,” said Stafford, “yes, there is a cause--
  • This creature frights her, overpowers and awes.”
  • Six weeks had pass’d--“In truth, my love, this friend
  • Has liberal notions; what does she intend?
  • Without a hint she came, and will she stay
  • Till she receives the hint to go away?”
  • Confused the wife replied, in spite of truth, 390
  • “I love the dear companion of my youth.”
  • “’Tis well,” said Stafford; “then your loves renew;
  • Trust me, your rivals, Anna, will be few.”
  • Though playful this, she felt too much distress’d
  • T’ admit the consolation of a jest;
  • Ill she reposed, and in her dreams would sigh
  • And, murmuring forth her anguish, beg to die;
  • With sunken eye, slow pace, and pallid cheek,
  • She look’d confusion, and she fear’d to speak.
  • All this the friend beheld, for, quick of sight, 400
  • She knew the husband eager for her flight;
  • And that by force alone she could retain
  • The lasting comforts she had hope to gain:
  • She now perceived, to win her post for life,
  • She must infuse fresh terrors in the wife;
  • Must bid to friendship’s feebler ties adieu,
  • And boldly claim the object in her view;
  • She saw the husband’s love, and knew the power
  • Her friend might use in some propitious hour.
  • Meantime the anxious wife, from pure distress 410
  • Assuming courage, said, “I will confess;”
  • But with her children felt a parent’s pride,
  • And sought once more the hated truth to hide.
  • Offended, grieved, impatient, Stafford bore
  • The odious change till he could bear no more.
  • A friend to truth, in speech and action plain,
  • He held all fraud and cunning in disdain;
  • But fraud to find, and falsehood to detect,
  • For once he fled to measures indirect.
  • One day the friends were seated in that room 420
  • The guest with care adorn’d, and named her home.
  • To please the eye, there curious prints were placed,
  • And some light volumes to amuse the taste;
  • Letters and music, on a table laid,
  • The favourite studies of the fair betray’d;
  • Beneath the window was the toilet spread,
  • And the fire gleam’d upon a crimson bed.
  • In Anna’s looks and falling tears were seen
  • How interesting had their subjects been:
  • “Oh! then,” resumed the friend, “I plainly find 430
  • That you and Stafford know each other’s mind;
  • I must depart, must on the world be thrown,
  • Like one discarded, worthless and unknown;
  • But shall I carry, and to please a foe,
  • A painful secret in my bosom? No!
  • Think not your friend a reptile you may tread
  • Beneath your feet, and say, the worm is dead:
  • I have some feeling, and will not be made
  • The scorn of her whom love cannot persuade.
  • Would not your word, your slightest wish, effect 440
  • All that I hope, petition, or expect?
  • The power you have, but you the use decline--
  • Proof that you feel not, or you fear not mine.
  • There was a time, when I, a tender maid,
  • Flew at a call, and your desires obey’d;
  • A very mother to the child became,
  • Consoled your sorrow, and conceal’d your shame;
  • But now, grown rich and happy, from the door
  • You thrust a bosom-friend, despised and poor;
  • That child alive, its mother might have known 450
  • The hard, ungrateful spirit she has shown.”
  • Here paused the guest, and Anna cried at length--
  • “You try me, cruel friend! beyond my strength;
  • Would I had been beside my infant laid,
  • Where none would vex me, threaten, or upbraid.”
  • In Anna’s looks the friend beheld despair;
  • Her speech she soften’d, and composed her air;
  • Yet, while professing love, she answered still--
  • “You can befriend me, but you want the will.”
  • They parted thus, and Anna went her way, 460
  • To shed her secret sorrows, and to pray.
  • Stafford, amused with books, and fond of home,
  • By reading oft dispell’d the evening gloom;
  • History or tale--all heard him with delight,
  • And thus was pass’d this memorable night.
  • The listening friend bestow’d a flattering smile;
  • A sleeping boy the mother held the while;
  • And, ere she fondly bore him to his bed,
  • On his fair face the tear of anguish shed.
  • And now, his task resumed, “My tale,” said he, 470
  • “Is short and sad, short may our sadness be!”--
  • “The Caliph Harun[8], as historians tell,
  • Ruled, for a tyrant, admirably well;
  • Where his own pleasures were not touch’d, to men
  • He was humane, and sometimes even then.
  • Harun was fond of fruits, and gardens fair;
  • And wo to all whom he found poaching there.
  • Among his pages was a lively boy,
  • Eager in search of every trifling joy;
  • His feelings vivid, and his fancy strong, 480
  • He sigh’d for pleasure while he shrank from wrong;
  • When by the caliph in the garden placed,
  • He saw the treasures which he long’d to taste;
  • And oft alone he ventured to behold
  • Rich hanging fruits with rind of glowing gold;
  • Too long he staid forbidden bliss to view,
  • His virtue failing, as his longings grew;
  • Athirst and wearied with the noon-tide heat,
  • Fate to the garden led his luckless feet;
  • With eager eyes and open mouth he stood, 490
  • Smelt the sweet breath, and touch’d the fragrant food;
  • The tempting beauty sparkling in the sun
  • Charm’d his young sense--he ate, and was undone.
  • When the fond glutton paused, his eyes around
  • He turn’d, and eyes upon him turning found;
  • Pleased he beheld the spy, a brother-page,
  • A friend allied in office and in age;
  • Who promised much that secret he would be,
  • But high the price he fix’d on secrecy.
  • “‘Were you suspected, my unhappy friend,’ 500
  • Began the boy, ‘where would your sorrows end?
  • In all the palace there is not a page
  • The caliph would not torture in his rage:
  • I think I see thee now impaled alive,
  • Writhing in pangs--but come, my friend! revive;
  • Had some beheld you, all your purse contains
  • Could not have saved you from terrific pains;
  • I scorn such meanness; and, if not in debt,
  • Would not an asper on your folly set.’
  • “The hint was strong; young Osmyn search’d his store
  • For bribes, and found he soon could bribe no more; 511
  • That time arrived, for Osmyn’s stock was small,
  • And the young tyrant now possess’d it all;
  • The cruel youth, with his companions near,
  • Gave the broad hint that raised the sudden fear;
  • Th’ ungenerous insult now was daily shown,
  • And Osmyn’s peace and honest pride were flown;
  • Then came augmenting woes, and fancy strong
  • Drew forms of suffering, a tormenting throng;
  • He felt degraded, and the struggling mind 520
  • Dared not be free, and could not be resign’d;
  • And all his pains and fervent prayers obtain’d
  • Was truce from insult, while the fears remain’d.
  • “One day it chanced that this degraded boy
  • And tyrant-friend were fix’d at their employ;
  • Who now had thrown restraint and form aside,
  • And for his bribe in plainer speech applied:
  • ‘Long have I waited, and the last supply
  • Was but a pittance, yet how patient I!
  • But, give me now what thy first terrors gave, 530
  • My speech shall praise thee, and my silence save.’
  • “Osmyn had found, in many a dreadful day,
  • The tyrant fiercer when he seem’d in play:
  • He begg’d forbearance: ‘I have not to give;
  • Spare me awhile, although ’tis pain to live.
  • Oh! had that stolen fruit the power possess’d
  • To war with life, I now had been at rest.’
  • “‘So fond of death,’ replied the boy, ’’tis plain
  • Thou hast no certain notion of the pain;
  • But, to the caliph were a secret shown, 540
  • Death has no pain that would be then unknown,’
  • “Now,” says the story, “in a closet near,
  • The monarch, seated, chanced the boys to hear;
  • There oft he came, when wearied on his throne,
  • To read, sleep, listen, pray, or be alone.
  • “The tale proceeds: when first the caliph found
  • That he was robb’d, although alone, he frown’d;
  • And swore in wrath, that he would send the boy
  • Far from his notice, favour, or employ;
  • But gentler movements soothed his ruffled mind, 550
  • And his own failings taught him to be kind.
  • “Relenting thoughts then painted Osmyn young,
  • His passion urgent, and temptation strong;
  • And that he suffer’d from that villain-spy
  • Pains worse than death till he desired to die;
  • Then, if his morals had received a stain,
  • His bitter sorrows made him pure again;
  • To Reason Pity lent her generous aid,
  • For one so tempted, troubled, and betray’d;
  • And a free pardon the glad boy restored 560
  • To the kind presence of a gentle lord;
  • Who from his office and his country drove
  • That traitor-friend, whom pains nor pray’rs could move;
  • Who raised the fears no mortal could endure,
  • And then with cruel av’rice sold the cure.
  • “My tale is ended; but, to be applied,
  • I must describe the place where caliphs hide.”
  • Here both the females look’d alarm’d, distress’d,
  • With hurried passions hard to be express’d.
  • “It was a closet by a chamber placed, 570
  • Where slept a lady of no vulgar taste;
  • Her friend attended in that chosen room
  • That she had honour’d and proclaim’d her home;
  • To please the eye were chosen pictures placed,
  • And some light volumes to amuse the taste;
  • Letters and music on a table laid,
  • For much the lady wrote, and often play’d;
  • Beneath the window was a toilet spread,
  • And a fire gleam’d upon a crimson bed.”
  • He paused, he rose; with troubled joy the wife 580
  • Felt the new era of her changeful life;
  • Frankness and love appear’d in Stafford’s face,
  • And all her trouble to delight gave place.
  • Twice made the guest an effort to sustain }
  • Her feelings, twice resumed her seat in vain, }
  • Nor could suppress her shame, nor could support her pain. }
  • Quick she retired, and all the dismal night
  • Thought of her guilt, her folly, and her flight;
  • Then sought unseen her miserable home,
  • To think of comforts lost, and brood on wants to come. 590
  • [8] The sovereign here meant is the Haroun Alraschid, or Harun
  • al Rashid, who died early in the ninth century; he is often the
  • hearer, and sometimes the hero, of a tale in the Arabian Nights’
  • Entertainments.
  • TALE XVII.
  • _RESENTMENT._
  • _She_ hath a tear for pity, and a hand
  • Open as day for melting charity;
  • Yet, notwithstanding, being incensed, is flint----
  • _Her_ temper, therefore, must be well observ’d.
  • _2 Henry IV._ Act IV. Scene 4.
  • Three or four wenches, where I stood, cried--“Alas! good soul!” and
  • forgave him with all their hearts; but [there’s] no heed to be taken
  • of them; if Cæsar had stabb’d their mothers, they would have done no
  • less.
  • _Julius Cæsar_, Act I. Scene 2.
  • How dost . . .? Art cold?
  • I’m cold myself--Where is the straw, my fellow?
  • The art of our necessities is strange,
  • That can make vile things precious.
  • _King Lear_, Act III. Scene 2.
  • TALE XVII.
  • _RESENTMENT._
  • Females there are of unsuspicious mind,
  • Easy and soft, and credulous and kind;
  • Who, when offended for the twentieth time,
  • Will hear th’ offender and forgive the crime;
  • And there are others whom, like these to cheat,
  • Asks but the humblest effort of deceit;
  • But they, once injured, feel a strong disdain,
  • And, seldom pardoning, never trust again;
  • Urged by religion, they forgive--but yet
  • Guard the warm heart, and never more forget. 10
  • Those are like wax--apply them to the fire,
  • Melting, they take th’ impressions you desire;
  • Easy to mould, and fashion as you please,
  • And again moulded with an equal ease;
  • Like smelted iron these the forms retain,
  • But once impress’d will never melt again.
  • A busy port a serious merchant made
  • His chosen place to recommence his trade;
  • And brought his lady, who, their children dead,
  • Their native seat of recent sorrow fled. 20
  • The husband duly on the quay was seen;
  • The wife at home became at length serene;
  • There in short time the social couple grew
  • With all acquainted, friendly with a few;
  • When the good lady, by disease assail’d,
  • In vain resisted--hope and science fail’d.
  • Then spake the female friends, by pity led,
  • “Poor merchant Paul! what think ye? will he wed?
  • A quiet, easy, kind, religious man,
  • Thus can he rest?--I wonder if he can.” 30
  • He too, as grief subsided in his mind,
  • Gave place to notions of congenial kind;
  • Grave was the man, as we have told before;
  • His years were forty--he might pass for more;
  • Composed his features were, his stature low,
  • His air important, and his motion slow;
  • His dress became him, it was neat and plain,
  • The colour purple, and without a stain;
  • His words were few, and special was his care
  • In simplest terms his purpose to declare; 40
  • A man more civil, sober, and discreet,
  • More grave and courteous, you could seldom meet.
  • Though frugal he, yet sumptuous was his board,
  • As if to prove how much he could afford;
  • For, though reserved himself, he loved to see
  • His table plenteous, and his neighbours free.
  • Among these friends he sat in solemn style,
  • And rarely soften’d to a sober smile;
  • For this observant friends their reasons gave--
  • “Concerns so vast would make the idlest grave; 50
  • And for such man to be of language free,
  • Would seem incongruous as a singing tree:
  • Trees have their music, but the birds they shield
  • The pleasing tribute for protection yield;
  • Each ample tree the tuneful choir defends,
  • As this rich merchant cheers his happy friends!”
  • In the same town it was his chance to meet
  • A gentle lady, with a mind discreet;
  • Neither in life’s decline, nor bloom of youth,
  • One fam’d for maiden modesty and truth. 60
  • By nature cool, in pious habits bred,
  • She look’d on lovers with a virgin’s dread:
  • Deceivers, rakes, and libertines were they,
  • And harmless beauty their pursuit and prey;
  • As bad as giants in the ancient times
  • Were modern lovers, and the same their crimes.
  • Soon as she heard of her all-conquering charms,
  • At once she fled to her defensive arms;
  • Conn’d o’er the tales her maiden aunt had told,
  • And, statue-like, was motionless and cold; 70
  • From prayer of love, like that Pygmalion pray’d,
  • Ere the hard stone became the yielding maid,
  • A different change in this chaste nymph ensued,
  • And turn’d to stone the breathing flesh and blood.
  • Whatever youth described his wounded heart,
  • “He came to rob her, and she scorn’d his art;
  • And who of raptures once presumed to speak,
  • Told listening maids he thought them fond and weak.
  • But should a worthy man his hopes display
  • In few plain words, and beg a _yes_ or _nay_, 80
  • He would deserve an answer just and plain, }
  • Since adulation only moved disdain-- }
  • Sir, if my friends object not, come again.” }
  • Hence, our grave lover, though he liked the face,
  • Praised not a feature--dwelt not on a grace;
  • But in the simplest terms declared his state:
  • “A widow’d man, who wish’d a virtuous mate;
  • Who fear’d neglect, and was compell’d to trust
  • Dependents wasteful, idle, or unjust;
  • Or, should they not the trusted stores destroy, 90
  • At best, they could not help him to enjoy;
  • But with her person and her prudence blest,
  • His acts would prosper, and his soul have rest.
  • Would she be his?”--“Why, that was much to say;
  • She would consider; he awhile might stay;
  • She liked his manners, and believed his word;
  • He did not flatter, flattery she abhorr’d;
  • It was her happy lot in peace to dwell--
  • Would change make better what was now so well?
  • But she would ponder.”---“This,” he said, “was kind,” 100
  • And begg’d to know “when she had fix’d her mind.”
  • Romantic maidens would have scorn’d the air,
  • And the cool prudence of a mind so fair;
  • But well it pleased this wiser maid to find
  • Her own mild virtues in her lover’s mind.
  • His worldly wealth she sought, and quickly grew
  • Pleased with her search, and happy in the view
  • Of vessels freighted with abundant stores,
  • Of rooms whose treasures press’d the groaning floors;
  • And he of clerks and servants could display 110
  • A little army, on a public day:
  • Was this a man like needy bard to speak
  • Of balmy lip, bright eye, or rosy cheek?
  • The sum appointed for her widow’d state,
  • Fix’d by her friend, excited no debate;
  • Then the kind lady gave her hand and heart,
  • And, never finding, never dealt with art:
  • In his engagements she had no concern;
  • He taught her not, nor had she wish to learn:
  • On him in all occasions she relied, 120
  • His word her surety, and his worth her pride.
  • When ship was launch’d, and merchant Paul had share,
  • A bounteous feast became the lady’s care;
  • Who then her entry to the dinner made,
  • In costly raiment, and with kind parade.
  • Call’d by this duty on a certain day,
  • And robed to grace it in a rich array,
  • Forth from her room with measured step she came,
  • Proud of th’ event, and stately look’d the dame.
  • The husband met her at his study-door-- 130
  • “This way, my love--one moment and no more:
  • A trifling business--you will understand,
  • The law requires that you affix your hand;
  • But first attend, and you shall learn the cause
  • Why forms like these have been prescribed by laws:”
  • Then from his chair a man in black arose,
  • And with much quickness hurried off his prose:
  • That “Ellen Paul the wife, and so forth, freed
  • From all control, her own the act and deed,
  • And forasmuch”----said she, “I’ve no distrust, 140
  • For he that asks it is discreet and just;
  • Our friends are waiting--where am I to sign?--
  • There!--Now be ready when we meet to dine.”
  • This said, she hurried off in great delight:
  • The ship was launch’d, and joyful was the night.
  • Now, says the reader, and in much disdain,
  • This serious merchant was a rogue in grain;
  • A treacherous wretch, an artful, sober knave,
  • And ten times worse for manners cool and grave;
  • And she devoid of sense, to set her hand 150
  • To scoundrel deeds she could not understand.
  • Alas! ’tis true; and I in vain had tried
  • To soften crime, that cannot be denied;
  • And might have labour’d many a tedious verse
  • The latent cause of mischief to rehearse:
  • Be it confess’d, that long with troubled look
  • This trader view’d a huge accompting-book
  • (His former marriage for a time delay’d
  • The dreaded hour, the present lent its aid);
  • But he too clearly saw the evil day, 160
  • And put the terror, by deceit, away;
  • Thus by connecting with his sorrows crime,
  • He gain’d a portion of uneasy time.--
  • All this too late the injured lady saw,
  • What law had given, again she gave to law;
  • His guilt, her folly--these at once impress’d
  • Their lasting feelings on her guileless breast.
  • “Shame I can bear,” she cried, “and want sustain,
  • But will not see this guilty wretch again:”
  • For all was lost, and he, with many a tear, 170
  • Confess’d the fault--she turning scorn’d to hear.
  • To legal claims he yielded all his worth;
  • But small the portion, and the wrong’d were wroth,
  • Nor to their debtor would a part allow;
  • And where to live he knew not--knew not how.
  • The wife a cottage found, and thither went
  • The suppliant man, but she would not relent;
  • Thenceforth she utter’d with indignant tone,
  • “I feel the misery, and will feel alone.”
  • He would turn servant for her sake, would keep 180
  • The poorest school; the very streets would sweep,
  • To show his love--“It was already shown,
  • And her affliction should be all her own.
  • His wants and weakness might have touch’d her heart,
  • But from his meanness she resolved to part.”
  • In a small alley was she lodged, beside
  • Its humblest poor, and at the view she cried:
  • “Welcome--yes! let me welcome, if I can,
  • The fortune dealt me by this cruel man;
  • Welcome this low thatch’d roof, this shatter’d door, 190
  • These walls of clay, this miserable floor;
  • Welcome my envied neighbours; this, to you,
  • Is all familiar--all to me is new.
  • You have no hatred to the loathsome meal; }
  • Your firmer nerves no trembling terrors feel, }
  • Nor, what you must expose, desire you to conceal; }
  • What your coarse feelings bear without offence,
  • Disgusts my taste, and poisons every sense.
  • Daily shall I your sad relations hear,
  • Of wanton women, and of men severe; 200
  • There will dire curses, dreadful oaths abound,
  • And vile expressions shock me and confound;
  • Noise of dull wheels, and songs with horrid words,
  • Will be the music that this lane affords;
  • Mirth that disgusts, and quarrels that degrade
  • The human mind, must my retreat invade.
  • Hard is my fate! yet easier to sustain,
  • Than to abide with guilt and fraud again,
  • A grave impostor--who expects to meet,
  • In such grey locks and gravity, deceit? 210
  • Where the sea rages, and the billows roar,
  • Men know the danger, and they quit the shore;
  • But, be there nothing in the way descried,
  • When o’er the rocks smooth runs the wicked tide--
  • Sinking unwarn’d, they execrate the shock,
  • And the dread peril of the sunken rock.”
  • A frowning world had now the man to dread,
  • Taught in no arts, to no profession bred;
  • Pining in grief, beset with constant care,
  • Wandering he went, to rest he knew not where. 220
  • Meantime the wife--but she abjured the name--
  • Endured her lot, and struggled with the shame:
  • When, lo! an uncle on the mother’s side,
  • In nature something, as in blood allied,
  • Admired her firmness, his protection gave,
  • And show’d a kindness she disdain’d to crave.
  • Frugal and rich the man, and frugal grew
  • The sister-mind, without a selfish view;
  • And further still--the temp’rate pair agreed
  • With what they saved the patient poor to feed. 230
  • His whole estate, when to the grave consign’d,
  • Left the good kinsman to the kindred mind;
  • Assured that law, with spell secure and tight,
  • Had fix’d it as her own peculiar right.
  • Now to her ancient residence removed,
  • She lived as widow, well endow’d and loved;
  • Decent her table was, and to her door
  • Came daily welcomed the neglected poor.
  • The absent sick were soothed by her relief,
  • As her free bounty sought the haunts of grief; 240
  • A plain and homely charity had she,
  • And loved the objects of her alms to see;
  • With her own hands she dress’d the savoury meat,
  • With her own fingers wrote the choice receipt;
  • She heard all tales that injured wives relate,
  • And took a double interest in their fate;
  • But of all husbands not a wretch was known
  • So vile, so mean, so cruel, as her own.
  • This bounteous lady kept an active spy,
  • To search th’ abodes of want, and to supply; 250
  • The gentle Susan served the liberal dame--
  • Unlike their notions, yet their deeds the same:
  • No practised villain could a victim find,
  • Than this stern lady more completely blind;
  • Nor (if detected in his fraud) could meet
  • One less disposed to pardon a deceit;
  • The wrong she treasured, and on no pretence
  • Received th’ offender, or forgot th’ offence;
  • But the kind servant, to the thrice-proved knave
  • A fourth time listen’d, and the past forgave. 260
  • First in her youth, when she was blithe and gay,
  • Came a smooth rogue, and stole her love away;
  • Then to another and another flew,
  • To boast the wanton mischief he could do.
  • Yet she forgave him, though so great her pain,
  • That she was never blithe or gay again.
  • Then came a spoiler, who, with villain-art,
  • Implored her hand, and agonized her heart;
  • He seized her purse, in idle waste to spend
  • With a vile wanton, whom she call’d her friend; 270
  • Five years she suffer’d--he had revell’d five--
  • Then came to show her he was just alive;
  • Alone he came, his vile companion dead,
  • And he, a wand’ring pauper, wanting bread;
  • His body wasted, wither’d life and limb,
  • When this kind soul became a slave to him.
  • Nay, she was sure that, should he now survive,
  • No better husband would be left alive;
  • For him she mourn’d, and then, alone and poor,
  • Sought and found comfort at her lady’s door: 280
  • Ten years she served, and, mercy her employ,
  • Her tasks were pleasure, and her duty joy.
  • Thus lived the mistress and the maid, design’d
  • Each other’s aid--one cautious, and both kind.
  • Oft at their window, working, they would sigh
  • To see the aged and the sick go by;
  • Like wounded bees, that at their home arrive,
  • Slowly and weak, but labouring for the hive.
  • The busy people of a mason’s yard
  • The curious lady view’d with much regard; 290
  • With steady motion she perceived them draw
  • Through blocks of stone the slowly-working saw;
  • It gave her pleasure and surprise to see
  • Among these men the signs of revelry;
  • Cold was the season, and confined their view,
  • Tedious their tasks, but merry were the crew.
  • There she beheld an aged pauper wait,
  • Patient and still, to take an humble freight;
  • Within the panniers on an ass he laid
  • The ponderous grit, and for the portion paid; 300
  • This he re-sold, and, with each trifling gift,
  • Made shift to live, and wretched was the shift.
  • Now will it be by every reader told
  • Who was this humble trader, poor and old.--
  • In vain an author would a name suppress,
  • From the least hint a reader learns to guess;
  • Of children lost our novels sometimes treat;
  • We never care--assured again to meet.
  • In vain the writer for concealment tries,
  • We trace his purpose under all disguise; 310
  • Nay, though he tells us they are dead and gone,
  • Of whom we wot--they will appear anon;
  • Our favourites fight, are wounded, hopeless lie;
  • Survive they cannot--nay, they cannot die:
  • Now, as these tricks and stratagems are known,
  • ’Tis best, at once, the simple truth to own.
  • This was the husband--in an humble shed
  • He nightly slept, and daily sought his bread.
  • Once for relief the weary man applied;
  • “Your wife is rich,” the angry vestry cried; 320
  • Alas! he dared not to his wife complain,
  • Feeling her wrongs, and fearing her disdain:
  • By various methods he had tried to live,
  • But not one effort would subsistence give.
  • He was an usher in a school, till noise
  • Made him less able than the weaker boys;
  • On messages he went, till he in vain
  • Strove names, or words, or meanings to retain;
  • Each small employment in each neighbouring town
  • By turn he took, to lay as quickly down; 330
  • For, such his fate, he fail’d in all he plann’d,
  • And nothing prosper’d in his luckless hand.
  • At his old home, his motive half suppress’d,
  • He sought no more for riches, but for rest:
  • There lived the bounteous wife, and at her gate
  • He saw in cheerful groups the needy wait;
  • “Had he a right with bolder hope t’ apply?”
  • He ask’d--was answer’d, and went groaning by;
  • For some remains of spirit, temper, pride,
  • Forbade a prayer he knew would be denied. 340
  • Thus was the grieving man, with burthen’d ass,
  • Seen day by day along the street to pass:
  • “Who is he, Susan? who the poor old man?
  • He never calls--do make him, if you can.”--
  • The conscious damsel still delay’d to speak,
  • She stopp’d confused, and had her words to seek;
  • From Susan’s fears the fact her mistress knew,
  • And cried--“The wretch! what scheme has he in view?
  • Is this his lot?--but let him, let him feel--
  • Who wants the courage, not the will to steal.” 350
  • A dreadful winter came, each day severe,
  • Misty when mild, and icy cold when clear;
  • And still the humble dealer took his load,
  • Returning slow, and shivering on the road:
  • The lady, still relentless, saw him come,
  • And said--“I wonder, has the wretch a home?”--
  • “A hut! a hovel!”--“Then his fate appears
  • To suit his crime;”--“Yes, lady, not his years--
  • No! nor his sufferings--nor that form decay’d.”--
  • “Well! let the parish give its paupers aid; 360
  • You must the vileness of his acts allow.”--
  • “And you, dear lady, that he feels it now.”--
  • “When such dissemblers on their deeds reflect,
  • Can they the pity they refused expect?
  • He that doth evil, evil shall he dread.”-- }
  • “The snow,” quoth Susan, “falls upon his bed-- }
  • It blows beside the thatch--it melts upon his head.”-- }
  • “’Tis weakness, child, for grieving guilt to feel.”--
  • “Yes, but he never sees a wholesome meal;
  • Through his bare dress appears his shrivell’d skin, 370
  • And ill he fares without, and worse within;
  • With that weak body, lame, diseased, and slow,
  • What cold, pain, peril, must the sufferer know!”--
  • “Think on his crime.”--“Yes, sure ’twas very wrong;
  • But look, (God bless him!) how he gropes along.”--
  • “Brought me to shame.”--“Oh! yes, I know it all-- }
  • What cutting blast! and he can scarcely crawl; }
  • He freezes as he moves--he dies! if he should fall. }
  • With cruel fierceness drives this icy sleet--
  • And must a Christian perish in the street, 380
  • In sight of Christians?--There! at last, he lies;
  • Nor unsupported can he ever rise:
  • He cannot live.”--“But is he fit to die?”--
  • Here Susan softly mutter’d a reply,
  • Look’d round the room--said something of its state,
  • Dives the rich, and Lazarus at his gate;
  • And then, aloud--“In pity do behold
  • The man affrighten’d, weeping, trembling, cold.
  • Oh! how those flakes of snow their entrance win
  • Through the poor rags, and keep the frost within; 390
  • His very heart seems frozen as he goes,
  • Leading that starved companion of his woes:
  • He tried to pray--his lips, I saw them move,
  • And he so turn’d his piteous looks above;
  • But the fierce wind the willing heart opposed,
  • And, ere he spoke, the lips in misery closed.
  • Poor suffering object! yes, for ease you pray’d,
  • And God will hear--he only, I’m afraid.”--
  • “Peace! Susan, peace! Pain ever follows sin.”--
  • “Ah! then,” thought Susan, “when will ours begin? 400
  • When reach’d his home, to what a cheerless fire
  • And chilling bed will those cold limbs retire!
  • Yet ragged, wretched as it is, that bed
  • Takes half the space of his contracted shed;
  • I saw the thorns beside the narrow grate,
  • With straw collected in a putrid state.
  • There will he, kneeling, strive the fire to raise,
  • And that will warm him, rather than the blaze;
  • The sullen, smoky blaze, that cannot last
  • One moment after his attempt is past: 410
  • And I so warmly and so purely laid,
  • To sink to rest--indeed, I am afraid.”--
  • “Know you his conduct?”--“Yes, indeed, I know--
  • And how he wanders in the wind and snow:
  • Safe in our rooms the threat’ning storm we hear,
  • But he feels strongly what we faintly fear.”--
  • “Wilful was rich, and he the storm defied;
  • Wilful is poor, and must the storm abide;”
  • Said the stern lady;--“’tis in vain to feel;
  • Go and prepare the chicken for our meal.” 420
  • Susan her task reluctantly began,
  • And utter’d as she went--“The poor old man!”--
  • But while her soft and ever-yielding heart
  • Made strong protest against her lady’s part,
  • The lady’s self began to think it wrong,
  • To feel so wrathful and resent so long.
  • “No more the wretch would she receive again,
  • No more behold him--but she would sustain;
  • Great his offence, and evil was his mind--
  • But he had suffer’d, and she would be kind: 430
  • She spurn’d such baseness, and she found within
  • A fair acquittal from so foul a sin;
  • Yet she too err’d, and must of Heaven expect
  • To be rejected, him should she reject.”
  • Susan was summon’d--“I’m about to do
  • A foolish act, in part seduced by you:
  • Go to the creature--say that I intend,
  • Foe to his sins, to be his sorrow’s friend;
  • Take, for his present comforts, food and wine,
  • And mark his feelings at this act of mine; 440
  • Observe if shame be o’er his features spread,
  • By his own victim to be soothed and fed;
  • But, this inform him, that it is not love
  • That prompts my heart, that duties only move.
  • Say, that no merits in his favour plead,
  • But miseries only, and his abject need;
  • Nor bring me grov’ling thanks, nor high-flown praise;
  • I would his spirits, not his fancy raise.
  • Give him no hope that I shall ever more
  • A man so vile to my esteem restore; 450
  • But warn him rather, that, in time of rest,
  • His crimes be all remember’d and confess’d:
  • I know not all that form the sinner’s debt,
  • But there is one that he must not forget.”
  • The mind of Susan prompted her with speed
  • To act her part in every courteous deed:
  • All that was kind she was prepared to say,
  • And keep the lecture for a future day;
  • When he had all life’s comforts by his side,
  • Pity might sleep, and good advice be tried. 460
  • This done, the mistress felt disposed to look,
  • As self-approving, on a pious book:
  • Yet, to her native bias still inclined,
  • She felt her act too merciful and kind;
  • But when, long musing on the chilling scene
  • So lately past--the frost and sleet so keen--
  • The man’s whole misery in a single view--
  • Yes! she could think some pity was his due.
  • Thus fix’d, she heard not her attendant glide
  • With soft slow step--till, standing by her side, 470
  • The trembling servant gasp’d for breath, and shed
  • Relieving tears, then utter’d---“He is dead!”
  • “Dead!” said the startled lady; “Yes, he fell
  • Close at the door where he was wont to dwell;
  • There his sole friend, the ass, was standing by,
  • Half-dead himself, to see his master die.”
  • “Expired he then, good Heaven! for want of food?”--
  • “No! crusts and water in a corner stood;--
  • To have this plenty, and to wait so long,
  • And to be right too late, is doubly wrong: 480
  • Then, every day to see him totter by,
  • And to forbear--Oh! what a heart had I!”--
  • “Blame me not, child; I tremble at the news.”--
  • “’Tis my own heart,” said Susan, “I accuse:
  • To have this money in my purse--to know
  • What grief was his, and what to grief we owe;
  • To see him often, always to conceive
  • How he must pine and languish, groan and grieve;
  • And every day in ease and peace to dine
  • And rest in comfort!--what a heart is mine!”-- 490
  • TALE XVIII.
  • _THE WAGER._
  • ’Tis thought your deer doth hold you at a bay.
  • _Taming [of] the Shrew_, Act V. Scene 2.
  • I choose her for myself:
  • If she and I are pleased, what’s that to you?
  • ----, Act II. Scene 1.
  • Let’s send each one to his wife,
  • And he whose wife is most obedient
  • [. . . . . .]
  • Shall win the wager.
  • ----, Act V. Scene 2.
  • Now by the world it is a lusty wench,
  • I love her ten times more than e’er I did.
  • ----, Act II. Scene 1.
  • TALE XVIII.
  • _THE WAGER._
  • Counter and Clubb were men in trade, whose pains,
  • Credit, and prudence, brought them constant gains;
  • Partners and punctual, every friend agreed
  • Counter and Clubb were men who must succeed.
  • When they had fix’d some little time in life,
  • Each thought of taking to himself a wife;
  • As men in trade alike, as men in love
  • They seem’d with no according views to move;
  • As certain ores in outward view the same,
  • They show’d their difference when the magnet came. 10
  • Counter was vain; with spirit strong and high,
  • ’Twas not in him like suppliant swain to sigh:
  • “His wife might o’er his men and maids preside,
  • And in her province be a judge and guide;
  • But what he thought, or did, or wish’d to do,
  • She must not know, or censure if she knew;
  • At home, abroad, by day, by night, if he
  • On aught determined, so it was to be.
  • How is a man,” he ask’d, “for business fit,
  • Who to a female can his will submit? 20
  • Absent awhile, let no inquiring eye
  • Or plainer speech presume to question why,
  • But all be silent; and, when seen again,
  • Let all be cheerful--shall a wife complain?
  • Friends I invite, and who shall dare t’ object,
  • Or look on them with coolness or neglect?
  • No! I must ever of my house be head,
  • And, thus obey’d, I condescend to wed.”
  • Clubb heard the speech--“My friend is nice,” said he;
  • “A wife with less respect will do for me. 30
  • How is he certain such a prize to gain? }
  • What he approves, a lass may learn to feign, }
  • And so affect t’ obey till she begins to reign; }
  • Awhile complying, she may vary then,
  • And be as wives of more unwary men;
  • Beside, to him who plays such lordly part,
  • How shall a tender creature yield her heart?
  • Should he the promised confidence refuse,
  • She may another more confiding choose;
  • May show her anger, yet her purpose hide, 40
  • And wake his jealousy, and wound his pride.
  • In one so humbled, who can trace the friend?
  • I on an equal, not a slave, depend;
  • If true, my confidence is wisely placed,
  • And, being false, she only is disgraced.”
  • Clubb, with these notions, cast his eye around,
  • And one so easy soon a partner found.
  • The lady chosen was of good repute;
  • Meekness she had not, and was seldom mute;
  • Though quick to anger, still she loved to smile; 50
  • And would be calm if men would wait awhile:
  • She knew her duty, and she loved her way,
  • More pleased in truth to govern than obey;
  • She heard her priest with reverence, and her spouse
  • As one who felt the pressure of her vows.
  • Useful and civil, all her friends confess’d--
  • Give her her way, and she would choose the best;
  • Though some indeed a sly remark would make--
  • Give it her not, and she would choose to take.
  • All this, when Clubb some cheerful months had spent, 60
  • He saw, confess’d, and said he was content.
  • Counter meantime selected, doubted, weigh’d,
  • And then brought home a young complying maid--
  • A tender creature, full of fears as charms,
  • A beauteous nursling from its mother’s arms;
  • A soft, sweet blossom, such as men must love,
  • But to preserve must keep it in the stove.
  • She had a mild, subdued, expiring look--
  • Raise but the voice, and this fair creature shook;
  • Leave her alone, she felt a thousand fears-- 70
  • Chide, and she melted into floods of tears;
  • Fondly she pleaded and would gently sigh,
  • For very pity, or she knew not why;
  • One whom to govern none could be afraid--
  • Hold up the finger, this meek thing obey’d;
  • Her happy husband had the easiest task--
  • Say but his will, no question would she ask;
  • She sought no reasons, no affairs she knew,
  • Of business spoke not, and had nought to do.
  • Oft he exclaim’d, “How meek! how mild! how kind! 80
  • With her ’twere cruel but to seem unkind;
  • Though ever silent when I take my leave,
  • It pains my heart to think how hers will grieve;
  • ’Tis heaven on earth with such a wife to dwell,
  • I am in raptures to have sped so well;
  • But let me not, my friend, your envy raise,
  • No! on my life, your patience has my praise.”
  • His friend, though silent, felt the scorn implied--
  • “What need of patience?” to himself he cried:
  • “Better a woman o’er her house to rule, 90
  • Than a poor child just hurried from her school:
  • Who has no care, yet never lives at ease;
  • Unfit to rule, and indisposed to please;
  • What if he govern, there his boast should end,
  • No husband’s power can make a slave his friend.”
  • It was the custom of these friends to meet
  • With a few neighbours in a neighbouring street;
  • Where Counter oft-times would occasion seize,
  • To move his silent friend by words like these:
  • “A man,” said he, “if govern’d by his wife, 100
  • Gives up his rank and dignity in life;
  • Now better fate befalls my friend and me.”--
  • He spoke, and look’d th’ approving smile to see.
  • The quiet partner, when he chose to speak,
  • Desired his friend, “another theme to seek;
  • When thus they met, he judged that state-affairs
  • And such important subjects should be theirs.”
  • But still the partner, in his lighter vein,
  • Would cause in Clubb affliction or disdain;
  • It made him anxious to detect the cause 110
  • Of all that boasting--“Wants my friend applause?
  • This plainly proves him not at perfect ease,
  • For, felt he pleasure, he would wish to please.--
  • These triumphs here for some regrets atone--
  • Men who are blest let other men alone.”
  • Thus made suspicious, he observed and saw
  • His friend each night at early hour withdraw;
  • He sometimes mention’d Juliet’s tender nerves,
  • And what attention such a wife deserves.
  • “In this,” thought Clubb, “full sure some mystery lies--}
  • He laughs at me, yet he with much complies, } 121
  • And all his vaunts of bliss are proud apologies.” }
  • With such ideas treasured in his breast,
  • He grew composed, and let his anger rest;
  • Till Counter once (when wine so long went round
  • That friendship and discretion both were drown’d)
  • Began in teasing and triumphant mood
  • His evening banter--“Of all earthly good,
  • The best,” he said, “was an obedient spouse,
  • Such as my friend’s--that every one allows: 130
  • What if she wishes his designs to know?
  • It is because she would her praise bestow;
  • What if she wills that he remains at home?
  • She knows that mischief may from travel come.
  • I, who am free to venture where I please,
  • Have no such kind preventing checks as these;
  • But mine is double duty, first to guide
  • Myself aright, then rule a house beside;
  • While this our friend, more happy than the free,
  • Resigns all power, and laughs at liberty.” 140
  • “By Heaven,” said Clubb, “excuse me if I swear,
  • I’ll bet a hundred guineas, if he dare,
  • That uncontroll’d I will such freedoms take,
  • That he will fear to equal--there’s my stake.”
  • “A match!” said Counter, much by wine inflamed;
  • “But we are friends--let smaller stake be named:
  • Wine for our future meeting, that will I
  • Take and no more--what peril shall we try?”
  • “Let’s to Newmarket,” Clubb replied; “or choose
  • Yourself the place, and what you like to lose; 150
  • And he who first returns, or fears to go,
  • Forfeits his cash.”--Said Counter, “Be it so.”
  • The friends around them saw with much delight
  • The social war, and hail’d the pleasant night;
  • Nor would they further hear the cause discuss’d,
  • Afraid the recreant heart of Clubb to trust.
  • Now sober thoughts return’d as each withdrew,
  • And of the subject took a serious view.
  • “’Twas wrong,” thought Counter, “and will grieve my love;”
  • “’Twas wrong,” thought Clubb, “my wife will not approve;
  • But friends were present; I must try the thing, 161
  • Or with my folly half the town will ring.”
  • He sought his lady--“Madam, I’m to blame,
  • But was reproach’d, and could not bear the shame;
  • Here in my folly--for ’tis best to say
  • The very truth--I’ve sworn to have my way:
  • To that Newmarket--(though I hate the place,
  • And have no taste or talents for a race,
  • Yet so it is--well, now prepare to chide--)
  • I laid a wager that I dared to ride; 170
  • And I must go: by Heaven, if you resist
  • I shall be scorn’d, and ridiculed, and hiss’d;
  • Let me with grace before my friends appear,
  • You know the truth, and must not be severe;
  • He too must go, but that he will of course;
  • Do you consent?--I never think of force.”
  • “You never need,” the worthy dame replied;
  • “The husband’s honour is the woman’s pride;
  • If I in trifles be the wilful wife,
  • Still for your credit I would lose my life; 180
  • Go! and when fix’d the day of your return,
  • Stay longer yet, and let the blockheads learn,
  • That, though a wife may sometimes wish to rule,
  • She would not make th’ indulgent man a fool;
  • I would at times advise--but idle they
  • Who think th’ assenting husband _must_ obey.”
  • The happy man, who thought his lady right
  • In other cases, was assured to-night;
  • Then for the day with proud delight prepared,
  • To show his doubting friends how much he dared. 190
  • Counter--who grieving sought his bed, his rest
  • Broken by pictures of his love distress’d--
  • With soft and winning speech the fair prepared:
  • “She all his councils, comforts, pleasures shared;
  • She was assured he loved her from his soul;
  • She never knew and need not fear control;
  • But so it happen’d--he was grieved at heart,
  • It happen’d so, that they awhile must part--
  • A little time--the distance was but short,
  • And business call’d him--he despised the sport; 200
  • But to Newmarket he engaged to ride,
  • With his friend Clubb;” and there he stopp’d and sigh’d.
  • Awhile the tender creature look’d dismay’d,
  • Then floods of tears the call of grief obey’d:--
  • “She an objection! No!” she sobb’d, “not one;
  • Her work was finish’d, and her race was run;
  • For die she must, indeed she would not live
  • A week alone, for all the world could give;
  • He too must die in that same wicked place;
  • It always happen’d--was a common case; 210
  • Among those horrid horses, jockeys, crowds,
  • ’Twas certain death--they might bespeak their shrouds;
  • He would attempt a race, be sure to fall--
  • And she expire with terror--that was all;
  • With love like hers she was indeed unfit
  • To bear such horrors, but she must submit.”--
  • “But for three days, my love! three days at most--”
  • “Enough for me; I then shall be a ghost.--”
  • “My honour’s pledged!”--“Oh! yes, my dearest life,
  • I know your honour must outweigh your wife; 220
  • But ere this absence, have you sought a friend--
  • I shall be dead--on whom can you depend?--
  • Let me one favour of your kindness crave:
  • Grant me the stone I mention’d for my grave.--”
  • “Nay, love, attend--why, bless my soul--I say
  • I will return--there--weep no longer--nay!”--
  • “Well! I obey, and to the last am true,
  • But spirits fail me; I must die; adieu!”
  • “What, madam! must?--’tis wrong--I’m angry--zounds!
  • Can I remain and lose a thousand pounds?” 230
  • “Go then, my love! it is a monstrous sum,
  • Worth twenty wives--go, love! and I am dumb--
  • Nor be displeased--[had] I the power to live,
  • You might be angry, now you must forgive;
  • Alas! I faint--ah! cruel--there’s no need
  • Of wounds or fevers--this had done the deed.”
  • The lady fainted, and the husband sent
  • For every aid, for every comfort went;
  • Strong terror seized him; “Oh! she loved so well,
  • And who th’ effect of tenderness could tell?” 240
  • She now recover’d, and again began
  • With accent querulous--“Ah! cruel man--”
  • Till the sad husband, conscience-struck, confess’d,
  • ’Twas very wicked with his friend to jest;
  • For now he saw that those who were obey’d,
  • Could like the most subservient feel afraid;
  • And, though a wife might not dispute the will
  • Of her liege lord, she could prevent it still.
  • The morning came, and Clubb prepared to ride
  • With a smart boy, his servant and his guide; 250
  • When, ere he mounted on the ready steed,
  • Arrived a letter, and he stopp’d to read.
  • “My friend,” he read--“our journey I decline:
  • A heart too tender for such strife is mine;
  • Yours is the triumph, be you so inclined;
  • But you are too considerate and kind,
  • In tender pity to my Juliet’s fears
  • I thus relent, o’ercome by love and tears;
  • She knows your kindness; I have heard her say,
  • A man like you ’tis pleasure to obey. 260
  • Each faithful wife, like ours, must disapprove
  • Such dangerous trifling with connubial love;
  • What has the idle world, my friend, to do
  • With our affairs? they envy me and you.
  • What if I could my gentle spouse command--
  • Is that a cause I should her tears withstand?
  • And what if you, a friend of peace, submit
  • To one you love--is that a theme for wit?
  • ’Twas wrong; and I shall henceforth judge it weak
  • Both of submission and control to speak. 270
  • Be it agreed that all contention cease,
  • And no such follies vex our future peace;
  • Let each keep guard against domestic strife,
  • And find nor slave nor tyrant in his wife.”
  • “Agreed,” said Clubb, “with all my soul agreed”--
  • And to the boy, delighted, gave his steed;
  • “I think my friend has well his mind express’d,
  • And I assent; such things are not a jest.”
  • “True,” said the wife, “no longer he can hide
  • The truth that pains him by his wounded pride. 280
  • Your friend has found it not an easy thing,
  • Beneath his yoke this yielding soul to bring;
  • These weeping willows, though they seem inclined }
  • By every breeze, yet not the strongest wind }
  • Can from their bent divert this weak but stubborn kind; }
  • Drooping they seek your pity to excite,
  • But ’tis at once their nature and delight.
  • Such women feel not; while they sigh and weep,
  • ’Tis but their habit--their affections sleep;
  • They are like ice that in the hand we hold, 290
  • So very melting, yet so very cold;
  • On such affection let not man rely:
  • The husbands suffer, and the ladies sigh.
  • But your friend’s offer let us kindly take,
  • And spare his pride for his vexation’s sake;
  • For he has found, and through his life will find, }
  • ’Tis easiest dealing with the firmest mind-- }
  • More just when it resists, and, when it yields, more kind.” }
  • TALE XIX.
  • _THE CONVERT._
  • A tapster is a good trade, an old cloak makes
  • a new jerkin; a wither’d serving-man a fresh tapster.
  • _Merry Wives of Windsor_, Act I. Scene 3.
  • A fellow, sir, that I have known go about with [troll-my-dames].
  • _Winter’s Tale_, Act IV. Scene 3.
  • I myself, sometimes leaving the fear of Heaven on the left hand, and
  • [hiding] mine honour in my necessity, am forced to shuffle, to hedge,
  • and to lurch.
  • _Merry Wives of Windsor_, Act II. Scene 3.
  • Yea, and at that very moment,
  • Consideration like an angel came,
  • And whipp’d th’ offending Adam out of him.
  • _Henry V._ Act I. Scene 1.
  • I have lived long enough: my May of life
  • Is fall’n into the sear, the yellow leaf;
  • And that which should accompany old age,
  • As honour, love, obedience, troops of friends,
  • I must not look to have.
  • _Macbeth_, Act V. Scene 3.
  • TALE XIX.
  • _THE CONVERT._
  • Some to our hero have a hero’s name
  • Denied, because no father’s he could claim;
  • Nor could his mother with precision state
  • A full fair claim to her certificate;
  • On her own word the marriage must depend--
  • A point she was not eager to defend.
  • But who, without a father’s name, can raise
  • His own so high, deserves the greater praise:
  • The less advantage to the strife he brought,
  • The greater wonders has his prowess wrought; 10
  • He who depends upon his wind and limbs,
  • Needs neither cork or bladder when he swims;
  • Nor will by empty breath be puff’d along,
  • As not himself--but in his helpers--strong.
  • Suffice it then, our hero’s name was clear,
  • For, call John Dighton, and he answer’d, “Here!”
  • But who that name in early life assign’d
  • He never found, he never tried to find;
  • Whether his kindred were to John disgrace,
  • Or John to them, is a disputed case; 20
  • His infant-state owed nothing to their care--
  • His mind neglected, and his body bare;
  • All his success must on himself depend,
  • He had no money, counsel, guide, or friend;
  • But, in a market-town, an active boy
  • Appear’d, and sought in various ways employ;
  • Who soon, thus cast upon the world, began
  • To show the talents of a thriving man.
  • With spirit high John learn’d the world to brave,
  • And in both senses was a ready knave; 30
  • Knave [as of] old, obedient, keen, and quick,
  • Knave as at present, skill’d to shift and trick.
  • Some humble part of many trades he caught:
  • He for the builder and the painter wrought;
  • For serving-maids on secret errands ran,
  • The waiter’s helper, and the hostler’s man;
  • And, when he chanced (oft chanced he) place to lose,
  • His varying genius shone in blacking shoes.
  • A midnight fisher by the pond he stood;
  • Assistant poacher, he o’erlook’d the wood; 40
  • At an election John’s impartial mind
  • Was to no cause nor candidate confined;
  • To all in turn he full allegiance swore,
  • And in his hat the various badges bore;
  • His liberal soul with every sect agreed;
  • Unheard their reasons, he received their creed.
  • At church he deign’d the organ-pipes to fill,
  • And at the meeting sang both loud and shrill;
  • But the full purse these different merits gain’d,
  • By strong demands his lively passions drain’d; 50
  • Liquors he loved of each inflaming kind,
  • To midnight revels flew with ardent mind;
  • Too warm at cards, a losing game he play’d;
  • To fleecing beauty his attention paid;
  • His boiling passions were by oaths express’d,
  • And lies he made his profit and his jest.
  • Such was the boy, and such the man had been,
  • But fate or happier fortune changed the scene;
  • A fever seized him; “he should surely die--”
  • He fear’d, and lo! a friend was praying by. 60
  • With terror moved, this teacher he address’d,
  • And all the errors of his youth confess’d:
  • The good man kindly clear’d the sinner’s way
  • To lively hope, and counsell’d him to pray:
  • Who then resolved, should he from sickness rise,
  • To quit cards, liquors, poaching, oaths, and lies.
  • His health restored, he yet resolved, and grew
  • True to his masters, to their meeting true;
  • His old companions at his sober face }
  • Laugh’d loud, while he, attesting it was grace, } 70
  • With tears besought them all his calling to embrace. }
  • To his new friends such convert gave applause,
  • Life to their zeal, and glory to their cause;
  • Though terror wrought the mighty change, yet strong
  • Was the impression, and it lasted long;
  • John at the lectures due attendance paid,
  • A convert meek, obedient, and afraid.
  • His manners strict, though form’d on fear alone, }
  • Pleased the grave friends, nor less his solemn tone, }
  • The lengthen’d face of care, the low and inward groan. } 80
  • The stern good men exulted, when they saw
  • Those timid looks of penitence and awe;
  • Nor thought that one so passive, humble, meek,
  • Had yet a creed and principles to seek.
  • The faith that reason finds, confirms, avows,
  • The hopes, the views, the comforts she allows--
  • These were not his, who by his feelings found,
  • And by them only, that his faith was sound:
  • Feelings of terror these, for evil past,
  • Feelings of hope, to be received at last; 90
  • Now weak, now lively, changing with the day,
  • These were his feelings, and he felt his way.
  • Sprung from such sources, will this faith remain
  • While these supporters can their strength retain?
  • As heaviest weights the deepest rivers pass,
  • While icy chains fast bind the solid mass:
  • So, born of feelings, faith remains secure,
  • Long as their firmness and their strength endure;
  • But, when the waters in their channel glide,
  • A bridge must bear us o’er the threat’ning tide; 100
  • Such bridge is reason, and there faith relies,
  • Whether the varying spirits fall or rise.
  • His patrons, still disposed their aid to lend,
  • Behind a counter placed their humble friend;
  • Where pens and paper were on shelves display’d,
  • And pious pamphlets on the windows laid.
  • By nature active, and from vice restrain’d,
  • Increasing trade his bolder views sustain’d;
  • His friends and teachers, finding so much zeal
  • In that young convert whom they taught to feel, 110
  • His trade encouraged, and were pleased to find
  • A hand so ready, with such humble mind.
  • And now, his health restored, his spirits eased,
  • He wish’d to marry, if the teachers pleased.
  • They, not unwilling, from the virgin-class
  • Took him a comely and a courteous lass;
  • Simple and civil, loving and beloved,
  • She long a fond and faithful partner proved;
  • In every year the elders and the priest
  • Were duly summon’d to a christening feast; 120
  • Nor came a babe, but by his growing trade,
  • John had provision for the coming made;
  • For friends and strangers all were pleased to deal
  • With one whose care was equal to his zeal.
  • In human friendships, it compels a sigh,
  • To think what trifles will dissolve the tie.
  • John, now become a master of his trade,
  • Perceived how much improvement might be made;
  • And, as this prospect open’d to his view,
  • A certain portion of his zeal withdrew; 130
  • His fear abated--“What had he to fear--
  • His profits certain, and his conscience clear?”
  • Above his door a board was placed by John,
  • And “Dighton, stationer,” was gilt thereon;
  • His window next, enlarged to twice the size,
  • Shone with such trinkets as the simple prize;
  • While in the shop with pious works were seen
  • The last new play, review, or magazine.
  • In orders punctual, he observed--“The books
  • He never read, and could he judge their looks? 140
  • Readers and critics should their merits try,
  • He had no office but to sell and buy;
  • Like other traders, profit was his care;
  • Of what they print, the authors must beware.”
  • He held his patrons and his teachers dear,
  • But with his trade--they must not interfere.
  • ’Twas certain now that John had lost the dread
  • And pious thoughts that once such terrors bred;
  • His habits varied, and he more inclined
  • To the vain world, which he had half resign’d: 150
  • He had moreover in his brethren seen,
  • Or he imagined, craft, conceit, and spleen;
  • “They are but men,” said John, “and shall I then
  • Fear man’s control, or stand in awe of men?
  • ’Tis their advice (their convert’s rule and law),
  • And good it is--I will not stand in awe.”
  • Moreover Dighton, though he thought of books
  • As one who chiefly on the title looks,
  • Yet sometimes ponder’d o’er a page to find,
  • When vex’d with cares, amusement for his mind; 160
  • And by degrees that mind had treasured much
  • From works his teachers were afraid to touch.
  • Satiric novels, poets bold and free,
  • And what their writers term philosophy,
  • All these were read; and he began to feel
  • Some self-approval on his bosom steal.
  • Wisdom creates humility, but he
  • Who thus collects it, will not humble be.
  • No longer John was fill’d with pure delight
  • And humble reverence in a pastor’s sight, 170
  • Who, like a grateful zealot, listening stood,
  • To hear a man so friendly and so good;
  • But felt the dignity of one who made
  • Himself important by a thriving trade;
  • And growing pride in Dighton’s mind was bred
  • By the strange food on which it coarsely fed.
  • Their brother’s fall the grieving brethren heard,
  • The pride indeed to all around appear’d;
  • The world, his friends agreed, had won the soul
  • From its best hopes, the man from their control. 180
  • To make him humble, and confine his views
  • Within their bounds, and books which they peruse,
  • A deputation from these friends select,
  • Might reason with him to some good effect;
  • Arm’d with authority, and led by love,
  • They might those follies from his mind remove;
  • Deciding thus, and with this kind intent,
  • A chosen body with its speaker went.
  • “John,” said the teacher, “John, with great concern
  • We see thy frailty, and thy fate discern-- 190
  • Satan with toils thy simple soul beset,
  • And thou art careless, slumbering in the net;
  • Unmindful art thou of thy early vow;
  • Who at the morning-meeting sees thee now?
  • Who at the evening? where is brother John?
  • We ask--are answer’d, ‘To the tavern gone.’
  • Thee on the sabbath seldom we behold;
  • Thou canst not sing, thou’rt nursing for a cold:
  • This from the churchmen thou hast learn’d, for they
  • Have colds and fevers on the sabbath-day; 200
  • When in some snug warm room they sit, and pen
  • Bills from their ledgers, world-entangled men!
  • “See with what pride thou hast enlarged thy shop;
  • To view thy tempting stores the heedless stop;
  • By what strange names dost thou these baubles know,
  • Which wantons wear, to make a sinful show?
  • Hast thou in view these idle volumes placed
  • To be the pander of a vicious taste?
  • What’s here? a book of dances!--you advance
  • In goodly knowledge--John, wilt learn to dance? 210
  • How! ‘Go--’ it says, and ‘to the devil go!
  • And shake thyself!’ I tremble--but ’tis so----
  • Wretch as thou art, what answer canst thou make?
  • Oh! without question, thou wilt go and shake.
  • What’s here? ‘The School for Scandal’--pretty schools!
  • Well, and art thou proficient in the rules?
  • Art thou a pupil, is it thy design
  • To make our names contemptible as thine?
  • ‘Old Nick, a Novel!’ oh! ’tis mighty well--
  • A fool has courage when he laughs at hell; 220
  • ‘Frolic and Fun,’ ‘The humours of Tim Grin’;
  • Why, John, thou grow’st facetious in thy sin;
  • And what? ‘The Archdeacon’s Charge’--‘tis mighty well--
  • If Satan publish’d, thou wouldst doubtless sell;
  • Jests, novels, dances, and this precious stuff--
  • To crown thy folly we have seen enough;
  • We find thee fitted for each evil work---
  • Do print the Koran, and become a Turk!
  • “John, thou art lost; success and worldly pride }
  • O’er all thy thoughts and purposes preside, } 230
  • Have bound thee fast, and drawn thee far aside; }
  • Yet turn, these sin-traps from thy shop expel,
  • Repent and pray, and all may yet be well.
  • “And here thy wife, thy Dorothy, behold,
  • How fashion’s wanton robes her form infold!
  • Can grace, can goodness with such trappings dwell?
  • John, thou hast made thy wife a Jezebel.
  • See! on her bosom rests the sign of sin,
  • The glaring proof of naughty thoughts within;
  • What? ’tis a cross; come hither--as a friend, 240
  • Thus from thy neck the shameful badge I rend.”
  • “Rend, if you dare,” said Dighton; “you shall find
  • A man of spirit, though to peace inclined;
  • Call me ungrateful! have I not my pay
  • At all times ready for the expected day?--
  • To share my plenteous board you deign to come,
  • Myself your pupil, and my house your home;
  • And shall the persons who my meat enjoy
  • Talk of my faults, and treat me as a boy?
  • Have you not told how Rome’s insulting priests 250
  • Led their meek laymen like a herd of beasts;
  • And by their fleecing and their forgery made
  • Their holy calling an accursed trade?
  • Can you such acts and insolence condemn,
  • Who to your utmost power resemble them?
  • “Concerns it you what books I set for sale?
  • The tale perchance may be a virtuous tale;
  • And, for the rest, ’tis neither wise nor just
  • In you, who read not, to condemn on trust;
  • Why should th’ Archdeacon’s Charge your spleen excite?
  • He, or perchance th’ archbishop, may be right. 261
  • “That from your meetings I refrain, is true;
  • I meet with nothing pleasant--nothing new,
  • But the same proofs, that not one text explain,
  • And the same lights, where all things dark remain;
  • I thought you saints on earth--but I have found
  • Some sins among you, and the best unsound;
  • You have your failings, like the crowds below,
  • And at your pleasure hot and cold can blow.
  • When I at first your grave deportment saw, 270
  • (I own my folly,) I was fill’d with awe;
  • You spoke so warmly, and it [seemed] so well,
  • I should have thought it treason to rebel.
  • Is it a wonder that a man like me
  • Should such perfection in such teachers see;
  • Nay, should conceive you sent from Heav’n to brave
  • The host of sin, and sinful souls to save?
  • But, as our reason wakes, our prospects clear,
  • And failings, flaws, and blemishes appear.
  • “When you were mounted in your rostrum high, 280
  • We shrank beneath your tone, your frown, your eye;
  • Then you beheld us abject, fallen, low,
  • And felt your glory from our baseness grow;
  • Touch’d by your words, I trembled like the rest,
  • And my own vileness and your power confess’d:
  • These, I exclaim’d, are men divine, and gazed
  • On him who taught, delighted and amazed;
  • Glad, when he finish’d, if by chance he cast
  • One look on such a sinner, as he pass’d.
  • “But, when I view’d you in a clearer light, 290
  • And saw the frail and carnal appetite;
  • When, at his humble pray’r, you deign’d to eat,
  • Saints as you are, a civil sinner’s meat;
  • When, as you sat contented and at ease,
  • Nibbling at leisure on the ducks and peas,
  • And, pleased some comforts in such place to find,
  • You could descend to be a little kind;
  • And gave us hope, in Heaven there might be room
  • For a few souls beside your own to come;
  • While this world’s good engaged your carnal view, 300
  • And like a sinner you enjoy’d it too:
  • All this perceiving, can you think it strange
  • That change in you should work an equal change?”
  • “Wretch that thou art,” an elder cried, “and gone
  • For everlasting”----“Go thyself,” said John;
  • “Depart this instant, let me hear no more;
  • My house my castle is, and that my door.”
  • The hint they took, and from the door withdrew,
  • And John to meeting bade a long adieu;
  • Attach’d to business; he in time became 310
  • A wealthy man of no inferior name.
  • It seem’d, alas! in John’s deluded sight,
  • That all was wrong because not all was right;
  • And, when he found his teachers had their stains,
  • Resentment and not reason broke his chains.
  • Thus on his feelings he again relied,
  • And never look’d to reason for his guide.
  • Could he have wisely view’d the frailty shown,
  • And rightly weigh’d their wanderings and his own,
  • He might have known that men may be sincere, 320
  • Though gay and feasting on the savoury cheer;
  • That doctrines sound and sober they may teach,
  • Who love to eat with all the glee they preach;
  • Nay, who believe the duck, the grape, the pine,
  • Were not intended for the dog and swine.
  • But Dighton’s hasty mind on every theme
  • Ran from the truth, and rested in th’ extreme;
  • Flaws in his friends he found, and then withdrew
  • (Vain of his knowledge) from their virtues too;
  • Best of his books he loved the liberal kind, 330
  • That, if they improve not, still enlarge the mind;
  • And found himself, with such advisers, free
  • From a fix’d creed, as mind enlarged could be.
  • His humble wife at these opinions sigh’d,
  • But her he never heeded till she died;
  • He then assented to a last request,
  • And by the meeting-window let her rest;
  • And on her stone the sacred text was seen,
  • Which had her comfort in departing been.
  • Dighton with joy beheld his trade advance, 340
  • Yet seldom published, loth to trust to chance;
  • Then wed a doctor’s sister--poor indeed,
  • But skill’d in works her husband could not read;
  • Who, if he wish’d new ways of wealth to seek,
  • Could make her half-crown pamphlet in a week:
  • This he rejected, though without disdain,
  • And chose the old and certain way to gain.
  • Thus he proceeded; trade increased the while,
  • And fortune woo’d him with perpetual smile.
  • On early scenes he sometimes cast a thought, 350
  • When on his heart the mighty change was wrought;
  • And all the ease and comfort converts find
  • Was magnified in his reflecting mind;
  • Then on the teacher’s priestly pride he dwelt,
  • That caused his freedom, but with this he felt
  • The danger of the free--for since that day,
  • No guide had shown, no brethren join’d his way;
  • Forsaking one, he found no second creed,
  • But reading doubted, doubting what to read.
  • Still, though reproof had brought some present pain, 360
  • The gain he made was fair and honest gain;
  • He laid his wares indeed in public view,
  • But that all traders claim a right to do.
  • By means like these, he saw his wealth increase,
  • And felt his consequence, and dwelt in peace.
  • Our hero’s age was threescore years and five,
  • When he exclaim’d, “Why longer should I strive?
  • Why more amass, who never must behold
  • A young John Dighton to make glad the old?”
  • (The sons he had to early graves were gone, 370
  • And girls were burdens to the mind of John.)
  • “Had I [a] boy, he would our name sustain,
  • That now to nothing must return again;
  • But what are all my profits, credit, trade,
  • And parish-honours?--folly and parade.”
  • Thus Dighton thought, and in his looks appear’d
  • Sadness, increased by much he saw and heard.
  • The brethren often at the shop would stay,
  • And make their comments ere they walk’d away;
  • They mark’d the window, fill’d in every pane 380
  • With lawless prints of reputations slain;
  • Distorted forms of men with honours graced,
  • And our chief rulers in derision placed:
  • Amazed they stood, remembering well the days,
  • When to be humble was their brother’s praise;
  • When at the dwelling of their friend they stopp’d
  • To drop a word, or to receive it dropp’d;
  • Where they beheld the prints of men renown’d,
  • And far-famed preachers pasted all around;
  • (Such mouths! eyes! hair! so prim! so fierce! so sleek! 390
  • They look’d as speaking what is wo to speak):
  • On these the passing brethren loved to dwell--
  • How long they spake! how strongly! warmly! well!
  • What power had each to dive in mysteries deep,
  • To warm the cold, to make the harden’d weep;
  • To lure, to fright, to soothe, to awe the soul,
  • And list’ning flocks to lead and to control!
  • But now discoursing, as they linger’d near,
  • They tempted John (whom they accused) to hear
  • Their weighty charge--“And can the lost-one feel, 400
  • As in the time of duty, love, and zeal:
  • When all were summon’d at the rising sun,
  • And he was ready with his friends to run;
  • When he, partaking with a chosen few,
  • Felt the great change, sensation rich and new?
  • No! all is lost, her favours Fortune shower’d
  • Upon the man, and he is overpower’d;
  • The world has won him with its tempting store
  • Of needless wealth, and that has made him poor.
  • Success undoes him; he has risen to fall, 410
  • Has gain’d a fortune, and has lost his all;
  • Gone back from Sion, he will find his age
  • Loth to commence a second pilgrimage;
  • He has retreated from the chosen track;
  • And now must ever bear the burden on his back.”
  • Hurt by such censure, John began to find
  • Fresh revolutions working in his mind;
  • He sought for comfort in his books, but read
  • Without a plan or method in his head;
  • What once amused, now rather made him sad, 420
  • What should inform, increased the doubts he had;
  • Shame would not let him seek at church a guide,
  • And from his meeting he was held by pride;
  • His wife derided fears she never felt,
  • And passing brethren daily censures dealt;
  • Hope for a son was now for ever past,
  • He was the first John Dighton, and the last;
  • His stomach fail’d, his case the doctor knew,
  • But said, “he still might hold a year or two.”
  • “No more?” he said, “but why should I complain? 430
  • A life of doubt must be a life of pain.
  • Could I be sure--but why should I despair?
  • I’m sure my conduct has been just and fair;
  • In youth indeed I had a wicked will,
  • But I repented, and have sorrow still;
  • I had my comforts, and a growing trade
  • Gave greater pleasure than a fortune made;
  • And, as I more possess’d and reason’d more,
  • I lost those comforts I enjoy’d before,
  • When reverend guides I saw my table round, 440
  • And in my guardian guest my safety found.
  • Now sick and sad, no appetite, no ease,
  • Nor pleasure have I, nor a wish to please;
  • Nor views, nor hopes, nor plans, nor taste have I,
  • Yet sick of life, have no desire to die.”
  • He said, and died; his trade, his name is gone,
  • And all that once gave consequence to John.
  • Unhappy Dighton! had he found a friend,
  • When conscience told him it was time to mend!
  • A friend discreet, considerate, kind, sincere, 450
  • Who would have shown the grounds of hope and fear;
  • And proved that spirits, whether high or low,
  • No certain tokens of man’s safety show;
  • Had reason ruled him in her proper place,
  • And virtue led him while he lean’d on grace;
  • Had he while zealous been discreet and pure,
  • His knowledge humble, and his hope secure--
  • These guides had placed him on the solid rock,
  • Where faith had rested, nor received a shock;
  • But his, alas! was placed upon the sand, 460
  • Where long it stood not, and where none can stand.
  • TALE XX.
  • _THE BROTHERS._
  • A brother noble,
  • Whose nature is so far from doing harms
  • That he suspects none; on whose foolish honesty
  • My [practices] ride easy.
  • _King Lear_, Act I. Scene 2.
  • He lets me feed with [his] hinds; bars me the place of brother.
  • _As You Like It_, Act I. Scene 1.
  • ’Twas I, but ’tis not I: I do not shame
  • To tell you what I was, [. . .
  • . . .] being [the thing] I am.
  • _As You Like It_, Act IV. Scene 3.
  • TALE XX.
  • _THE BROTHERS._
  • Than old George Fletcher on the British coast
  • Dwelt not a seaman who had more to boast:
  • Kind, simple, and sincere--he seldom spoke,
  • But sometimes sang and chorus’d “_Hearts of Oak_;”
  • In dangers steady, with his lot content,
  • His days in labour and in love were spent.
  • He left a son so like him, that the old
  • With joy exclaim’d, “’Tis Fletcher we behold;”
  • But to his brother when the kinsmen came,
  • And view’d his form, they grudged the father’s name. 10
  • George was a bold, intrepid, careless lad,
  • With just the failings that his father had;
  • Isaac was weak, attentive, slow, exact,
  • With just the virtues that his father lack’d.
  • George lived at sea: upon the land a guest--
  • He sought for recreation, not for rest--
  • While, far unlike, his brother’s feebler form
  • Shrank from the cold, and shudder’d at the storm;
  • Still with the seaman’s to connect his trade,
  • The boy was bound where blocks and ropes were made. 20
  • George, strong and sturdy, had a tender mind,
  • And was to Isaac pitiful and kind;
  • A very father, till his art was gain’d,
  • And then a friend unwearied he remain’d.
  • He saw his brother was of spirit low,
  • His temper peevish, and his motions slow;
  • Not fit to bustle in a world, or make
  • Friends to his fortune for his merit’s sake:
  • But the kind sailor could not boast the art
  • Of looking deeply in the human heart; 30
  • Else had he seen that this weak brother knew
  • What men to court--what objects to pursue;
  • That he to distant gain the way discern’d,
  • And none so crooked but his genius learn’d.
  • Isaac was poor, and this the brother felt;
  • He hired a house, and there the landman dwelt;
  • Wrought at his trade, and had an easy home,
  • For there would George with cash and comforts come;
  • And, when they parted, Isaac look’d around,
  • Where other friends and helpers might be found. 40
  • He wish’d for some port-place, and one might fall,
  • He wisely thought, if he should try for all;
  • He had a vote--and, were it well applied,
  • Might have its worth--and he had views beside;
  • Old Burgess Steel was able to promote
  • An humble man who served him with a vote;
  • For Isaac felt not what some tempers feel,
  • But bow’d and bent the neck to Burgess Steel;
  • And great attention to a lady gave,
  • His ancient friend, a maiden spare and grave: 50
  • One whom the visage long and look demure
  • Of Isaac pleased--he seem’d sedate and pure;
  • And his soft heart conceived a gentle flame
  • For her who waited on this virtuous dame:
  • Not an outrageous love, a scorching fire,
  • But friendly liking and chastised desire;
  • And thus he waited, patient in delay,
  • In present favour and in fortune’s way.
  • George then was coasting--war was yet delay’d,
  • And what he gain’d was to his brother paid; 60
  • Nor ask’d the seaman what he saved or spent:
  • But took his grog, wrought hard, and was content;
  • Till war awaked the land, and George began
  • To think what part became a useful man:
  • “Press’d, I must go; why, then, ’tis better far
  • At once to enter like a British tar,
  • Than a brave captain and the foe to shun,
  • As if I fear’d the music of a gun.”
  • “Go not!” said Isaac--“You shall wear disguise.”
  • “What!” said the seaman, “clothe myself with lies?”-- 70
  • “Oh! but there’s danger.”--“Danger in the fleet?
  • You cannot mean, good brother, of defeat;
  • And other dangers I at land must share--
  • So now adieu! and trust a brother’s care.”
  • Isaac awhile demurr’d--but, in his heart,
  • So might he share, he was disposed to part:
  • The better mind will sometimes feel the pain }
  • Of benefactions--favour is a chain; }
  • But they the feeling scorn, and what they wish, disdain;-- }
  • While beings form’d in coarser mould will hate 80
  • The helping hand they ought to venerate.
  • No wonder George should in this cause prevail,
  • With one contending who was glad to fail:
  • “Isaac, farewell! do wipe that doleful eye; }
  • Crying we came, and groaning we may die. }
  • Let us do something ’twixt the groan and cry: }
  • And hear me, brother, whether pay or prize,
  • One half to thee I give and I devise;
  • For thou hast oft occasion for the aid
  • Of learn’d physicians, and they will be paid: 90
  • Their wives and children men support, at sea,
  • And thou, my lad, art wife and child to me:
  • Farewell!--I go where hope and honour call,
  • Nor does it follow that who fights must fall.”
  • Isaac here made a poor attempt to speak,
  • And a huge tear moved slowly down his cheek;
  • Like Pluto’s iron drop, hard sign of grace, }
  • It slowly roll’d upon the rueful face, }
  • Forced by the striving will alone its way to trace. }
  • Years fled--war lasted--George at sea remain’d, 100
  • While the slow landman still his profits gain’d.
  • A humble place was vacant--he besought
  • His patron’s interest, and the office caught;
  • For still the virgin was his faithful friend,
  • And one so sober could with truth commend,
  • Who of his own defects most humbly thought,
  • And their advice with zeal and reverence sought.
  • Whom thus the mistress praised, the maid approved,
  • And her he wedded whom he wisely loved.
  • No more he needs assistance--but, alas! 110
  • He fears the money will for liquor pass;
  • Or that the seaman might to flatterers lend,
  • Or give support to some pretended friend.
  • Still, he must write--he wrote, and he confess’d
  • That, till absolved, he should be sore distress’d;
  • But one so friendly would, he thought, forgive
  • The hasty deed--Heav’n knew how he should live;
  • “But you,” he added, “as a man of sense,
  • Have well consider’d danger and expense:
  • I ran, alas! into the fatal snare, 120
  • And now for trouble must my mind prepare;
  • And how, with children, I shall pick my way,
  • Through a hard world, is more than I can say:
  • Then change not, brother, your more happy state,
  • Or on the hazard long deliberate.”
  • George answer’d gravely, “It is right and fit,
  • In all our crosses, humbly to submit:
  • Your apprehensions are unwise, unjust;
  • Forbear repining, and expel distrust.”--
  • He added, “Marriage was the joy of life,” 130
  • And gave his service to his brother’s wife;
  • Then vow’d to bear in all expense a part,
  • And thus concluded, “Have a cheerful heart.”
  • Had the glad Isaac been his brother’s guide,
  • In these same terms the seaman had replied;
  • At such reproofs the crafty landman smiled,
  • And softly said--“This creature is a child.”
  • Twice had the gallant ship a capture made--
  • And when in port the happy crew were paid,
  • Home went the sailor, with his pocket stored, 140
  • Ease to enjoy, and pleasure to afford.
  • His time was short; joy shone in every face;
  • Isaac half fainted in the fond embrace;
  • The wife resolved her honour’d guest to please,
  • The children clung upon their uncle’s knees;
  • The grog went round, the neighbours drank his health,
  • And George exclaim’d--“Ah! what to this is wealth?
  • Better,” said he, “to bear a loving heart,
  • Than roll in riches----but we now must part!”
  • All yet is still--but hark! the winds o’ersweep 150
  • The rising waves, and howl upon the deep;
  • Ships, late becalm’d, on mountain-billows ride--
  • So life is threaten’d, and so man is tried.
  • Ill were the tidings that arrived from sea:
  • The worthy George must now a cripple be;
  • His leg was lopp’d; and, though his heart was sound,
  • Though his brave captain was with glory crown’d--
  • Yet much it vex’d him to repose on shore,
  • An idle log, and be of use no more.
  • True, he was sure that Isaac would receive 160
  • All of his brother that the foe might leave;
  • To whom the seaman his design had sent,
  • Ere from the port the wounded hero went;
  • His wealth and expectations told, he “knew
  • Wherein they fail’d, what Isaac’s love would do;
  • That he the grog and cabin would supply,
  • Where George at anchor during life would lie.”
  • The landman read--and, reading, grew distress’d:--
  • “Could he resolve t’ admit so poor a guest?
  • Better at Greenwich might the sailor stay, 170
  • Unless his purse could for his comforts pay;”
  • So Isaac judged, and to his wife appeal’d,
  • But yet acknowledged it was best to yield:
  • “Perhaps his pension, with what sums remain
  • Due or unsquander’d, may the man maintain;
  • Refuse we must not.”--With a heavy sigh
  • The lady heard, and made her kind reply:
  • “Nor would I wish it, Isaac, were we sure
  • How long his crazy building will endure;
  • Like an old house, that every day appears 180
  • About to fall--he may be propp’d for years;
  • For a few months, indeed, we might comply,
  • But these old batter’d fellows never die.”
  • The hand of Isaac George on entering took,
  • With love and resignation in his look;
  • Declared his comfort in the fortune past,
  • And joy to find his anchor safely cast;
  • “Call then my nephews, let the grog be brought,
  • And I will tell them how the ship was fought.”
  • Alas! our simple seaman should have known, } 190
  • That all the care, the kindness, he had shown, }
  • Were from his brother’s heart, if not his memory, }
  • flown: }
  • All swept away to be perceived no more,
  • Like idle structures on the sandy shore;
  • The chance amusement of the playful boy,
  • That the rude billows in their rage destroy.
  • Poor George confess’d, though loth the truth to find,
  • Slight was his knowledge of a brother’s mind:
  • The vulgar pipe was to the wife offence,
  • The frequent grog to Isaac an expense; 200
  • “Would friends like hers,” she question’d, “choose to come,
  • Where clouds of poison’d fume defiled a room?
  • This could their lady-friend, and Burgess Steel,
  • (Teased with his worship’s asthma) bear to feel?
  • Could they associate or converse with him--
  • A loud rough sailor with a timber limb?”
  • Cold as he grew, still Isaac strove to show,
  • By well-feign’d care, that cold he could not grow;
  • And when he saw his brother look distress’d,
  • He strove some petty comforts to suggest; 210
  • On his wife solely their neglect to lay,
  • And then t’ excuse it as a woman’s way;
  • He too was chidden when her rules he broke,
  • And then she sicken’d at the scent of smoke.
  • George, though in doubt, was still consoled to find
  • His brother wishing to be reckon’d kind.
  • That Isaac seem’d concern’d by his distress,
  • Gave to his injured feelings some redress;
  • But none he found disposed to lend an ear
  • To stories all were once intent to hear; 220
  • Except his nephew, seated on his knee,
  • He found no creature cared about the sea;
  • But George indeed--for George they call’d the boy,
  • When his good uncle was their boast and joy--
  • Would listen long, and would contend with sleep,
  • To hear the woes and wonders of the deep;
  • Till the fond mother cried--“That man will teach
  • The foolish boy his loud and boisterous speech.”
  • So judged the father--and the boy was taught
  • To shun the uncle, whom his love had sought. 230
  • The mask of kindness now but seldom worn,
  • George felt each evil harder to be borne;
  • And cried (vexation growing day by day),
  • “Ah! brother Isaac!--What! I’m in the way!”--
  • “No! on my credit, look ye, No! but I }
  • Am fond of peace, and my repose would buy }
  • On any terms--in short, we must comply: }
  • My spouse had money--she must have her will--
  • Ah! brother--marriage is a bitter pill.”--
  • George tried the lady--“Sister, I offend”-- 240
  • “Me?” she replied; “Oh no!--you may depend
  • On my regard--but watch your brother’s way,
  • Whom I, like you, must study and obey.”
  • “Ah!” thought the seaman, “what a head was mine,
  • That easy birth at Greenwich to resign!
  • I’ll to the parish”--but a little pride,
  • And some affection, put the thought aside.
  • Now gross neglect and open scorn he bore
  • In silent sorrow--but he felt the more;
  • The odious pipe he to the kitchen took, 250
  • Or strove to profit by some pious book.
  • When the mind stoops to this degraded state,
  • New griefs will darken the dependent’s fate;
  • “Brother!” said Isaac, “you will sure excuse
  • The little freedom I’m compell’d to use:
  • My wife’s relations--(curse the haughty crew)--
  • Affect such niceness, and such dread of you:
  • You speak so loud--and they have natures soft--
  • Brother----I wish----do go upon the loft!”
  • Poor George obey’d, and to the garret fled, 260
  • Where not a being saw the tears he shed.
  • But more was yet required, for guests were come,
  • Who could not dine if he disgraced the room.
  • It shock’d his spirit to be esteem’d unfit
  • With an own brother and his wife to sit;
  • He grew rebellious--at the vestry spoke
  • For weekly aid----they heard it as a joke:
  • So kind a brother, and so wealthy----you
  • Apply to us?----No! this will never do:
  • Good neighbour Fletcher,” said the overseer, 270
  • “We are engaged--you can have nothing here!”
  • George mutter’d something in despairing tone,
  • Then sought his loft, to think and grieve alone;
  • Neglected, slighted, restless on his bed,
  • With heart half broken, and with scraps ill fed;
  • Yet was he pleased that hours for play design’d
  • Were given to ease his ever-troubled mind;
  • The child still listen’d with increasing joy,
  • And he was soothed by the attentive boy.
  • At length he sicken’d, and this duteous child 280
  • Watch’d o’er his sickness, and his pains beguiled;
  • The mother bade him from the loft refrain,
  • But, though with caution, yet he went again;
  • And now his tales the sailor feebly told,
  • His heart was heavy, and his limbs were cold:
  • The tender boy came often to entreat
  • His good kind friend would of his presents eat,
  • Purloin’d or purchased; for he saw, with shame,
  • The food untouch’d that to his uncle came:
  • Who, sick in body and in mind, received 290
  • The boy’s indulgence, gratified and grieved.
  • “Uncle will die!” said George--the piteous wife
  • Exclaim’d, “she saw no value in his life;
  • But sick or well, to my commands attend,
  • And go no more to your complaining friend.”
  • The boy was vex’d, he felt his heart reprove
  • The stern decree.--What! punish’d for his love!
  • No! he would go, but softly, to the room
  • Stealing in silence--for he knew his doom.
  • Once in a week the father came to say, 300
  • “George, are you ill?”--and hurried him away;
  • Yet to his wife would on their duties dwell,
  • And often cry, “Do use my brother well;”
  • And something kind, no question, Isaac meant,
  • Who took vast credit for the vague intent.
  • But, truly kind, the gentle boy essay’d
  • To cheer his uncle, firm, although afraid;
  • But now the father caught him at the door,
  • And, swearing--yes, the man in office swore,
  • And cried, “Away! How! Brother, I’m surprised, 310
  • That one so old can be so ill advised.
  • Let him not dare to visit you again,
  • Your cursed stories will disturb his brain;
  • Is it not vile to court a foolish boy,
  • Your own absurd narrations to enjoy?
  • What! sullen!--ha! George Fletcher? you shall see,
  • Proud as you are, your bread depends on me!”
  • He spoke, and, frowning, to his dinner went,
  • Then cool’d and felt some qualms of discontent;
  • And thought on times when he compell’d his son 320
  • To hear these stories, nay, to beg for one;
  • But the wife’s wrath o’ercame the brother’s pain,
  • And shame was felt, and conscience rose in vain.
  • George yet stole up--he saw his uncle lie
  • Sick on the bed, and heard his heavy sigh:
  • So he resolved, before he went to rest,
  • To comfort one so dear and so distress’d;
  • Then watch’d his time, but, with a child-like art,
  • Betray’d a something treasured at his heart.
  • Th’ observant wife remark’d, “the boy is grown 330
  • So like your brother, that he seems his own;
  • So close and sullen! and I still suspect
  • They often meet--do watch them and detect.”
  • George now remark’d that all was still as night,
  • And hasten’d up with terror and delight;
  • “Uncle!” he cried, and softly tapp’d the door;
  • “Do let me in”--but he could add no more;
  • The careful father caught him in the fact,
  • And cried, “You serpent! is it thus you act?
  • Back to your mother!” and, with hasty blow, 340
  • He sent th’ indignant boy to grieve below;
  • Then at the door an angry speech began:
  • “Is this your conduct--is it thus you plan?
  • Seduce my child, and make my house a scene
  • Of vile dispute--What is it that you mean?--
  • George, are you dumb? do learn to know your friends,
  • And think awhile on whom your bread depends.--
  • What! not a word? be thankful I am cool;
  • But, sir, beware, nor longer play the fool.--
  • Come! brother, come! what is that you seek 350
  • By this rebellion?--Speak, you villain, speak!--
  • Weeping! I warrant, sorrow makes you dumb;
  • I’ll ope your mouth, impostor! if I come.
  • Let me approach--I’ll shake you from the bed,
  • You stubborn dog----Oh God! my brother’s dead!----”
  • Timid was Isaac, and in all the past
  • He felt a purpose to be kind at last;
  • Nor did he mean his brother to depart,
  • Till he had shown this kindness of his heart:
  • But day by day he put the cause aside, 360
  • Induced by av’rice, peevishness, or pride.
  • But, now awaken’d, from this fatal time
  • His conscience Isaac felt, and found his crime:
  • He raised to George a monumental stone,
  • And there retired to sigh and think alone;
  • An ague seized him, he grew pale, and shook--
  • “So,” said his son, “would my poor uncle look.”--
  • “And so, my child, shall I like him expire.”--
  • “No! you have physic and a cheerful fire.”--
  • “Unhappy sinner! yes, I’m well supplied 370
  • With every comfort my cold heart denied.”
  • He view’d his brother now, but not as one
  • Who vex’d his wife by fondness for her son;
  • Not as with wooden limb, and seaman’s tale,
  • The odious pipe, vile grog, or humbler ale:
  • He now the worth and grief alone can view
  • Of one so mild, so generous, and so true:
  • The frank, kind brother, with such open heart,
  • And I to break it--’twas a dæmon’s part!”
  • So Isaac now, as led by conscience, feels, 380
  • Nor his unkindness palliates or conceals.
  • “This is your folly,” said his heartless wife;
  • “Alas! my folly cost my brother’s life:
  • It suffer’d him to languish and decay, }
  • My gentle brother, whom I could not pay, }
  • And therefore left to pine, and fret his life away.” }
  • He takes his son, and bids the boy unfold
  • All the good uncle of his feelings told,
  • All he lamented--and the ready tear
  • Falls as he listens, soothed and grieved to hear. 390
  • “Did he not curse me, child?”--“He never cursed,
  • But could not breathe, and said his heart would burst”--
  • “And so will mine.”--“Then, father, you must pray;
  • My uncle said it took his pains away.”
  • Repeating thus his sorrows, Isaac shows }
  • That he, repenting, feels the debt he owes, }
  • And from this source alone his every comfort flows. }
  • He takes no joy in office, honours, gain;
  • They make him humble, nay, they give him pain;
  • “These from my heart,” he cries, “all feeling drove; 400
  • They made me cold to nature, dead to love.”
  • He takes no joy in home, but, sighing, sees
  • A son in sorrow, and a wife at ease;
  • He takes no joy in office--see him now,
  • And Burgess Steel has but a passing bow;
  • Of one sad train of gloomy thoughts possess’d, }
  • He takes no joy in friends, in food, in rest-- }
  • Dark are the evil days, and void of peace the best. }
  • And thus he lives, if living be to sigh, }
  • And from all comforts of the world to fly, } 410
  • Without a hope in life--without a wish to die. }
  • TALE XXI.
  • _THE LEARNED BOY._
  • Like one well studied in a sad ostent,
  • To please his grandam.
  • _Merchant of Venice_, Act II. Scene 2.
  • And then the whining school-boy, with his satchel
  • And shining morning face, creeping like snail
  • Unwillingly to school.
  • _As You Like It_, Act II. Scene 7.
  • He is a better scholar than I thought he was.--He [is] a good sprag
  • memory.
  • _Merry Wives of Windsor_, Act IV. Scene 1.
  • One that feeds
  • On objects, arts, and imitations,
  • Which, out of use, and stal’d by other men,
  • Begin his fashion.
  • _Julius Cæsar,_ Act IV. Scene 1.
  • Oh! torture me no more--I will confess.
  • 2 _Henry VI._ Act III. Scene 3.
  • TALE XXI.
  • _THE LEARNED BOY._
  • An honest man was Farmer Jones, and true;
  • He did by all as all by him should do;
  • Grave, cautious, careful, fond of gain was he,
  • Yet famed for rustic hospitality.
  • Left with his children in a widow’d state,
  • The quiet man submitted to his fate;
  • Though prudent matrons waited for his call,
  • With cool forbearance he avoided all;
  • Though each profess’d a pure maternal joy,
  • By kind attention to his feeble boy. 10
  • And--though a friendly widow knew no rest,
  • Whilst neighbour Jones was lonely and distress’d,
  • Nay, though the maidens spoke in tender tone
  • Their hearts’ concern to see him left alone--
  • Jones still persisted in that cheerless life,
  • As if t’were sin to take a second wife.
  • Oh! ’tis a precious thing, when wives are dead,
  • To find such numbers who will serve instead;
  • And, in whatever state a man be thrown,
  • ’Tis that precisely they would wish their own. 20
  • Left the departed infants--then their joy
  • Is to sustain each lovely girl and boy;
  • Whatever calling his, whatever trade,
  • To that their chief attention has been paid;
  • His happy taste in all things they approve,
  • His friends they honour, and his food they love;
  • His wish for order, prudence in affairs,
  • And equal temper, (thank their stars!) are theirs;
  • In fact, it seem’d to be a thing decreed,
  • And fix’d as fate, that marriage must succeed. 30
  • Yet some, like Jones, with stubborn hearts and hard,
  • Can hear such claims, and show them no regard.
  • Soon as our farmer, like a general, found
  • By what strong foes he was encompass’d round--
  • Engage he dared not, and he could not fly,
  • But saw his hope in gentle parley lie;
  • With looks of kindness then, and trembling heart,
  • He met the foe, and art opposed to art.
  • Now spoke that foe insidious--gentle tones,
  • And gentle looks, assumed for Farmer Jones: 40
  • “Three girls,” the widow cried, “a lively three
  • To govern well--indeed it cannot be.”
  • “Yes,” he replied, “it calls for pains and care;
  • But I must bear it.”--“Sir, you cannot bear;
  • Your son is weak, and asks a mother’s eye.”--
  • “That, my kind friend, a father’s may supply.”--
  • “Such growing griefs your very soul will tease.”--
  • “To grieve another would not give me ease;
  • I have a mother.”--“She, poor ancient soul!
  • Can she the spirits of the young control? 50
  • Can she thy peace promote, partake thy care,
  • Procure thy comforts, and thy sorrows share?
  • Age is itself impatient, uncontroll’d.”--
  • “But wives like mothers must at length be old.”--
  • “Thou hast shrewd servants--they are evils sore.”--
  • “Yet a shrewd mistress might afflict me more.”--
  • “Wilt thou not be a weary wailing man?”--
  • “Alas! and I must bear it as I can.”
  • Resisted thus, the widow soon withdrew,
  • That in his pride the hero might pursue; 60
  • And off his wonted guard, in some retreat,
  • Find from a foe prepared entire defeat.
  • But he was prudent, for he knew in flight
  • These Parthian warriors turn again and fight;
  • He but at freedom, not at glory aim’d,
  • And only safety by his caution claim’d.
  • Thus, when a great and powerful state decrees
  • Upon a small one, in its love, to seize--
  • It vows in kindness to protect, defend,
  • And be the fond ally, the faithful friend; 70
  • It therefore wills that humbler state to place
  • Its hopes of safety in a fond embrace:
  • Then must that humbler state its wisdom prove,
  • By kind rejection of such pressing love;
  • Must dread such dangerous friendship to commence,
  • And stand collected in its own defence.--
  • Our farmer thus the proffer’d kindness fled,
  • And shunn’d the love that into bondage led.
  • The widow failing, fresh besiegers came,
  • To share the fate of this retiring dame; 80
  • And each foresaw a thousand ills attend
  • The man that fled from so discreet a friend;
  • And pray’d, kind soul! that no event might make
  • The harden’d heart of Farmer Jones to ache.
  • But he still govern’d with resistless hand,
  • And where he could not guide he would command.
  • With steady view in course direct he steer’d,
  • And his fair daughters loved him, though they fear’d;
  • Each had her school, and, as his wealth was known,
  • Each had in time a household of her own. 90
  • The boy indeed was, at the grandam’s side,
  • Humour’d and train’d, her trouble and her pride:
  • Companions dear, with speech and spirits mild,
  • The childish widow and the vapourish child.
  • This nature prompts; minds uninform’d and weak
  • In such alliance ease and comfort seek;
  • Push’d by the levity of youth aside, }
  • The cares of man, his humour, or his pride, }
  • They feel, in their defenceless state, allied. }
  • The child is pleased to meet regard from age, 100
  • The old are pleased ev’n children to engage;
  • And all their wisdom, scorn’d by proud mankind,
  • They love to pour into the ductile mind,
  • By its own weakness into error led,
  • And by fond age with prejudices fed.
  • The father, thankful for the good he had,
  • Yet saw with pain a whining, timid lad;
  • Whom he, instructing, led through cultured fields,
  • To show what man performs, what nature yields;
  • But Stephen, listless, wander’d from the view; } 110
  • From beasts he fled, for butterflies he flew, }
  • And idly gazed about, in search of something new. }
  • The lambs indeed he loved, and wish’d to play
  • With things so mild, so harmless, and so gay;
  • Best pleased the weakest of the flock to see,
  • With whom he felt a sickly sympathy.
  • Meantime, the dame was anxious, day and night, }
  • To guide the notions of her babe aright, }
  • And on the favourite mind to throw her glimmering light; }
  • Her Bible-stories she impress’d betimes, 120
  • And fill’d his head with hymns and holy rhymes;
  • On powers unseen, the good and ill, she dwelt,
  • And the poor boy mysterious terrors felt;
  • From frightful dreams, he, waking, sobb’d in dread,
  • Till the good lady came to guard his bed.
  • The father wish’d such errors to correct,
  • But let them pass in duty and respect.
  • But more it grieved his worthy mind to see
  • That Stephen never would a farmer be;
  • In vain he tried the shiftless lad to guide, 130
  • And yet ’twas time that something should be tried.
  • He at the village-school perchance might gain
  • All that such mind could gather and retain;
  • Yet the good dame affirm’d her favourite child
  • Was apt and studious, though sedate and mild;
  • “That he on many a learned point could speak,
  • And that his body, not his mind, was weak.”
  • The father doubted--but to school was sent
  • The timid Stephen, weeping as he went:
  • There the rude lads compell’d the child to fight, 140
  • And sent him bleeding to his home at night;
  • At this the grandam more indulgent grew,
  • And bade her darling “shun the beastly crew;
  • Whom Satan ruled, and who were sure to lie
  • Howling in torments, when they came to die.”
  • This was such comfort, that in high disdain
  • He told their fate, and felt their blows again.
  • Yet, if the boy had not a hero’s heart,
  • Within the school he play’d a better part:
  • He wrote a clean, fine hand, and at his slate 150
  • With more success than many a hero sate;
  • He thought not much indeed--but what depends
  • On pains and care was at his fingers’ ends.
  • This had his father’s praise, who now espied
  • A spark of merit, with a blaze of pride;
  • And, though a farmer he would never make,
  • He might a pen with some advantage take;
  • And as a clerk that instrument employ,
  • So well adapted to a timid boy.
  • A London cousin soon a place obtain’d, 160
  • Easy but humble--little could be gain’d.
  • The time arrived when youth and age must part,
  • Tears in each eye, and sorrow in each heart;
  • The careful father bade his son attend
  • To all his duties, and obey his friend;
  • To keep his church and there behave aright, }
  • As one existing in his Maker’s sight, }
  • Till acts to habits led, and duty to delight: }
  • “Then try, my boy, as quickly as you can,
  • T’ assume the looks and spirit of a man; 170
  • I say, be honest, faithful, civil, true,
  • And this you may, and yet have courage too.
  • Heroic men, their country’s boast and pride,
  • Have fear’d their God, and nothing fear’d beside;
  • While others daring, yet imbecile, fly
  • The power of man, and that of God defy.
  • Be manly then, though mild, for, sure as fate,
  • Thou art, my Stephen, too effeminate;
  • Here, take my purse, and make a worthy use
  • (’Tis fairly stock’d) of what it will produce; 180
  • And now my blessing, not as any charm
  • Or conjuration; but ’twill do no harm.”
  • Stephen, whose thoughts were wandering up and down,
  • Now charm’d with promised sights in London-town,
  • Now loth to leave his grandam--lost the force,
  • The drift and tenor of this grave discourse;
  • But, in a general way, he understood
  • ’Twas good advice, and meant, “My son, be good;”
  • And Stephen knew that all such precepts mean,
  • That lads should read their Bible, and be clean. 190
  • The good old lady, though in some distress,
  • Begg’d her dear Stephen would his grief suppress:
  • “Nay, dry those eyes, my child--and, first of all,
  • Hold fast thy faith, whatever may befall;
  • Hear the best preacher, and preserve the text
  • For meditation, till you hear the next;
  • Within your Bible night and morning look--
  • There is your duty, read no other book;
  • Be not in crowds, in broils, in riots seen,
  • And keep your conscience and your linen clean. 200
  • Be you a Joseph, and the time may be,
  • When kings and rulers will be ruled by thee.”
  • “Nay,” said the father----“Hush, my son,” replied
  • The dame----“The Scriptures must not be denied.”
  • The lad, still weeping, heard the wheels approach,
  • And took his place within the evening coach,
  • With heart quite rent asunder: On one side
  • Was love, and grief, and fear, for scenes untried;
  • Wild beasts and wax-work fill’d the happier part
  • Of Stephen’s varying and divided heart; 210
  • This he betray’d by sighs and questions strange,
  • Of famous shows, the Tower, and the Exchange.
  • Soon at his desk was placed the curious boy,
  • Demure and silent at his new employ;
  • Yet, as he could, he much attention paid
  • To all around him, cautious and afraid.
  • On older clerks his eager eyes were fix’d,
  • But Stephen never in their council mix’d;
  • Much their contempt he fear’d, for, if like them,
  • He felt assured he should himself contemn: 220
  • “Oh! they were all so eloquent, so free,
  • No! he was nothing--nothing could he be.
  • They dress so smartly, and so boldly look,
  • And talk as if they read it from a book;
  • But I,” said Stephen, “will forbear to speak,
  • And they will think me prudent, and not weak.
  • They talk, the instant they have dropp’d the pen,
  • Of singing-women and of acting-men;
  • Of plays and places where at night they walk
  • Beneath the lamps, and with the ladies talk; 230
  • While other ladies for their pleasure sing,
  • Oh! ’tis a glorious and a happy thing.
  • They would despise me, did they understand
  • I dare not look upon a scene so grand;
  • Or see the plays when critics rise and roar,
  • And hiss and groan, and cry--‘Encore! encore!’--
  • There’s one among them looks a little kind;
  • If more encouraged, I would ope my mind.”
  • Alas! poor Stephen, happier had he kept
  • His purpose secret, while his envy slept; 240
  • Virtue, perhaps, had conquer’d, or his shame
  • At least preserved him simple as he came.
  • A year elapsed before this clerk began
  • To treat the rustic something like a man;
  • He then in trifling points the youth advised,
  • Talk’d of his coat, and had it modernized;
  • Or with the lad a Sunday-walk would take,
  • And kindly strive his passions to awake;
  • Meanwhile explaining all they heard and saw,
  • Till Stephen stood in wonderment and awe. 250
  • To a neat garden near the town they stray’d,
  • Where the lad felt delighted and afraid;
  • There all he saw was smart, and fine, and fair--
  • He could but marvel how he ventured there:
  • Soon he observed, with terror and alarm,
  • His friend enlock’d within a lady’s arm,
  • And freely talking--“But it is,” said he,
  • “A near relation, and that makes him free;”
  • And much amazed was Stephen, when he knew
  • This was the first and only interview; 260
  • Nay, had that lovely arm by him been seized,
  • The lovely owner had been highly pleased:
  • “Alas!” he sigh’d, “I never can contrive,
  • At such bold, blessed freedoms to arrive;
  • Never shall I such happy courage boast;
  • I dare as soon encounter with a ghost.”
  • Now to a play the friendly couple went,
  • But the boy murmur’d at the money spent;
  • “He loved,” he said, “to buy, but not to spend--
  • They only talk awhile, and there’s an end.” 270
  • “Come, you shall purchase books,” the friend replied;
  • “You are bewilder’d, and you want a guide;
  • To me refer the choice, and you shall find
  • The light break in upon your stagnant mind!”
  • The cooler clerks exclaim’d, “In vain your art
  • T’ improve a cub without a head or heart;
  • Rustics, though coarse, and savages, though wild,
  • Our cares may render liberal and mild;
  • But what, my friend, can flow from all these pains?
  • There is no dealing with a lack of brains.”-- 280
  • “True I am hopeless to behold him man;
  • But let me make the booby what I can:
  • Though the rude stone no polish will display,
  • Yet you may strip the rugged coat away.”
  • Stephen beheld his books--“I love to know
  • How money goes--now here is that to show;
  • And now,” he cried, “I shall be pleased to get
  • Beyond the Bible--there I puzzle yet.”
  • He spoke abash’d--“Nay, nay!” the friend replied,
  • “You need not lay the good old book aside; 290
  • Antique and curious, I myself indeed
  • Read it at times, but as a man should read;
  • A fine old work it is, and I protest
  • I hate to hear it treated as a jest;
  • The book has wisdom in it, if you look
  • Wisely upon it, as another book;
  • For superstition (as our priests of sin
  • Are pleased to tell us) makes us blind within.--
  • Of this hereafter--we will now select
  • Some works to please you, others to direct; 300
  • Tales and romances shall your fancy feed,
  • And reasoners form your morals and your creed.”
  • The books were view’d, the price was fairly paid,
  • And Stephen read, undaunted, undismay’d--
  • But not till first he paper’d all the row,
  • And placed in order, to enjoy the show;
  • Next letter’d all the backs with care and speed,
  • Set them in ranks, and then began to read.
  • The love of order,--I the thing receive
  • From reverend men, and I in part believe-- 310
  • Shows a clear mind and clean, and whoso needs
  • This love but seldom in the world succeeds;
  • And yet with this some other love must be,
  • Ere I can fully to the fact agree.
  • Valour and study may by order gain,
  • By order sovereigns hold more steady reign;
  • Through all the tribes of nature order runs,
  • And rules around in systems and in suns;
  • Still has the love of order found a place }
  • With all that’s low, degrading, mean, and base, } 320
  • With all that merits scorn, and all that meets }
  • disgrace: }
  • In the cold miser, of all change afraid;
  • In pompous men, in public seats obey’d;
  • In humble placemen, heralds, solemn drones,
  • Fanciers of flowers, and lads like Stephen Jones;
  • Order to these is armour and defence,
  • And love of method serves in lack of sense.
  • For rustic youth could I a list produce
  • Of Stephen’s books, how great might be the use;
  • But evil fate was theirs--survey’d, enjoy’d 330
  • Some happy months, and then by force destroy’d.
  • So will’d the fates--but these, with patience read,
  • Had vast effect on Stephen’s heart and head.
  • This soon appear’d--within a single week
  • He oped his lips, and made attempt to speak;
  • He fail’d indeed--but still his friend confess’d
  • The best have fail’d, and he had done his best.
  • The first of swimmers, when at first he swims,
  • Has little use or freedom in his limbs;
  • Nay, when at length he strikes with manly force, 340
  • The cramp may seize him, and impede his course.
  • Encouraged thus, our clerk again essay’d
  • The daring act, though daunted and afraid;
  • Succeeding now, though partial his success,
  • And pertness mark’d his manner and address,
  • Yet such improvement issued from his books,
  • That all discern’d it in his speech and looks.
  • He ventured then on every theme to speak,
  • And felt no feverish tingling in his cheek;
  • His friend, approving, hail’d the happy change; 350
  • The clerks exclaim’d--“’Tis famous, and ’tis strange.”--
  • Two years had pass’d; the youth attended still,
  • (Though thus accomplish’d) with a ready quill;
  • He sat th’ allotted hours, though hard the case,
  • While timid prudence ruled in virtue’s place;
  • By promise bound, the son his letters penn’d
  • To his good parent, at the quarter’s end.
  • At first, he sent those lines, the state to tell
  • Of his own health, and hoped his friends were well;
  • He kept their virtuous precepts in his mind, 360
  • And needed nothing--then his name was sign’d;
  • But now he wrote of Sunday walks and views,
  • Of actors’ names, choice novels, and strange news;
  • How coats were cut, and of his urgent need
  • For fresh supply, which he desired with speed.
  • The father doubted, when these letters came,
  • To what they tended, yet was loth to blame:
  • “Stephen was once _my duteous son_, and now
  • _My most obedient_--this can I allow?
  • Can I with pleasure or with patience see 370
  • A boy at once so heartless, and so free?”
  • But soon the kinsman heavy tidings told,
  • That love and prudence could no more withhold:
  • “Stephen, though steady at his desk, was grown
  • A rake and coxcomb--this he grieved to own;
  • His cousin left his church, and spent the day
  • Lounging about in quite a heathen way;
  • Sometimes he swore, but had indeed the grace
  • To show the shame imprinted on his face.
  • I search’d his room, and in his absence read 380
  • Books that I knew would turn a stronger head:
  • The works of atheists half the number made,
  • The rest were lives of harlots leaving trade;
  • Which neither man nor boy would deign to read,
  • If from the scandal and pollution freed.
  • I sometimes threaten’d, and would fairly state
  • My sense of things so vile and profligate;
  • But I’m a cit, such works are lost on me--
  • They’re knowledge, and (good Lord!) philosophy.”
  • “Oh, send him down,” the father soon replied; 390
  • “Let me behold him, and my skill be tried:
  • If care and kindness lose their wonted use,
  • Some rougher medicine will the end produce.”
  • Stephen with grief and anger heard his doom--
  • “Go to the farmer? to the rustic’s home?
  • Curse the base threat’ning--” “Nay, child, never curse;
  • Corrupted long, your case is growing worse.”--
  • “I!” quoth the youth, “I challenge all mankind
  • To find a fault; what fault have you to find?
  • Improve I not in manner, speech, and grace? 400
  • Inquire--my friends will tell it to your face;
  • Have I been taught to guard his kine and sheep?
  • A man like me has other things to keep;
  • This let him know.”--“It would his wrath excite;
  • But come, prepare, you must away to-night.”--
  • “What! leave my studies, my improvements leave,
  • My faithful friends and intimates to grieve!”--
  • “Go to your father, Stephen, let him see
  • All these improvements; they are lost on me.”
  • The youth, though loth, obey’d, and soon he saw 410
  • The farmer-father, with some signs of awe:
  • Who kind, yet silent, waited to behold
  • How one would act, so daring, yet so cold;
  • And soon he found, between the friendly pair
  • That secrets pass’d which he was not to share;
  • But he resolved those secrets to obtain,
  • And quash rebellion in his lawful reign.
  • Stephen, though vain, was with his father mute;
  • He fear’d a crisis, and he shunn’d dispute;
  • And yet he long’d with youthful pride to show 420
  • He knew such things as farmers could not know;
  • These to the grandam he with freedom spoke,
  • Saw her amazement, and enjoy’d the joke.
  • But, on the father when he cast his eye,
  • Something he found that made his valour shy;
  • And thus there seem’d to be a hollow truce,
  • Still threat’ning something dismal to produce.
  • Ere this the father at his leisure read
  • The son’s choice volumes, and his wonder fled;
  • He saw how wrought the works of either kind 430
  • On so presuming, yet so weak, a mind;
  • These in a chosen hour he made his prey,
  • Condemn’d, and bore with vengeful thoughts away;
  • Then in a close recess the couple near,
  • He sat unseen to see, unheard to hear.
  • There soon a trial for his patience came;
  • Beneath were placed the youth and ancient dame,
  • Each on a purpose fix’d--but neither thought
  • How near a foe, with power and vengeance fraught.
  • And now the matron told, as tidings sad, 440
  • What she had heard of her beloved lad;
  • How he to graceless, wicked men gave heed,
  • And wicked books would night and morning read;
  • Some former lectures she again began,
  • And begg’d attention of her little man;
  • She brought, with many a pious boast, in view
  • His former studies, and condemn’d the new:
  • Once he the names of saints and patriarchs old,
  • Judges and kings, and chiefs and prophets, told;
  • Then he in winter-nights the Bible took, 450
  • To count how often in the sacred book
  • The sacred name appear’d, and could rehearse
  • Which were the middle chapter, word, and verse,
  • The very letter in the middle placed,
  • And so employ’d the hours that others waste.
  • “Such wert thou once; and now, my child, they say
  • Thy faith like water runneth fast away;
  • The prince of devils hath, I fear, beguiled
  • The ready wit of my backsliding child.”
  • On this, with lofty looks, our clerk began 460
  • His grave rebuke, as he assumed the man--
  • “There is no devil,” said the hopeful youth,
  • “Nor prince of devils; that I know for truth.
  • Have I not told you how my books describe
  • The arts of priests and all the canting tribe?
  • Your Bible mentions Egypt, where, it seems,
  • Was Joseph found when Pharaoh dream’d his dreams.
  • Now, in that place, in some bewilder’d head,
  • (The learned write) religious dreams were bred;
  • Whence through the earth, with various forms combined,
  • They came to frighten and afflict mankind, 471
  • Prone (so I read) to let a priest invade }
  • Their souls with awe, and by his craft be made }
  • Slave to his will, and profit to his trade. }
  • So say my books, and how the rogues agreed
  • To blind the victims, to defraud and lead;
  • When joys above to ready dupes were sold,
  • And hell was threaten’d to the shy and cold.
  • “Why so amazed, and so prepared to pray?
  • As if a Being heard a word we say! 480
  • This may surprise you; I myself began
  • To feel disturb’d, and to my Bible ran;
  • I now am wiser--yet agree in this,
  • The book has things that are not much amiss;
  • It is a fine old work, and I protest
  • I hate to hear it treated as a jest:
  • The book has wisdom in it, if you look
  • Wisely upon it as another book.”--
  • “Oh! wicked! wicked! my unhappy child,
  • How hast thou been by evil men beguiled!”-- 490
  • “How! wicked, say you? you can little guess
  • The gain of that which you call wickedness:
  • Why, sins you think it sinful but to name
  • Have gain’d both wives and widows wealth and fame;
  • And this, because such people never dread
  • Those threaten’d pains; hell comes not in their head.
  • Love is our nature, wealth we all desire,
  • And what we wish ’tis lawful to acquire;
  • So say my books--and what beside they show
  • ’Tis time to let this honest farmer know. 500
  • Nay, look not grave; am I commanded down
  • To feed his cattle and become his clown?
  • Is such his purpose? then he shall be told
  • The vulgar insult----”
  • ----“Hold, in mercy hold--”
  • “Father, oh! father! throw the whip away;
  • I was but jesting, on my knees I pray--
  • There, hold his arm--oh! leave us not alone;
  • In pity cease, and I will yet atone
  • For all my sin--” In vain: stroke after stroke
  • On side and shoulder quick as mill-wheels broke; 510
  • Quick as the patient’s pulse, who trembling cried,
  • And still the parent with a stroke replied;
  • Till all the medicine he prepared was dealt,
  • And every bone the precious influence felt;
  • Till all the panting flesh was red and raw,
  • And every thought was turn’d to fear and awe;
  • Till every doubt to due respect gave place--
  • Such cures are done when doctors know the case.
  • “Oh! I shall die--my father! do receive
  • My dying words; indeed, I do believe; 520
  • The books are lying books, I know it well,
  • There is a devil, oh! there is a hell;
  • And I’m a sinner: spare me, I am young,
  • My sinful words were only on my tongue;
  • My heart consented not; ’tis all a lie:
  • Oh! spare me then, I’m not prepared to die.”
  • “Vain, worthless, stupid wretch!” the father cried,
  • “Dost thou presume to teach? art thou a guide?
  • Driveller and dog, it gave the mind distress
  • To hear thy thoughts in their religious dress; 530
  • Thy pious folly moved my strong disdain,
  • Yet I forgave thee for thy want of brain.
  • But Job in patience must the man exceed
  • Who could endure thee in thy present creed;
  • Is it for thee, thou idiot, to pretend
  • The wicked cause a helping hand to lend?
  • Canst thou a judge in any question be?
  • Atheists themselves would scorn a friend like thee.--
  • “Lo! yonder blaze thy worthies; in one heap
  • Thy scoundrel-favourites must for ever sleep: 540
  • Each yields its poison to the flame in turn,
  • Where whores and infidels are doom’d to burn;
  • Two noble faggots made the flame you see,
  • Reserving only two fair twigs for thee;
  • That in thy view the instruments may stand,
  • And be in future ready for my hand:
  • The just mementos that, though silent, show
  • Whence thy correction and improvements flow;
  • Beholding these, thou wilt confess their power,
  • And feel the shame of this important hour. 550
  • “Hadst thou been humble, I had first design’d
  • By care from folly to have freed thy mind;
  • And, when a clean foundation had been laid,
  • Our priest, more able, would have lent his aid.
  • But thou art weak, and force must folly guide,
  • And thou art vain, and pain must humble pride.
  • Teachers men honour, learners they allure; }
  • But learners teaching of contempt are sure; }
  • Scorn is their certain meed, and smart their only cure!” }
  • TALES OF THE HALL.
  • TO HER GRACE THE DUCHESS OF RUTLAND
  • MADAM,
  • It is the privilege of those who are placed in that elevated
  • situation to which your Grace is an ornament, that they give honour
  • to the person upon whom they confer a favour. When I dedicate to your
  • Grace the fruits of many years, and speak of my debt to the House of
  • Rutland, I feel that I am not without pride in the confession nor
  • insensible to the honour which such gratitude implies. Forty years
  • have elapsed since this debt commenced. On my entrance into the
  • cares of life, and while contending with its difficulties, a Duke
  • and Duchess of Rutland observed and protected me--in my progress a
  • Duke and Duchess of Rutland favoured and assisted me--and, when I
  • am retiring from the world, a Duke and Duchess of Rutland receive
  • my thanks, and accept my offering. All, even in this world of
  • mutability, is not change: I have experienced unvaried favour--I have
  • felt undiminished respect.
  • With the most grateful remembrance of what I owe, and the most
  • sincere conviction of the little I can return, I present these pages
  • to your Grace’s acceptance, and beg leave to subscribe myself,
  • May it please your Grace,
  • With respect and gratitude,
  • Your Grace’s
  • Most obedient and devoted Servant,
  • GEORGE CRABBE.
  • _Trowbridge_,
  • _June_, 1819.
  • PREFACE.
  • If I did not fear that it would appear to my readers like arrogancy,
  • or if it did not seem to myself indecorous to send two volumes of
  • considerable magnitude from the press without preface or apology,
  • without one petition for the reader’s attention, or one plea for the
  • writer’s defects, I would most willingly spare myself an address of
  • this kind, and more especially for these reasons: first, because a
  • preface is a part of a book seldom honoured by a reader’s perusal;
  • secondly, because it is both difficult and distressing to write that
  • which we think will be disregarded; and thirdly, because I do not
  • conceive that I am called upon for such introductory matter by any of
  • the motives which usually influence an author when he composes his
  • prefatory address.
  • When a writer, whether of poetry or prose, first addresses the
  • public, he has generally something to offer which relates to himself
  • or to his work, and which he considers as a necessary prelude to the
  • work itself, to prepare his readers for the entertainment or the
  • instruction they may expect to receive; for one of these every man
  • who publishes must suppose he affords--this the act itself implies,
  • and in proportion to his conviction of this fact must be his feeling
  • of the difficulty in which he has placed himself: the difficulty
  • consists in reconciling the implied presumption of the undertaking,
  • whether to please or to instruct mankind, with the diffidence and
  • modesty of an untried candidate for fame or favour. Hence originate
  • the many reasons an author assigns for his appearance in that
  • character, whether they actually exist, or are merely offered to hide
  • the motives which cannot be openly avowed: namely, the want or the
  • vanity of the man, as his wishes for profit or reputation may most
  • prevail with him.
  • Now, reasons of this kind, whatever they may be, cannot be availing
  • beyond their first appearance. An author, it is true, may again feel
  • his former apprehensions, may again be elevated or depressed by
  • the suggestions of vanity and diffidence, and may be again subject
  • to the cold and hot fit of aguish expectation; but he is no more a
  • stranger to the press, nor has the motives or privileges of one who
  • is. With respect to myself, it is certain they belong not to me. Many
  • years have elapsed since I became a candidate for indulgence as an
  • inexperienced writer; and to assume the language of such writer now,
  • and to plead for his indulgences, would be proof of my ignorance
  • of the place assigned to me, and the degree of favour which I have
  • experienced; but of that place I am not uninformed, and with that
  • degree of favour I have no reason to be dissatisfied.
  • It was the remark of the pious, but on some occasions the querulous,
  • author of the _Night Thoughts_, that he had “been so long remembered,
  • he was forgotten”--an expression in which there is more appearance
  • of discontent than of submission: if he had patience, it was not the
  • patience that _smiles at grief_. It is not therefore entirely in the
  • sense of the good Doctor that I apply these words to myself, or to my
  • more early publications. So many years indeed have passed since their
  • first appearance, that I have no reason to complain, on that account,
  • if they be now slumbering with other poems of decent reputation in
  • their day--not dead indeed, nor entirely forgotten, but certainly not
  • the subjects of discussion or conversation as when first introduced
  • to the notice of the public by those whom the public will not forget,
  • whose protection was credit to their author, and whose approbation
  • was fame to them. Still these early publications had so long preceded
  • any other, that, if not altogether unknown, I was, when I came again
  • before the public, in a situation which excused, and perhaps rendered
  • necessary, some explanation; but this also has passed away, and none
  • of my readers will now take the trouble of making any inquiries
  • respecting my motives for writing or for publishing these Tales or
  • verses of any description. Known to each other as readers and authors
  • are known, they will require no preface to bespeak their good will;
  • nor shall I be under the necessity of soliciting the kindness which
  • experience has taught me, endeavouring to merit, I shall not fail to
  • receive.
  • There is one motive--and it is a powerful one--which sometimes
  • induces an author, and more particularly a poet, to ask the attention
  • of his readers to his prefatory address. This is when he has some
  • favourite and peculiar style or manner which he would explain and
  • defend, and chiefly if he should have adopted a mode of versification
  • of which an uninitiated reader was not likely to perceive either
  • the merit or the beauty. In such case it is natural, and surely
  • pardonable, to assert and to prove, as far as reason will bear
  • us on, that such method of writing has both; to show in what the
  • beauty consists, and what peculiar difficulty there is, which, when
  • conquered, creates the merit. How far any particular poet has or has
  • not succeeded in such attempt is not my business nor my purpose to
  • inquire: I have no peculiar notion to defend, no poetical heterodoxy
  • to support, nor theory of any kind to vindicate or oppose--that which
  • I have used is probably the most common measure in our language; and
  • therefore, whatever be its advantages or defects, they are too well
  • known to require from me a description of the one, or an apology for
  • the other.
  • Perhaps still more frequent than any explanation of the work is an
  • account of the author himself, the situation in which he is placed,
  • or some circumstances of peculiar kind in his life, education, or
  • employment. How often has youth been pleaded for deficiencies or
  • redundancies, for the existence of which youth may be an excuse,
  • and yet be none for their exposure. Age too has been pleaded for
  • the errors and failings in a work which the octogenarian had
  • the discernment to perceive, and yet had not the fortitude to
  • suppress. Many other circumstances are made apologies for a writer’s
  • infirmities: his much employment, and many avocations, adversity,
  • necessity, and the good of mankind. These, or any of them, however
  • availing in themselves, avail not me. I am neither so young nor so
  • old, so much engaged by one pursuit, or by many--I am not so urged
  • by want, or so stimulated by a desire of public benefit--that I can
  • borrow one apology from the many which I have named. How far they
  • prevail with our readers, or with our judges, I cannot tell; and it
  • is unnecessary for me to inquire into the validity of arguments which
  • I have not to produce.
  • If there be any combination of circumstances which may be supposed
  • to affect the mind of a reader, and in some degree to influence his
  • judgment, the junction of youth, beauty, and merit in a female writer
  • may be allowed to do this; and yet one of the most forbidding of
  • titles is “Poems by a very young Lady”--and this, although beauty
  • and merit were largely insinuated. Ladies, it is true, have of late
  • little need of any indulgence as authors, and names may readily be
  • found which rather excite the envy of man than plead for his lenity.
  • Our estimation of title also in a writer has materially varied from
  • that of our predecessors; “Poems by a Nobleman” would create a very
  • different sensation in our minds from that which was formerly excited
  • when they were so announced. A noble author had then no pretensions
  • to a seat so secure on the “sacred hill,” that authors not noble,
  • and critics not gentle, dared not attack; and they delighted to take
  • revenge, by their contempt and derision of the poet, for the pain
  • which their submission and respect to the man had cost them. But
  • in our times we find that a nobleman writes, not merely as well,
  • but better than other men: insomuch that readers in general begin
  • to fancy that the Muses have relinquished their old partiality for
  • rags and a garret, and are become altogether aristocratical in
  • their choice. A conceit so well supported by fact would be readily
  • admitted, did it not appear at the same time, that there were in
  • the higher ranks of society men who could write as tamely, or as
  • absurdly, as they had ever been accused of doing. We may, therefore,
  • regard the works of any noble author as extraordinary productions,
  • but must not found any theory upon them; and, notwithstanding their
  • appearance, must look on genius and talent as we are wont to do on
  • time and chance, that happen indifferently to all mankind.
  • But, whatever influence any peculiar situation of a writer might
  • have, it cannot be a benefit to me, who have no such peculiarity.
  • I must rely upon the willingness of my readers to be pleased
  • with that which was designed to give them pleasure, and upon the
  • cordiality which naturally springs from a remembrance of our having
  • before parted without any feelings of disgust on the one side, or of
  • mortification on the other.
  • With this hope I would conclude the present subject; but I am called
  • upon by duty to acknowledge my obligations, and more especially
  • for two of the following Tales--the Story of Lady Barbara, in Book
  • XVI; and that of Ellen in Book XVIII. The first of these I owe to
  • the kindness of a fair friend, who will, I hope, accept the thanks
  • which I very gratefully pay, and pardon me if I have not given to
  • her relation the advantages which she had so much reason to expect.
  • The other story, that of Ellen, could I give it in the language of
  • him who related it to me, would please and affect my readers. It is
  • by no means my only debt, though the one I now more particularly
  • acknowledge; for who shall describe all that he gains in the social,
  • the unrestrained, and the frequent conversations with a friend,
  • who is at once communicative and judicious--whose opinions, on all
  • subjects of literary kind, are founded on good taste, and exquisite
  • feeling? It is one of the greatest “pleasures of my memory” to
  • recal in absence those conversations; and, if I do not in direct
  • terms mention with whom I conversed, it is both because I have no
  • permission, and my readers will have no doubt.
  • The first intention of the poet must be to please; for, if he means
  • to instruct, he must render the instruction which he hopes to convey
  • palatable and pleasant. I will not assume the tone of a moralist,
  • nor promise that my relations shall be beneficial to mankind; but I
  • have endeavoured, not unsuccessfully I trust, that, in whatsoever I
  • have related or described, there should be nothing introduced which
  • has a tendency to excuse the vices of man by associating with them
  • sentiments that demand our respect, and talents that compel our
  • admiration. There is nothing in these pages which has the mischievous
  • effect of confounding truth and error, or confusing our ideas of
  • right and wrong. I know not which is most injurious to the yielding
  • minds of the young--to render virtue less respectable by making
  • its possessors ridiculous, or by describing vice with so many
  • fascinating qualities, that it is either lost in the assemblage, or
  • pardoned by the association. Man’s heart is sufficiently prone to
  • make excuse for man’s infirmity, and needs not the aid of poetry, or
  • eloquence, to take from vice its native deformity. A character may be
  • respectable with all its faults, but it must not be made respectable
  • by them. It is grievous when genius will condescend to place strong
  • and evil spirits in a commanding view, or excite our pity and
  • admiration for men of talents, degraded by crime, when struggling
  • with misfortune. It is but too true that great and wicked men may be
  • so presented to us as to demand our applause, when they should excite
  • our abhorrence; but it is surely for the interest of mankind, and
  • our own self-direction, that we should ever keep at unapproachable
  • distance our respect and our reproach.
  • I have one observation more to offer. It may appear to some that a
  • minister of religion, in the decline of life, should have no leisure
  • for such amusements as these; and for them I have no reply. But to
  • those who are more indulgent to the propensities, the studies, and
  • the habits of mankind, I offer some apology when I produce these
  • volumes, not as the occupations of my life, but the fruits of my
  • leisure--the employment of that time which, if not given to them, had
  • passed in the vacuity of unrecorded idleness, or had been lost in the
  • indulgence of unregistered thoughts and fancies, that melt away in
  • the instant they are conceived, and “_leave not a wreck behind_.”
  • TALES OF THE HALL.
  • BOOK I.
  • _THE HALL._
  • The Meeting of the Brothers, George and
  • Richard--The Retirement of the elder to his
  • native Village--Objects and Persons whom he
  • found there--The Brother described in various
  • Particulars--The Invitation and Journey of the
  • younger--His Soliloquy and Arrival.
  • TALES OF THE HALL.
  • BOOK I.
  • _THE HALL._
  • The Brothers met who many a year had past
  • Since their last meeting, and that seem’d their last;
  • They had no parent then or common friend
  • Who might their hearts to mutual kindness bend;
  • Who, touching both in their divided state,
  • Might generous thoughts and warm desires create;
  • For there are minds whom we must first excite
  • And urge to feeling, ere they can unite;
  • As we may hard and stubborn metals beat
  • And blend together, if we duly heat. 10
  • The elder, George, had past his threescore years,
  • A busy actor, sway’d by hopes and fears
  • Of powerful kind; and he had fill’d the parts
  • That try our strength and agitate our hearts.
  • He married not, and yet he well approved
  • The social state; but then he rashly loved;
  • Gave to a strong delusion all his youth,
  • Led by a vision till alarm’d by truth.
  • That vision past, and of that truth possest,
  • His passions wearied and disposed to rest, 20
  • George yet had will and power a place to choose,
  • Where Hope might sleep, and terminate her views.
  • He chose his native village, and the hill
  • He climb’d a boy had its attraction still;
  • With that small brook beneath, where he would stand,
  • And stooping fill the hollow of his hand,
  • To quench th’ impatient thirst--then stop awhile
  • To see the sun upon the waters smile,
  • In that sweet weariness when, long denied,
  • We drink and view the fountain that supplied 30
  • The sparkling bliss--and feel, if not express,
  • Our perfect ease in that sweet weariness.
  • The oaks yet flourish’d in that fertile ground,
  • Where still the church with lofty tower was found;
  • And still that Hall, a first, a favourite view,
  • But not the elms that form’d its avenue;
  • They fell ere George arrived, or yet had stood,
  • For he in reverence held the living wood,
  • That widely spreads in earth the deepening root,
  • And lifts to heaven the still aspiring shoot; 40
  • From age to age they fill’d a growing space,
  • But hid the mansion they were meant to grace.
  • It was an ancient, venerable hall,
  • And once surrounded by a moat and wall;
  • A part was added by a squire of taste,
  • Who, while unvalued acres ran to waste,
  • Made spacious rooms, whence he could look about,
  • And mark improvements as they rose without:
  • He fill’d the moat, he took the wall away,
  • He thinn’d the park, and bade the view be gay. 50
  • The scene was rich, but he who should behold
  • Its worth was poor, and so the whole was sold.
  • Just then our merchant from his desk retired,
  • And made the purchase that his heart desired--
  • The Hall of Binning, his delight a boy,
  • That gave his fancy in her flight employ.
  • Here, from his father’s modest home, he gazed,
  • Its grandeur charm’d him, and its height amazed,
  • Work of past ages; and the brick-built place
  • Where he resided was in much disgrace; 60
  • But never in his fancy’s proudest dream
  • Did he the master of that mansion seem.
  • Young was he then, and little did he know
  • What years on care and diligence bestow;
  • Now, young no more, retired to views well known,
  • He finds that object of his awe his own:
  • The Hall at Binning!--how he loves the gloom
  • That sun-excluding window gives the room;
  • Those broad brown stairs on which he loves to tread;
  • Those beams within; without, that length of lead, 70
  • On which the names of wanton boys appear,
  • Who died old men, and left memorials here--
  • Carvings of feet and hands, and knots and flowers,
  • The fruits of busy minds in idle hours.
  • Here, while our squire the modern part possess’d, }
  • His partial eye upon the old would rest; }
  • That best his comforts gave--this sooth’d his feelings best. }
  • Here, day by day, withdrawn from busy life,
  • No child t’ awake him, to engage no wife,
  • When friends were absent, not to books inclined, 80
  • He found a sadness steal upon his mind;
  • Sighing the works of former lords to see,
  • “I follow them,” he cried, “but who will follow me?”
  • Some ancient men whom he a boy had known
  • He knew again; their changes were his own.
  • Comparing now he view’d them, and he felt
  • That time with him in lenient mood had dealt;
  • While some the half-distinguish’d features bore }
  • That he was doubtful if he saw before, }
  • And some in memory lived, whom he must see no more. } 90
  • Here George had found, yet scarcely hoped to find,
  • Companions meet, minds fitted to his mind;
  • Here, late and loth, the worthy rector came,
  • From college dinners and a fellow’s fame;
  • Yet, here when fix’d, was happy to behold
  • So near a neighbour in a friend so old.
  • Boys on one form they parted, now to meet
  • In equal state, their worships on one seat.
  • Here were a sister-pair, who seem’d to live
  • With more respect than affluence can give; 100
  • Although not affluent, they, by nature graced,
  • Had sense and virtue, dignity and taste;
  • Their minds by sorrows, by misfortunes tried,
  • Were vex’d and heal’d, were pain’d and purified.
  • Hither a sage physician came, and plann’d,
  • With books his guides, improvements on his land;
  • Nor less to mind than matter would he give
  • His noble thoughts, to know how spirits live,
  • And what is spirit; him his friends advised
  • To think with fear; but caution he despised; 110
  • And hints of fear provoked him till he dared
  • Beyond himself, nor bold assertion spared,
  • But fiercely spoke, like those who strongly feel,
  • “Priests and their craft, enthusiasts and their zeal.”
  • More yet appear’d, of whom as we proceed--
  • Ah! yield not yet to languor--you shall read.
  • But ere the events that from this meeting rose,
  • Be they of pain or pleasure, we disclose,
  • It is of custom, doubtless is of use,
  • That we our heroes first should introduce. 120
  • Come, then, fair Truth! and let me clearly see
  • The minds I paint, as they are seen in thee;
  • To me their merits and their faults impart; }
  • Give me to say, “frail being! such thou art,” }
  • And closely let me view the naked human heart. }
  • GEORGE loved to think; but, as he late began
  • To muse on all the grander thoughts of man,
  • He took a solemn and a serious view
  • Of his religion, and he found it true;
  • Firmly, yet meekly, he his mind applied 130
  • To this great subject, and was satisfied.
  • He then proceeded, not so much intent,
  • But still in earnest, and to church he went.
  • Although they found some difference in their creed,
  • He and his pastor cordially agreed,
  • Convinced that they who would the truth obtain
  • By disputation, find their efforts vain;
  • The church he view’d as liberal minds will view,
  • And there he fix’d his principles and pew.
  • He saw--he thought he saw--how weakness, pride, 140
  • And habit, draw seceding crowds aside:
  • Weakness, that loves on trifling points to dwell;
  • Pride, that at first from Heaven’s own worship fell;
  • And habit, going where it went before,
  • Or to the meeting or the tavern door.
  • George loved the cause of freedom, but reproved
  • All who with wild and boyish ardour loved:
  • Those who believed they never could be free,
  • Except when fighting for their liberty;
  • Who by their very clamour and complaint 150
  • Invite coercion or enforce restraint.
  • He thought a trust so great, so good a cause,
  • Was only to be kept by guarding laws;
  • For, public blessings firmly to secure,
  • We must a lessening of the good endure.
  • The public waters are to none denied;
  • All drink the stream, but only few must guide.
  • There must be reservoirs to hold supply,
  • And channels form’d to send the blessing by;
  • The public good must be a private care; 160
  • None all they would may have, but all a share.
  • So we must freedom with restraint enjoy;
  • What crowds possess they will, uncheck’d, destroy;
  • And hence, that freedom may to all be dealt,
  • Guards must be fix’d, and safety must be felt.
  • So thought our squire, nor wish’d the guards t’ appear
  • So strong, that safety might be bought too dear;
  • The constitution was the ark that he
  • Join’d to support with zeal and sanctity;
  • Nor would expose it, as th’ accursed son 170
  • His father’s weakness, to be gazed upon.
  • “I for that freedom make,” said he, “my prayer,
  • That suits with all, like atmospheric air;
  • That is to mortal man by heaven assign’d,
  • Who cannot bear a pure and perfect kind.
  • The lighter gas, that, taken in the frame,
  • The spirit heats, and sets the blood in flame:
  • Such is the freedom which when men approve,
  • They know not what a dangerous thing they love.”
  • George chose the company of men of sense, 180
  • But could with wit in moderate share dispense;
  • He wish’d in social ease his friends to meet,
  • When still he thought the female accent sweet;
  • Well from the ancient, better from the young,
  • He loved the lispings of the mother tongue.
  • He ate and drank, as much as men who think
  • Of life’s best pleasures, ought to eat or drink;
  • Men purely temperate might have taken less,
  • But still he loved indulgence, not excess;
  • Nor would alone the grants of fortune taste, 190
  • But shared the wealth he judged it crime to waste;
  • And thus obtained the sure reward of care--
  • For none can spend like him who learns to spare.
  • Time, thought, and trouble made the man appear--
  • By nature shrewd--sarcastic and severe;
  • Still, he was one whom those who fully knew
  • Esteem’d and trusted, one correct and true;
  • All on his word with surety might depend,
  • Kind as a man, and faithful as a friend.
  • But him the many [knew] not, knew not cause 200
  • In their new squire for censure or applause;
  • Ask them, “Who dwelt within that lofty wall?”
  • And they would say, “the gentleman was tall;
  • Look’d old when follow’d, but alert when met,
  • And had some vigour in his movements yet;
  • He stoops, but not as one infirm; and wears
  • Dress that becomes his station and his years.”
  • Such was the man who from the world return’d
  • Nor friend nor foe; he prized it not, nor spurn’d;
  • But came and sat him in his village down, 210
  • Safe from its smile, and careless of its frown:
  • He, fairly looking into life’s account,
  • Saw frowns and favours were of like amount;
  • And viewing all--his perils, prospects, purse--
  • He said, “Content! ’tis well it is no worse.”
  • Through ways more rough had fortune RICHARD led,
  • The world he traversed was the book he read;
  • Hence clashing notions and opinions strange
  • Lodged in his mind: all liable to change.
  • By nature generous, open, daring, free, 220
  • The vice he hated was hypocrisy.
  • Religious notions, in her latter years,
  • His mother gave, admonish’d by her fears;
  • To these he added, as he chanced to read
  • A pious work or learn a christian creed.
  • He heard the preacher by the highway side,
  • The church’s teacher, and the meeting’s guide;
  • And, mixing all their matters in his brain,
  • Distill’d a something he could ill explain;
  • But still it served him for his daily use, 230
  • And kept his lively passions from abuse;
  • For he believed, and held in reverence high,
  • The truth so dear to man--“not all shall die.”
  • The minor portions of his creed hung loose,
  • For time to shapen and an whole produce;
  • This love effected, and a favourite maid
  • With clearer views his honest flame repaid;
  • Hers was the thought correct, the hope sublime,
  • She shaped his creed, and did the work of time.
  • He spake of freedom as a nation’s cause, 240
  • And loved, like George, our liberty and laws;
  • But had more youthful ardour to be free,
  • And stronger fears for injured liberty.
  • With him, on various questions that arose,
  • The monarch’s servants were the people’s foes;
  • And, though he fought with all a Briton’s zeal,
  • He felt for France as Freedom’s children feel;
  • Went far with her in what she thought reform,
  • And hail’d the revolutionary storm;
  • Yet would not here, where there was least to win, 250
  • And most to lose, the doubtful work begin;
  • But look’d on change with some religious fear,
  • And cried, with filial dread, “Ah! come not here.”
  • His friends he did not as the thoughtful choose;
  • Long to deliberate was, he judged, to lose;
  • Frankly he join’d the free, nor suffered pride
  • Or doubt to part them, whom their fate allied;
  • Men with such minds at once each other aid; }
  • “Frankness,” they cry, “with frankness is repaid; }
  • If honest, why suspect? if poor, of what afraid? } 260
  • Wealth’s timid votaries may with caution move;
  • Be it our wisdom to confide and love.”
  • So pleasures came, (not purchased first or plann’d)
  • But the chance pleasures that the poor command;
  • They came but seldom, they remain’d not long,
  • Nor gave him time to question “are they wrong?”
  • These he enjoy’d, and left to after time
  • To judge the folly or decide the crime;
  • Sure had he been, he had perhaps been pure
  • From this reproach--but Richard was not sure-- 270
  • Yet from the sordid vice, the mean, the base,
  • He stood aloof--death frown’d not like disgrace.
  • With handsome figure, and with manly air,
  • He pleased the sex, who all to him were fair;
  • With filial love he look’d on forms decay’d,
  • And admiration’s debt to beauty paid;
  • On sea or land, wherever Richard went,
  • He felt affection, and he found content;
  • There was in him a strong presiding hope
  • In fortune’s tempests, and it bore him up. 280
  • But when that mystic vine his mansion graced,
  • When numerous branches round his board were placed,
  • When sighs of apprehensive love were heard--
  • Then first the spirit of the hero fear’d;
  • Then he reflected on the father’s part,
  • And all an husband’s sorrow touch’d his heart;
  • Then thought he, “Who will their assistance lend?
  • And be the children’s guide, the parent’s friend?
  • Who shall their guardian, their protector be?
  • I have a brother--Well!--and so has he.” 290
  • And now they met; a message--kind, ’tis true,
  • But verbal only--ask’d an interview;
  • And many a mile, perplex’d by doubt and fear,
  • Had Richard past, unwilling to appear--
  • “How shall I now my unknown way explore,
  • He proud and rich--I very proud and poor?
  • Perhaps my friend a dubious speech mistook,
  • And George may meet me with a stranger’s look;
  • Then to my home when I return again, }
  • How shall I bear this business to explain, } 300
  • And tell of hopes raised high, and feelings hurt, in }
  • vain? }
  • “How stands the case? My brother’s friend and mine
  • Met at an inn, and sat them down to dine:
  • When, having settled all their own affairs,
  • And kindly canvass’d such as were not theirs,
  • Just as my friend was going to retire--
  • ‘Stay!--you will see the brother of our squire,’
  • Said his companion; ‘be his friend, and tell
  • The captain that his brother loves him well,
  • And, when he has no better thing in view, 310
  • Will be rejoiced to see him. Now, adieu!’
  • Well! here I am; and, brother, take you heed,
  • I am not come to flatter you and feed;
  • You shall no soother, fawner, hearer find,
  • I will not brush your coat, nor smooth your mind;
  • I will not hear your tales the whole day long,
  • Nor swear you’re right if I believe you wrong.
  • Nor be a witness of the facts you state,
  • Nor as my own adopt your love or hate:
  • I will not earn my dinner when I dine, 320
  • By taking all your sentiments for mine;
  • Nor watch the guiding motions of your eye,
  • Before I venture question or reply;
  • Nor when you speak affect an awe profound,
  • Sinking my voice, as if I fear’d the sound;
  • Nor to your looks obediently attend,
  • The poor, the humble, the dependant friend;
  • Yet, son of that dear mother could I meet--
  • But lo! the mansion--’tis a fine old seat!”
  • The Brothers met, with both too much at heart 330
  • To be observant of each other’s part.
  • “Brother, I’m glad,” was all that George could say,
  • Then stretch’d his hand, and turn’d his head away;
  • For he in tender tears had no delight,
  • But scorn’d the thought, and ridiculed the sight;
  • Yet now with pleasure, though with some surprise,
  • He felt his heart o’erflowing at his eyes.
  • Richard, mean time, made some attempts to speak,
  • Strong in his purpose, in his trial weak;
  • We cannot nature by our wishes rule, 340
  • Nor at our will her warm emotions cool;--
  • At length affection, like a risen tide,
  • Stood still, and then seem’d slowly to subside;
  • Each on the other’s looks had power to dwell,
  • And Brother Brother greeted passing well.
  • TALES OF THE HALL.
  • BOOK II.
  • _THE BROTHERS._
  • Further Account of the Meeting--Of the Men--The
  • Mother--The Uncle--The private Tutor--The second
  • Husband--Dinner Conversation-- School of the Rector
  • and Squire--The Master.
  • TALES OF THE HALL.
  • BOOK II.
  • _THE BROTHERS._
  • At length the Brothers met, no longer tried
  • By those strong feelings that in time subside;
  • Not fluent yet their language, but the eye
  • And action spoke both question and reply;
  • Till the heart rested, and could calmly feel;
  • Till the shook compass felt the settling steel;
  • Till playful smiles on graver converse broke,
  • And either speaker less abruptly spoke.
  • Still was there oft-times silence, silence blest,
  • Expressive, thoughtful--their emotions’ rest: 10
  • Pauses that came not from a want of thought,
  • But want of ease, by wearied passion sought;
  • For souls, when hurried by such powerful force,
  • Rest, and retrace the pleasure of the course.
  • They differ’d much; yet might observers trace
  • Likeness of features both in mind and face;
  • Pride they possess’d, that neither strove to hide,
  • But not offensive, not obtrusive pride.
  • Unlike had been their life, unlike the fruits
  • Of different tempers, studies, and pursuits; 20
  • Nay, in such varying scenes the men had moved,
  • ’Twas passing strange that aught alike they loved.
  • But all distinction now was thrown apart,
  • While these strong feelings ruled in either heart.
  • As various colours in a painted ball,
  • While it has rest, are seen distinctly all,
  • Till, whirl’d around by some exterior force,
  • They all are blended in the rapid course:
  • So in repose, and not by passion sway’d,
  • We saw the difference by their habits made; 30
  • But, tried by strong emotions, they became
  • Fill’d with one love, and were in heart the same;
  • Joy to the face its own expression sent,
  • And gave a likeness in the looks it lent.
  • All now was sober certainty; the joy
  • That no strong passions swell till they destroy:
  • For they, like wine, our pleasures raise so high,
  • That they subdue our strength, and then they die.
  • George in his brother felt a glowing pride,
  • He wonder’d who that fertile mind supplied-- 40
  • “Where could the wanderer gather on his road
  • Knowledge so various? how the mind this food?
  • No college train’d him, guideless through his life,
  • Without a friend--not so! he has a wife.
  • Ah! had I married, I might now have seen
  • My----No! it never, never could have been,
  • That long enchantment, that pernicious state!--
  • True, I recover’d, but alas! too late--
  • And here is Richard, poor indeed--but--nay!
  • This is self-torment--foolish thoughts, away!” 50
  • Ease leads to habit, as success to ease,
  • He lives by rule who lives himself to please;
  • For change is trouble, and a man of wealth
  • Consults his quiet as he guards his health;
  • And habit now on George had sovereign power,
  • His actions all had their accustom’d hour:
  • At the fix’d time he slept, he walk’d, he read,
  • Or sought his grounds, his gruel, and his bed;
  • For every season he with caution dress’d,
  • And morn and eve had the appropriate vest; 60
  • He talk’d of early mists, and night’s cold air,
  • And in one spot was fix’d his worship’s chair.
  • But not a custom yet on Richard’s mind
  • Had force, or him to certain modes confined;
  • To him no joy such frequent visits paid
  • That habit by its beaten track was made;
  • He was not one who at his ease could say,
  • “We’ll live to-morrow as we lived to-day;”
  • But he and his were as the ravens fed,
  • As the day came it brought the daily bread. 70
  • George, born to fortune, though of moderate kind,
  • Was not in haste his road through life to find.
  • His father early lost, his mother tried }
  • To live without him, liked it not, and--sigh’d, }
  • When, for her widow’d hand, an amorous youth applied. }
  • She still was young, and felt that she could share
  • A lover’s passion, and an husband’s care;
  • Yet past twelve years before her son was told,
  • To his surprise, “your father you behold.”
  • But he beheld not with his mother’s eye 80
  • The new relation, and would not comply,
  • But all obedience, all connexion spurn’d,
  • And fled their home, where he no more return’d.
  • His father’s brother was a man whose mind
  • Was to his business and his bank confined;
  • His guardian care the captious nephew sought,
  • And was received, caress’d, advised, and taught.
  • “That Irish beggar, whom your mother took,
  • Does you this good, he sends you to your book;
  • Yet love not books beyond their proper worth, 90
  • But, when they fit you for the world, go forth:
  • They are like beauties, and may blessings prove,
  • When we with caution study them, or love;
  • But, when to either we our souls devote,
  • We grow unfitted for that world, and dote.”
  • George to a school of higher class was sent,
  • But he was ever grieving that he went:
  • A still, retiring, musing, dreaming boy,
  • He relish’d not their sudden bursts of joy;
  • Nor the tumultuous pleasures of a rude, 100
  • A noisy, careless, fearless multitude.
  • He had his own delights, as one who flies
  • From every pleasure that a crowd supplies;
  • Thrice he return’d, but then was weary grown,
  • And was indulged with studies of his own.
  • Still could the rector and his friend relate
  • The small adventures of that distant date;
  • And Richard listen’d as they spake of time
  • Past in that world of misery and crime.
  • Freed from his school, a priest of gentle kind 110
  • The uncle found to guide the nephew’s mind;
  • Pleased with his teacher, George so long remain’d,
  • The mind was weaken’d by the store it gain’d.
  • His guardian uncle, then on foreign ground,
  • No time to think of his improvements found;
  • Nor had the nephew, now to manhood grown,
  • Talents or taste for trade or commerce shown,
  • But shunn’d a world of which he little knew,
  • Nor of that little did he like the view.
  • His mother chose, nor I the choice upbraid, 120
  • An Irish soldier of an house decay’d,
  • And passing poor; but, precious in her eyes
  • As she in his, they both obtain’d a prize.
  • To do the captain justice, she might share
  • What of her jointure his affairs could spare;
  • Irish he was in his profusion--true,
  • But he was Irish in affection too;
  • And, though he spent her wealth and made her grieve,
  • He always said “my dear” and “with your leave.”
  • Him she survived; she saw his boy possess’d 130
  • Of manly spirit, and then sank to rest.
  • Her sons thus left, some legal cause required
  • That they should meet, but neither this desired.
  • George, a recluse, with mind engaged, was one
  • Who did no business, with whom none was done;
  • Whose heart, engross’d by its peculiar care,
  • Shared no one’s counsel--no one his might share.
  • Richard, a boy, a lively boy, was told
  • Of his half-brother, haughty, stern, and cold;
  • And his boy folly, or his manly pride, 140
  • Made him on measures cool and harsh decide.
  • So, when they met, a distant cold salute
  • Was of a long-expected day the fruit;
  • The rest by proxies managed, each withdrew,
  • Vex’d by the business and the brother too;
  • But now they met when time had calm’d the mind;
  • Both wish’d for kindness, and it made them kind.
  • George had no wife or child, and was disposed
  • To love the man on whom his hope reposed:
  • Richard had both; and those so well beloved, 150
  • Husband and father were to kindness moved;
  • And thus th’ affections check’d, subdued, restrain’d,
  • Rose in their force, and in their fulness reign’d.
  • The bell now bids to dine; the friendly priest,
  • Social and shrewd, the day’s delight increased.
  • Brief and abrupt their speeches while they dined,
  • Nor were their themes of intellectual kind;
  • Nor, dinner past, did they to these advance,
  • But left the subjects they discuss’d to chance.
  • Richard, whose boyhood in the place was spent, 160
  • Profound attention to the speakers lent,
  • Who spake of men; and, as he heard a name,
  • Actors and actions to his memory came.
  • Then, too, the scenes he could distinctly trace,
  • Here he had fought, and there had gain’d a race;
  • In that church-walk he had affrighted been;
  • In that old tower he had a something seen--
  • What time, dismiss’d from school, he upward cast
  • A fearful look, and trembled as he past.
  • No private tutor Richard’s parents sought, 170
  • Made keen by hardship, and by trouble taught;
  • They might have sent him--some the counsel gave--
  • Seven gloomy winters of the North to brave:
  • Where a few pounds would pay for board and bed,
  • While the poor frozen boy was taught and fed;
  • When, say he lives, fair, freckled, lank and lean,
  • The lad returns shrewd, subtle, close and keen;
  • With all the northern virtues, and the rules
  • Taught to the thrifty in these thriving schools.
  • There had he gone, and borne this trying part-- 180
  • But Richard’s mother had a mother’s heart.
  • Now squire and rector were return’d to school,
  • And spoke of him who there had sovereign rule:
  • He was, it seem’d, a tyrant of the sort
  • Who make the cries of tortured boys his sport;
  • One of a race, if not extinguish’d, tamed--
  • The flogger now is of the act ashamed;
  • But this great mind all mercy’s calls withstood;
  • This Holofernes was a man of blood.
  • “Students,” he said, “like horses on the road, 190
  • Must well be lash’d before they take the load;
  • They may be willing for a time to run,
  • But you must whip them ere the work be done.
  • To tell a boy, that, if he will improve,
  • His friends will praise him, and his parents love,
  • Is doing nothing--he has not a doubt
  • But they will love him, nay, applaud, without;
  • Let no fond sire a boy’s ambition trust,
  • To make him study, let him see he must.”
  • Such his opinion; and, to prove it true, 200
  • At least sincere, it was his practice too.
  • Pluto they call’d him, and they named him well:
  • ’Twas not an heaven where he was pleased to dwell.
  • From him a smile was like the Greenland sun,
  • Surprising, nay portentous, when it shone;
  • Or like the lightning, for the sudden flash
  • Prepared the children for the thunder’s crash.
  • O! had Narcissa, when she fondly kiss’d
  • The weeping boy whom she to school dismiss’d,
  • Had she beheld him shrinking from the arm 210
  • Uplifted high to do the greater harm,
  • Then seen her darling stript, and that pure white,
  • And--O! her soul had fainted at the sight;
  • And with those looks that love could not withstand,
  • She would have cried, “Barbarian, hold thy hand!”
  • In vain! no grief to this stern soul could speak,
  • No iron-tear roll down this Pluto’s cheek.
  • Thus far they went, half earnest, half in jest,
  • Then turn’d to themes of deeper interest;
  • While Richard’s mind, that for awhile had stray’d, 220
  • Call’d home its powers, and due attention paid.
  • TALES OF THE HALL.
  • BOOK III.
  • _BOYS AT SCHOOL._
  • The School--School-Boys--The Boy-Tyrant--Sir Hector
  • Blane-- School-Boys in after Life, how changed--how
  • the same--The patronized Boy, his Life and
  • Death--Reflections--Story of Harry Bland.
  • TALES OF THE HALL.
  • BOOK III.
  • _BOYS AT SCHOOL._
  • We name the world a school, for day by day
  • We something learn, till we are call’d away;
  • The school we name a world,--for vice and pain,
  • Fraud and contention, there begin to reign;
  • And much, in fact, this lesser world can show
  • Of grief and crime that in the greater grow.
  • “You saw,” said George, “in that still-hated school
  • How the meek suffer, how the haughty rule;
  • There soft, ingenuous, gentle minds endure
  • Ills that ease, time, and friendship fail to cure; 10
  • There the best hearts, and those, who shrink from sin,
  • Find some seducing imp to draw them in,
  • Who takes infernal pleasure to impart
  • The strongest poison to the purest heart.
  • Call to your mind this scene--Yon boy behold:
  • How hot the vengeance of a heart so cold!
  • See how he beats, whom he had just reviled
  • And made rebellious--that imploring child;
  • How fierce his eye, how merciless his blows,
  • And how his anger on his insult grows; 20
  • You saw this Hector and his patient slave,
  • Th’ insulting speech, the cruel blows he gave.
  • Mix’d with mankind, his interest in his sight,
  • We found this Nimrod civil and polite;
  • There was no triumph in his manner seen,
  • He was so humble you might think him mean.
  • Those angry passions slept till he attain’d
  • His purposed wealth, and waked when that was gain’d;
  • He then resumed the native wrath and pride,
  • The more indulged, as longer laid aside; 30
  • Wife, children, servants, all obedience pay,
  • The slaves at school no greater slaves than they;
  • No more dependant, he resumes the rein,
  • And shows the school-boy turbulence again.
  • “Were I a poet, I would say, he brings
  • To recollection some impetuous springs;
  • See one that issues from its humble source,
  • To gain new powers, and run its noisy course:
  • Frothy and fierce among the rocks it goes,
  • And threatens all that bound it or oppose; 40
  • Till wider grown, and finding large increase,
  • Though bounded still, it moves along in peace;
  • And, as its waters to the ocean glide,
  • They bear a busy people on its tide;
  • But there arrived, and from its channel free,
  • Those swelling waters meet the mighty sea;
  • With threat’ning force the new-form’d billows swell,
  • And now affright the crowd they bore so well.”
  • “Yet,” said the rector, “all these early signs
  • Of vice are lost, and vice itself declines; 50
  • Religion counsels; troubles, sorrows rise,
  • And the vile spirit in the conflict dies.
  • “Sir Hector Blane, the champion of the school,
  • Was very blockhead, but was form’d for rule;
  • Learn he could not; he said he could not learn,
  • But he profess’d it gave him no concern.
  • Books were his horror, dinner his delight,
  • And his amusement to shake hands and fight;
  • Argue he could not, but in case of doubt,
  • Or disputation, fairly box’d it out. 60
  • This was his logic, and his arm so strong,
  • His cause prevail’d, and he was never wrong;
  • But so obtuse--you must have seen his look,
  • Desponding, angry, puzzled o’er his book.
  • “Can you not see him on the morn that proved
  • His skill in figures? Pluto’s self was moved--
  • ‘Come, six times five?’ th’ impatient teacher cried;
  • In vain, the pupil shut his eyes, and sigh’d.
  • ‘Try, six times count your fingers; how he stands!--
  • Your fingers, idiot!’--‘What, of both my hands?’ 70
  • “With parts like these his father felt assured,
  • In busy times, a ship might be procured;
  • He too was pleased to be so early freed:
  • He now could fight, and he in time might read.
  • So he has fought, and in his country’s cause
  • Has gain’d him glory, and our hearts’ applause.
  • No more the blustering boy a school defies; }
  • We see the hero from the tyrant rise, }
  • And in the captain’s worth the student’s dulness dies.” }
  • “Be all allow’d;” replied the squire, “I give 80
  • Praise to his actions; may their glory live!
  • Nay, I will hear him in his riper age
  • Fight his good ship, and with the foe engage;
  • Nor will I quit him when the cowards fly,
  • Although, like them, I dread his energy.
  • “But still, my friend, that ancient spirit reigns;
  • His powers support the credit of his brains,
  • Insisting ever that he must be right,
  • And for his reasons still prepared to fight.
  • Let him a judge of England’s prowess be, 90
  • And all her floating terrors on the sea;
  • But this contents not, this is not denied;
  • He claims a right on all things to decide,
  • A kind of patent-wisdom; and he cries,
  • ‘’Tis so!’ and bold the hero that denies.
  • Thus the boy-spirit still the bosom rules,
  • And the world’s maxims were at first the school’s.”
  • “No doubt,” said Jacques, “there are in minds the seeds
  • Of good and ill, the virtues and the weeds;
  • But is it not of study the intent 100
  • This growth of evil nature to prevent?
  • To check the progress of each idle shoot
  • That might retard the ripening of the fruit?
  • Our purpose certain, and we much effect,
  • We something cure, and something we correct;
  • But do your utmost: when the man you see,
  • You find him what you saw the boy would be,
  • Disguised a little; but we still behold
  • What pleased and what offended us of old.
  • Years from the mind no native stain remove, 110
  • But lay the varnish of the world above.
  • Still, when he can, he loves to step aside
  • And be the boy, without a check or guide;
  • In the old wanderings he with pleasure strays,
  • And reassumes the bliss of earlier days.
  • “I left at school the boy with pensive look,
  • Whom some great patron order’d to his book;
  • Who from his mother’s cot reluctant came,
  • And gave my lord, for this compassion, fame;
  • Who, told of all his patron’s merit, sigh’d, 120
  • I know not why, in sorrow or in pride;
  • And would, with vex’d and troubled spirit, cry,
  • ‘I am not happy; let your envy die.’
  • Him left I with you; who, perhaps, can tell
  • If fortune bless’d him, or what fate befell.
  • I yet remember how the idlers ran
  • To see the carriage of the godlike man,
  • When pride restrain’d me; yet I thought the deed
  • Was noble, too--and how did it succeed?”
  • Jacques answer’d not till he had backward cast 130
  • His view, and dwelt upon the evil past;
  • Then, as he sigh’d, he smil’d;--from folly rise
  • Such smiles, and misery will create such sighs.
  • And Richard now from his abstraction broke,
  • Listening attentive as the rector spoke.
  • * * * * *
  • “This noble lord was one disposed to try
  • And weigh the worth of each new luxury;
  • Now, at a certain time, in pleasant mood,
  • He tried the luxury of doing good.
  • For this he chose a widow’s handsome boy, 140
  • Whom he would first improve, and then employ.
  • The boy was gentle, modest, civil, kind,
  • But not for bustling through the world design’d;
  • Reserved in manner, with a little gloom,
  • Apt to retire, but never to assume;
  • Possess’d of pride that he could not subdue,
  • Although he kept his origin in view.
  • Him sent my lord to school, and this became
  • A theme for praise, and gave his lordship fame;
  • But when the boy was told how great his debt, 150
  • He proudly ask’d, ‘is it contracted yet?’
  • “With care he studied, and with some success;
  • His patience great, but his acquirements less:
  • Yet when he heard that Charles would not excel,
  • His lordship answer’d, with a smile, ‘’tis well;
  • Let him proceed, and do the best he can,
  • I want no pedant, but a useful man.’
  • “The speech was heard, and praise was amply dealt,
  • His lordship felt it, and he said he felt--
  • ‘It is delightful,’ he observed, ‘to raise 160
  • And foster merit--it is more than praise.’
  • “Five years at school th’ industrious boy had past,
  • ‘And what,’ was whisper’d, ‘will be done at last?’
  • “My lord was troubled, for he did not mean
  • To have his bounty watch’d and overseen;
  • Bounty that sleeps when men applaud no more
  • The generous act that waked their praise before;
  • The deed was pleasant while the praise was new,
  • But none the progress would with wonder view.
  • It was a debt contracted; he who pays 170
  • A debt is just, but must not look for praise:
  • The deed that once had fame must still proceed,
  • Though fame no more proclaims ‘how great the deed!’
  • The boy is taken from his mother’s side,
  • And he who took him must be now his guide.
  • But this, alas! instead of bringing fame,
  • A tax, a trouble, to my lord became.
  • “‘The boy is dull, you say,--why then by trade,
  • By law, by physic, nothing can be made;
  • If a small living--mine are both too large, 180
  • And then the college is a cursed charge.
  • The sea is open; should he there display
  • Signs of dislike, he cannot run away.’
  • “Now Charles, who acted no heroic part,
  • And felt no seaman’s glory warm his heart,
  • Refused the offer--anger touch’d my lord.--
  • ‘He does not like it--Good, upon my word--
  • If I at college place him, he will need
  • Supplies for ever, and will not succeed;--
  • Doubtless in me ’tis duty to provide 190
  • Not for his comfort only, but his pride--
  • Let him to sea!’--He heard the words again,
  • With promise join’d--with threat’ning; all in vain:
  • Charles had his own pursuits; for aid to these
  • He had been thankful, and had tried to please;
  • But urged again, as meekly as a saint,
  • He humbly begg’d to stay at home, and paint.
  • ‘Yes, pay some dauber, that this stubborn fool
  • May grind his colours, and may boast his school.’
  • “As both persisted, ‘Choose, good sir, your way,’ 200
  • The peer exclaim’d, ‘I have no more to say,
  • I seek your good, but I have no command
  • Upon your will, nor your desire withstand.’
  • “Resolved and firm, yet dreading to offend,
  • Charles pleaded _genius_ with his noble friend:
  • ‘Genius!’ he cried, ‘the name that triflers give
  • To their strong wishes without pains to live;
  • Genius! the plea of all who feel desire
  • Of fame, yet grudge the labours that acquire--
  • But say ’tis true: how poor, how late the gain, 210
  • And certain ruin if the hope be vain!’
  • Then to the world appeal’d my lord, and cried,
  • ‘Whatever happens, I am justified.’
  • Nay, it was trouble to his soul to find
  • There was such hardness in the human mind:
  • He wash’d his hands before the world, and swore
  • That he ‘such minds would patronize no more.’
  • “Now Charles his bread by daily labours sought,
  • And this his solace, ‘so Corregio wrought.’
  • Alas, poor youth! however great his name, 220
  • And humble thine, thy fortune was the same.
  • Charles drew and painted, and some praise obtain’d
  • For care and pains; but little more was gain’d:
  • Fame was his hope, and he contempt display’d
  • For approbation, when ’twas coolly paid;
  • His daily tasks he call’d a waste of mind,
  • Vex’d at his fate, and angry with mankind:
  • ‘Thus have the blind to merit ever done,
  • And Genius mourn’d for each neglected son.’
  • “Charles murmur’d thus, and, angry and alone, 230
  • Half breathed the curse, and half suppress’d the groan;
  • Then still more sullen grew, and still more proud; }
  • Fame so refused he to himself allow’d; }
  • Crowds in contempt he held, and all to him was crowd. }
  • “If aught on earth, the youth his mother loved,
  • And, at her death, to distant scenes removed.
  • “Years past away, and where he lived, and how,
  • Was then unknown--indeed we know not now;
  • But once at twilight walking up and down,
  • In a poor alley of the mighty town, 240
  • Where, in her narrow courts and garrets, hide
  • The grieving sons of genius, want, and pride,
  • I met him musing; sadness I could trace,
  • And conquer’d hope’s meek anguish, in his face.
  • See him I must; but I with ease address’d,
  • And neither pity nor surprise express’d;
  • I strove both grief and pleasure to restrain,
  • But yet I saw that I was giving pain.
  • He said, with quick’ning pace, as loth to hold
  • A longer converse, that ‘the day was cold, 250
  • That he was well, that I had scarcely light
  • To aid my steps,’ and bade me then good night!
  • “I saw him next where he had lately come,
  • A silent pauper in a crowded room;
  • I heard his name, but he conceal’d his face,
  • To his sad mind his misery was disgrace;
  • In vain I strove to combat his disdain
  • Of my compassion----‘Sir, I pray, refrain;’
  • For I had left my friends and stepp’d aside,
  • Because I fear’d his unrelenting pride. 260
  • “He then was sitting on a workhouse-bed,
  • And on the naked boards reclined his head,
  • Around were children with incessant cry,
  • And near was one, like him, about to die;
  • A broken chair’s deal bottom held the store
  • That he required--he soon would need no more;
  • A yellow tea-pot, standing at his side,
  • From its half-spout the cold, black tea supplied.
  • “Hither, it seem’d, the fainting man was brought,
  • Found without food--it was no longer sought; 270
  • For his employers knew not whom they paid,
  • Nor where to seek him whom they wish’d to aid.
  • Here brought, some kind attendant he address’d,
  • And sought some trifles which he yet possess’d;
  • Then named a lightless closet, in a room
  • Hired at small rate, a garret’s deepest gloom.
  • They sought the region, and they brought him all
  • That he his own, his proper wealth could call:
  • A better coat, less pieced; some linen neat,
  • Not whole; and papers, many a valued sheet-- 280
  • Designs and drawings; these, at his desire,
  • Were placed before him at the chamber fire,
  • And while th’ admiring people stood to gaze,
  • He, one by one, committed to the blaze,
  • Smiling in spleen; but one he held awhile,
  • And gave it to the flames, and could not smile.
  • “The sickening man--for such appear’d the fact--
  • Just in his need, would not a debt contract;
  • But left his poor apartment for the bed
  • That earth might yield him, or some way-side shed; 290
  • Here he was found, and to this place convey’d,
  • Where he might rest, and his last debt be paid:
  • Fame was his wish, but he so far from fame, }
  • That no one knew his kindred, or his name, }
  • Or by what means he lived, or from what place he came. }
  • “Poor Charles! unnoticed by thy titled friend,
  • Thy days had calmly past, in peace thine end;
  • Led by thy patron’s vanity astray,
  • Thy own misled thee in thy trackless way,
  • Urging thee on by hope absurd and vain, 300
  • Where never peace or comfort smiled again!
  • “Once more I saw him, when his spirits fail’d,
  • And my desire to aid him then prevail’d;
  • He show’d a softer feeling in his eye,
  • And watch’d my looks, and own’d the sympathy.
  • ’Twas now the calm of wearied pride; so long
  • As he had strength was his resentment strong;
  • But in such place, with strangers all around,
  • And they such strangers, to have something found
  • Allied to his own heart, an early friend-- } 310
  • One, only one, who would on him attend, }
  • To give and take a look at this his journey’s end! }
  • One link, however slender, of the chain
  • That held him where he could not long remain;
  • The one sole interest!--No, he could not now
  • Retain his anger; Nature knew not how;
  • And so there came a softness to his mind,
  • And he forgave the usage of mankind.
  • His cold long fingers now were press’d to mine,
  • And his faint smile of kinder thoughts gave sign; 320
  • His lips moved often as he tried to lend
  • His words their sound, and softly whisper’d ‘friend!’
  • Not without comfort in the thought express’d
  • By that calm look with which he sank to rest.”
  • * * * * *
  • “The man,” said George, “you see, through life retain’d
  • The boy’s defects; his virtues too remain’d.
  • “But where are now those minds so light and gay, }
  • So forced on study, so intent on play, }
  • Swept, by the world’s rude blasts, from hope’s dear }
  • views away }
  • Some grieved for long neglect in earlier times, 330
  • Some sad from frailties, some lamenting crimes;
  • Thinking, with sorrow, on the season lent
  • For noble purpose, and in trifling spent;
  • And now, at last, when they in earnest view
  • The nothings done--what work they find to do!
  • Where is that virtue that the generous boy
  • Felt, and resolved that nothing should destroy?
  • He who with noble indignation glow’d
  • When vice had triumph? who his tear bestow’d
  • On injured merit? he who would possess 340
  • Power, but to aid the children of distress;
  • Who has such joy in generous actions shown,
  • And so sincere, they might be call’d his own;
  • Knight, hero, patriot, martyr! on whose tongue,
  • And potent arm, a nation’s welfare hung;
  • He who to public misery brought relief,
  • And soothed the anguish of domestic grief?
  • Where now this virtue’s fervour, spirit, zeal?
  • Who felt so warmly, has he ceased to feel?
  • The boy’s emotions of that noble kind, 350
  • Ah! sure th’ experienced man has not resign’d;
  • Or are these feelings varied? has the knight,
  • Virtue’s own champion, now refused to fight?
  • Is the deliverer turn’d th’ oppressor now?
  • Has the reformer dropt the dangerous vow?
  • Or has the patriot’s bosom lost its heat,
  • And forced him, shivering, to a snug retreat?
  • Is such the grievous lapse of human pride?
  • Is such the victory of the worth untried?
  • “Here will I pause, and then review the shame 360
  • Of Harry Bland, to hear his parent’s name.
  • That mild, that modest boy, whom well we knew,
  • In him long time the secret sorrow grew;
  • He wept alone; then to his friend confess’d
  • The grievous fears that his pure mind oppress’d;
  • And thus, when terror o’er his shame obtain’d
  • A painful conquest, he his case explain’d;
  • And first his favourite question’d--‘Willie, tell,
  • Do all the wicked people go to hell?’
  • “Willie with caution answer’d, ‘Yes, they do, 370
  • Or else repent; but what is this to you?’
  • ‘O! yes, dear friend:’ he then his tale began--
  • ‘He fear’d his father was a wicked man,
  • Nor had repented of his naughty life;
  • The wife he had indeed was not a wife,
  • Not as my mother was; the servants all
  • Call her a name--I’ll whisper what they call.
  • She saw me weep, and ask’d, in high disdain,
  • If tears could bring my mother back again?
  • This I could bear, but not when she pretends 380
  • Such fond regard, and what I speak commends;
  • Talks of my learning, fawning wretch! and tries
  • To make me love her,--love! when I despise.
  • Indeed I had it in my heart to say
  • Words of reproach, before I came away;
  • And then my father’s look is not the same,
  • He puts his anger on to hide his shame.’
  • “With all these feelings delicate and nice,
  • This dread of infamy, this scorn of vice,
  • He left the school, accepting, though with pride, 390
  • His father’s aid--but there would not reside;
  • He married then a lovely maid, approved
  • Of every heart as worthy to be loved;
  • Mild as the morn in summer, firm as truth,
  • And graced with wisdom in the bloom of youth.
  • “How is it, men, when they in judgment sit
  • On the same fault, now censure, now acquit?
  • Is it not thus, that _here_ we view the sin,
  • And _there_ the powerful cause that drew us in?
  • ’Tis not that men are to the evil blind, 400
  • But that a different object fills the mind.
  • In judging others we can see too well
  • Their grievous fall, but not how grieved they fell;
  • Judging ourselves, we to our minds recall,
  • Not how we fell, but how we grieved to fall.
  • Or could this man, so vex’d in early time,
  • By this strong feeling for his father’s crime;
  • Who to the parent’s sin was barely just,
  • And mix’d with filial fear the man’s disgust--
  • Could he, without some strong delusion, quit 410
  • The path of duty, and to shame submit?
  • Cast off the virtue he so highly prized,
  • ‘And be the very creature he despised?’
  • “A tenant’s wife, half forward, half afraid,
  • Features, it seem’d, of powerful cast displayed,
  • That bore down faith and duty; common fame
  • Speaks of a contract that augments the shame.
  • “There goes he, not unseen, so strong the will,
  • And blind the wish, that bear him to the mill;
  • There he degraded sits, and strives to please 420
  • The miller’s children, laughing at his knees;
  • And little Dorcas, now familiar grown,
  • Talks of her rich papa, and of her own.
  • He woos the mother’s now precarious smile
  • By costly gifts, that tempers reconcile;
  • While the rough husband, yielding to the pay
  • That buys his absence, growling stalks away.
  • ’Tis said th’ offending man will sometimes sigh,
  • And say, ‘My God, in what a dream am I!
  • I will awake;’ but, as the day proceeds, 430
  • The weaken’d mind the day’s indulgence needs;
  • Hating himself at every step he takes,
  • His mind approves the virtue he forsakes,
  • And yet forsakes her. O! how sharp the pain,
  • Our vice, ourselves, our habits to disdain;
  • To go where never yet in peace we went; }
  • To feel our hearts can bleed, yet not relent; }
  • To sigh, yet not recede; to grieve, yet not repent!” }
  • TALES OF THE HALL.
  • BOOK IV.
  • _ADVENTURES OF RICHARD._
  • Meeting of the Brothers in the Morning--Pictures,
  • Music, Books--The Autumnal Walk--The
  • Farm--The Flock--Effect of Retirement upon
  • the Mind--Dinner--Richard’s Adventure at
  • Sea--George inquires into the Education of his
  • Brother--Richard’s Account of his Occupations
  • in his early Life: his Pursuits, Associations,
  • Partialities, Affections and Feelings--His Love of
  • Freedom--The Society he chose--The Friendships he
  • engaged in--and the Habits he contracted.
  • TALES OF THE HALL.
  • BOOK IV.
  • _ADVENTURES OF RICHARD._
  • Eight days had past; the Brothers now could meet
  • With ease, and take the customary seat.
  • “These” said the host--for he perceived where stray’d
  • His brother’s eye, and what he now survey’d--
  • “These are the costly trifles that we buy,
  • Urged by the strong demands of vanity,
  • The thirst and hunger of a mind diseased,
  • That must with purchased flattery be appeased;
  • But yet, ’tis true, the things that you behold
  • Serve to amuse us as we’re getting old. 10
  • These pictures, as I heard our artists say,
  • Are genuine all, and I believe they may;
  • They cost the genuine sums, and I should grieve
  • If, being willing, I could not believe.
  • And there is music; when the ladies come,
  • With their keen looks they scrutinize the room
  • To see what pleases, and I must expect
  • To yield them pleasure, or to find neglect:
  • For, as attractions from our person fly,
  • Our purses, Richard, must the want supply; 20
  • Yet would it vex me, could the triflers know
  • That they can shut out comfort or bestow.
  • “But see this room: here, Richard, you will find
  • Books for all palates, food for every mind;
  • This readers term the ever-new delight,
  • And so it is, if minds have appetite:
  • Mine once was craving; great my joy, indeed,
  • Had I possess’d such food when I could feed;
  • When at the call of every new-born wish
  • I could have keenly relish’d every dish-- 30
  • Now, Richard, now, I stalk around and look
  • Upon the dress and title of a book,
  • Try half a page, and then can taste no more,
  • But the dull volume to its place restore;
  • Begin a second slowly to peruse,
  • Then cast it by, and look about for news;
  • The news itself grows dull in long debates--
  • I skip, and see what the conclusion states;
  • And many a speech, with zeal and study made
  • Cold and resisting spirits to persuade, 40
  • Is lost on mine; alone, we cease to feel
  • What crowds admire, and wonder at their zeal.
  • “But how the day? No fairer will it be? }
  • Walk you? Alas! ’tis requisite for me-- }
  • Nay, let me not prescribe--my friends and guests are free.” }
  • * * * * *
  • It was a fair and mild autumnal sky,
  • And earth’s ripe treasures met th’ admiring eye,
  • As a rich beauty, when her bloom is lost,
  • Appears with more magnificence and cost.
  • The wet and heavy grass, where feet had stray’d, 50
  • Not yet erect, the wanderer’s way betray’d;
  • Showers of the night had swell’d the deep’ning rill;
  • The morning breeze had urged the quick’ning mill;
  • Assembled rooks had wing’d their sea-ward flight, }
  • By the same passage to return at night; }
  • While proudly o’er them hung the steady kite, }
  • Then turn’d him back, and left the noisy throng,
  • Nor deign’d to know them as he sail’d along.
  • Long yellow leaves from oziers, strew’d around,
  • Choked the small stream, and hush’d the feeble sound; 60
  • While the dead foliage dropt from loftier trees
  • Our squire beheld not with his wonted ease,
  • But to his own reflections made reply,
  • And said aloud, “Yes! doubtless we must die.”
  • “We must;” said Richard, “and we would not live
  • To feel what dotage and decay will give;
  • But we yet taste whatever we behold:
  • The morn is lovely, though the air is cold;
  • There is delicious quiet in this scene,
  • At once so rich, so varied, so serene; 70
  • Sounds too delight us--each discordant tone
  • Thus mingled please, that fail to please alone:
  • This hollow wind, this rustling of the brook, }
  • The farm-yard noise, the woodman at yon oak-- }
  • See, the axe falls!--now listen to the stroke! }
  • That gun itself, that murders all this peace,
  • Adds to the charm, because it soon must cease.”
  • “No doubt,” said George, “the country has its charms!
  • My farm behold! the model for all farms!
  • Look at that land--you find not there a weed, 80
  • We grub the roots, and suffer none to seed.
  • To land like this no botanist will come,
  • To seek the precious ware he hides at home;
  • Pressing the leaves and flowers with effort nice,
  • As if they came from herbs in Paradise;
  • Let them their favourites with my neighbours see,
  • They have no--what?--no _habitat_ with me.
  • “Now see my flock, and hear its glory;--none
  • Have that vast body and that slender bone;
  • They are the village boast, the dealer’s theme, 90
  • Fleece of such staple! flesh in such esteem!”
  • “Brother,” said Richard, “do I hear aright?
  • Does the land truly give so much delight?”
  • “So says my bailiff; sometimes I have tried
  • To catch the joy, but nature has denied;
  • It will not be--the mind has had a store
  • Laid up for life, and will admit no more.
  • Worn out in trials, and about to die,
  • In vain to these we for amusement fly;
  • We farm, we garden, we our poor employ, 100
  • And much command, though little we enjoy;
  • Or, if ambitious, we employ our pen,
  • We plant a desert, or we drain a fen;
  • And--here, behold my medal!--this will show
  • What men may merit when they nothing know.”
  • “Yet reason here,” said Richard, “joins with pride:--”
  • “I did not ask th’ alliance,” George replied--
  • “I grant it true, such trifle may induce
  • A dull, proud man to wake and be of use;
  • And there are purer pleasures, that a mind 110
  • Calm and uninjured may in villas find;
  • But, where th’ affections have been deeply tried,
  • With other food that mind must be supplied:
  • ’Tis not in trees or medals to impart
  • The powerful medicine for an aching heart;
  • The agitation dies, but there is still
  • The backward spirit, the resisting will.
  • Man takes his body to a country seat,
  • But minds, dear Richard, have their own retreat;
  • Oft when the feet are pacing o’er the green 120
  • The mind is gone where never grass was seen,
  • And never thinks of hill, or vale, or plain, }
  • Till want of rest creates a sense of pain, }
  • That calls that wandering mind, and brings it home again. }
  • No more of farms; but here I boast of minds
  • That make a friend the richer when he finds:
  • These shalt thou see;--but, Richard, be it known,
  • Who thinks to see must in his turn be shown.--
  • But now farewell! to thee will I resign
  • Woods, walks, and valleys! take them till we dine.” 130
  • * * * * *
  • The Brothers dined, and with that plenteous fare
  • That seldom fails to dissipate our care,
  • At least the lighter kind; and oft prevails
  • When reason, duty, nay, when kindness fails.
  • Yet food and wine, and all that mortals bless,
  • Lead them to think of peril and distress--
  • Cold, hunger, danger, solitude, and pain,
  • That men in life’s adventurous ways sustain.
  • “Thou hast sail’d far, dear brother,” said the ’squire--
  • “Permit me of these unknown lands t’ inquire, 140
  • Lands never till’d, where thou hast wondering been,
  • And all the marvels thou hast heard and seen.
  • Do tell me something of the miseries felt
  • In climes where travellers freeze, and where they melt;
  • And be not nice--we know ’tis not in men
  • Who travel far to hold a steady pen.
  • Some will, ’tis true, a bolder freedom take,
  • And keep our wonder always wide awake;
  • We know of those whose dangers far exceed
  • Our frail belief, that trembles as we read: 150
  • Such as in deserts burn, and thirst, and die,
  • Save a last gasp that they recover by;
  • Then, too, their hazard from a tyrant’s arms,
  • A tiger’s fury, or a lady’s charms;
  • Beside th’ accumulated evils borne
  • From the bold outset to the safe return.
  • These men abuse; but thou hast fair pretence
  • To modest dealing, and to mild good sense;
  • Then let me hear thy struggles and escapes
  • In the far lands of crocodiles and apes: 160
  • Say, hast thou, Bruce-like, knelt upon the bed
  • Where the young Nile uplifts his branchy head?
  • Or been partaker of th’ unhallow’d feast,
  • Where beast-like man devours his fellow beast,
  • And churn’d the bleeding life? while each great dame
  • And sovereign beauty bade adieu to shame?
  • Or did the storm, that thy wreck’d pinnace bore,
  • Impel thee gasping on some unknown shore;
  • Where, when thy beard and nails were savage grown,
  • Some swarthy princess took thee for her own, 170
  • Some danger-dreading Yarico, who, kind,
  • Sent thee away, and, prudent, staid behind?
  • “Come--I am ready wonders to receive,
  • Prone to assent, and willing to believe.”
  • Richard replied: “It must be known to you,
  • That tales improbable may yet be true;
  • And yet it is a foolish thing to tell
  • A tale that shall be judged improbable;
  • While some impossibilities appear
  • So like the truth, that we assenting hear: 180
  • Yet, with your leave, I venture to relate
  • A chance-affair, and fact alone will state;
  • Though, I confess, it may suspicion breed,
  • And you may cry, ‘improbable, indeed!’
  • * * * * *
  • “When first I tried the sea, I took a trip,
  • But duty none, in a relation’s ship;
  • Thus, unengaged, I felt my spirits light,
  • Kept care at distance, and put fear to flight;
  • Oft this same spirit in my friends prevail’d,
  • Buoyant in dangers, rising when assail’d; 190
  • When, as the gale at evening died away--
  • And die it will with the retiring day--
  • Impatient then, and sick of very ease,
  • We loudly whistled for the slumbering breeze.
  • “One eve it came; and, frantic in my joy,
  • I rose and danced, as idle as a boy:
  • The cabin-lights were down, that we might learn
  • A trifling something from the ship astern;
  • The stiffening gale bore up the growing wave,
  • And wilder motion to my madness gave. 200
  • Oft have I since, when thoughtful and at rest,
  • Believed some maddening power my mind possess’d;
  • For, in an instant, as the stern sank low,
  • (How moved I knew not--What can madness know?)
  • Chance that direction to my motion gave,
  • And plunged me headlong in the roaring wave;
  • Swift flew the parting ship,--the fainter light
  • Withdrew,--or horror took them from my sight.
  • “All was confused above, beneath, around;
  • All sounds of terror; no distinguish’d sound 210
  • Could reach me, now on sweeping surges tost,
  • And then between the rising billows lost;
  • An undefined sensation stopp’d my breath;
  • Disorder’d views and threat’ning signs of death
  • Met in one moment, and a terror gave--
  • I cannot paint it--to the moving grave.
  • My thoughts were all distressing, hurried, mix’d,
  • On all things fixing, not a moment fix’d,
  • Vague thoughts of instant danger brought their pain,
  • New hopes of safety banish’d them again; 220
  • Then the swoln billow all these hopes destroy’d,
  • And left me sinking in the mighty void.
  • Weaker I grew, and grew the more dismay’d,
  • Of aid all hopeless, yet in search of aid;
  • Struggling awhile upon the wave to keep,
  • Then, languid, sinking in the yawning deep.
  • So tost, so lost, so sinking in despair,
  • I pray’d in heart an indirected prayer,
  • And then once more I gave my eyes to view
  • The ship now lost, and bade the light adieu! 230
  • From my chill’d frame th’ enfeebled spirit fled, }
  • Rose the tall billows round my deep’ning bed, }
  • Cold seized my heart, thought ceased, and I was dead. }
  • “Brother, I have not--man has not, the power
  • To paint the horrors of that life-long hour--
  • Hour!--but of time I knew not--when I found
  • Hope, youth, life, love, and all they promised, drown’d;
  • When all so indistinct, so undefined,
  • So dark and dreadful, overcame the mind;
  • When such confusion on the spirit dwelt, 240
  • That, feeling much, it knew not what it felt.
  • “Can I, my brother--ought I to forget
  • That night of terror? No! it threatens yet.
  • Shall I days, months--nay, years indeed neglect,
  • Who then could feel what moments must effect,
  • Were aught effected? who, in that wild storm,
  • Found there was nothing I could well perform;
  • For what to us are moments, what are hours,
  • If lost our judgment, and confused our powers?
  • “Oft in the times when passion strives to reign, 250
  • When duty feebly holds the slacken’d chain,
  • When reason slumbers, then remembrance draws }
  • This view of death, and folly makes a pause-- }
  • The view o’ercomes the vice, the fear the frenzy awes. }
  • “I know there wants not this to make it true,
  • ‘What danger bids be done, in safety do’;
  • Yet such escapes may make our purpose sure;
  • Who slights such warning may be too secure.”
  • “But the escape!”--“Whate’er they judged might save
  • Their sinking friend they cast upon the wave; 260
  • Something of these my heaven-directed arm
  • Unconscious seized, and held as by a charm;
  • The crew astern beheld me as I swam,
  • And I am saved--O! let me say I am.”
  • * * * * *
  • “Brother,” said George, “I have neglected long
  • To think of all thy perils--it was wrong;
  • But do forgive me; for I could not be
  • Than of myself more negligent of thee.
  • Now tell me, Richard, from the boyish years
  • Of thy young mind, that now so rich appears, 270
  • How was it stored? ’twas told me, thou wert wild,
  • A truant urchin, a neglected child.
  • I heard of this escape, and sat supine
  • Amid the danger that exceeded thine;
  • Thou couldst but die--the waves could but infold
  • Thy warm, gay heart, and make that bosom cold--
  • While I--but no! Proceed, and give me truth;
  • How past the years of thy unguided youth?
  • Thy father left thee to the care of one
  • Who could not teach, could ill support a son; 280
  • Yet time and trouble feeble minds have stay’d,
  • And fit for long-neglected duties made.
  • I see thee struggling in the world, as late
  • Within the waves, and, with an equal fate,
  • By Heaven preserved--but tell me, whence and how
  • Thy gleaning came?--a dexterous gleaner thou!”
  • “Left by that father, who was known to few,
  • And to that mother, who has not her due
  • Of honest fame,” said Richard, “our retreat
  • Was a small cottage, for our station meet, 290
  • On Barford Downs; that mother, fond and poor,
  • There taught some truths, and bade me seek for more,
  • Such as our village-school and books a few
  • Supplied; but such I cared not to pursue.
  • I sought the town, and to the ocean gave
  • My mind and thoughts, as restless as the wave;
  • Where crowds assembled, I was sure to run,
  • Hear[d] what was said, and mused on what was done;
  • Attentive listening in the moving scene,
  • And often wondering what the men could mean. 300
  • “When ships at sea made signals of their need,
  • I watch’d on shore the sailors, and their speed;
  • Mix’d in their act, nor rested till I knew
  • Why they were call’d, and what they were to do.
  • “Whatever business in the port was done,
  • I, without call, was with the busy one;
  • Not daring question, but with open ear
  • And greedy spirit, ever bent to hear.
  • “To me the wives of seamen loved to tell
  • What storms endanger’d men esteem’d so well; 310
  • What wond’rous things in foreign parts they saw,
  • Lands without bounds, and people without law.
  • “No ships were wreck’d upon that fatal beach,
  • But I could give the luckless tale of each;
  • Eager I look’d, till I beheld a face
  • Of one disposed to paint their dismal case;
  • Who gave the sad survivors’ doleful tale,
  • From the first brushing of the mighty gale
  • Until they struck; and, suffering in their fate,
  • I long’d the more they should its horrors state; 320
  • While some, the fond of pity, would enjoy
  • The earnest sorrows of the feeling boy.
  • “I sought the men return’d from regions cold,
  • The frozen straits, where icy mountains roll’d;
  • Some I could win to tell me serious tales
  • Of boats uplifted by enormous whales,
  • Or, when harpoon’d, how swiftly through the sea
  • The wounded monsters with the cordage flee.
  • Yet some uneasy thoughts assail’d me then:
  • The monsters warr’d not with, nor wounded, men. 330
  • The smaller fry we take, with scales and fins,
  • Who gasp and die--this adds not to our sins;
  • But so much blood, warm life, and frames so large
  • To strike, to murder--seem’d an heavy charge.
  • “They told of days, where many goes to one--
  • Such days as ours; and how a larger sun,
  • Red, but not flaming, roll’d, with motion slow,
  • On the world’s edge, and never dropt below.
  • “There were fond girls, who took me to their side
  • To tell the story how their lovers died; 340
  • They praised my tender heart, and bade me prove
  • Both kind and constant when I came to love.
  • In fact, I lived for many an idle year
  • In fond pursuit of agitations dear;
  • For ever seeking, ever pleased to find,
  • The food I loved, I thought not of its kind;
  • It gave affliction while it brought delight,
  • And joy and anguish could at once excite.
  • “One gusty day, now stormy and now still,
  • I stood apart upon the western hill, 350
  • And saw a race at sea: a gun was heard,
  • And two contending boats in sail appear’d,
  • Equal awhile; then one was left behind,
  • And for a moment had her chance resign’d,
  • When, in that moment, up a sail they drew--
  • Not used before--their rivals to pursue.
  • Strong was the gale! in hurry now there came
  • Men from the town, their thoughts, their fears the same;
  • And women too! affrighted maids and wives,
  • All deeply feeling for their sailors’ lives. 360
  • “The strife continued; in a glass we saw
  • The desperate efforts, and we stood in awe:
  • When the last boat shot suddenly before,
  • Then fill’d, and sank--and could be seen no more!
  • “Then were those piercing shrieks, that frantic flight,
  • All hurried! all in tumult and affright!
  • A gathering crowd from different streets drew near;
  • All ask, all answer--none attend, none hear!
  • “One boat is safe; and see! she backs her sail
  • To save the sinking--Will her care avail? 370
  • “O! how impatient on the sands we tread,
  • And the winds roaring, and the women led,
  • As up and down they pace with frantic air,
  • And scorn a comforter, and will despair;
  • They know not who in either boat is gone,
  • But think the father, husband, lover, one.
  • “And who is she apart? She dares not come
  • To join the crowd, yet cannot rest at home:
  • With what strong interest looks she at the waves,
  • Meeting and clashing o’er the seamen’s graves: 380
  • ’Tis a poor girl betroth’d--a few hours more,
  • And _he_ will lie a corpse upon the shore.
  • “Strange, that a boy could love these scenes, and cry
  • In very pity--but that boy was I.
  • With pain my mother would my tales receive,
  • And say, ‘my Richard, do not learn to grieve.’
  • “One wretched hour had past before we knew
  • Whom they had saved! Alas! they were but two,
  • An orphan’d lad and widow’d man--no more!
  • And they unnoticed stood upon the shore, 390
  • With scarce a friend to greet them--widows view’d
  • This man and boy, and then their cries renew’d;--
  • ’Twas long before the signs of wo gave place
  • To joy again; grief sat on every face.
  • “Sure of my mother’s kindness, and the joy
  • She felt in meeting her rebellious boy,
  • I at my pleasure our new seat forsook,
  • And, undirected, these excursions took:
  • I often rambled to the noisy quay,
  • Strange sounds to hear, and business strange to me; 400
  • Seamen and carmen, and I know not who,
  • A lewd, amphibious, rude, contentious crew--
  • Confused as bees appear about their hive,
  • Yet all alert to keep their work alive.
  • “Here, unobserved as weed upon the wave,
  • My whole attention to the scene I gave;
  • I saw their tasks, their toil, their care, their skill,
  • Led by their own and by a master-will;
  • And, though contending, toiling, tugging on,
  • The purposed business of the day was done. 410
  • “The open shops of craftsmen caught my eye,
  • And there my questions met the kind reply:
  • Men, when alone, will teach; but, in a crowd,
  • The child is silent, or the man is proud;
  • But, by themselves, there is attention paid
  • To a mild boy, so forward, yet afraid.
  • “I made me interest at the inn’s fire-side,
  • Amid the scenes to bolder boys denied;
  • For I had patrons there, and I was one,
  • They judged, who noticed nothing that was done. 420
  • ‘A quiet lad!’ would my protector say;
  • ‘To him, now, this is better than his play:
  • Boys are as men; some active, shrewd, and keen,
  • They look about if aught is to be seen;
  • And some, like Richard here, have not a mind
  • That takes a notice--but the lad is kind.’
  • “I loved in summer on the heath to walk,
  • And seek the shepherd--shepherds love to talk.
  • His superstition was of ranker kind,
  • And he with tales of wonder stored my mind; 430
  • Wonders that he in many a lonely eve
  • Had seen, himself, and therefore must believe.
  • His boy, his Joe, he said, from duty ran,
  • Took to the sea, and grew a fearless man:
  • ‘On yonder knoll--the sheep were in the fold--
  • His spirit past me, shivering-like and cold!
  • I felt a fluttering, but I knew not how,
  • And heard him utter, like a whisper, ‘now!’
  • Soon came a letter from a friend--to tell
  • That he had fallen, and the time he fell.’ 440
  • “Even to the smugglers’ hut the rocks between,
  • I have, adventurous in my wandering, been.
  • Poor, pious Martha served the lawless tribe,
  • And could their merits and their faults describe;
  • Adding her thoughts; ‘I talk, my child, to you,
  • Who little think of what such wretches do.’
  • “I loved to walk where none had walk’d before,
  • About the rocks that ran along the shore;
  • Or far beyond the sight of men to stray,
  • And take my pleasure when I lost my way; 450
  • For then ’twas mine to trace the hilly heath,
  • And all the mossy moor that lies beneath:
  • Here had I favourite stations, where I stood
  • And heard the murmurs of the ocean-flood,
  • With not a sound beside, except when flew
  • Aloft the lapwing, or the gray curlew,
  • Who with wild notes my fancied power defied,
  • And mock’d the dreams of solitary pride.
  • “I loved to stop at every creek and bay
  • Made by the river in its winding way, 460
  • And call to memory--not by marks they bare,
  • But by the thoughts that were created there.
  • “Pleasant it was to view the sea-gulls strive
  • Against the storm, or in the ocean dive,
  • With eager scream, or when they dropping gave
  • Their closing wings to sail upon the wave:
  • Then, as the winds and waters raged around,
  • And breaking billows mix’d their deafening sound,
  • They on the rolling deep securely hung,
  • And calmly rode the restless waves among. 470
  • Nor pleased it less around me to behold,
  • Far up the beach, the yesty sea-foam roll’d;
  • Or, from the shore upborn, to see on high
  • Its frothy flakes in wild confusion fly;
  • While the salt spray that clashing billows form,
  • Gave to the taste a feeling of the storm.
  • “Thus, with my favourite views, for many an hour
  • Have I indulged the dreams of princely power;
  • When the mind, weaned by excursions bold,
  • The fancy jaded, and the bosom cold, 480
  • Or when those wants that will on kings intrude,
  • Or evening-fears, broke in on solitude;
  • When I no more my fancy could employ, }
  • I left in haste what I could not enjoy, }
  • And was my gentle mother’s welcome boy. }
  • “But now thy walk,--this soft autumnal gloom
  • Bids no delay--at night I will resume
  • My subject, showing, not how I improved
  • In my strange school, but what the things I loved,
  • My first-born friendships, ties by forms uncheck’d, 490
  • And all that boys acquire whom men neglect.”
  • TALES OF THE HALL.
  • BOOK V.
  • _RUTH._
  • Richard resumes his Narrative--Visits a Family
  • in a Seaport--The Man and his Wife--Their
  • Dwelling--Books, Number and Kind--The Friendship
  • contracted--Employment there--Hannah, the Wife,
  • her Manner; open Mirth and latent Grief--She
  • gives the Story of Ruth, her Daughter--Of Thomas,
  • a Sailor--Their Affection--A Press-gang--
  • Reflections--Ruth disturbed in Mind--A Teacher
  • sent to comfort her--His Fondness--Her Reception
  • of him--Her Supplication--Is refused--She
  • deliberates--Is decided.
  • TALES OF THE HALL.
  • BOOK V.
  • _RUTH._
  • Richard would wait till George the tale should ask,
  • Nor waited long--He then resumed the task.
  • “South in the port, and eastward in the street,
  • Rose a small dwelling, my beloved retreat,
  • Where lived a pair, then old; the sons had fled
  • The home they fill’d; a part of them were dead,
  • Married a part, while some at sea remain’d,
  • And stillness in the seaman’s mansion reign’d;
  • Lord of some petty craft, by night and day,
  • The man had fish’d each fathom of the bay. 10
  • “My friend the matron woo’d me, quickly won,
  • To fill the station of an absent son
  • (Him whom at school I knew, and, Peter known,
  • I took his home and mother for my own).
  • I read, and doubly was I paid to hear
  • Events that fell upon no listless ear:
  • She grieved to say her parents could neglect
  • Her education!--’twas a sore defect;
  • She, who had ever such a vast delight
  • To learn, and now could neither read nor write:-- 20
  • But hear she could, and from our stores I took,
  • Librarian meet! at her desire our book.
  • Full twenty volumes--I would not exceed
  • The modest truth--were there for me to read;
  • These a long shelf contain’d, and they were found
  • Books truly speaking, volumes fairly bound;
  • The rest--for some of other kinds remain’d,
  • And these a board beneath the shelf contain’d--
  • Had their deficiencies in part; they lack’d
  • One side or both, or were no longer back’d; 30
  • But now became degraded from their place,
  • And were but pamphlets of a bulkier race.
  • Yet had we pamphlets, an inviting store,
  • From sixpence downwards--nay, a part were more;
  • Learning abundance, and the various kinds
  • For relaxation--food for different minds;
  • A piece of Wingate--thanks for all we have--
  • What we of figures needed, fully gave;
  • Culpepper, new in numbers, cost but thrice
  • The ancient volume’s unassuming price, 40
  • But told what planet o’er each herb had power,
  • And how to take it in the lucky hour.
  • “History we had--wars, treasons, treaties, crimes,
  • From Julius Cæsar to the present times;
  • Questions and answers, teaching what to ask
  • And what reply--a kind, laborious task;
  • A scholar’s book it was, who, giving, swore
  • It held the whole he wish’d to know, and more.
  • “And we had poets, hymns and songs divine;
  • The most we read not, but allow’d them fine. 50
  • “Our tracts were many, on the boldest themes--
  • We had our metaphysics, spirits, dreams,
  • Visions and warnings, and portentous sights
  • Seen, though but dimly, in the doleful nights,
  • When the good wife her wintry vigil keeps,
  • And thinks alone of him at sea, and weeps.
  • “Add to all these our works in single sheets,
  • That our Cassandras sing about the streets.
  • These, as I read, the grave good man would say,
  • ‘Nay, Hannah!’ and she answer’d ‘What is Nay? 60
  • What is there, pray, so hurtful in a song?
  • It is our fancy only makes it wrong;
  • His purer mind no evil thoughts alarm,
  • And innocence protects him like a charm.’
  • Then would the matron, when the song had past,
  • And her laugh over, ask an hymn at last;
  • To the coarse jest she would attention lend,
  • And to the pious psalm in reverence bend.
  • She gave her every power and all her mind
  • As chance directed, or as taste inclined. 70
  • “More of our learning I will now omit: }
  • We had our Cyclopædias of Wit, }
  • And all our works, rare fate, were to our genius fit. }
  • “When I had read, and we were weary grown
  • Of other minds, the dame disclosed her own;
  • And long have I in pleasing terror stay’d }
  • To hear of boys trepann’d, and girls betray’d; }
  • Ashamed so long to stay, and yet to go afraid. }
  • “I could perceive, though Hannah bore full well
  • The ills of life, that few with her would dwell, 80
  • But pass away, like shadows o’er the plain
  • From flying clouds, and leave it fair again;
  • Still every evil, be it great or small,
  • Would one past sorrow to the mind recal--
  • The grand disease of life, to which she turns,
  • And common cares and lighter suffering spurns.
  • ‘O! these are nothing,--they will never heed
  • Such idle contests who have fought indeed,
  • And have the wounds unclosed.’--I understood
  • My hint to speak, and my design pursued, 90
  • Curious the secret of that heart to find, }
  • To mirth, to song, to laughter loud inclined, }
  • And yet to bear and feel a weight of grief behind. }
  • How does she thus her little sunshine throw
  • Always before her?--I should like to know.
  • My friend perceived, and would no longer hide }
  • The bosom’s sorrow--Could she not confide }
  • In one who wept, unhurt--in one who felt, untried? }
  • ‘Dear child, I show you sins and sufferings strange,
  • But you, like Adam, must for knowledge change 100
  • That blissful ignorance: remember, then,
  • What now you feel should be a check on men;
  • For then your passions no debate allow,
  • And therefore lay up resolution now.
  • ’Tis not enough, that when you can persuade
  • A maid to love, you know there’s promise made;
  • ’Tis not enough, that you design to keep
  • That promise made, nor leave your lass to weep:
  • But you must guard yourself against the sin,
  • And think it such to draw the party in; 110
  • Nay, the more weak and easy to be won,
  • The viler you who have the mischief done.
  • I am not angry, love; but men should know
  • They cannot always pay the debt they owe
  • Their plighted honour; they may cause the ill
  • They cannot lessen, though they feel a will;
  • For _he_ had truth with love, but love in youth
  • Does wrong, that cannot be repair’d by truth.
  • Ruth--I may tell, too oft had she been told--
  • Was tall and fair, and comely to behold; 120
  • Gentle and simple, in her native place
  • Not one compared with her in form or face;
  • She was not merry, but she gave our hearth
  • A cheerful spirit that was more than mirth.
  • There was a sailor boy, and people said
  • He was, as man, a likeness of the maid;
  • But not in this--for he was ever glad,
  • While Ruth was apprehensive, mild, and sad;
  • A quiet spirit hers, and peace would seek
  • In meditation--tender, mild, and meek! 130
  • Her loved the lad most truly; and, in truth,
  • She took an early liking to the youth;
  • To her alone were his attentions paid,
  • And they became the bachelor and maid.
  • He wish’d to marry; but so prudent we
  • And worldly wise, we said it could not be.
  • They took the counsel--may be they approved--
  • But still they grieved and waited, hoped and loved.
  • Now, my young friend, when of such state I speak
  • As one of danger, you will be to seek: 140
  • You know not, Richard, where the danger lies
  • In loving hearts, kind words, and speaking eyes;
  • For lovers speak their wishes with their looks
  • As plainly, love, as you can read your books.
  • Then, too, the meetings and the partings, all
  • The playful quarrels in which lovers fall,
  • Serve to one end--each lover is a child,
  • Quick to resent and to be reconciled;
  • And then their peace brings kindness that remains,
  • And so the lover from the quarrel gains. 150
  • When he has fault that she reproves, his fear
  • And grief assure her she was too severe:
  • And that brings kindness--when he bears an ill, }
  • Or disappointment, and is calm and still, }
  • She feels his own obedient to her will: }
  • And that brings kindness--and what kindness brings
  • I cannot tell you;--these were trying things.
  • They were as children, and they fell at length;
  • The trial, doubtless, is beyond their strength
  • Whom grace supports not; and will grace support 160
  • The too confiding, who their danger court?
  • Then they would marry--but were now too late--
  • All could their fault in sport or malice state;
  • And though the day was fix’d, and now drew on,
  • I could perceive my daughter’s peace was gone;
  • She could not bear the bold and laughing eye }
  • That gazed on her--reproach she could not fly; }
  • Her grief she would not show, her shame could not deny;}
  • For some with many virtues come to shame,
  • And some that lose them all preserve their name. 170
  • “‘Fix’d was the day; but ere that day appear’d,
  • A frightful rumour through the place was heard;
  • War, who had slept awhile, awaked once more,
  • And gangs came pressing till they swept the shore:
  • Our youth was seized and quickly sent away,
  • Nor would the wretches for his marriage stay,
  • But bore him off, in barbarous triumph bore,
  • And left us all our miseries to deplore.
  • There were wives, maids, and mothers on the beach,
  • And some sad story appertain’d to each; 180
  • Most sad to Ruth--to neither could she go!
  • But sat apart, and suffer’d matchless wo!
  • On the vile ship they turn’d their earnest view, }
  • Not one last [look] allow’d,--not one adieu! }
  • They saw the men on deck, but none distinctly knew. }
  • And there she staid, regardless of each eye,
  • With but one hope, a fervent hope to die.
  • Nor cared she now for kindness--all beheld
  • Her, who invited none, and none repell’d;
  • For there are griefs, my child, that sufferers hide, 190
  • And there are griefs that men display with pride;
  • But there are other griefs that, so we feel,
  • We care not to display them nor conceal:
  • Such were our sorrows on that fatal day,
  • More than our lives the spoilers tore away;
  • Nor did we heed their insult--some distress }
  • No form or manner can make more or less, }
  • And this is of that kind--this misery of a press! }
  • ‘They say such things must be--perhaps they must;
  • But, sure, they need not fright us and disgust; 200
  • They need not soul-less crews of ruffians send
  • At once the ties of humble love to rend.
  • A single day had Thomas stay’d on shore,
  • He might have wedded, and we ask’d no more;
  • And that stern man, who forced the lad away,
  • Might have attended, and have graced the day;
  • His pride and honour might have been at rest,
  • It is no stain to make a couple blest!
  • Blest!--no, alas! it was to ease the heart
  • Of one sore pang, and then to weep and part! 210
  • But this he would not.--English seamen fight
  • For England’s gain and glory--it is right;
  • But will that public spirit be so strong,
  • Fill’d, as it must be, with their private wrong?
  • Forbid it, honour, one in all the fleet
  • Should hide in war, or from the foe retreat!
  • But is it just, that he who so defends
  • His country’s cause, should hide him from her friends?
  • Sure, if they must upon our children seize,
  • They might prevent such injuries as these; 220
  • Might hours--nay, days--in many a case allow,
  • And soften all the griefs we suffer now.
  • Some laws, some orders might in part redress
  • The licensed insults of a British press,
  • That keeps the honest and the brave in awe,
  • Where might is right, and violence is law.
  • ‘Be not alarm’d, my child; there’s none regard
  • What you and I conceive so cruel-hard:
  • There is compassion, I believe; but still
  • One wants the power to help, and one the will, 230
  • And so from war to war the wrongs remain,
  • While Reason pleads, and Misery sighs, in vain.
  • ‘Thus my poor Ruth was wretched and undone,
  • Nor had an husband for her only son,
  • Nor had he father; hope she did awhile,
  • And would not weep, although she could not smile;
  • Till news was brought us that the youth was slain,
  • And then, I think, she never smiled again;
  • Or if she did, it was but to express
  • A feeling far, indeed, from happiness! 240
  • Something that her bewilder’d mind conceived,
  • When she inform’d us that she never grieved,
  • But was right merry, then her head was wild,
  • And grief had gain’d possession of my child.
  • Yet, though bewilder’d for a time, and prone
  • To ramble much and speak aloud, alone;
  • Yet did she all that duty ever ask’d
  • And more, her will self-govern’d and untask’d.
  • With meekness bearing all reproach, all joy
  • To her was lost; she wept upon her boy, 250
  • Wish’d for his death, in fear that he might live
  • New sorrow to a burden’d heart to give.
  • ‘There was a teacher, where my husband went-- }
  • _Sent_, as he told the people--what he meant }
  • You cannot understand, but--he was sent. }
  • This man from meeting came, and strove to win
  • Her mind to peace by drawing off the sin,
  • Or what it was, that, working in her breast,
  • Robb’d it of comfort, confidence, and rest.
  • He came and reason’d, and she seem’d to feel 260
  • The pains he took--her griefs began to heal;
  • She ever answer’d kindly when he spoke,
  • And always thank’d him for the pains he took;
  • So, after three long years, and all the while
  • Wrapt up in grief, she blest us with a smile,
  • And spoke in comfort; but she mix’d no more
  • With younger persons, as she did before.
  • ‘Still Ruth was pretty; in her person neat;
  • So thought the teacher, when they chanced to meet.
  • He was a weaver by his worldly trade, 270
  • But powerful work in the assemblies made;
  • People came leagues to town to hear him sift
  • The holy text,--he had the grace and gift;
  • Widows and maidens flock’d to hear his voice;
  • Of either kind he might have had his choice;--
  • But he had chosen--we had seen how shy
  • The girl was getting, my good man and I;
  • That when the weaver came, she kept with us,
  • Where he his points and doctrines might discuss;
  • But in our bit of garden, or the room 280
  • We call our parlour, there he must not come.
  • She loved him not, and though she could attend
  • To his discourses as her guide and friend,
  • Yet now to these she gave a listless ear,
  • As if a friend she would no longer hear;
  • This might he take for woman’s art, and cried,
  • ‘Spouse of my heart, I must not be denied!’--
  • Fearless he spoke, and I had hope to see
  • My girl a wife--but this was not to be.
  • ‘My husband, thinking of his worldly store, 290
  • And not, frail man, enduring to be poor,
  • Seeing his friend would for his child provide
  • And hers, he grieved to have the man denied;
  • For Ruth, when press‘d, rejected him, and grew
  • To her old sorrow, as if that were new.
  • ‘Who shall support her?’ said her father, ‘how
  • Can I, infirm and weak as I am now?
  • And here a loving fool’----this gave her pain
  • Severe, indeed, but she would not complain;
  • Nor would consent, although the weaver grew 300
  • More fond, and would the frighten’d girl pursue.
  • ‘O! much she begg’d him to forbear, to stand
  • Her soul’s kind friend, and not to ask her hand:
  • She could not love him.--‘Love me!’ he replied,
  • ‘The love you mean is love unsanctified,
  • An earthly, wicked, sensual, sinful kind,
  • A creature-love, the passion of the blind.’
  • He did not court her, he would have her know,
  • For that poor love that will on beauty grow;
  • No! he would take her as the prophet took 310
  • One of the harlots in the holy book;
  • And then he look’d so ugly and severe!
  • And yet so fond--she could not hide her fear.
  • This fondness grew her torment; she would fly
  • In woman’s terror, if he came but nigh;
  • Nor could I wonder he should odious prove,
  • So like a ghost that left a grave for love.
  • But still her father lent his cruel aid
  • To the man’s hope, and she was more afraid:
  • He said, no more she should his table share, 320
  • But be the parish or the teacher’s care.
  • ‘Three days I give you: see that all be right }
  • On Monday-morning--this is Thursday-night-- }
  • Fulfil my wishes, girl! or else forsake my sight!’ }
  • ‘I see her now; and, she that was so meek
  • It was a chance that she had power to speak,
  • Now spoke in earnest--‘Father! I obey,
  • And will remember the appointed day!’
  • ‘Then came the man: she talk’d with him apart,
  • And, I believe, laid open all her heart; 330
  • But all in vain--she said to me, in tears,
  • ‘Mother! that man is not what he appears:
  • He talks of heaven, and let him, if he will,
  • But he has earthly purpose to fulfil;
  • Upon my knees I begg’d him to resign
  • The hand he asks--he said, ‘it shall be mine.
  • ‘What! did the holy men of Scripture deign
  • To hear a woman when she said ‘refrain?’
  • Of whom they chose they took them wives, and these
  • Made it their study and their wish to please; 340
  • The women then were faithful and afraid,
  • As Sarah Abraham, they their lords obey’d,
  • And so she styled him; ’tis in later days
  • Of foolish love that we our women praise,
  • Fall on the knee, and raise the suppliant hand,
  • And court the favour that we might command.’
  • O! my dear mother, when this man has power,
  • How will he treat me--first may beasts devour!
  • Or death in every form that I could prove,
  • Except this selfish being’s hateful love.’ 350
  • I gently blamed her, for I knew how hard
  • It is to force affection and regard.
  • Ah! my dear lad, I talk to you as one
  • Who knew the misery of an heart undone;
  • You know it not; but, dearest boy, when man,
  • Do not an ill because you find you can.
  • Where is the triumph? when such things men seek,
  • They only drive to wickedness the weak.
  • Weak was poor Ruth, and this good man so hard,
  • That to her weakness he had no regard; 360
  • But we had two days peace; he came, and then
  • My daughter whisper’d, ‘Would there were no men!
  • None to admire or scorn us, none to vex
  • A simple, trusting, fond, believing sex;
  • Who truly love the worth that men profess,
  • And think too kindly for their happiness.’
  • Poor Ruth! few heroines in the tragic page
  • Felt more than thee in thy contracted stage;
  • Fair, fond, and virtuous, they our pity move,
  • Impell’d by duty, agonized by love; 370
  • But no Mandane, who in dread has knelt
  • On the bare boards, has greater terrors felt,
  • Nor been by warring passions more subdued
  • Than thou, by this man’s groveling wish pursued;
  • Doom’d to a parent’s judgment, all unjust, }
  • Doom’d the chance mercy of the world to trust, }
  • Or to wed grossness and conceal disgust. }
  • If Ruth was frail, she had a mind too nice
  • To wed with that which she beheld as vice;
  • To take a reptile, who, beneath a show 380
  • Of peevish zeal, let carnal wishes grow;
  • Proud and yet mean, forbidding and yet full
  • Of eager appetites, devout and dull;
  • Waiting a legal right that he might seize
  • His own, and his impatient spirit ease;
  • Who would at once his pride and love indulge,
  • His temper humour, and his spite divulge.
  • This the poor victim saw--a second time,
  • Sighing, she said, ‘Shall I commit the crime,
  • And now untempted? Can the form or rite 390
  • Make me a wife in my Creator’s sight?
  • Can I the words without a meaning say?
  • Can I pronounce love, honour, or obey?
  • And if I cannot, shall I dare to wed,
  • And go an harlot to a loathed bed?
  • Never, dear mother! my poor boy and I
  • Will at the mercy of a parish lie:
  • Reproved for wants that vices would remove,
  • Reproach’d for vice that I could never love,
  • Mix’d with a crew long wedded to disgrace, } 400
  • A Vulgar, forward, equalizing race-- }
  • And am I doom’d to beg a dwelling in that place?’ }
  • Such was her reasoning: many times she weigh’d
  • The evils all, and was of each afraid;
  • She loath’d the common board, the vulgar seat, }
  • Where shame, and want, and vice, and sorrow meet, }
  • Where frailty finds allies, where guilt insures retreat. }
  • But peace again is fled; the teacher comes,
  • And new importance, haughtier air assumes.
  • No hapless victim of a tyrant’s love 410
  • More keenly felt, or more resisting strove
  • Against her fate; she look’d on every side,
  • But there were none to help her, none to guide;--
  • And he, the man who should have taught the soul,
  • Wish’d but the body in his base control.
  • She left her infant on the Sunday morn,
  • A creature doom’d to shame! in sorrow born;
  • A thing that languished, nor arrived at age
  • When the man’s thoughts with sin and pain engage--
  • She came not home to share our humble meal, 420
  • Her father thinking what his child would feel
  • From his hard sentence--still she came not home.
  • The night grew dark, and yet she was not come;
  • The east-wind roar’d, the sea return’d the sound,
  • And the rain fell as if the world were drown’d;
  • There were no lights without, and my good man,
  • To kindness frighten’d, with a groan began
  • To talk of Ruth, and pray; and then he took
  • The Bible down, and read the holy book;
  • For he had learning; and when that was done 430
  • We sat in silence--whither could we run?
  • We said, and then rush’d frighten’d from the door,
  • For we could bear our own conceit no more;
  • We call’d on neighbours--there she had not been;
  • We met some wanderers--ours they had not seen;
  • We hurried o’er the beach, both north and south,
  • Then join’d, and wander’d to our haven’s mouth,
  • Where rush’d the falling waters wildly out:
  • I scarcely heard the good man’s fearful shout,
  • Who saw a something on the billow ride, 440
  • And ‘Heaven have mercy on our sins!’ he cried,
  • ‘It is my child!’ and to the present hour
  • So he believes--and spirits have the power.
  • And she was gone! the waters wide and deep
  • Roll’d o’er her body as she lay asleep.
  • She heard no more the angry waves and wind,
  • She heard no more the threatening of mankind;
  • Wrapt in dark weeds, the refuse of the storm,
  • To the hard rock was borne her comely form!
  • But O! what storm was in that mind? what strife, 450
  • That could compel her to lay down her life?
  • For she was seen within the sea to wade,
  • By one at distance, when she first had pray’d;
  • Then to a rock within the hither shoal
  • Softly and with a fearful step she stole;
  • Then, when she gain’d it, on the top she stood
  • A moment still--and dropt into the flood!
  • The man cried loudly, but he cried in vain--
  • She heard not then--she never heard again!
  • She had--pray, Heav’n!--she had that world in sight, 460
  • Where frailty mercy finds, and wrong has right;
  • But, sure, in this her portion such has been,
  • Well had it still remain’d a world unseen!’
  • Thus far the dame: the passions will dispense
  • To such a wild and rapid eloquence--
  • Will to the weakest mind their strength impart,
  • And give the tongue the language of the heart.”
  • TALES OF THE HALL.
  • BOOK VI.
  • _ADVENTURES OF RICHARD, CONCLUDED._
  • Richard relates his Illness and Retirement--A Village
  • Priest and his two Daughters--His peculiar
  • Studies--His Simplicity of Character--Arrival of
  • a third Daughter--Her Zeal in his Conversion--
  • Their Friendship--How terminated--An happy
  • Day--Its Commencement and Progress--A Journey
  • along the Coast--Arrival as a Guest--
  • Company--A Lover’s Jealousy--it increases--dies
  • away---An Evening Walk--Suspense---
  • Apprehension--Resolution--Certainty.
  • TALES OF THE HALL.
  • BOOK VI.
  • _ADVENTURES OF RICHARD, CONCLUDED._
  • “This then, dear Richard, was the way you took
  • To gain instruction--thine a curious book,
  • Containing much of both the false and true;
  • But thou hast read it, and with profit too.
  • “Come, then, my Brother, now thy tale complete--
  • I know thy first embarking in the fleet,
  • Thy entrance in the army, and thy gain
  • Of plenteous laurels in the wars in Spain,
  • And what then follow’d; but I wish to know
  • When thou that heart hadst courage to bestow, 10
  • When to declare it gain’d, and when to stand
  • Before the priest, and give the plighted hand;
  • So shall I boldness from thy frankness gain
  • To paint the frenzy that possessed my brain;
  • For rather there than in my heart I found
  • Was my disease; a poison, not a wound,
  • A madness, Richard--but, I pray thee, tell
  • Whom hast thou loved so dearly and so well?”
  • The younger man his gentle host obey’d,
  • For some respect, though not required, was paid; 20
  • Perhaps with all that independent pride
  • Their different states would to the memory glide;
  • Yet was his manner unconstrain’d and free,
  • And nothing in it like servility.
  • Then he began:--“When first I reach’d the land,
  • I was so ill that death appear’d at hand;
  • And, though the fever left me, yet I grew
  • So weak ’twas judged that life would leave me too.
  • I sought a village-priest, my mother’s friend,
  • And I believed with him my days would end: 30
  • The man was kind, intelligent, and mild,
  • Careless and shrewd, yet simple as the child;
  • For of the wisdom of the world his share
  • And mine were equal--neither had to spare;
  • Else--with his daughters, beautiful and poor--
  • He would have kept a sailor from his door.
  • Two then were present, who adorn’d his home,
  • But ever speaking of a third to come;
  • Cheerful they were, not too reserved or free,
  • I loved them both, and never wish’d them three. 40
  • “The vicar’s self, still further to describe,
  • Was of a simple, but a studious tribe;
  • He from the world was distant, not retired,
  • Nor of it much possess’d, nor much desired:
  • Grave in his purpose, cheerful in his eye,
  • And with a look of frank benignity.
  • He lost his wife when they together past
  • Years of calm love, that triumph’d to the last.
  • He much of nature, not of man, had seen,
  • Yet his remarks were often shrewd and keen; 50
  • Taught not by books t’ approve or to condemn,
  • He gain’d but little that he knew from them;
  • He read with reverence and respect the few,
  • Whence he his rules and consolations drew;
  • But men and beasts, and all that lived or moved,
  • Were books to him; he studied them and loved.
  • “He knew the plants in mountain, wood, or mead;
  • He knew the worms that on the foliage feed;
  • Knew the small tribes that ’scape the careless eye,
  • The plant’s disease that breeds the embryo-fly; 60
  • And the small creatures who on bark or bough
  • Enjoy their changes, changed we know not how;
  • But now th’ imperfect being scarcely moves,
  • And now takes wing and seeks the sky it loves.
  • “He had no system, and forbore to read
  • The learned labours of th’ immortal Swede;
  • But smiled to hear the creatures he had known
  • So long, were now in class and order shown,
  • Genus and species--‘is it meet,’ said he,
  • ‘This creature’s name should one so sounding be? 70
  • Tis but a fly, though first-born of the spring--
  • Bombylius majus, dost thou call the thing?
  • Majus, indeed! and yet, in fact, ’tis true, }
  • We all are majors, all are minors too, }
  • Except the first and last--th’ immensely distant two. }
  • And here again--what call the learned this?
  • Both Hippobosca and Hirundinis?
  • Methinks the creature should be proud to find
  • That he employs the talents of mankind;
  • And that his sovereign master shrewdly looks, 80
  • Counts all his parts, and puts them in his books.
  • Well! go thy way, for I do feel it shame
  • To stay a being with so proud a name.’
  • “Such were his daughters, such my quiet friend,
  • And pleasant was it thus my days to spend;
  • But when Matilda at her home I saw,
  • Whom I beheld with anxiousness and awe,
  • The ease and quiet that I found before
  • At once departed, and return’d no more.
  • No more their music soothed me as they play’d, 90
  • But soon her words a strong impression made:
  • The sweet enthusiast, so I deem’d her, took
  • My mind, and fix’d it to her speech and look;
  • My soul, dear girl! she made her constant care, }
  • But never whisper’d to my heart ‘beware!’ }
  • In love no dangers rise till we are in the snare. }
  • Her father sometimes question’d of my creed,
  • And seem’d to think it might amendment need;
  • But great the difference when the pious maid
  • To the same errors her attention paid: 100
  • Her sole design that I should think aright,
  • And my conversion her supreme delight.
  • Pure was her mind, and simple her intent,
  • Good all she sought, and kindness all she meant.
  • Next to religion friendship was our theme,
  • Related souls and their refined esteem.
  • We talk’d of scenes where this is real found,
  • And love subsists without a dart or wound;
  • But there intruded thoughts not all serene,
  • And wishes not so calm would intervene.” 110
  • “Saw not her father?”
  • “Yes; but saw no more
  • Than he had seen without a fear before:
  • He had subsisted by the church and plough,
  • And saw no cause for apprehension now.
  • We, too, could live; he thought not passion wrong,
  • But only wonder’d we delay’d so long.
  • More had he wonder’d had he known esteem
  • Was all we mention’d, friendship was our theme.--
  • Laugh, if you please, I must my tale pursue-- }
  • This sacred friendship thus in secret grew } 120
  • An intellectual love, most tender, chaste, and true; }
  • Unstain’d, we said; nor knew we how it chanced
  • To gain some earthly soil as it advanced;
  • But yet my friend, and she alone, could prove
  • How much it differ’d from romantic love--
  • But this and more I pass--No doubt, at length,
  • We could perceive the weakness of our strength.
  • “O! days remember’d well! remember’d all!
  • The bitter-sweet, the honey and the gall;
  • Those garden rambles in the silent night, 130
  • Those trees so shady, and that moon so bright;
  • That thickset alley, by the arbour closed,
  • That woodbine seat where we at last reposed;
  • And then the hopes that came and then were gone,
  • Quick as the clouds beneath the moon passed on.
  • Now, in this instant, shall my love be shown,
  • I said--O! no, the happy time is flown!
  • “You smile; remember, I was weak and low,
  • And fear’d the passion as I felt it grow:
  • Will she, I said, to one so poor attend, 140
  • Without a prospect, and without a friend?
  • I dared not ask her--till a rival came,
  • But hid the secret, slow-consuming flame.
  • I once had seen him; then familiar, free,
  • More than became a common guest to be;
  • And sure, I said, he has a look of pride
  • And inward joy--a lover satisfied.
  • Can you not, Brother, on adventures past
  • A thought, as on a lively prospect, cast?
  • On days of dear remembrance! days that seem, 150
  • When past--nay, even when present--like a dream?
  • These white and blessed days, that softly shine
  • On few, nor oft on them--have they been thine?”
  • George answer’d, “Yes! dear Richard, through the years
  • Long past, a day so white and mark’d appears.
  • As in the storm that pours destruction round,
  • Is here and there a ship in safety found:
  • So in the storms of life some days appear
  • More blest and bright for the preceding fear.
  • These times of pleasure that in life arise, 160
  • Like spots in deserts, that delight, surprise,
  • And to our wearied senses give the more,
  • For all the waste behind us and before--
  • And thou, dear Richard, hast then had thy share
  • Of those enchanting times that baffle care?”
  • Yes, I have felt this life-refreshing gale
  • That bears us onward when our spirits fail;
  • That gives those spirits vigour and delight--
  • I would describe it, could I do it right.
  • Such days have been--a day of days was one 170
  • When, rising gaily with the rising sun,
  • I took my way to join a happy few,
  • Known not to me, but whom Matilda knew,
  • To whom she went a guest, and message sent:
  • Come thou to us;’ and as a guest I went.
  • There are two ways to Brandon--by the heath
  • Above the cliff, or on the sand beneath,
  • Where the small pebbles, wetted by the wave,
  • To the new day reflected lustre gave.
  • At first above the rocks I made my way, 180
  • Delighted looking at the spacious bay,
  • And the large fleet that to the northward steer’d
  • Full sail, that glorious in my view appear’d;
  • For where does man evince his full control
  • O’er subject matter, where displays the soul
  • Its mighty energies with more effect
  • Than when her powers that moving mass direct?
  • Than when man guides the ship man’s art has made,
  • And makes the winds and waters yield him aid?
  • “Much as I long’d to see the maid I loved, 190
  • Through scenes so glorious I at leisure moved;
  • For there are times when we do not obey
  • The master-passion--when we yet delay--
  • When absence, soon to end, we yet prolong,
  • And dally with our wish although so strong.
  • “High were my joys, but they were sober too,
  • Nor reason spoil’d the pictures fancy drew;
  • I felt--rare feeling in a world like this--
  • The sober certainty of waking bliss;
  • Add too the smaller aids to happy men, 200
  • Convenient helps--these too were present then.
  • “But what are spirits? light indeed and gay }
  • They are, like winter flowers, nor last a day; }
  • Comes a rude icy wind--they feel, and fade away. }
  • “High beat my heart when to the house I came,
  • And when the ready servant gave my name;
  • But when I enter’d that pernicious room,
  • Gloomy it look’d, and painful was the gloom;
  • And jealous was the pain, and deep the sigh
  • Caused by this gloom, and pain, and jealousy: 210
  • For there Matilda sat, and her beside
  • That rival soldier, with a soldier’s pride;
  • With self-approval in his laughing face,
  • His seem’d the leading spirit of the place.
  • She was all coldness--yet I thought a look,
  • But that corrected, tender welcome spoke:
  • It was as lightning which you think you see,
  • But doubt, and ask if lightning it could be.
  • “Confused and quick my introduction pass’d,
  • When I, a stranger and on strangers cast, 220
  • Beheld the gallant man as he display’d
  • Uncheck’d attention to the guilty maid.
  • O! how it grieved me that she dared t’ excite
  • Those looks in him that show’d so much delight;
  • Egregious coxcomb! there--he smiled again,
  • As if he sought to aggravate my pain;
  • Still she attends--I must approach--and find,
  • Or make, a quarrel, to relieve my mind.
  • “In vain I try--politeness as a shield
  • The angry strokes of my contempt repell’d; 230
  • Nor must I violate the social law
  • That keeps the rash and insolent in awe.
  • Once I observed, on hearing my replies,
  • The woman’s terror fix’d on me the eyes
  • That look’d entreaty; but the guideless rage
  • Of jealous minds no softness can assuage.
  • But, lo! they rise, and all prepare to take
  • The promised pleasure on the neighbouring lake.
  • “Good heaven! they whisper! Is it come to this?
  • Already!--then may I my doubt dismiss: 240
  • Could he so soon a timid girl persuade?
  • What rapid progress has the coxcomb made!
  • And yet how cool her looks, and how demure!
  • The falling snow nor lily’s flower so pure--
  • What can I do? I must the pair attend,
  • And watch this horrid business to its end.
  • “There, forth they go! He leads her to the shore--
  • Nay, I must follow--I can bear no more:
  • What can the handsome gipsy have in view
  • In trifling thus, as she appears to do? 250
  • I, who for months have labour’d to succeed,
  • Have only lived her vanity to feed.
  • “O! you will make me room--’tis very kind,
  • And meant for him--it tells him he must mind;
  • Must not be careless:--I can serve to draw
  • The soldier on, and keep the man in awe.
  • O! I did think she had a guileless heart,
  • Without deceit, capriciousness, or art;
  • And yet a stranger, with a coat of red,
  • Has, by an hour’s attention, turn’d her head. 260
  • “Ah! how delicious was the morning-drive,
  • The soul awaken’d, and its hopes alive;
  • How dull this scene by trifling minds enjoy’d,
  • The heart in trouble and its hope destroy’d.
  • Well, now we land--And will he yet support
  • This part? What favour has he now to court?
  • Favour! O, no! He means to quit the fair;
  • How strange! how cruel! Will she not despair?
  • Well! take her hand--no further if you please,
  • I cannot suffer fooleries like these:-- 270
  • How? ‘Love to Julia!’ to his wife?--O! dear }
  • And injured creature, how must I appear, }
  • Thus haughty in my looks, and in my words severe? }
  • Her love to Julia, to the school-day friend
  • To whom those letters she has lately penn’d!
  • Can she forgive? And now I think again,
  • The man was neither insolent nor vain;
  • Good humour chiefly would a stranger trace,
  • Were he impartial, in the air or face;
  • And I so splenetic the whole way long, 280
  • And she so patient--it was very wrong.
  • The boat had landed in a shady scene;
  • The grove was in its glory, fresh and green;
  • The showers of late had swell’d the branch and bough,
  • And the sun’s fervour made them pleasant now.
  • Hard by, an oak arose in all its pride,
  • And threw its arms along the water’s side:
  • Its leafy limbs, that on the glassy lake
  • Stretch far, and all those dancing shadows make.
  • And now we walk--now smaller parties seek 290
  • Or sun or shade as pleases--Shall I speak?
  • Shall I forgiveness ask, and then apply
  • For----O! that vile and intercepting cry!
  • Alas! what mighty ills can trifles make--
  • An hat! the idiot’s--fallen in the lake!
  • What serious mischief can such idlers do?
  • I almost wish the head had fallen too.
  • No more they leave us, but will hover round,
  • As if amusement at our cost they found;
  • Vex’d and unhappy I indeed had been, 300
  • Had I not something in my charmer seen
  • Like discontent, that, though corrected, dwelt
  • On that dear face, and told me what she felt.
  • “Now must we cross the lake, and as we cross’d
  • Was my whole soul in sweet emotion lost;
  • Clouds in white volumes roll’d beneath the moon,
  • Softening her light that on the waters shone:
  • This was such bliss! even then it seem’d relief
  • To veil the gladness in a show of grief.
  • We sigh’d as we conversed, and said, how deep 310
  • This lake on which those broad dark shadows sleep;
  • There is between us and a watery grave
  • But a thin plank, and yet our fate we brave.
  • ‘What if it burst?’ ‘Matilda, then my care }
  • Would be for thee: all danger I would dare, }
  • And, should my efforts fail, thy fortune would I share.’ }
  • ‘The love of life,’ she said, ‘would powerful prove!’--
  • ‘O! not so powerful as the strength of love.’--
  • A look of kindness gave the grateful maid,
  • That had the real effort more than paid. 320
  • “But here we land, and haply now may choose
  • Companions home--our way, too, we may lose:
  • In these drear, dark, inosculating lanes,
  • The very native of his doubt complains;
  • No wonder then that in such lonely ways
  • A stranger, heedless of the country, strays;
  • A stranger, too, whose many thoughts all meet
  • In one design, and none regard his feet.
  • “‘Is this the path?’ the cautious fair one cries; }
  • I answer, ‘Yes!’--‘We shall our friends surprise,’ } 330
  • She added, sighing--I return the sighs. }
  • “‘Will they not wonder?’ ‘O! they would, indeed,
  • Could they the secrets of this bosom read,
  • These chilling doubts, these trembling hopes I feel!
  • The faint, fond hopes I can no more conceal--
  • I love thee, dear Matilda!--to confess
  • The fact is dangerous, fatal to suppress.
  • “‘And now in terror I approach the home
  • Where I may wretched but not doubtful come;
  • Where I must be all ecstasy, or all-- 340
  • O! what will you a wretch rejected call?
  • Not man, for I shall lose myself, and be
  • A creature lost to reason, losing thee.
  • “‘Speak, my Matilda! on the rack of fear
  • Suspend me not--I would my sentence hear,
  • Would learn my fate--Good Heaven! and what portend
  • These tears?--and fall they for thy wretched friend?
  • Or’----but I cease; I cannot paint the bliss,
  • From a confession soft and kind as this;
  • Nor where we walk’d, nor how our friends we met, } 350
  • Or what their wonder--I am wondering yet; }
  • For he who nothing heeds has nothing to forget. }
  • “All thought, yet thinking nothing--all delight
  • In every thing, but nothing in my sight!
  • Nothing I mark or learn, but am possess’d }
  • Of joys I cannot paint, and I am bless’d }
  • In all that I conceive--whatever is, is best. }
  • Ready to aid all beings, I would go
  • The world around to succour human wo;
  • Yet am so largely happy, that it seems 360
  • There are no woes, and sorrows are but dreams.
  • “There is a college joy, to scholars known,
  • When the first honours are proclaim’d their own;
  • There is ambition’s joy, when in their race
  • A man surpassing rivals gains his place;
  • There is a beauty’s joy, amid a crowd
  • To have that beauty her first fame allow’d;
  • And there’s the conqueror’s joy, when, dubious held
  • And long the fight, he sees the foe repell’d.
  • “But what are these, or what are other joys, 370
  • That charm kings, conquerors, beauteous nymphs and boys,
  • Or greater yet, if greater yet be found,
  • To that delight when love’s dear hope is crown’d?
  • To the first beating of a lover’s heart,
  • When the loved maid endeavours to impart,
  • Frankly yet faintly, fondly yet in fear,
  • The kind confession that he holds so dear?
  • Now in the morn of our return how strange
  • Was this new feeling, this delicious change;
  • That sweet delirium, when I gazed in fear, 380
  • That all would yet be lost and disappear.
  • “Such was the blessing that I sought for pain,
  • In some degree to be myself again;
  • And when we met a shepherd old and lame,
  • Cold and diseased, it seem’d my blood to tame;
  • And I was thankful for the moral sight,
  • That soberized the vast and wild delight.”
  • TALES OF THE HALL.
  • BOOK VII.
  • _THE ELDER BROTHER_.
  • Conversation--Story of the elder Brother--His
  • romantic Views and Habits--The Scene of his
  • Meditations--Their Nature--Interrupted by an
  • Adventure--The Consequences of it--A strong and
  • permanent Passion--Search of its Object--Long
  • ineffectual--How found--The first Interview--The
  • second--End of the Adventure--Retirement.
  • TALES OF THE HALL.
  • BOOK VII.
  • _THE ELDER BROTHER._
  • “Thanks, my dear Richard; and, I pray thee, deign
  • To speak the truth--does all this love remain,
  • And all this joy? for views and flights sublime,
  • Ardent and tender, are subdued by time.
  • Speakst thou of her to whom thou madest thy vows,
  • Of my fair sister, of thy lawful spouse?
  • Or art thou talking some frail love about,
  • The rambling fit, before th’ abiding gout?”
  • Nay, spare me, Brother, an adorer spare:
  • Love and the gout! thou wouldst not these compare?“ 10
  • “Yea, and correctly; teasing ere they come,
  • They then confine their victim to his home:
  • In both are previous feints and false attacks,
  • Both place the grieving patient on their racks:
  • They both are ours, with all they bring, for life,
  • ’Tis not in us t’ expel or gout or wife;
  • On man a kind of dignity they shed,
  • A sort of gloomy pomp about his bed;
  • Then, if he leaves them, go where’er he will,
  • They have a claim upon his body still; 20
  • Nay, when they quit him, as they sometimes do,
  • What is there left t’ enjoy or to pursue?--
  • But dost thou love this woman?”
  • “O! beyond
  • What I can tell thee of the true and fond:
  • Hath she not soothed me, sick, enrich’d me, poor,
  • And banish’d death and misery from my door?
  • Has she not cherish’d every moment’s bliss,
  • And made an Eden of a world like this?
  • When Care would strive with us his watch to keep,
  • Has she not sung the snarling fiend to sleep? 30
  • And when Distress has look’d us in the face,
  • Has she not told him, ‘thou art not Disgrace?’”
  • “I must behold her, Richard; I must see
  • This patient spouse who sweetens misery--
  • But didst thou need, and wouldst thou not apply?--
  • Nay thou wert right--but then how wrong was I!”
  • “My indiscretion was----”
  • “No more repeat;
  • Would I were nothing worse than indiscreet;--
  • But still there is a plea that I could bring,
  • Had I the courage to describe the thing.” 40
  • “Then, thou too, Brother, couldst of weakness tell;
  • Thou, too, hast found the wishes that rebel
  • Against the sovereign reason; at some time
  • Thou hast been fond, heroic, and sublime;
  • Wrote verse, it may be, and for one dear maid
  • The sober purposes of life delay’d;
  • From year to year the fruitless chase pursued,
  • And hung enamour’d o’er the flying good.
  • Then, be thy weakness to a Brother shown,
  • And give him comfort who displays his own.” 50
  • “Ungenerous youth! dost thou presuming ask
  • A man so grave his failings to unmask?
  • What if I tell thee of a waste of time,
  • That on my spirit presses as a crime,
  • Wilt thou despise me?--I, who, soaring, fell }
  • So late to rise--Hear then the tale I tell; }
  • Who tells what thou shalt hear, esteems his hearer well. }
  • * * * * *
  • “Yes, my dear Richard, thou shalt hear me own
  • Follies and frailties thou hast never known;
  • Thine was a frailty,--folly, if you please-- 60
  • But mine a flight, a madness, a disease.
  • “Turn with me to my twentieth year, for then
  • The lover’s frenzy ruled the poet’s pen;
  • When virgin reams were soil’d with lays of love,
  • The flinty hearts of fancied nymphs to move:
  • Then was I pleased in lonely ways to tread,
  • And muse on tragic tales of lovers dead;
  • For all the merit I could then descry
  • In man or woman was for love to die.
  • “I mused on charmers chaste, who pledged their truth, 70
  • And left no more the once-accepted youth;
  • Though he disloyal, lost, diseased, became,
  • The widow’d turtle’s was a deathless flame.
  • This faith, this feeling, gave my soul delight:
  • Truth in the lady, ardour in the knight.
  • “I built me castles wondrous rich and rare,
  • Few castle-builders could with me compare;
  • The hall, the palace, rose at my command,
  • And these I fill’d with objects great and grand.
  • Virtues sublime, that nowhere else would live, 80
  • Glory and pomp, that I alone could give;
  • Trophies and thrones, by matchless valour gain’d,
  • Faith unreproved, and chastity unstain’d;
  • With all that soothes the sense and charms the soul,
  • Came at my call, and were in my control.
  • “And who was I? a slender youth and tall,
  • In manner awkward, and with fortune small;
  • With visage pale; my motions quick and slow,
  • That fall and rising in the spirits show;
  • For none could more by outward signs express 90
  • What wise men lock within the mind’s recess.
  • Had I a mirror set before my view,
  • I might have seen what such a form could do;
  • Had I within the mirror truth beheld,
  • I should have such presuming thoughts repell’d:
  • But, awkward as I was, without the grace
  • That gives new beauty to a form or face,
  • Still I expected friends most true to prove,
  • And grateful, tender, warm, assiduous love.
  • “Assured of this, that love’s delicious bond 100
  • Would hold me ever faithful, ever fond,
  • It seem’d but just that I in love should find
  • A kindred heart as constant and as kind.
  • Give me, I cried, a beauty: none on earth
  • Of higher rank or nobler in her birth;
  • Pride of her race, her father’s hope and care,
  • Yet meek as children of the cottage are;
  • Nursed in the court, and there by love pursued,
  • But fond of peace, and blest in solitude;
  • By rivals honour’d, and by beauties praised, 110
  • Yet all unconscious of the envy raised.
  • Suppose her this, and from attendants freed,
  • To want my prowess in a time of need,
  • When safe and grateful she desires to show
  • She feels the debt that she delights to owe,
  • And loves the man who saved her in distress--
  • So fancy will’d, nor would compound for less.
  • “This was my dream.--In some auspicious hour,
  • In some sweet solitude, in some green bower,
  • Whither my fate should lead me, there, unseen, 120
  • I should behold my fancy’s gracious queen,
  • Singing sweet song! that I should hear awhile,
  • Then catch the transient glory of a smile;
  • Then at her feet with trembling hope should kneel,
  • Such as rapt saints and raptured lovers feel:
  • To watch the chaste unfoldings of her heart,
  • In joy to meet, in agony to part,
  • And then in tender song to soothe my grief,
  • And hail, in glorious rhyme, my _Lady of the Leaf_.
  • “To dream these dreams I chose a woody scene, 130
  • My guardian-shade, the world and me between;
  • A green inclosure, where beside its bound
  • A thorny fence beset its beauties round,
  • Save where some creature’s force had made a way
  • For me to pass, and in my kingdom stray.
  • Here then I stray’d, then sat me down to call,
  • Just as I will’d, my shadowy subjects all!
  • Fruits of all minds conceived on every coast--
  • Fay, witch, enchanter, devil, demon, ghost;
  • And thus with knights and nymphs, in halls and bowers, 140
  • In war and love, I pass’d unnumber’d hours.
  • Gross and substantial beings all forgot, }
  • Ideal glories beam’d around the spot, }
  • And all that was, with me, of this poor world was not. }
  • “Yet in this world there was a single scene,
  • That I allow’d with mine to intervene.
  • This house, where never yet my feet had stray’d,
  • I with respect and timid awe survey’d;
  • With pleasing wonder I have oft-times stood,
  • To view these turrets rising o’er the wood; 150
  • When fancy to the halls and chambers flew,
  • Large, solemn, silent, that I must not view;
  • The moat was then, and then o’er all the ground
  • Tall elms and ancient oaks stretch’d far around;
  • And where the soil forbad the nobler race,
  • Dwarf trees and humbler shrubs had found their place,
  • Forbidding man in their close hold to go,
  • Haw, gatter, holm, the service and the sloe;
  • With tangling weeds that at the bottom grew,
  • And climbers all above their feathery branches threw. 160
  • Nor path of man or beast was there espied; }
  • But there the birds of darkness loved to hide, }
  • The loathed toad to lodge, and speckled snake to glide. }
  • “To me this hall, thus view’d in part, appear’d
  • A mansion vast. I wonder’d, and I fear’d.
  • There as I wander’d, fancy’s forming eye
  • Could gloomy cells and dungeons dark espy;
  • Winding through these, I caught th’ appalling sound }
  • Of troubled souls, that guilty minds confound, }
  • Where murder made its way, and mischief stalk’d around. }
  • Above the roof were raised the midnight storms, 171
  • And the wild lights betray’d the shadowy forms.
  • “With all these flights and fancies, then so dear,
  • I reach’d the birth-day of my twentieth year;
  • And in the evening of a day in June
  • Was singing--as I sang--some heavenly tune.
  • My native tone, indeed, was harsh and hoarse,
  • But he who feels such powers can sing of course--
  • Is there a good on earth, or gift divine,
  • That fancy cannot say, behold! ’tis mine? 180
  • “So was I singing, when I saw descend
  • From this old seat a lady and her friend;
  • Downward they came with steady pace and slow,
  • Arm link’d in arm, to bless my world below.
  • I knew not yet if they escaped, or chose
  • Their own free way; if they had friends or foes--
  • But near to my dominion drew the pair,
  • Link’d arm in arm, and walk’d, conversing, there.
  • “I saw them ere they came, myself unseen,
  • My lofty fence and thorny bound between-- 190
  • And one alone, one matchless face I saw,
  • And, though at distance, felt delight and awe:
  • Fancy and truth adorn’d her; fancy gave
  • Much, but not all; truth help’d to make their slave.
  • For she was lovely, all was not the vain
  • Or sickly homage of a fever’d brain;
  • No! she had beauty, such as they admire
  • Whose hope is earthly, and whose love desire;
  • Imagination might her aid bestow,
  • But she had charms that only truth could show. 200
  • “Their dress was such as well became the place, }
  • But one superior; hers the air, the grace, }
  • The condescending looks, that spoke the nobler race. }
  • Slender she was and tall; her fairy-feet
  • Bore her right onward to my shady seat;
  • And O! I sigh’d that she would nobly dare
  • To come, nor let her friend th’ adventure share;
  • But see how I in my dominion reign,
  • And never wish to view the world again.
  • “Thus was I musing, seeing with my eyes 210
  • These objects, with my mind her fantasies,
  • And chiefly thinking--is this maid, divine
  • As she appears, to be this queen of mine?
  • Have I from henceforth beauty in my view,
  • Not airy all, but tangible and true?
  • Here then I fix, here bound my vagrant views,
  • And here devote my heart, my time, my muse.
  • “She saw not this, though ladies early trace
  • Their beauty’s power, the glories of their face;
  • Yet knew not this fair creature--could not know 220
  • That new-born love that I too soon must show!
  • And I was musing--how shall I begin?
  • How make approach my unknown way to win,
  • And to that heart, as yet untouch’d, make known
  • The wound, the wish, the weakness of my own?
  • Such is my part, but----Mercy! what alarm?
  • Dare aught on earth that sovereign beauty harm?
  • Again--the shrieking charmers--how they rend
  • The gentle air----The shriekers lack a friend--
  • They are my princess and th’ attendant maid, 230
  • In so much danger, and so much afraid!--
  • But whence the terror?--Let me haste and see }
  • What has befallen them who cannot flee-- }
  • Whence can the peril rise? What can that peril be? }
  • “It soon appear’d, that while this nymph divine
  • Moved on, there met her rude uncivil kine,
  • Who knew her not--the damsel was not there
  • Who kept them--all obedient--in her care;
  • Strangers they thus defied and held in scorn,
  • And stood in threat’ning posture, hoof and horn; 240
  • While Susan--pail in hand--could stand the while
  • And prate with Daniel at a distant stile.
  • “As feeling prompted, to the place I ran,
  • Resolved to save the maids and show the man.
  • Was each a cow like that which challenged Guy, }
  • I had resolved t’ attack it, and defy }
  • In mortal combat! to repel or die! }
  • That was no time to parley--or to say,
  • I will protect you--fly in peace away!
  • Lo! yonder stile--but with an air of grace, 250
  • As I supposed, I pointed to the place.
  • “The fair ones took me at my sign, and flew,
  • Each like a dove, and to the stile withdrew;
  • Where safe, at distance, and from terrors free,
  • They turn’d to view my beastly foes and me.
  • “I now had time my business to behold,
  • And did not like it--let the truth be told:
  • The cows, though cowards, yet in numbers strong,
  • Like other mobs, by might defended wrong;
  • In man’s own pathway fix’d, they seem’d disposed 260
  • For hostile measure, and in order closed,
  • Then halted near me, as I judged, to treat,
  • Before we came to triumph or defeat.
  • “I was in doubt: ’twas sore disgrace, I knew,
  • To turn my back, and let the cows pursue;
  • And should I rashly mortal strife begin,
  • ’Twas all unknown who might the battle win;
  • And yet to wait, and neither fight nor fly,
  • Would mirth create--I could not that deny;
  • It look’d as if for safety I would treat, 270
  • Nay, sue for peace--No! rather come defeat!
  • ‘Look to me, loveliest of thy sex! and give
  • One cheering glance, and not a cow shall live;
  • For lo! this iron bar, this strenuous arm,
  • And those dear eyes to aid me as a charm.’
  • “Say, goddess! Victory! say, on man or cow
  • Meanest thou now to perch?--On neither now--
  • For, as I ponder’d, on their way appear’d
  • The Amazonian milker of the herd;
  • These, at the wonted signals, made a stand, 280
  • And woo’d the nymph of the relieving hand;
  • Nor heeded now the man, who felt relief
  • Of other kind, and not unmix’d with grief;
  • For now he neither should his courage prove,
  • Nor in his dying moments boast his love.
  • “My sovereign beauty with amazement saw--
  • So she declared--the horrid things in awe;
  • Well pleased, she witness’d what respect was paid
  • By such brute natures--Every cow afraid,
  • And kept at distance by the powers of one, } 290
  • Who had to her a dangerous service done, }
  • That prudence had declined, that valour’s self }
  • might shun. }
  • “So thought the maid, who now, beyond the stile,
  • Received her champion with a gracious smile;
  • Who now had leisure on those charms to dwell,
  • That he could never from his thought expel.
  • There are, I know, to whom a lover seems,
  • Praising his mistress, to relate his dreams;
  • But, Richard, looks like those, that angel-face
  • Could I no more in sister-angel trace; 300
  • O! it was more than fancy! it was more }
  • Than in my darling views I saw before, }
  • When I my idol made, and my allegiance swore. }
  • “Henceforth ’twas bliss upon that face to dwell,
  • Till every trace became indelible;
  • I bless’d the cause of that alarm, her fright,
  • And all that gave me favour in her sight,
  • Who then was kind and grateful, till my mind,
  • Pleased and exulting, awe awhile resign’d.
  • For in the moment when she feels afraid, } 310
  • How kindly speaks the condescending maid; }
  • She sees her danger near, she wants her lover’s aid. }
  • As fire electric, when discharged, will strike
  • All who receive it, and they feel alike,
  • So in the shock of danger and surprise
  • Our minds are struck, and mix, and sympathise.
  • “But danger dies, and distance comes between
  • My state and that of my all glorious queen;
  • Yet much was done--upon my mind a chain
  • Was strongly fix’d, and likely to remain; 320
  • Listening, I grew enamour’d of the sound,
  • And felt to her my very being bound;
  • I bless’d the scene, nor felt a power to move,
  • Lost in the ecstacies of infant-love.
  • “She saw and smiled; the smile delight convey’d,
  • My love encouraged, and my act repaid.
  • In that same smile I read the charmer meant
  • To give her hero chaste encouragement;
  • It spoke, as plainly as a smile can speak,
  • ‘Seek whom you love, love freely whom you seek.’ 330
  • “Thus, when the lovely witch had wrought her charm,
  • She took th’ attendant maiden by the arm,
  • And left me fondly gazing, till no more
  • I could the shade of that dear form explore;
  • Then to my secret haunt I turn’d again,
  • Fire in my heart, and fever in my brain;
  • That face of her for ever in my view, }
  • Whom I was henceforth fated to pursue, }
  • To hope I knew not what--small hope in what I knew. }
  • “O! my dear Richard, what a waste of time 340
  • Gave I not thus to lunacy sublime;
  • What days, months, years, (to useful purpose lost)
  • Has not this dire infatuation cost?
  • To this fair vision I, a [bonded] slave,
  • Time, duty, credit, honour, comfort, gave;
  • Gave all--and waited for the glorious things
  • That hope expects, but fortune never brings.
  • Yet let me own, while I my fault reprove,
  • There is one blessing still affix’d to love--
  • To love like mine--for, as my soul it drew 350
  • From reason’s path, it shunn’d dishonour’s too;
  • It made my taste refined, my feelings nice,
  • And placed an angel in the way of vice.
  • “This angel now, whom I no longer view’d,
  • Far from this scene her destined way pursued;
  • No more that mansion held a form so fair,
  • She was away, and beauty was not there.
  • “Such, my dear Richard, was my early flame,
  • My youthful frenzy--give it either name;
  • It was the withering bane of many a year, 360
  • That past away in causeless hope and fear--
  • The hopes, the fears, that every dream could kill,
  • Or make alive, and lead my passive will.
  • “At length I learnt one name my angel bore,
  • And Rosabella I must now adore:
  • Yet knew but this--and not the favour’d place
  • That held the angel or th’ angelic race;
  • Nor where, admired, the sweet enchantress dwelt,
  • But I had lost her--that, indeed, I felt.
  • “Yet, would I say, she will at length be mine! 370
  • Did ever hero hope or love resign?
  • Though men oppose, and fortune bids despair, }
  • She will in time her mischief well repair, }
  • And I, at last, shall wed this fairest of the fair! }
  • “My thrifty uncle, now return’d, began
  • To stir within me what remain’d of man;
  • My powerful frenzy painted to the life,
  • And ask’d me if I took a dream to wife?
  • Debate ensued, and, though not well content,
  • Upon a visit to his house I went. 380
  • He, the most saving of mankind, had still
  • Some kindred feeling; he would guide my will,
  • And teach me wisdom--so affection wrought,
  • That he to save me from destruction sought:
  • To him destruction, the most awful curse
  • Of misery’s children, was--an empty purse!
  • He his own books approved, and thought the pen
  • An useful instrument for trading men;
  • But judged a quill was never to be slit
  • Except to make it for a merchant fit. 390
  • He, when inform’d how men of taste could write,
  • Look’d on his ledger with supreme delight;
  • Then would he laugh, and, with insulting joy,
  • Tell me aloud, ‘that’s poetry, my boy;
  • These are your golden numbers--them repeat, }
  • The more you have, the more you’ll find them sweet-- }
  • Their numbers move all hearts--no matter for their feet. }
  • Sir, when a man composes in this style,
  • What is to him a critic’s frown or smile?
  • What is the puppy’s censure or applause 400
  • To the good man who on his banker draws,
  • Buys an estate, and writes upon the grounds,
  • ‘Pay to A. B. an hundred thousand pounds?’
  • Thus, my dear nephew, thus your talents prove;
  • Leave verse to poets, and the poor to love.’
  • “Some months I suffered thus, compell’d to sit
  • And hear a wealthy kinsman aim at wit;
  • Yet there was something in his nature good,
  • And he had feeling for the tie of blood.
  • So, while I languish’d for my absent maid 410
  • I some observance to my uncle paid.”
  • “Had you inquired?” said Richard.
  • “I had placed
  • Inquirers round, but nothing could be traced;
  • Of every reasoning creature at this Hall,
  • And tenant near it, I applied to all----
  • ‘Tell me if she’--and I described her well--
  • ‘Dwelt long a guest, or where retired to dwell?’
  • But no! such lady they remember’d not--
  • They saw that face, strange beings! and forgot.
  • Nor was inquiry all; but I pursued 420
  • My soul’s first wish, with hope’s vast strength endued:
  • I cross’d the seas, I went where strangers go,
  • And gazed on crowds as one who dreads a foe,
  • Or seeks a friend; and, when I sought in vain,
  • Fled to fresh crowds, and hoped, and gazed again.”
  • “It was a strong possession”--“Strong and strange,
  • I felt the evil, yet desired not change.
  • Years now had flown, nor was the passion cured,
  • But hope had life, and so was life endured;
  • The mind’s disease, with all its strength, stole on, 430
  • Till youth, and health, and all but love were gone.
  • And there were seasons, Richard, horrid hours
  • Of mental suffering! they o’erthrew my powers,
  • And made my mind unsteady--I have still,
  • At times, a feeling of that nameless ill,
  • That is not madness--I could always tell
  • My mind was wandering--knew it was not well;
  • Felt all my loss of time, the shameful waste
  • Of talents perish’d, and of parts disgraced.
  • But though my mind was sane, there was a void-- 440
  • My understanding seem’d in part destroy’d;
  • I thought I was not of my species one,
  • But unconnected, injured and undone!
  • “While in this state, once more my uncle pray’d
  • That I would hear--I heard, and I obey’d;
  • For I was thankful that a being broke
  • On this my sadness, or an interest took
  • In my poor life--but, at his mansion, rest
  • Came with its halcyon stillness to my breast.
  • Slowly there enter’d in my mind concern 450
  • For things about me--I would something learn,
  • And to my uncle listen; who, with joy,
  • Found that ev’n yet I could my powers employ,
  • Till I could feel new hopes my mind possess,
  • Of ease at least, if not of happiness;
  • Till, not contented, not in discontent,
  • As my good uncle counsell’d, on I went;
  • Conscious of youth’s great error--nay, the crime
  • Of manhood now--a dreary waste of time!
  • Conscious of that account which I must give 460
  • How life had past with me--I strove to live.
  • “Had I, like others, my first hope attain’d,
  • I must, at least, a certainty have gain’d;
  • Had I, like others, lost the hope of youth,
  • Another hope had promised greater truth;
  • But I in baseless hopes, and groundless views,
  • Was fated time, and peace, and health to lose,
  • Impell’d to seek, for ever doom’d to fail,
  • Is----I distress you--let me end my tale.
  • “Something one day occurr’d about a bill 470
  • That was not drawn with true mercantile skill,
  • And I was ask’d and authorized to go
  • To seek the firm of Clutterbuck and Co.;
  • Their hour was past--but when I urged the case,
  • There was a youth who named a second place;
  • Where, on occasions of important kind,
  • I might the man of occupation find
  • In his retirement, where he found repose
  • From the vexations that in business rose.
  • I found, though not with ease, this private seat 480
  • Of soothing quiet, wisdom’s still retreat.
  • “The house was good, but not so pure and clean
  • As I had houses of retirement seen;
  • Yet men, I knew, of meditation deep,
  • Love not their maidens should their studies sweep;
  • His room I saw, and must acknowledge, there
  • Were not the signs of cleanliness or care:
  • A female servant, void of female grace,
  • Loose in attire, proceeded to the place;
  • She stared intrusive on my slender frame, 490
  • And boldly ask’d my business and my name.
  • “I gave them both; and, left to be amused,
  • Well as I might, the parlour I perused.
  • The shutters half unclosed, the curtains fell }
  • Half down, and rested on the window-sill, }
  • And thus, confusedly, made the room half visible. }
  • Late as it was, the little parlour bore
  • Some tell-tale tokens of the night before;
  • There were strange sights and scents about the room,
  • Of food high-season’d, and of strong perfume; 500
  • Two unmatch’d sofas ample rents display’d;
  • Carpet and curtains were alike decay’d;
  • A large old mirror, with once-gilded frame,
  • Reflected prints that I forbear to name,
  • Such as a youth might purchase--but, in truth,
  • Not a sedate or sober-minded youth;
  • The cinders yet were sleeping in the grate, }
  • Warm from the fire, continued large and late, }
  • As left by careless folk in their neglected state; }
  • The chairs in haste seem’d whirl’d about the room, } 510
  • As when the sons of riot hurry home, }
  • And leave the troubled place to solitude and gloom. }
  • “All this, for I had ample time, I saw,
  • And prudence question’d--should we not withdraw?
  • For he who makes me thus on business wait,
  • Is not for business in a proper state;
  • But man there was not, was not he for whom
  • To this convenient lodging I was come;
  • No! but a lady’s voice was heard to call
  • On my attention--and she had it all; 520
  • For lo! she enters, speaking ere in sight,
  • ‘Monsieur! I shall not want the chair to-night--
  • Where shall I see him?--This dear hour atones
  • For all affection’s hopeless sighs and groans’--
  • Then, turning to me--‘Art thou come at last?
  • A thousand welcomes--be forgot the past;
  • Forgotten all the grief that absence brings,
  • Fear that torments, and jealousy that stings--
  • All that is cold, injurious, and unkind,
  • Be it for ever banish’d from the mind; 530
  • And in that mind, and in that heart be now
  • The soft endearment, and the binding vow!’
  • “She spoke--and o’er the practised features threw
  • The looks that reason charm, and strength subdue.
  • “Will you not ask, how I beheld that face,
  • Or read that mind, and read it in that place?
  • I have tried, Richard, oft-times, and in vain,
  • To trace my thoughts, and to review their train--
  • If train there were--that meadow, grove, and stile;
  • The fright, th’ escape, her sweetness and her smile; 540
  • Years since elapsed, and hope, from year to year,
  • To find her free--and then to find her here!
  • “But is it she?--O! yes; the rose is dead;
  • All beauty, fragrance, freshness, glory fled;
  • But yet ’tis she--the same and not the same--
  • Who to my bower an heavenly being came;
  • Who waked my soul’s first thought of real bliss;
  • Whom long I sought; and now I find her--this.
  • “I cannot paint her--something I had seen
  • So pale and slim, and tawdry and unclean; 550
  • With haggard looks, of vice and wo the prey,
  • Laughing in langour, miserably gay.
  • Her face, where face appear’d, was amply spread, }
  • By art’s coarse pencil, with ill-chosen red, }
  • The flower’s fictitious bloom, the blushing of the dead; }
  • But still the features were the same, and strange
  • My view of both--the sameness and the change,
  • That fix’d me gazing and my eye enchain’d,
  • Although so little of herself remain’d;
  • It is the creature whom I loved, and yet 560
  • Is far unlike her--Would I could forget
  • The angel or her fall! the once adored
  • Or now despised! the worshipp’d or deplored!
  • “‘O! Rosabella!’ I prepared to say, }
  • ‘Whom I have loved,’ but prudence whisper’d nay, }
  • And folly grew ashamed--discretion had her day. }
  • She gave her hand; which, as I lightly press’d,
  • The cold but ardent grasp my soul oppress’d;
  • The ruin’d girl disturb’d me, and my eyes
  • Look’d, I conceive, both sorrow and surprise. 570
  • “I spoke my business--‘He,’ she answer’d, ‘comes
  • And lodges here--he has the backward rooms--
  • He now is absent, and I chanced to hear
  • Will not before to-morrow eve appear,
  • And may be longer absent----O! the night
  • When you preserved me in that horrid fright;
  • A thousand, thousand times, asleep, awake,
  • I thought of what you ventured for my sake--
  • Now, have you thought--yet tell me so--deceive
  • Your Rosabella, willing to believe! 580
  • O! there is something in love’s first-born pain
  • Sweeter than bliss--it never comes again--
  • But has your heart been faithful?’--Here my pride,
  • To anger rising, her attempt defied--
  • ‘My faith must childish in your sight appear,
  • Who have been faithful--to how many, dear?’
  • “If words had fail’d, a look explain’d their style,
  • She could not blush assent, but she could smile.
  • Good heaven! I thought, have I rejected fame,
  • Credit, and wealth, for one who smiles at shame? 590
  • “She saw me thoughtful--saw it, as I guess’d,
  • With some concern, though nothing she express’d.
  • “‘Come, my dear friend, discard that look of care,
  • All things were made to be, as all things are;
  • All to seek pleasure as the end design’d,
  • The only good in matter or in mind;
  • So was I taught by one, who gave me all
  • That my experienced heart can wisdom call.
  • “‘I saw thee young, love’s soft obedient slave,
  • And many a sigh to my young lover gave; 600
  • And I had, spite of cowardice or cow,
  • Return’d thy passion, and exchanged my vow;
  • But, while I thought to bait the amorous hook,
  • One set for me my eager fancy took;
  • There was a crafty eye, that far could see,
  • And through my failings fascinated me:
  • Mine was a childish wish, to please my boy;
  • His a design, his wishes to enjoy.
  • O! we have both about the world been tost,
  • Thy gain I know not--I, they cry, am lost; 610
  • So let the wise ones talk; they talk in vain,
  • And are mistaken both in loss and gain;
  • ’Tis gain to get whatever life affords,
  • ’Tis loss to spend our time in empty words.
  • “‘I was a girl, and thou a boy wert then,
  • Nor aught of women knew, nor I of men;
  • But I have traffick’d in the world, and thou,
  • Doubtless, canst boast of thy experience now;
  • Let us the knowledge we have gain’d produce,
  • And kindly turn it to our common use.’ 620
  • “Thus spoke the siren in voluptuous style, }
  • While I stood gazing and perplex’d the while, }
  • Chain’d by that voice, confounded by that smile. }
  • And then she sang, and changed from grave to gay,
  • Till all reproach and anger died away.
  • * * * * *
  • “‘&My Damon was the first to wake
  • The gentle flame that cannot die;
  • My Damon is the last to take
  • The faithful bosom’s softest sigh:
  • The life between is nothing worth, 630
  • O! cast it from thy thought away;
  • Think of the day that gave it birth,
  • And this its sweet returning day.
  • “‘Buried be all that has been done,
  • Or say that naught is done amiss;
  • For who the dangerous path can shun
  • In such bewildering world as this?
  • But love can every fault forgive,
  • Or with a tender look reprove;
  • And now let naught in memory live, 640
  • But that we meet, and that we love.’”
  • * * * * *
  • “And then she moved my pity; for she wept,
  • And told her miseries till resentment slept;
  • For when she saw she could not reason blind,
  • She pour’d her heart’s whole sorrows on my mind,
  • With features graven on my soul, with sighs
  • Seen but not heard, with soft imploring eyes,
  • And voice that needed not, but had the aid
  • Of powerful words to soften and persuade.
  • O! I repent me of the past; and sure 650
  • Grief and repentance make the bosom pure;
  • Yet meet thee not with clean and single heart,
  • As on the day we met--and but to part!
  • Ere I had drank the cup that to my lip
  • Was held, and press’d till I was forced to sip.
  • I drank indeed, but never ceased to hate--
  • It poison’d, but could not intoxicate.
  • T’ excuse my fall I plead not love’s excess,
  • But a weak orphan’s need and loneliness.
  • I had no parent upon earth--no door 660
  • Was oped to me--young, innocent, and poor,
  • Vain, tender, and resentful--and my friend,
  • Jealous of one who must on her depend,
  • Making life misery--You could witness then
  • That I was precious in the eyes of men;
  • So, made by them a goddess, and denied
  • Respect and notice by the women’s pride;
  • Here scorn’d, there worshipp’d--will it strange appear,
  • Allured and driven, that I settled here?
  • Yet loved it not; and never have I pass’d 670
  • One day, and wish’d another like the last.
  • There was a fallen angel, I have read,
  • For whom their tears the sister-angels shed,
  • Because, although she ventured to rebel,
  • She was not minded like a child of hell.--
  • Such is my lot! and will it not be given
  • To grief like mine, that I may think of heaven;
  • Behold how there the glorious creatures shine,
  • And all my soul to grief and hope resign?’”
  • “I wonder’d, doubting--and, is this a fact, 680
  • I thought, or part thou art disposed to act?
  • “‘Is it not written, He, who came to save
  • Sinners, the sins of deepest dye forgave;
  • That he his mercy to the sufferers dealt,
  • And pardon’d error when the ill was felt?
  • Yes! I would hope, there is an eye that reads
  • What is within, and sees the heart that bleeds----
  • But who on earth will one so lost deplore,
  • And who will help that lost one to restore?
  • ‘Who will on trust the sigh of grief receive; 690
  • And--all things warring with belief--believe?’
  • “Soften’d, I said--‘Be mine the hand and heart,
  • If with your world you will consent to part.’
  • She would--she tried----Alas! she did not know
  • How deeply rooted evil habits grow:
  • She felt the truth upon her spirits press,
  • But wanted ease, indulgence, show, excess,
  • Voluptuous banquets, pleasures--not refined,
  • But such as soothe to sleep th’ opposing mind--
  • She look’d for idle vice, the time to kill, 700
  • And subtle, strong apologies for ill;
  • And thus her yielding, unresisting soul
  • Sank, and let sin confuse her and control:
  • Pleasures that brought disgust yet brought relief,
  • And minds she hated help’d to war with grief.”
  • “Thus then she perish’d?”--
  • “Nay--but thus she proved
  • Slave to the vices that she never loved;
  • But, while she thus her better thoughts opposed,
  • And woo’d the world, the world’s deceptions closed.--
  • I had long lost her; but I sought in vain 710
  • To banish pity--still she gave me pain;
  • Still I desired to aid her--to direct,
  • And wish’d the world, that won her, to reject;
  • Nor wish’d in vain--there came, at length, request
  • That I would see a wretch with grief oppress’d,
  • By guilt affrighted--and I went to trace
  • Once more the vice-worn features of that face,
  • That sin-wreck’d being! and I saw her laid
  • Where never worldly joy a visit paid,
  • That world receding fast! the world to come 720
  • Conceal’d in terror, ignorance, and gloom,
  • Sins, sorrow, and neglect: with not a spark
  • Of vital hope--all horrible and dark--
  • It frighten’d me!--I thought, and shall not I }
  • Thus feel? thus fear?--this danger can I fly? }
  • Do I so wisely live that I can calmly die? }
  • “The wants I saw I could supply with ease,
  • But there were wants of other kind than these;
  • Th’ awakening thought, the hope-inspiring view-- }
  • The doctrines awful, grand, alarming, true-- } 730
  • Most painful to the soul, and yet most healing too. }
  • Still, I could something offer, and could send
  • For other aid--a more important friend,
  • Whose duty call’d him, and his love no less,
  • To help the grieving spirit in distress;
  • To save in that sad hour the drooping prey,
  • And from its victim drive despair away.
  • All decent comfort[s] round the sick were seen;
  • The female helpers quiet, sober, clean;
  • Her kind physician with a smile appear’d, 740
  • And zealous love the pious friend endear’d;
  • While I, with mix’d sensations, could inquire,
  • ‘Hast thou one wish, one unfulfill’d desire?
  • Speak every thought, nor unindulged depart,
  • If I can make thee happier than thou art.’
  • “Yes! there was yet a female friend, an old
  • And grieving nurse! to whom it should be told--
  • I would tell--that she, her child, had fail’d,
  • And turn’d from truth! yet truth at length prevail’d.
  • “’Twas in that chamber, Richard, I began 750
  • To think more deeply of the end of man:
  • Was it to jostle all his fellows by,
  • To run before them, and say, ‘here am I,
  • Fall down, and worship?’--Was it, life throughout,
  • With circumspection keen to hunt about,
  • As spaniels for their game, where might be found
  • Abundance more for coffers that abound?
  • Or was it life’s enjoyments to prefer,
  • Like this poor girl, and then to die like her?
  • No! He, who gave the faculties, design’d 760
  • Another use for the immortal mind:
  • There is a state in which it will appear
  • With all the good and ill contracted here;
  • With gain and loss, improvement and defect; }
  • And then, my soul! what hast thou to expect }
  • For talents laid aside, life’s waste, and time’s neglect? }
  • “Still as I went came other change--the frame
  • And features wasted, and yet slowly came
  • The end; and so inaudible the breath,
  • And still the breathing, we exclaim’d--‘’tis death!’ 770
  • But death it was not: when, indeed, she died,
  • I sat and his last gentle stroke espied:
  • When--as it came--or did my fancy trace
  • That lively, lovely flushing o’er the face,
  • Bringing back all that my young heart impress’d?
  • It came--and went!--She sigh’d, and was at rest!
  • “Adieu, I said, fair Frailty! dearly cost
  • The love I bore thee--time and treasure lost;
  • And I have suffer’d many years in vain;
  • Now let me something in my sorrows gain: 780
  • Heaven would not all this wo for man intend
  • If man’s existence with his we should end;
  • Heaven would not pain, and grief, and anguish give,
  • If man was not by discipline to live;
  • And for that brighter, better world prepare, }
  • That souls with souls, when purified, shall share, }
  • Those stains all done away that must not enter there. }
  • “Home I return’d, with spirits in that state
  • Of vacant wo I strive not to relate;
  • Nor how, deprived of all her hope and strength, 790
  • My soul turn’d feebly to the world at length.
  • I travell’d then till health again resumed
  • Its former seat--I must not say re-bloom’d;
  • And then I fill’d, not loth, that favourite place
  • That has enrich’d some seniors of our race;
  • Patient and dull I grew; my uncle’s praise
  • Was largely dealt me on my better days;
  • A love of money--other love at rest--
  • Came creeping on, and settled in my breast;
  • The force of habit held me to the oar, 800
  • Till I could relish what I scorn’d before:
  • I now could talk and scheme with _men of sense_,
  • Who deal for millions, and who sigh for pence;
  • And grew so like them, that I heard with joy
  • Old Blueskin said I was a pretty boy;
  • For I possess’d the caution, with the zeal,
  • That all true lovers of their interest feel.
  • Exalted praise! and to the creature due
  • Who loves that interest solely to pursue.
  • “But I was sick, and sickness brought disgust; 810
  • My peace I could not to my profits trust:
  • Again some views of brighter kind appear’d,
  • My heart was humbled, and my mind was clear’d;
  • I felt those helps that souls diseased restore,
  • And that cold frenzy, avarice, raged no more.
  • From dreams of boundless wealth I then arose; }
  • This place, the scene of infant bliss, I chose; }
  • And here I find relief, and here I seek repose. }
  • “Yet much is lost, and not yet much is found,
  • But what remains, I would believe, is sound: 820
  • That first wild passion, that last mean desire,
  • Are felt no more; but holier hopes require
  • A mind prepared and steady--my reform
  • Has fears like his, who, suffering in a storm,
  • Is on a rich but unknown country cast,
  • The future fearing, while he feels the past;
  • But whose more cheerful mind, with hope imbued,
  • Sees through receding clouds the rising good.”
  • TALES OF THE HALL.
  • BOOK VIII.
  • _THE SISTERS._
  • Morning Walk and Conversation--Visit at a
  • Cottage--Characters of the Sisters--Lucy and
  • Jane--Their Lovers--Their Friend the Banker and his
  • Lady--Their Intimacy--Its Consequence--Different
  • Conduct of the Lovers--The Effect upon the
  • Sisters--Their present State--The Influence of
  • their Fortune upon the Minds of either.
  • TALES OF THE HALL.
  • BOOK VIII.
  • _THE SISTERS._
  • The morning shone in cloudless beauty bright;
  • Richard his letters read with much delight;
  • George from his pillow rose in happy tone,
  • His bosom’s lord sat lightly on his throne.
  • They read the morning news--they saw the sky
  • Inviting call’d them, and the earth was dry.
  • “The day invites us, brother,” said the ’squire;
  • “Come, and I’ll show thee something to admire:
  • We still may beauty in our prospects trace;
  • If not, we have them in both mind and face. 10
  • “’Tis but two miles--to let such women live
  • Unseen of him, what reason can I give?
  • Why should not Richard to the girls be known?
  • Would I have all their friendship for my own?--
  • Brother, there dwell, yon northern hill below,
  • Two favourite maidens, whom ’tis good to know;
  • Young, but experienced; dwellers in a cot,
  • Where they sustain and dignify their lot;
  • The best good girls in all our world below--
  • O! you must know them--Come! and you shall know. 20
  • “But lo! the morning wastes--here, Jacob, stir--
  • If Phœbe comes, do you attend to her;
  • And let not Mary get a chattering press
  • Of idle girls to hear of her distress.
  • Ask her to wait till my return--and hide
  • From her meek mind your plenty and your pride;
  • Nor vex a creature, humble, sad, and still,
  • By your coarse bounty, and your rude good-will.”
  • This said, the brothers hasten’d on their way,
  • With all the foretaste of a pleasant day. 30
  • The morning purpose in the mind had fix’d
  • The leading thought, and that with others mix’d.
  • “How well it is,” said George, “when we possess
  • The strength that bears us up in our distress;
  • And need not the resources of our pride,
  • Our fall from greatness and our wants to hide;
  • But have the spirit and the wish to show,
  • We know our wants as well as others know.
  • ’Tis true, the rapid turns of fortune’s wheel
  • Make even the virtuous and the humble feel: 40
  • They for a time must suffer, and but few
  • Can bear their sorrows and our pity too.
  • “Hence all these small expedients, day by day,
  • Are used to hide the evils they betray:
  • When, if our pity chances to be seen, }
  • The wounded pride retorts, with anger keen, }
  • And man’s insulted grief takes refuge in his spleen. }
  • “When Timon’s board contains a single dish,
  • Timon talks much of market-men and fish,
  • Forgetful servants, and th’ infernal cook, 50
  • Who always spoil’d whate’er she undertook.
  • “But say it tries us from our height to fall,
  • Yet is not life itself a trial all?
  • And not a virtue in the bosom lives,
  • That gives such ready pay as patience gives;
  • That pure submission to the ruling mind,
  • Fix’d, but not forced; obedient, but not blind,
  • The will of heaven to make her own she tries,
  • Or makes her own to heaven a sacrifice.
  • “And is there aught on earth so rich or rare, 60
  • Whose pleasures may with virtue’s pains compare?
  • This fruit of patience, this the pure delight
  • That ’tis a trial in her Judge’s sight;
  • Her part still striving duty to sustain,
  • Not spurning pleasure, not defying pain;
  • Never in triumph till her race be won,
  • And never fainting till her work be done.”
  • With thoughts like these they reach’d the village brook,
  • And saw a lady sitting with her book;
  • And so engaged she heard not, till the men 70
  • Were at her side, nor was she frighten’d then;
  • But to her friend, the ’squire, his smile return’d,
  • Through which the latent sadness he discern’d.
  • The stranger-brother at the cottage door
  • Was now admitted, and was strange no more;
  • Then of an absent sister he was told,
  • Whom they were not at present to behold;
  • Something was said of nerves, and that disease,
  • Whose varying powers on mind and body seize,
  • Enfeebling both!--Here chose they to remain 80
  • One hour in peace, and then return’d again.
  • “I know not why,” said Richard, “but I feel
  • The warmest pity on my bosom steal
  • For that dear maid! How well her looks express
  • For this world’s good a cherish’d hopelessness!
  • A resignation that is so entire,
  • It feels not now the stirrings of desire;
  • What now to her is all the world esteems?
  • She is awake, and cares not for its dreams;
  • But moves while yet on earth, as one above 90
  • Its hopes and fears--it[s] loathing and its love.
  • “But shall I learn,” said he, “these sisters’ fate?”--
  • And found his brother willing to relate.
  • * * * * *
  • “The girls were orphans early; yet I saw,
  • When young, their father--his profession law;
  • He left them but a competence, a store
  • That made his daughters neither rich nor poor;
  • Not rich, compared with some who dwelt around;
  • Not poor, for want they neither fear’d nor found;
  • Their guardian uncle was both kind and just, 100
  • One whom a parent might in dying trust;
  • Who, in their youth, the trusted store improved,
  • And, when he ceased to guide them, fondly loved.
  • “These sister beauties were in fact the grace
  • Of yon small town,--it was their native place;
  • Like Saul’s famed daughters were the lovely twain,
  • As Micah, Lucy, and as Merab, Jane:
  • For this was tall, with free commanding air,
  • And that was mild, and delicate, and fair.
  • “Jane had an arch delusive smile, that charm’d 110
  • And threaten’d too; alluring, it alarm’d;
  • The smile of Lucy her approval told,
  • Cheerful, not changing; neither kind nor cold.
  • “When children, Lucy love alone possess’d,
  • Jane was more punished and was more caress’d;
  • If told the childish wishes, one bespoke
  • A lamb, a bird, a garden, and a brook;
  • The other wish’d a joy unknown, a rout
  • Or crowded ball, and to be first led out.
  • “Lucy loved all that grew upon the ground, 120
  • And loveliness in all things living found;
  • The gilded fly, the fern upon the wall,
  • Were nature’s works, and admirable all;
  • Pleased with indulgence of so cheap a kind,
  • Its cheapness never discomposed her mind.
  • “Jane had no liking for such things as these,
  • Things pleasing her must her superiors please;
  • The costly flower was precious in her eyes,
  • That skill can vary, or that money buys;
  • Her taste was good, but she was still afraid, 130
  • Till fashion sanction’d the remarks she made.
  • “The sisters read, and Jane with some delight,
  • The satires keen that fear or rage excite,
  • That men in power attack, and ladies high,
  • And give broad hints that we may know them by.
  • She was amused when sent to haunted rooms,
  • Or some dark passage where the spirit comes
  • Of one once murder’d! then she laughing read,
  • And felt at once the folly and the dread.
  • As rustic girls to crafty gipsies fly, 140
  • And trust the liar though they fear the lie,
  • Or as a patient, urged by grievous pains,
  • Will fee the daring quack whom he disdains:
  • So Jane was pleased to see the beckoning hand,
  • And trust the magic of the Ratcliffe-wand.
  • “In her religion--for her mind, though light,
  • Was not disposed our better views to slight--
  • Her favourite authors were a solemn kind,
  • Who fill with dark mysterious thoughts the mind;
  • And who with such conceits her fancy plied, 150
  • Became her friend, philosopher, and guide.
  • “She made the Progress of the Pilgrim one
  • To build a thousand pleasant views upon;
  • All that connects us with a world above
  • She loved to fancy, and she long’d to prove;
  • Well would the poet please her, who could lead
  • Her fancy forth, yet keep untouch’d her creed.
  • “Led by an early custom, Lucy spied,
  • When she awaked, the Bible at her side;
  • That, ere she ventured on a world of care, } 160
  • She might for trials, joys or pains prepare, }
  • For every dart a shield, a guard for every snare. }
  • “She read not much of high heroic deeds,
  • Where man the measure of man’s power exceeds;
  • But gave to luckless love and fate severe
  • Her tenderest pity and her softest tear.
  • “She mix’d not faith with fable, but she trod
  • Right onward, cautious in the ways of God;
  • Nor did she dare to launch on seas unknown, }
  • In search of truths by some adventurers shown, } 170
  • But her own compass used, and kept a course her own. }
  • “The maidens both their loyalty declared,
  • And in the glory of their country shared;
  • But Jane that glory felt with proud delight,
  • When England’s foes were vanquish’d in the fight;
  • While Lucy’s feelings for the brave who bled
  • Put all such glorious triumphs from her head.
  • “They both were frugal; Lucy from the fear
  • Of wasting that which want esteems so dear,
  • But finds so scarce, her sister from the pain 180
  • That springs from want, when treated with disdain.
  • “Jane borrow’d maxims from a doubting school,
  • And took for truth the test of ridicule;
  • Lucy saw no such virtue in a jest:
  • Truth was with her of ridicule a test.
  • “They loved each other with the warmth of youth,
  • With ardour, candour, tenderness, and truth;
  • And, though their pleasures were not just the same,
  • Yet both were pleased whenever one became;
  • Nay, each would rather in the act rejoice, 190
  • That was th’ adopted, not the native choice.
  • “Each had a friend, and friends to minds so fond
  • And good are soon united in the bond;
  • Each had a lover; but it seem’d that fate
  • Decreed that these should not approximate.
  • Now Lucy’s lover was a prudent swain,
  • And thought, in all things, what would be his gain;
  • The younger sister first engaged his view,
  • But with her beauty he her spirit knew;
  • Her face he much admired, ‘but, put the case,’ 200
  • Said he, ‘I marry, what is then a face?
  • At first it pleases to have drawn the lot;
  • He then forgets it, but his wife does not;
  • Jane too,’ he judged, ‘would be reserved and nice,
  • And many lovers had enhanced her price.’
  • “Thus thinking much, but hiding what he thought,
  • The prudent lover Lucy’s favour sought,
  • And he succeeded--she was free from art,
  • And his appear’d a gentle guileless heart;
  • Such she respected; true, her sister found 210
  • His placid face too ruddy and too round,
  • Too cold and inexpressive; such a face
  • Where you could nothing mark’d or manly trace.
  • “But Lucy found him to his mother kind,
  • And saw the Christian meekness of his mind;
  • His voice was soft, his temper mild and sweet,
  • His mind was easy, and his person neat.
  • “Jane said he wanted courage; Lucy drew
  • No ill from that, though she believed it too;
  • ‘It is religious, Jane, be not severe;’ 220
  • ‘Well, Lucy, then it is religious fear,’
  • Nor could the sister, great as was her love,
  • A man so lifeless and so cool approve.
  • “Jane had a lover, whom a lady’s pride
  • Might wish to see attending at her side,
  • Young, handsome, sprightly, and with good address,
  • Not mark’d for folly, error or excess;
  • Yet not entirely from their censure free
  • Who judge our failings with severity.
  • The very care he took to keep his name 230
  • Stainless, with some was evidence of shame.
  • “Jane heard of this, and she replied, ‘Enough;
  • Prove but the facts, and I resist not proof;
  • Nor is my heart so easy as to love
  • The man my judgment bids me not approve.’
  • But yet that heart a secret joy confess’d,
  • To find no slander on the youth would rest;
  • His was, in fact, such conduct, that a maid
  • Might think of marriage, and be not afraid;
  • And she was pleased to find a spirit high, 240
  • Free from all fear, that spurn’d hypocrisy.
  • “‘What fears my sister?’ said the partial fair,
  • For Lucy fear’d,--‘Why tell me to beware?
  • No smooth deceitful varnish can I find; }
  • His is a spirit generous, free, and kind; }
  • And all his flaws are seen, all floating in his mind. }
  • A little boldness in his speech. What then?
  • It is the failing of these generous men.
  • A little vanity, but--O! my dear,
  • They all would show it, were they all sincere. 250
  • “‘But come, agreed; we’ll lend each other eyes
  • To see our favourites, when they wear disguise;
  • And all those errors that will then be shown
  • Uninfluenced by the workings of our own.’
  • “Thus lived the sisters, far from power removed,
  • And far from need, both loving and beloved.
  • Thus grew, as myrtles grow; I grieve at heart
  • That I have pain and sorrow to impart.
  • But so it is, the sweetest herbs that grow
  • In the lone vale, where sweetest waters flow, 260
  • Ere drops the blossom, or appears the fruit,
  • Feel the vile grub, and perish at the root;
  • And, in a quick and premature decay,
  • Breathe the pure fragrance of their life away.
  • “A town was near, in which the buildings all
  • Were large, but one pre-eminently tall--
  • An huge high house. Without there was an air
  • Of lavish cost; no littleness was there;
  • But room for servants, horses, whiskies, gigs,
  • And walls for pines and peaches, grapes and figs; 270
  • Bright on the sloping glass the sunbeams shone,
  • And brought the summer of all climates on.
  • “Here wealth its prowess to the eye display’d,
  • And here advanced the seasons, there delay’d;
  • Bid the due heat each growing sweet refine, }
  • Made the sun’s light with grosser fire combine, }
  • And to the Tropic gave the vigour of the Line. }
  • “Yet, in the master of this wealth behold }
  • A light vain coxcomb taken from his gold, }
  • Whose busy brain was weak, whose boasting }
  • heart was cold. } 280
  • O! how he talk’d to that believing town,
  • That he would give it riches and renown;
  • Cause a canal where treasures were to swim,
  • And they should owe their opulence to him!
  • In fact, of riches he insured a crop,
  • So they would give him but a seed to drop.
  • As used the alchymist his boasts to make,
  • ‘I give you millions for the mite I take:’
  • The mite they never could again behold,
  • The millions all were Eldorado gold. 290
  • “By this professing man the country round
  • Was search’d to see where money could be found.
  • “The thriven farmer, who had lived to spare,
  • Became an object of especial care;
  • He took the frugal tradesman by the hand,
  • And wish’d him joy of what he might command;
  • And the industrious servant, who had laid
  • His saving by, it was his joy to aid;
  • Large talk, and hints of some productive plan
  • Half named, won all his hearers to a man; 300
  • Uncertain projects drew them wondering on,
  • And avarice listen’d till distrust was gone.
  • But when to these dear girls he found his way,
  • All easy, artless, innocent were they;
  • When he compelled his foolish wife to be
  • At once so great, so humble, and so free;
  • Whom others sought, nor always with success!
  • But they were both her pride and happiness;
  • And she esteem’d them, but attended still
  • To the vile purpose of her husband’s will; 310
  • And, when she fix’d his snares about their mind,
  • Respected those whom she essay’d to blind;
  • Nay with esteem she some compassion gave
  • To the fair victims whom she would not save.
  • “The Banker’s wealth and kindness were her themes,
  • His generous plans, his patriotic schemes;
  • What he had done for some, a favourite few,
  • What for his favourites still he meant to do;
  • Not that he always listen’d--which was hard--
  • To her, when speaking of her great regard 320
  • For certain friends--‘but you, as I may say,
  • Are his own choice--I am not jealous--nay!’
  • “Then came the man himself, and came with speed,
  • As just from business of importance freed;
  • Or just escaping, came with looks of fire,
  • As if he’d just attain’d his full desire;
  • As if Prosperity and he for life
  • Were wed, and he was showing off his wife;
  • Pleased to display his influence, and to prove
  • Himself the object of her partial love; 330
  • Perhaps with this was join’d the latent fear,
  • The time would come when he should not be dear.
  • “Jane laugh’d at all their visits and parade,
  • And call’d it friendship in an hot-house made;
  • A style of friendship suited to his taste,
  • Brought on, and ripen’d, like his grapes, in haste;
  • She saw the wants that wealth in vain would hide,
  • And all the tricks and littleness of pride;
  • On all the wealth would creep the vulgar stain,
  • And grandeur strove to look itself in vain. 340
  • “Lucy perceived--but she replied, ‘why heed
  • Such small defects?--they’re very kind indeed!’
  • And kind they were, and ready to produce
  • Their easy friendship, ever fit for use,
  • Friendship that enters into all affairs,
  • And daily wants, and daily gets, repairs.
  • “Hence at the cottage of the sisters stood
  • The Banker’s steed--he was so very good;
  • Oft through the roads, in weather foul or fair,
  • Their friend’s gay carriage bore the gentle pair; 350
  • His grapes and nectarines woo’d the virgins’ hand;
  • His books and roses were at their command,
  • And costly flowers--he took upon him shame
  • That he could purchase what he could not name.
  • “Lucy was vex’d to have such favours shown,
  • And they returning nothing of their own;
  • Jane smiled, and begg’d her sister to believe,--
  • ‘We give at least as much as we receive.’
  • “Alas! and more; they gave their ears and eyes,
  • His splendor oft-times took them by surprise; 360
  • And, if in Jane appear’d a meaning smile,
  • She gazed, admired, and paid respect the while;
  • Would she had rested there! Deluded maid,
  • She saw not yet the fatal price she paid;
  • Saw not that wealth, though join’d with folly, grew
  • In her regard; she smiled, but listened too;
  • Nay would be grateful, she would trust her all, }
  • Her funded source--to him a matter small; }
  • Taken for their sole use, and ever at their call, }
  • To be improved--he knew not how indeed, 370
  • But he had methods--and they must succeed.
  • “This was so good, that Jane, in very pride,
  • To spare him trouble, for a while denied;
  • And Lucy’s prudence, though it was alarm’d,
  • Was by the splendor of the Banker charm’d;
  • What was her paltry thousand pounds to him,
  • Who would expend five thousand on a whim?
  • And then the portion of his wife was known;
  • But not that she reserved it for her own.
  • “Lucy her lover trusted with the fact, 380
  • And frankly ask’d, ‘if he approved the act?’
  • ‘It promised well,’ he said; ‘he could not tell
  • How it might end, but sure it promised well;
  • He had himself a trifle in the Bank,
  • And should be sore uneasy if it sank.’
  • “Jane from her lover had no wish to hide
  • Her deed; but was withheld by maiden pride;
  • To talk so early--as if one were sure
  • Of being his; she could not that endure.
  • “But when the sisters were apart, and when 390
  • They freely spoke of their affairs and men,
  • They thought with pleasure of the sum improved,
  • And so presented to the men they loved.
  • “Things now proceeded in a quiet train;
  • No cause appear’d to murmur or complain;
  • The monied man, his ever-smiling dame,
  • And their young darlings, in their carriage came.
  • Jane’s sprightly lover smiled their pomp to see,
  • And ate their grapes, with gratitude and glee;
  • But with the freedom there was nothing mean, 400
  • Humble, or forward, in his freedom seen;
  • His was the frankness of a mind that shows
  • It knows itself, nor fears for what it knows.
  • But Lucy’s ever humble friend was awed
  • By the profusion he could not applaud;
  • He seem’d indeed reluctant to partake
  • Of the collation that he could not make;
  • And this was pleasant in the maiden’s view,--
  • Was modesty--was moderation too;
  • Though Jane esteem’d it meanness; and she saw 410
  • Fear in that prudence, avarice in that awe.
  • “But both the lovers now to town are gone;
  • By business one is call’d, by duty one;
  • While rumour rises--whether false or true
  • The ladies knew not--it was known to few--
  • But fear there was, and on their guardian-friend
  • They for advice and comfort would depend
  • When rose the day; meantime from Belmont-place
  • Came vile report, predicting quick disgrace.
  • “’Twas told--the servants, who had met to thank 420
  • Their lord for placing money in his Bank--
  • Their kind free master, who such wages gave,
  • And then increased whatever they could save--
  • They who had heard they should their savings lose,
  • Were weeping, swearing, drinking at the news;
  • And still the more they drank, the more they wept,
  • And swore, and rail’d, and threatened, till they slept.
  • “The morning truth confirm’d the evening dread;
  • The Bank was broken, and the Banker fled;
  • But left a promise that his friends should have, 430
  • To the last shilling--what his fortunes gave.
  • “The evil tidings reach’d the sister-pair,
  • And one like Sorrow look’d, and one Despair;
  • They from each other turn’d th’ afflicting look,
  • And loth and late the painful silence broke.
  • “‘The odious villain!’ Jane in wrath began;
  • In pity Lucy, ‘the unhappy man!
  • When time and reason our affliction heal,
  • How will the author of our sufferings feel?’
  • “‘And let him feel, my sister--let the woes 440
  • That he creates be bane to his repose!
  • Let them be felt in his expiring hour,
  • When death brings all his dread, and sin its power:
  • Then let the busy foe of mortals state
  • The pangs he caused, his own to aggravate!
  • “‘Wretch! when our life was glad, our prospers gay,
  • With savage hand to sweep them all away!
  • And he must know it--know when he beguiled
  • His easy victims--how the villain smiled!
  • “‘Oh! my dear Lucy, could I see him crave 450
  • The food denied, a beggar and a slave,
  • To stony hearts he should with tears apply,
  • And Pity’s self withhold the struggling sigh;
  • Or, if relenting weakness should extend
  • Th’ extorted scrap that justice would not lend,
  • Let it be poison’d by the curses deep
  • Of every wretch whom he compels to weep!’
  • “‘Nay, my sweet sister, if you thought such pain
  • Were his, your pity would awake again;
  • Your generous heart the wretch’s grief would feel, 460
  • And you would soothe the pangs you could not heal.’
  • “‘Oh! never, never,--I would still contrive
  • To keep the slave whom I abhorr’d alive;
  • His tortured mind with horrid fears to fill,
  • Disturb his reason, and misguide his will;
  • Heap coals of fire, to lie like melted lead,
  • Heavy and hot, on his accursed head;
  • Not coals that mercy kindles hearts to melt,
  • But he should feel them hot as fires are felt,
  • Corroding ever, and through life the same, 470
  • Strong self-contempt and ever-burning shame;
  • Let him so wretched live that he may fly
  • To desperate thoughts, and be resolved to die--
  • And then let death such frightful visions give,
  • That he may dread th’ attempt, and beg to live!’
  • So spake th’ indignant maid, when Lucy sigh’d,
  • And, waiting softer times, no more replied.
  • “Barlow was then in town; and there he thought
  • Of bliss to come, and bargains to be bought;
  • And was returning homeward--when he found 480
  • The Bank was broken, and his venture drown’d.
  • “‘Ah! foolish maid,’ he cried, ‘and what wilt thou
  • Say for thy friends and their excesses now?
  • All now is brought completely to an end;
  • What can the spendthrift now afford to spend?
  • Had my advice been--true, I gave consent,
  • The thing was purposed; what could I prevent?
  • “‘Who will her idle taste for flowers supply-- }
  • Who send her grapes and peaches? let her try;-- }
  • There’s none will give her, and she cannot buy. } 490
  • “‘Yet would she not be grateful if she knew
  • What to my faith and generous love was due?
  • Daily to see the man who took her hand,
  • When she had not a sixpence at command;
  • Could I be sure that such a quiet mind
  • Would be for ever grateful, mild, and kind,
  • I might comply--but how will Bloomer act,
  • ‘When he becomes acquainted with the fact?
  • The loss to him is trifling--but the fall
  • From independence, that to her is all; 500
  • Now, should he marry, ‘twill be shame to me
  • To hold myself from my engagement free;
  • And should he not, it will be double grace
  • To stand alone in such a trying case.
  • “‘Come then, my Lucy, to thy faithful heart
  • And humble love I will my views impart;
  • Will see the grateful tear that softly steals
  • Down the fair face and all thy joy reveals;
  • And when I say it is a blow severe,
  • Then will I add--restrain, my love, the tear, 510
  • And take this heart, so faithful and so fond,
  • Still bound to thine; and fear not for that bond.’
  • “He said; and went, with purpose he believed
  • Of generous nature--so is man deceived.
  • “Lucy determined that her lover’s eye
  • Should not distress nor supplication spy;
  • That in her manner he should nothing find
  • To indicate the weakness of her mind.
  • He saw no eye that wept, no frame that shook;
  • No fond appeal was made by word or look; 520
  • Kindness there was, but join’d with some restraint;
  • And traces of the late event were faint.
  • “He look’d for grief deploring, but perceives
  • No outward token that she longer grieves;
  • He had expected for his efforts praise,
  • For he resolved the drooping mind to raise;
  • She would, he judged, be humble, and afraid
  • That he might blame her rashness and upbraid;
  • And lo! he finds her in a quiet state,
  • Her spirit easy and her air sedate: 530
  • As if her loss was not a cause for pain,
  • As if assured that he would make it gain,--
  • “Silent awhile, he told the morning news,
  • And what he judged they might expect to lose;
  • He thought himself, whatever some might boast,
  • The composition would be small at most,
  • Some shabby matter; she would see no more
  • The tithe of what she held in hand before.
  • “How did her sister feel? and did she think
  • Bloomer was honest, and would never shrink? 540
  • ‘But why that smile; is loss like yours so light
  • That it can aught like merriment excite?
  • Well, he is rich, we know, and can afford
  • To please his fancy, and to keep his word;
  • To him ’tis nothing; had he now a fear,
  • He must the meanest of his sex appear;
  • But the true honour, as I judge the case,
  • Is both to feel the evil and embrace.’
  • “Here Barlow stopp’d, a little vex’d to see
  • No fear or hope, no dread or ecstasy. 550
  • Calmly she spoke--‘Your prospects, sir, and mine
  • Are not the same--their union I decline;
  • Could I believe the hand for which you strove
  • Had yet its value, did you truly love,
  • I had with thanks addressed you, and replied,
  • Wait till your feelings and my own subside,
  • Watch your affections, and, if still they live,
  • What pride denies, my gratitude shall give.’
  • Ev’n then, in yielding, I had first believed
  • That I conferr’d the favour, not received. 560
  • “‘You I release--nay, hear me--I impart
  • Joy to your soul--I judge not of your heart.
  • Think’st thou a being, to whom God has lent
  • A feeling mind, will have her bosom rent
  • By man’s reproaches? Sorrow will be thine,
  • For all thy pity prompts thee to resign!
  • Think’st thou that meekness’ self would condescend
  • To take the husband when she scorns the friend?
  • Forgive the frankness, and rejoice for life
  • Thou art not burden’d with so poor a wife. 570
  • “‘Go! and be happy--tell, for the applause
  • Of hearts like thine, we parted, and the cause
  • Give, as it pleases.’ With a foolish look
  • That a dull school-boy fixes on his book
  • That he resigns, with mingled shame and joy,
  • So Barlow went, confounded like the boy.
  • “Jane, while she wept to think her sister’s pain
  • Was thus increased, felt infinite disdain;
  • Bound as she was, and wedded by the ties
  • Of love and hope, that care and craft despise, 580
  • She could but wonder that a man, whose taste
  • And zeal for money had a Jew disgraced,
  • Should love her sister; yet with this surprise,
  • She felt a little exultation rise;
  • Hers was a lover who had always held
  • This man as base, by generous scorn impell’d,
  • And yet, as one, of whom for Lucy’s sake
  • He would a civil distant notice take.
  • “Lucy, with sadden’d heart and temper mild,
  • Bow’d to correction, like an humbled child, 590
  • Who feels the parent’s kindness, and who knows
  • Such the correction he who loves bestows.
  • “Attending always, but attending more
  • When sorrow ask’d his presence than before,
  • Tender and ardent, with the kindest air
  • Came Bloomer, fortune’s error to repair;
  • Words sweetly soothing spoke the happy youth,
  • With all the tender earnestness of truth.
  • “There was no doubt of his intention now--
  • He will his purpose with his love avow; 600
  • So judged the maid; yet, waiting, she admired
  • His still delaying what he most desired;
  • Till, from her spirit’s agitation free,
  • She might determine when the day should be.
  • With such facility the partial mind
  • Can the best motives for its favourites find.
  • “Of this he spake not, but he stayed beyond
  • His usual hour--attentive still and fond;--
  • The hand yet firmer to the hand he prest,
  • And the eye rested where it loved to rest; 610
  • Then took he certain freedoms, yet so small
  • That it was prudish so the things to call;
  • Things they were not--‘Describe’--that none can do,
  • They had been nothing had they not been new;
  • It was the manner and the look; a maid,
  • Afraid of such, is foolishly afraid;
  • For what could she explain? The piercing eye
  • Of jealous fear could nought amiss descry.
  • “But some concern now rose; the youth would seek
  • Jane by herself, and then would nothing speak, 610
  • Before not spoken; there was still delay,
  • Vexatious, wearying, wasting, day by day.
  • “‘He does not surely trifle!’ Heaven forbid!
  • She now should doubly scorn him if he did.
  • “Ah! more than this, unlucky girl! is thine;
  • Thou must the fondest views of life resign;
  • And in the very time resign them too,
  • When they were brightening on the eager view.
  • I will be brief,--nor have I heart to dwell
  • On crimes they almost share who paint them well. 630
  • “There was a moment’s softness, and it seem’d
  • Discretion slept, or so the lover dream’d;
  • And, watching long the now confiding maid,
  • He thought her guardless, and grew less afraid;
  • Led to the theme that he had shunn’d before,
  • He used a language he must use no more--
  • For if it answers, there is no more need,
  • And no more trial, should it not succeed.
  • “Then made he that attempt, in which to fail
  • Is shameful,--still more shameful to prevail. 640
  • “Then was there lightning in that eye that shed
  • Its beams upon him--and his frenzy fled;
  • Abject and trembling at her feet he laid,
  • Despised and scorn’d by the indignant maid,
  • Whose spirits in their agitation rose,
  • Him, and her own weak pity, to oppose:
  • As liquid silver in the tube mounts high,
  • Then shakes and settles as the storm goes by.
  • “While yet the lover stay’d, the maid was strong,
  • But when he fled, she droop’d and felt the wrong-- 650
  • Felt the alarming chill, the enfeebled breath,
  • Closed the quick eye, and sank in transient death.
  • So Lucy found her; and then first that breast
  • Knew anger’s power, and own’d the stranger guest.
  • “‘And is this love? Ungenerous! Has he too
  • Been mean and abject? Is no being true?’
  • For Lucy judged that, like her prudent swain,
  • Bloomer had talk’d of what a man might gain;
  • She did not think a man on earth was found,
  • A wounded bosom, while it bleeds, to wound; 660
  • Thought not that mortal could be so unjust,
  • As to deprive affliction of its trust;
  • Thought not a lover could the hope enjoy,
  • That must the peace he should promote destroy;
  • Thought not, in fact, that in the world were those,
  • Who to their tenderest friends are worse than foes,
  • Who win the heart, deprive it of its care,
  • Then plant remorse and desolation there.
  • “Ah! cruel he, who can that heart deprive
  • Of all that keeps its energy alive; 670
  • Can see consign’d to shame the trusting fair,
  • And turn confiding fondness to despair;
  • To watch that time--a name is not assign’d
  • For crime so odious, nor shall learning find.
  • Now, from that day has Lucy laid aside
  • Her proper cares, to be her sister’s guide,
  • Guard, and protector. At their uncle’s farm
  • They past the period of their first alarm,
  • But soon retired, nor was he grieved to learn
  • They made their own affairs their own concern. 680
  • “I knew not then their worth; and, had I known,
  • Could not the kindness of a friend have shown;
  • For men they dreaded; they a dwelling sought,
  • And there the children of the village taught;
  • There, firm and patient, Lucy still depends
  • Upon her efforts, not upon her friends;
  • She is with persevering strength endued,
  • And can be cheerful--for she will be good.
  • “Jane too will strive the daily tasks to share,
  • That so employment may contend with care; 690
  • Not power, but will, she shows, and looks about }
  • On her small people, who come in and out; }
  • And seems of what they need, or she can do, in doubt. }
  • “There sits the chubby crew on seats around,
  • While she, all rueful at the sight and sound,
  • Shrinks from the free approaches of the tribe,
  • Whom she attempts, lamenting to describe;
  • With stains the idlers gather’d in their way, }
  • The simple stains of mud, and mould, and clay, }
  • And compound of the streets, of what we dare not say; }
  • With hair uncomb’d, grimed face, and piteous look, 701
  • Each heavy student takes the odious book,
  • And on the lady casts a glance of fear,
  • Who draws the garment close as he comes near;
  • She then for Lucy’s mild forbearance tries,
  • And from her pupils turns her brilliant eyes,
  • Making new efforts, and with some success,
  • To pay attention while the students guess;
  • Who to the gentler mistress fain would glide,
  • And dread their station at the lady’s side. 710
  • “Such is their fate;--there is a friendly few
  • Whom they receive, and there is chance for you;
  • Their school, and something gather’d from the wreck
  • Of that bad Bank, keeps poverty in check;
  • And true respect, and high regard, are theirs,
  • The children’s profit, and the [parents’] prayers.
  • “With Lucy rests the one peculiar care, }
  • That few must see, and none with her may share; }
  • More dear than hope can be, more sweet than pleasures are. }
  • For her sad sister needs the care of love 720
  • That will direct her, that will not reprove,
  • But waits to warn: for Jane will walk alone,
  • Will sing in low and melancholy tone;
  • Will read or write, or to her plants will run,
  • To shun her friends,--alas! her thoughts to shun.
  • “It is not love alone disturbs her rest,
  • But loss of all that ever hope possess’d:
  • Friends ever kind, life’s lively pleasures, ease, }
  • When her enjoyments could no longer please; }
  • These were her comforts then! she has no more of these. }
  • “Wrapt in such thoughts, she feels her mind astray, 731
  • But knows ’tis true that she has lost her way;
  • For Lucy’s smile will check the sudden flight,
  • And one kind look let in the wonted light.
  • “Fits of long silence she endures, then talks
  • Too much--with too much ardour, as she walks;
  • But still the shrubs that she admires dispense
  • Their balmy freshness to the hurried sense,
  • And she will watch their progress, and attend
  • Her flowering favourites as a guardian friend; 740
  • To sun or shade she will her sweets remove,
  • ‘And here,’ she says, ‘I may with safety love.’
  • “But there are hours when on that bosom steals
  • A rising terror--then indeed she feels--
  • Feels how she loved the promised good, and how
  • She feels the failure of the promise now.
  • “‘That other spoiler did as robbers do,
  • Made poor our state, but not disgraceful too,
  • This spoiler shames me, and I look within
  • To find some cause that drew him on to sin; 750
  • He and the wretch who could thy worth forsake
  • Are the fork’d adder and the loathsome snake;
  • Thy snake could slip in villain-fear away,
  • But had no fang to fasten on his prey.
  • “‘Oh! my dear Lucy, I had thought to live
  • With all the comforts easy fortunes give;
  • A wife caressing, and caress’d--a friend,
  • Whom he would guide, advise, consult, defend,
  • And make his equal;--then I fondly thought
  • Among superior creatures to be brought; 760
  • And, while with them, delighted to behold
  • No eye averted, and no bosom cold;--
  • Then at my home, a mother, to embrace }
  • My----Oh! my sister, it was surely base! }
  • I might forget the wrong; I cannot the disgrace. }
  • “‘Oh! when I saw that triumph in his eyes,
  • I felt my spirits with his own arise;
  • I call’d it joy, and said, the generous youth
  • Laughs at my loss--no trial for his truth,
  • It is a trifle he can not lament, 770
  • A sum but equal to his annual rent;
  • And yet that loss, the cause of every ill,
  • Has made me poor, and him--’
  • “‘O! poorer still;
  • Poorer, my Jane, and far below thee now:
  • The injurer he,--the injured sufferer thou;
  • And shall such loss afflict thee?’--
  • “‘Lose I not
  • With him what fortune could in life allot?
  • Lose I not hope, life’s cordial, and the views }
  • Of an aspiring spirit?--O! I lose }
  • Whate’er the happy feel, whatever the sanguine choose. }
  • “‘Would I could lose this bitter sense of wrong, 781
  • And sleep in peace--but it will not be long!
  • And here is something, Lucy, in my brain--
  • I know not what--it is a cure for pain;
  • But is not death!--no beckoning hand I see,
  • No voice I hear that comes alone to me;
  • It is not death, but change; I am not now
  • As I was once--nor can I tell you how;
  • Nor is it madness--ask, and you shall find
  • In my replies the soundness of my mind: 790
  • O! I should be a trouble all day long;
  • A very torment, if my head were wrong.’
  • “At times there is upon her features seen
  • What moves suspicion--she is too serene.
  • Such is the motion of a drunken man,
  • Who steps sedately, just to show he can.
  • Absent at times she will her mother call,
  • And cry at mid-day, ‘then good night to all.’
  • But most she thinks there will some good ensue
  • From something done, or what she is to do; 800
  • Long wrapt in silence, she will then assume
  • An air of business, and shake off her gloom;
  • Then cry exulting, ‘O! it must succeed,
  • There are ten thousand readers--all men read:
  • There are my writings--you shall never spend
  • Your precious moments to so poor an end;
  • Our [peasants’] children may be taught by those
  • Who have no powers such wonders to compose;
  • So let me call them--what the world allows,
  • Surely a poet without shame avows; 810
  • Come, let us count what numbers we believe
  • Will buy our work--Ah! sister, do you grieve?
  • You weep; there’s something I have said amiss,
  • And vex’d my sister--What a world is this!
  • And how I wander!--Where has fancy run?
  • Is there no poem? Have I nothing done?
  • Forgive me, Lucy, I had fix’d my eye,
  • And so my mind, on works that cannot die,
  • _Marmion_ and _Lara_ yonder in the case;
  • And so I put me in the poet’s place. 820
  • “‘Still, be not frighten’d; it is but a dream;
  • I am not lost, bewilder’d though I seem;
  • I will obey thee--but suppress thy fear--
  • I am at ease--then why that silly tear?’
  • “Jane, as these melancholy fits invade
  • The busy fancy, seeks the deepest shade;
  • She walks in ceaseless hurry, till her mind
  • Will short repose in verse and music find;
  • Then her own songs to some soft tune she sings,
  • And laughs, and calls them melancholy things; 830
  • Not frenzy all; in some her erring Muse
  • Will sad, afflicting, tender strains infuse;
  • Sometimes on death she will her lines compose,
  • Or give her serious page of solemn prose;
  • And still those favourite plants her fancy please,
  • And give to care and anguish rest and ease.
  • * * * * *
  • “‘Let me not have this gloomy view,
  • About my room, around my bed;
  • But morning roses, wet with dew,
  • To cool my burning brows instead. 840
  • As flow’rs that once in Eden grew,
  • Let them their fragrant spirits shed,
  • And every day the sweets renew,
  • Till I, a fading flower, am dead.
  • “‘Oh! let the herbs I loved to rear
  • Give to my sense their perfumed breath;
  • Let them be placed about my bier,
  • And grace the gloomy house of death.
  • I’ll have my grave beneath an hill,
  • Where, only Lucy’s self shall know; 850
  • “‘Where runs the pure pellucid rill
  • Upon its gravelly bed below;
  • There violets on the borders blow,
  • And insects their soft light display,
  • Till, as the morning sunbeams glow,
  • The cold phosphoric fires decay.
  • “‘That is the grave to Lucy shown,
  • The soil a pure and silver sand;
  • The green cold moss above it grown,
  • Unpluck’d of all but maiden hand: 860
  • In virgin earth, till then unturn’d,
  • There let my maiden form be laid,
  • Nor let my changed clay be spurn’d,
  • Nor for new guest that bed be made.
  • “‘There will the lark, the lamb, in sport,
  • In air, on earth, securely play,
  • And Lucy to my grave resort,
  • As innocent, but not so gay.
  • I will not have the churchyard ground,
  • With bones all black and ugly grown, 870
  • To press my shivering body round,
  • Or on my wasted limbs be thrown.
  • “‘With ribs and skulls I will not sleep,
  • In clammy beds of cold blue clay,
  • Through which the ringed earth-worms creep,
  • And on the shrouded bosom prey;
  • I will not have the bell proclaim
  • When those sad marriage rites begin,
  • And boys, without regard or shame,
  • Press the vile mouldering masses in. 880
  • “‘Say not, it is beneath my care;
  • I cannot these cold truths allow;
  • These thoughts may not afflict me there,
  • But, O! they vex and tease me now,
  • Raise not a turf, nor set a stone,
  • That man a maiden’s grave may trace;
  • But thou, my Lucy, come alone,
  • And let affection find the place.
  • “‘O! take me from a world I hate--
  • Men cruel, selfish, sensual, cold; 890
  • And, in some pure and blessed state,
  • Let me my sister minds behold:
  • From gross and sordid views refined,
  • Our heaven of spotless love to share,
  • For only generous souls design’d,
  • And not a man to meet us there.’”
  • TALES OF THE HALL.
  • BOOK IX.
  • _THE PRECEPTOR HUSBAND._
  • The Morning Ride--Conversation--Character of one
  • whom they meet- His early Habits and Mode of
  • Thinking--The Wife whom he would choose--The one
  • chosen--His Attempts to teach--In History--In
  • Botany--The Lady’s Proficiency--His Complaint--Her
  • Defence and Triumph---The Trial ends.
  • TALES OF THE HALL.
  • BOOK IX.
  • THE PRECEPTOR HUSBAND.
  • “Whom pass’d we musing near the woodman’s shed,
  • Whose horse not only carried him but led,
  • That his grave rider might have slept the time,
  • Or solved a problem, or composed a rhyme?
  • A more abstracted man within my view
  • Has never come--He recollected you.”
  • “Yes--he was thoughtful--thinks the whole day long,
  • Deeply, and chiefly that he once thought wrong;
  • He thought a strong and kindred mind to trace
  • In the soft outlines of a trifler’s face. 10
  • “Poor Finch! I knew him when at school--a boy
  • Who might be said his labours to enjoy;
  • So young a pedant that he always took
  • The girl to dance who most admired her book;
  • And would the butler and the cook surprise,
  • Who listen’d to his Latin exercise;
  • The matron’s self the praise of Finch avow’d,
  • He was so serious, and he read so loud.
  • But yet, with all this folly and conceit,
  • The lines he wrote were elegant and neat; 20
  • And early promise in his mind appear’d
  • Of noble efforts when by reason clear’d.
  • “And when he spoke of wives, the boy would say,
  • His should be skill’d in Greek and algebra;
  • For who would talk with one to whom his themes,
  • And favourite studies, were no more than dreams?
  • For this, though courteous, gentle, and humane,
  • The boys contemn’d and hated him as vain,
  • Stiff and pedantic.--”
  • “Did the man enjoy,
  • In after life, the visions of the boy?”-- 30
  • “At least they form’d his wishes, they were yet
  • The favourite views on which his mind was set:
  • He quaintly said, how happy must they prove,
  • Who, loving, study--or who, studious, love;
  • Who feel their minds with sciences imbued,
  • And their warm hearts by beauty’s force subdued.
  • “His widow’d mother, who the world had seen,
  • And better judge of either sex had been,
  • Told him that, just as their affairs were placed,
  • In some respects he must forego his taste; 40
  • That every beauty, both of form and mind,
  • Must be by him, if unendow’d, resign’d;
  • That wealth was wanted for their joint affairs;
  • His sisters’ portions, and the Hall’s repairs.
  • “The son assented--and the wife must bring
  • Wealth, learning, beauty, ere he gave the ring;
  • But as these merits, when they all unite,
  • Are not produced in every soil and site;
  • And when produced are not the certain gain
  • Of him who would these precious things obtain; 50
  • Our patient student waited many a year,
  • Nor saw this phœnix in his walks appear.
  • But, as views mended in the joint estate,
  • He would a something in his points abate;
  • Give him but learning, beauty, temper, sense,
  • And he would then the happy state commence.
  • The mother sigh’d, but she at last agreed;
  • And now the son was likely to succeed.
  • Wealth is substantial good the fates allot:
  • We know we have it, or we have it not; 60
  • But all those graces which men highly rate
  • Their minds themselves imagine and create;
  • And therefore Finch was in a way to find
  • A good that much depended on his mind.
  • “He look’d around, observing, till he saw
  • Augusta Dallas! when he felt an awe
  • Of so much beauty and commanding grace,
  • That well became the honours of her race.
  • “This lady never boasted of the trash
  • That commerce brings: she never spoke of cash; 70
  • The gentle blood that ran in every vein
  • At all such notions blush’d in pure disdain.--
  • “Wealth once relinquished, there was all beside,
  • As Finch believed, that could adorn a bride;
  • He could not gaze upon the form and air,
  • Without concluding all was right and fair;
  • Her mild but dignified reserve supprest }
  • All free inquiry--but his mind could rest, }
  • Assured that all was well, and in that view was blest. }
  • “And now he asked, ’am I the happy man 80
  • Who can deserve her? is there one who can?’
  • His mother told him, he possess’d the land
  • That puts a man in heart to ask a hand;
  • All who possess it feel they bear about
  • A spell that puts a speedy end to doubt;
  • But Finch was modest--‘May it then be thought }
  • That she can so be gained?’--‘She may be sought.--’ }
  • ‘Can love with land be won?’--‘By land is beauty bought. }
  • Do not, dear Charles, with indignation glow,
  • All value that the want of which they know; 90
  • Nor do I blame her; none that worth denies;
  • But can my son be sure of what he buys?
  • Beauty she has, but with it can you find
  • The inquiring spirit, or the studious mind?
  • This wilt thou need who art to thinking prone,
  • And minds unpair’d had better think alone;
  • Then how unhappy will the husband be,
  • Whose sole associate spoils his company?‘
  • This he would try; but all such trials prove
  • Too mighty for a man disposed to love; 100
  • He whom the magic of a face enchains
  • But little knowledge of the mind obtains;
  • If by his tender heart the man is led,
  • He finds how erring is the soundest head.
  • “The lady saw his purpose; she could meet
  • The man‘s inquiry, and his aim defeat;
  • She had a studied flattery in her look;
  • She could be seen retiring with a book;
  • She by attending to his speech could prove
  • That she for learning had a fervent love-- 110
  • Yet love alone, she modestly declared;
  • She must be spared inquiry, and was spared;
  • Of her poor studies she was not so weak
  • As in his presence, or at all, to speak;
  • But to discourse with him who, all agreed,
  • [Had] read so much, would be absurd indeed;
  • Ask what he might, she was so much a dunce
  • She would confess her ignorance at once.
  • “All this the man believed not--doom‘d to grieve
  • For this belief, he this would not believe: 120
  • No! he was quite in raptures to discern
  • That love, and that avidity to learn.
  • ’Could she have found,‘ she said, ’a friend, a guide,
  • Like him, to study had been all her pride;
  • But, doom‘d so long to frivolous employ,
  • How could she those superior views enjoy?
  • The day might come--a happy day for her,
  • When she might choose the ways she should prefer.‘
  • “Then too he learn‘d in accidental way, }
  • How much she grieved to lose the given day } 130
  • In dissipation wild, in visitation gay. }
  • Happy, most happy, must the woman prove
  • Who proudly looks on him she vows to love;
  • Who can her humble acquisitions state,
  • That he will praise, at least will tolerate.
  • “Still the cool mother sundry doubts express‘d,--
  • ’How! is Augusta graver than the rest?
  • There are three others: they are not inclined
  • To feed with precious food the empty mind;
  • Whence this strong relish?‘ ’It is very strong,‘ 140
  • Replied the son, ’and has possess‘d her long;
  • Increased indeed, I may presume, by views--
  • We may suppose--ah! may she not refuse?‘
  • ’Fear not!--I see the question must be tried,
  • Nay, is determined--let us to your bride.‘
  • “They soon were wedded, and the nymph appear‘d
  • By all her promised excellence endear‘d:
  • Her words were kind, were cautious, and were few,
  • And she was proud--of what her husband knew.
  • “Weeks pass‘d away, some five or six, before, 150
  • Bless‘d in the present, Finch could think of more.
  • A month was next upon a journey spent,
  • When to the Lakes the fond companions went;
  • Then the gay town received them, and, at last,
  • Home to their mansion, man and wife, they pass‘d.
  • “And now in quiet way they came to live
  • On what their fortune, love, and hopes would give.
  • The honied moon had nought but silver rays,
  • And shone benignly on their early days;
  • The second moon a light less vivid shed, 160
  • And now the silver rays were tinged with lead.
  • They now began to look beyond the Hall,
  • And think what friends would make a morning-call;
  • Their former appetites return‘d, and now
  • Both could their wishes and their tastes avow;
  • ‘Twas now no longer ’just what you approve,‘
  • But ’let the wild fowl be to-day, my love.‘
  • In fact the senses, drawn aside by force
  • Of a strong passion, sought their usual course.
  • “Now to her music would the wife repair, 170
  • To which he listen‘d once with eager air;
  • When there was so much harmony within,
  • That any note was sure its way to win;
  • But now the sweet melodious tones were sent
  • From the struck chords, and none cared where they went.
  • Full well we know that many a favourite air
  • That charms a party fails to charm a pair;
  • And as Augusta play‘d she look‘d around,
  • To see if one was dying at the sound;
  • But all were gone--a husband, wrapt in gloom, 180
  • Stalk‘d careless, listless, up and down the room.
  • “And now ‘tis time to fill that ductile mind
  • With knowledge, from his stores of various kind.
  • His mother, in a peevish mood, had ask‘d,
  • ’Does your Augusta profit? is she task’d?’
  • “‘Madam!’ he cried, offended with her looks,
  • ‘There’s time for all things, and not all for books:
  • Just on one’s marriage to sit down, and prate
  • On points of learning, is a thing I hate.--’
  • “‘’Tis right, my son, and it appears to me, 190
  • If deep your hatred, you must well agree.’
  • “Finch was too angry for a man so wise,
  • And said, ‘Insinuation I despise!
  • Nor do I wish to have a mind so full
  • Of learned trash--it makes a woman dull:
  • Let it suffice, that I in her discern
  • An aptitude, and a desire to learn.--’
  • “The matron smiled, but she observed a frown
  • On her son’s brow, and calmly sat her down,
  • Leaving the truth to Time, who solves our doubt, 200
  • By bringing his all-glorious daughter out--
  • Truth! for whose beauty all their love profess;
  • And yet how many think it ugliness!
  • “‘Augusta, love,’ said Finch, ‘while you engage
  • In that embroidery, let me read a page.
  • Suppose it Hume’s; indeed he takes a side,
  • But still an author need not be our guide;
  • And, as he writes with elegance and ease,
  • Do now attend--he will be sure to please.
  • Here at the Revolution we commence-- 210
  • We date, you know, our liberties from hence.’
  • “‘Yes, sure,’ Augusta answer’d with a smile;
  • ‘Our teacher always talk’d about his style,
  • When we about the Revolution read,
  • And how the martyrs to the flames were led:
  • The good old bishops, I forget their names,
  • But they were all committed to the flames;
  • Maidens and widows, bachelors and wives--
  • The very babes and sucklings lost their lives.
  • I read it all in Guthrie at the school-- 220
  • What now!--I know you took me for a fool;
  • There were five bishops taken from the stall,
  • And twenty widows, I remember all;
  • And by this token, that our teacher tried
  • ’To cry for pity, till she howl’d and cried.’
  • “‘True, true, my love, but you mistake the thing--
  • The Revolution that made William king
  • Is what I mean; the Reformation you,
  • In Edward and Elizabeth.’--‘’Tis true;
  • But the nice reading is the love between 230
  • The brave Lord Essex and the cruel queen;
  • And how he sent the ring to save his head,
  • Which the false lady kept till he was dead.
  • “‘That is all true; now read, and I’ll attend;
  • But was not she a most deceitful friend?
  • It was a monstrous, vile, and treacherous thing
  • To show no pity, and to keep the ring;
  • But the queen shook her in her dying bed,
  • And ‘God forgive you!’ was the word she said;
  • ‘Not I for certain;’--Come, I will attend; 240
  • So read the Revolutions to an end.’
  • “Finch, with a timid, strange, inquiring look,
  • Softly and slowly laid aside the book
  • With sigh inaudible----‘Come, never heed,’
  • Said he, recovering; ‘now I cannot read.’
  • “They walk’d at leisure through their wood and groves,
  • In fields and lanes, and talk’d of plants and loves,
  • And loves of plants.--Said Finch, ‘Augusta, dear,
  • You said you loved to learn,--were you sincere?
  • Do you remember that you told me once 250
  • How much you grieved, and said you were a dunce?
  • That is, you wanted information. Say,
  • What would you learn? I will direct your way.’
  • “‘Goodness!’ said she, ‘what meanings you discern
  • In a few words! I said I wish’d to learn,
  • And so I think I did; and you replied,
  • The wish was good: what would you now beside?
  • Did not you say it show’d an ardent mind;
  • And pray what more do you expect to find?’
  • “‘My dear Augusta, could you wish indeed 260
  • For any knowledge, and not then proceed?
  • That is not wishing----’
  • “‘Mercy! how you tease!
  • You knew I said it with a view to please;
  • A compliment to you, and quite enough--
  • You would not kill me with that puzzling stuff!
  • Sure I might say I wish’d; but that is still
  • Far from a promise: it is not,--‘I will.’
  • “‘But come, to show you that I will not hide
  • My proper talents, you shall be my guide;
  • And lady Boothby, when we meet, shall cry, 270
  • She’s quite as good a botanist as I.’
  • “‘Right, my Augusta;’ and, in manner grave,
  • Finch his first lecture on the science gave;
  • An introduction--and he said, ‘My dear,
  • Your thought was happy--let us persevere;
  • And let no trifling cause our work retard.’
  • Agreed the lady, but she fear’d it hard.
  • “Now o’er the grounds they rambled many a mile;
  • He show’d the flowers, the stamina, the style,
  • Calix and corol, pericarp and fruit, 280
  • And all the plant produces, branch and root;
  • Of these he treated, every varying shape,
  • Till poor Augusta panted to escape.
  • He show’d the various foliage plants produce,
  • Lunate and lyrate, runcinate, retuse;
  • Long were the learned words, and urged with force,
  • Panduriform, pinnatifid, premorse,
  • Latent, and patent, papulous, and plane--
  • ‘Oh!’ said the pupil, ‘it will turn my brain.’
  • ‘Fear not,’ he answer’d, and again, intent 290
  • To fill that mind, o’er class and order went;
  • And stopping, ‘Now,’ said he, ‘my love, attend.’
  • ‘I do,’ said she, ‘but when will be an end?’--
  • ‘When we have made some progress--now begin,
  • Which is the stigma, show me with the pin;
  • Come, I have told you, dearest, let me see,
  • Times very many--tell it now to me.’
  • “‘Stigma! I know,--the things with yellow heads,
  • That shed the dust, and grow upon the threads;
  • You call them wives and husbands, but you know 300
  • That is a joke--here, look, and I will show
  • All I remember.’--Doleful was the look
  • Of the preceptor, when he shut his book--
  • The system brought to aid them in their view,
  • And now with sighs return’d--‘It will not do.’
  • “A handsome face first led him to suppose,
  • There must be talent with such looks as those;
  • The want of talent taught him now to find
  • The face less handsome with so poor a mind;
  • And half the beauty faded, when he found 310
  • His cherish’d hopes were falling to the ground.
  • “Finch lost his spirit; but e’en then he sought
  • For fancied powers: she might in time be taught.
  • Sure there was nothing in that mind to fear;
  • The favourite study did not yet appear.--
  • “Once he express’d a doubt if she could look
  • For five succeeding minutes on a book;
  • When, with awaken’d spirit, she replied,
  • ‘He was mistaken, and she would be tried.’
  • “With this delighted, he new hopes express’d-- 320
  • ‘How do I know?--She may abide the test?
  • Men I have known, and famous in their day,
  • Who were by chance directed in their way.
  • I have been hasty.--Well, Augusta, well,
  • What is your favourite reading? prithee tell;
  • Our different tastes may different books require--
  • Yours I may not peruse, and yet admire:
  • Do then explain.’--‘Good Heaven!’ said she, in haste,
  • ‘How do I hate these lectures upon taste!’
  • “‘I lecture not, my love; but do declare-- 330
  • You read, you say--what your attainments are.’
  • “‘Oh! you believe,’ said she, ‘that other things
  • Are read as well as histories of kings,
  • And loves of plants, with all that simple stuff
  • About their sex, of which I know enough.
  • Well, if I must, I will my studies name,
  • Blame if you please--I know you love to blame.
  • When all our childish books were set apart,
  • The first I read was ‘Wanderings of the Heart:’
  • It was a story, where was done a deed 340
  • So dreadful, that alone I fear’d to read.
  • “‘The next was ‘The Confessions of a Nun--’
  • ’Twas quite a shame such evil should be done;
  • ‘Nun of--no matter for the creature’s name,
  • For there are girls no nunnery can tame.
  • Then was the story of the Haunted Hall,
  • Where the huge picture nodded from the wall
  • When the old lord look’d up with trembling dread,
  • And I grew pale, and shudder’d as I read.
  • Then came the tales of Winters, Summers, Springs, 350
  • At Bath and Brighton,--they were pretty things!
  • No ghosts nor spectres there were heard or seen,
  • But all was love and flight to Gretna-green.
  • Perhaps your greater learning may despise
  • What others like, and there your wisdom lies--
  • Well! do not frown--I read the tender tales
  • Of lonely cots, retreats in silent vales
  • For maids forsaken, and suspected wives,
  • Against whose peace some foe his plot contrives;
  • With all the hidden schemes that none can clear 360
  • Till the last book, and then the ghosts appear.
  • “‘I read all plays that on the boards succeed, }
  • And all the works that ladies ever read-- }
  • Shakspeare, and all the rest--I did, indeed,-- }
  • Ay! you may stare; but, sir, believe it true
  • That we can read and learn, as well as you.
  • “‘I would not boast,--but I could act a scene
  • In any play, before I was fifteen.
  • “‘Nor is this all; for many are the times
  • I read in Pope and Milton, prose and rhymes; 370
  • They were our lessons, and, at ten years old,
  • I could repeat----but now enough is told.
  • Sir, I can tell you I my mind applied }
  • To all my studies, and was not denied }
  • Praise for my progress----Are you satisfied?’ }
  • “‘Entirely, madam! else were I possess’d
  • By a strong spirit who could never rest.
  • Yes! yes, no more I question--here I close
  • The theme for ever--let us to repose.’”
  • TALES OF THE HALL.
  • BOOK X.
  • _THE OLD BACHELOR._
  • A Friend arrives at the Hall--Old Bachelors and
  • Maids--Relation of one--His Parents--The
  • first Courtship--The second--The third--Long
  • Interval--Travel--Decline of Life--The fourth
  • Lady--Conclusion.
  • TALES OF THE HALL.
  • BOOK X.
  • _THE OLD BACHELOR._
  • Save their kind friend the rector, Richard yet
  • Had not a favourite of his brother met;
  • Now at the Hall that welcome guest appear’d,
  • By trust, by trials, and by time endear’d;
  • Of him the grateful ’squire his love profess’d,
  • And full regard--he was of friends the best;
  • “Yet not to him alone this good I owe,
  • This social pleasure that our friends bestow;
  • The sex that wrought in earlier life my woes,
  • With loss of time who murder’d my repose, 10
  • They to my joys administer, nor vex
  • Me more; and now I venerate the sex;
  • And boast the friendship of a spinster kind,
  • Cheerful and pleasant, to her fate resign’d;
  • Then by her side my bachelor I place,
  • And hold them honours to the human race.
  • Yet these are they in tale and song display’d,
  • The peevish man, and the repining maid;
  • Creatures made up of misery and spite,
  • Who taste no pleasures, except those they blight; 20
  • From whom th’ affrighten’d niece and nephew fly--
  • Fear’d while they live, and useless till they die.
  • “Not such these friends of mine; they never meant
  • That youth should so be lost, or life be spent.
  • They had warm passions, tender hopes, desires
  • That youth indulges, and that love inspires;
  • But fortune frown’d on their designs, displaced
  • The views of hope, and love’s gay dreams disgraced;
  • Took from the soul her sunny views, and spread
  • A cloud of dark but varying gloom instead. 30
  • And shall we these with ridicule pursue,
  • Because they did not what they could not do?
  • If they their lot preferr’d, still why the jest
  • On those who took the way they judged the best?
  • But if they sought a change, and sought in vain,
  • ’Tis worse than brutal to deride their pain--
  • But you will see them; see the man I praise,
  • The kind protector in my troubled days,
  • Himself in trouble; you shall see him now,
  • And learn his worth! and my applause allow.” 40
  • This friend appear’d, with talents form’d to please,
  • And with some looks of sprightliness and ease;
  • To him indeed the ills of life were known,
  • But misery had not made him all her own.
  • They spoke on various themes, and George design’d
  • To show his brother this, the favourite mind;
  • To lead the friend, by subjects he could choose, }
  • To paint himself, his life, and earlier views, }
  • What he was bless’d to hope, what he was doom’d to lose. }
  • They spoke of marriage, and he understood 50
  • Their call on him, and said, “It is not good
  • To be alone, although alone to be
  • Is freedom; so are men in deserts free;
  • Men who unyoked and unattended groan,
  • Condemn’d and grieved to walk their way alone.
  • Whatever ills a married pair betide,
  • Each feels a stay, a comfort, or a guide;
  • ‘Not always comfort,’ will our wits reply.--
  • Wits are not judges, nor the cause shall try.
  • “Have I not seen, when grief his visits paid, 60
  • That they were easier by communion made?
  • True, with the quiet times and days serene,
  • There have been flying clouds of care and spleen;
  • But is not man, the solitary, sick
  • Of his existence, sad and splenetic?
  • And who will help him, when such evils come,
  • To bear the pressure or to clear the gloom?
  • “Do you not find, that joy within the breast
  • Of the unwedded man is soon suppress’d;
  • While, to the bosom of a wife convey’d, 70
  • Increase is by participation made?--
  • The lighted lamp that gives another light,
  • Say, is it by th’ imparted blaze less bright?
  • Are not both gainers when the heart’s distress
  • Is so divided that the pain is less?
  • And when the tear has stood in either eye,
  • Love’s sun shines out, and they are quickly dry.”
  • He ended here--but would he not confess,
  • How came these feelings on his mind to press?
  • He would! nor fear’d his weakness to display 80
  • To men like them; their weakness too had they.
  • Bright shone the fire, wine sparkled, sordid care
  • Was banish’d far, at least appear’d not there;
  • A kind and social spirit each possess’d,
  • And thus began his tale the friendly guest.
  • * * * * *
  • “Near to my father’s mansion--but apart,
  • I must acknowledge, from my father’s heart--
  • Dwelt a keen sportsman, in a pleasant seat;
  • Nor met the neighbours as should neighbours meet.
  • To them revenge appear’d a kind of right, 90
  • A lawful pleasure, an avow’d delight;
  • Their neighbours too blew up their passion’s fire,
  • And urged the anger of each rival-squire;
  • More still their waspish tempers to inflame,
  • A party-spirit, friend of anger, came.
  • Oft would my father cry, ‘that tory-knave,
  • That villain-placeman, would the land enslave.’
  • Not that his neighbour had indeed a place,
  • But would accept one--that was his disgrace;
  • Who, in his turn, was sure my father plann’d 100
  • To revolutionize his native land.
  • He dared the most destructive things advance,
  • And even pray’d for liberty to France;
  • Had still good hope that Heaven would grant his prayer,
  • That he might see a revolution there.
  • At this the tory-squire was much perplex’d,
  • ‘Freedom in France!--what will he utter next?
  • Sooner should I in Paris look to see
  • An English army sent their guard to be.’
  • “My poor mamma, who had her mind subdued 110
  • By whig-control, and hated every feud,
  • Would have her neighbour met with mind serene;
  • But fiercer spirit fired the tory-queen.
  • My parents both had given her high disgust,
  • Which she resenting said, ‘Revenge is just;’
  • And till th’ offending parties chose to stoop,
  • She judged it right to keep resentment up;
  • Could she in friendship with a woman live
  • Who could the insult of a man forgive?
  • Did not her husband in a crowded room 120
  • Once call her idiot, and the thing was dumb?
  • The man’s attack was brutal to be sure,
  • But she no less an idiot to endure.
  • “This lofty dame, with unrelenting soul,
  • Had a fair girl to govern and control;
  • The dear Maria!--whom, when first I met,--
  • Shame on this weakness! do I feel it yet?
  • “The parents’ anger, you will oft-times see,
  • Prepares the children’s minds for amity;
  • Youth will not enter into such debate, 130
  • ’Tis not in them to cherish groundless hate;
  • Nor can they feel men’s quarrels or their cares,
  • Of whig or tory, partridges or hares.
  • “Long ere we loved, this gentle girl and I
  • Gave to our parents’ discord many a sigh;
  • It was not ours--and, when the meeting came,
  • It pleased us much to find our thoughts the same;
  • But grief and trouble in our minds arose
  • From the fierce spirits we could not compose;
  • And much it vex’d us that the friends so dear 140
  • To us should foes among themselves appear.
  • “Such was this maid, the angel of her race,
  • Whom I had loved in any time and place,
  • But in a time and place which chance assign’d,
  • When it was almost treason to be kind;
  • When we had vast impediments in view,
  • Then wonder not that love in terror grew
  • With double speed--we look’d, and strove to find
  • A kindred spirit in the hostile mind;
  • But is it hostile? there appears no sign 150
  • In those dear looks of warfare--none have mine;
  • At length I whisper’d--‘Would that war might cease
  • Between our houses, and that all was peace!’
  • A sweet confusion on her features rose,
  • ‘She could not bear to think of having foes,
  • When we might all as friends and neighbours live,
  • And for that blessing, O! what would she give!’--
  • ‘Then let us try and our endeavours blend,’
  • I said, ‘to bring these quarrels to an end.’
  • Thus, with one purpose in our hearts, we strove, 160
  • And, if no more, increased our secret love:
  • Love that, with such impediments in view,
  • To meet the growing danger stronger grew;
  • And from that time each heart, resolved and sure,
  • Grew firm in hope, and patient to endure.
  • “To those who know this season of delight
  • I need not strive their feelings to excite;
  • To those who know not the delight or pain,
  • The best description would be lent in vain;
  • And to the grieving, who will no more find 170
  • The bower of bliss, to paint it were unkind.
  • I pass it by, to tell that long we tried
  • To bring our fathers over to our side;
  • ’Twas bootless on their wives our skill to try,
  • For one would not, and one in vain, comply.
  • “First I began my father’s heart to move,
  • By boldly saying ‘We are born to love;’
  • My father answer’d, with an air of ease,
  • ‘Well! very well! be loving if you please!
  • Except a man insults us or offends, 180
  • In my opinion we should all be friends.’
  • “This gain’d me nothing; little would accrue
  • From clearing points so useless though so true;
  • But with some pains I brought him to confess,
  • That to forgive our wrongs is to redress.
  • “‘It might be so,’ he answer’d, yet with doubt
  • That it might not; ‘but what is this about?’
  • I dared not speak directly, but I strove
  • To keep my subjects, harmony and love.
  • “Coolly my father look’d, and much enjoy’d 190
  • The broken eloquence his eye destroy’d;
  • Yet less confused, and more resolved at last,
  • With bolder effort to my point I past;
  • And, fondly speaking of my peerless maid, }
  • I call’d her worth and beauty to my aid; }
  • ‘Then make her mine!’ I said, and for his favour pray’d. }
  • “My father’s look was one I seldom saw;
  • It gave no pleasure, nor created awe:
  • It was the kind of cool contemptuous smile
  • Of witty persons, overcharged with bile; 200
  • At first he spoke not, nor at last to me--
  • “‘Well now, and what if such a thing could be?
  • What, if the boy should his addresses pay
  • To the tall girl, would that old tory say?
  • I have no hatred to the dog--but, still,
  • It was some pleasure when I used him ill;
  • This I must lose if we should brethren be,
  • Yet may be not, for brethren disagree;
  • The fool is right--there is no bar in life
  • Against their marriage--let her be his wife.-- 210
  • Well, sir, you hear me!’--Never man complied,
  • And left a beggar so dissatisfied;
  • Though all was granted, yet was grace refused; }
  • I felt as one indulged, and yet abused; }
  • And yet, although provoked, I was not unamused. }
  • “In a reply like this appear’d to meet
  • All that encourage hope, and that defeat;
  • Consent, though cool, had been for me enough,
  • But this consent had something of reproof;
  • I had prepared my answer to his rage, 220
  • With his contempt I thought not to engage.
  • I, like a hero, would my castle storm,
  • And meet the giant in his proper form;
  • Then, conquering him, would set my princess free:
  • This would a trial and a triumph be--
  • When lo! a sneering menial brings the keys,
  • And cries in scorn, ‘Come, enter, if you please;
  • You’ll find the lady sitting on her bed,
  • And ’tis expected that you woo and wed.’
  • “Yet not so easy was my conquest found; 230
  • I met with trouble ere with triumph crown’d.
  • Triumph, alas!--My father little thought,
  • A king at home, how other minds are wrought;
  • True, his meek neighbour was a gentle squire,
  • And had a soul averse from wrath and ire;
  • He answer’d frankly, when to him I went,
  • ‘I give you little, sir, in my consent.’
  • He and my mother were to us inclined,
  • The powerless party with the peaceful mind;
  • But that meek man was destined to obey 240
  • A sovereign lady’s unremitted sway,
  • Who bore no partial, no divided rule;
  • All were obedient pupils in her school.
  • She had religious zeal, both strong and sour,
  • That gave an active sternness to her power;
  • But few could please her--she herself was one
  • By whom that deed was very seldom done.
  • With such a being, so disposed to feed
  • Contempt and scorn--how was I to succeed?
  • But love commanded, and I made my prayer 250
  • To the stern lady, with an humble air,
  • Said all that lovers hope, all measures tried
  • That love suggested, and bow’d down to pride.
  • “Yes! I have now the tygress in my eye--
  • When I had ceased and waited her reply,
  • A pause ensued; and then she slowly rose,
  • With bitter smile predictive of my woes,
  • A look she saw was plainly understood----
  • “‘Admire my daughter! Sir, you’re very good.
  • The girl is decent, take her all in all-- } 260
  • Genteel, we hope--perhaps a thought too tall; }
  • A daughter’s portion hers--you’ll think her }
  • fortune small. }
  • Perhaps her uncles, in a cause so good,
  • Would do a little for their flesh and blood;
  • We are not ill allied--and, say we make
  • Her portion decent, whither would you take?
  • Is there some cottage on your father’s ground,
  • Where may a dwelling for the girl be found?
  • Or a small farm--your mother understands
  • How to make useful such a pair of hands. 270
  • “‘But this we drop at present, if you please;
  • We shall have leisure for such things as these;
  • They will be proper ere you fix the day
  • For the poor girl to honour and obey;
  • At present therefore we may put an end
  • To our discourse--Good morrow to you, friend!’
  • “Then, with a solemn curtesy and profound, }
  • Her laughing eye she lifted from the ground, }
  • And left me lost in thought, and gazing idly round.-- }
  • “Still we had hope, and, growing bold in time, 280
  • I would engage the father in our crime;
  • But he refused, for, though he wish’d us well,
  • He said, ‘he must not make his house a hell;’--
  • And sure the meaning look that I convey’d
  • Did not inform him that the hell was made.
  • “Still hope existed that a mother’s heart
  • Would in a daughter’s feelings take a part;
  • Nor was it vain--for there is found access
  • To a hard heart, in time of its distress.
  • “The mother sicken’d, and the daughter sigh’d, 290
  • And we petition’d till our queen complied;
  • She thought of dying, and, if power must cease,
  • Better to make, than cause, th’ expected peace;
  • And sure, this kindness mixing with the blood,
  • Its balmy influence caused the body’s good;
  • For as a charm it work’d upon the frame
  • Of the reviving and relenting dame;
  • For, when recover’d, she no more opposed
  • Her daughter’s wishes.--Here contention closed.
  • “Then bliss ensued, so exquisitely sweet, 300
  • That with it once, once only, we can meet;
  • For, though we love again, and though once more
  • We feel th’ enlivening hope we felt before,
  • Still the pure freshness of the joy that cast
  • Its sweet around us is for ever past.
  • O! time to memory precious--ever dear, }
  • Though ever painful--this eventful year; }
  • What bliss is now in view! and now what woes appear! }
  • Sweet hours of expectation!--I was gone
  • To the vile town to press our business on; 310
  • To urge its formal instruments--and lo!
  • Comes with dire looks a messenger of wo,
  • With tidings sad as death!--With all my speed
  • I reach’d her home!--but that pure soul was freed--
  • She was no more--for ever shut that eye,
  • That look’d all soul, as if it could not die;
  • It could not see me--O! the strange distress }
  • Of these new feelings!--misery’s excess, }
  • What can describe it? words will not express. }
  • When I look back upon that dreadful scene, 320
  • I feel renew’d the anguish that has been,
  • And reason trembles----Yes! you bid me cease,
  • Nor try to think; but I will think in peace.--
  • Unbid and unforbidden, to the room
  • I went, a gloomy wretch amid that gloom;
  • And there the lovely being on her bed
  • Shrouded and cold was laid--Maria dead!
  • There was I left--and I have now no thought
  • Remains with me, how fear or fancy wrought;
  • I know I gazed upon the marble cheek, 330
  • And pray’d the dear departed girl to speak--
  • Further I know not, for, till years were fled,
  • All was extinguish’d--all with her was dead.
  • I had a general terror, dread of all
  • That could a thinking, feeling man befall;
  • I was desirous from myself to run,
  • And something, but I knew not what, to shun.
  • There was a blank from this I cannot fill;
  • It is a puzzle and a terror still.
  • Yet did I feel some intervals of bliss, 340
  • Ev’n with the horrors of a fate like this;
  • And dreams of wonderful construction paid
  • For waking horror--dear angelic maid!
  • “When peace return’d, unfelt for many a year,
  • And hope, discarded flatterer, dared t’ appear;
  • I heard of my estate, how free from debt,
  • And of the comforts life afforded yet;
  • Beside that best of comforts in a life
  • So sad as mine--a fond and faithful wife.
  • My gentle mother, now a widow, made 350
  • These strong attempts to guide me or persuade.
  • “‘Much time is lost,’ she said, ‘but yet my son
  • May, in the race of life, have much to run;
  • When I am gone, thy life to thee will seem
  • Lonely and sad, a melancholy dream;
  • Get thee a wife--I will not say to love,
  • But one, a friend in thy distress to prove;
  • One who will kindly help thee to sustain
  • Thy spirit’s burden in its hours of pain:
  • Say, will you marry?’--I in haste replied, 360
  • ‘And who would be the self-devoted bride?
  • There is a melancholy power that reigns
  • Tyrant within me--who would bear his chains,
  • And hear them clicking every wretched hour,
  • With will to aid me, but without the power?
  • But if such one were found with easy mind,
  • Who would not ask for raptures--I’m resign’d.’
  • “‘’Tis quite enough,’ my gentle mother cried;
  • ‘We leave the raptures, and will find the bride.’
  • “There was a lady near us, quite discreet, 370
  • Whom in our visits ’twas our chance to meet:
  • One grave and civil, who had no desire
  • That men should praise her beauties or admire;
  • She in our walks would sometimes take my arm,
  • But had no foolish fluttering or alarm;
  • She wish’d no heart to wound, no truth to prove,
  • And seem’d, like me, as one estranged from love;
  • My mother praised her, and with so much skill,
  • She gave a certain bias to my will;
  • But calm indeed our courtship; I profess’d 380
  • A due regard--My mother did the rest:
  • Who soon declared that we should love, and grow
  • As fond a couple as the world could show;
  • And talk’d of boys and girls with so much glee,
  • That I began to wish the thing could be.
  • “Still, when the day that soon would come was named,
  • I felt a cold fit, and was half ashamed;
  • But we too far proceeded to revoke,
  • And had been much too serious for a joke;
  • I shook away the fear that man annoys, 390
  • And thought a little of the girls and boys.
  • “A week remain’d--for seven succeeding days
  • Nor man nor woman might control my ways;
  • For seven dear nights I might to rest retire
  • At my own time, and none the cause require;
  • For seven blest days I might go in and out,
  • And none demand, ‘Sir, what are you about?’
  • For one whole week I might at will discourse
  • On any subject, with a freeman’s force.
  • “Thus while I thought, I utter’d, as men sing 400
  • In under-voice, reciting ‘With this ring;’
  • That, when the hour should come, I might not dread
  • These, or the words that follow’d, ‘I thee wed.’
  • “Such was my state of mind, exulting now
  • And then depress’d--I cannot tell you how--
  • When a poor lady, whom her friends could send
  • On any message, a convenient friend,
  • Who had all feelings of her own o’ercome,
  • And could pronounce to any man his doom;
  • Whose heart indeed was marble, but whose face 410
  • Assumed the look adapted to the case,
  • Enter’d my room, commission’d to assuage
  • What was foreseen, my sorrow and my rage.
  • “It seem’d the lady whom I could prefer,
  • And could my much-loved freedom lose for her,
  • Had bold attempts, but not successful, made,
  • The heart of some rich cousin to invade;
  • Who, half resisting, half complying, kept
  • A cautious distance, and the business slept.
  • “This prudent swain his own importance knew, 420
  • And swore to part the now affianced two.
  • Fill’d with insidious purpose, forth he went,
  • Profess’d his love, and woo’d her to consent.
  • ‘Ah! were it true!’ she sigh’d; he boldly swore
  • His love sincere, and mine was sought no more.
  • “All this the witch at dreadful length reveal’d,
  • And begg’d me calmly to my fate to yield:
  • Much pains she took engagements old to state,
  • And hoped to hear me curse my cruel fate,
  • Threat’ning my luckless life; and thought it strange 430
  • In me to bear the unexpected change;
  • In my calm feelings she beheld disguise,
  • And told of some strange wildness in my eyes.
  • “But there was nothing in the eye amiss,
  • And the heart calmly bore a stroke like this.
  • Not so my mother; though of gentle kind,
  • She could no mercy for the creature find.
  • “‘Vile plot!’ she said.--‘But, madam, if they plot,
  • And you would have revenge, disturb them not.’--
  • “‘What can we do, my son?’--‘Consult our ease, 440
  • And do just nothing, madam, if you please.’--
  • “‘What will be said?’--‘We need not that discuss;
  • Our friends and neighbours will do that for us.’--
  • “‘Do you so lightly, son, your loss sustain?’--
  • ‘Nay, my dear madam, but I count it gain.’--
  • “‘The world will blame us sure, if we be still.’--
  • ‘And, if we stir, you may be sure it will.’--
  • “‘Not to such loss your father had agreed.’--
  • ‘No, for my father’s had been loss indeed.’
  • “With gracious smile my mother gave assent, 450
  • And let th’ affair slip by with much content.
  • “Some old dispute, the lover meant should rise,
  • Some point of strife they could not compromise,
  • Displeased the squire--he from the field withdrew,
  • Not quite conceal’d, not fully placed in view;
  • But half advancing, half retreating, kept
  • At his old distance, and the business slept.
  • “Six years had past, and forty ere the six,
  • When Time began to play his usual tricks:
  • The locks once comely in a virgin’s sight, 460
  • Locks of pure brown, display’d th’ encroaching white;
  • The blood once fervid now to cool began,
  • And Time’s strong pressure to subdue the man.
  • I rode or walk’d as I was wont before,
  • But now the bounding spirit was no more;
  • A moderate pace would now my body heat,
  • A walk of moderate length distress my feet.
  • I show’d my stranger-guest those hills sublime,
  • But said, ‘the view is poor, we need not climb.’
  • At a friend’s mansion I began to dread 470
  • The cold neat parlour, and the gay glazed bed;
  • At home I felt a more decided taste,
  • And must have all things in my order placed;
  • I ceased to hunt, my horses pleased me less,
  • My dinner more; I learn’d to play at chess;
  • I took my dog and gun, but saw the brute
  • Was disappointed that I did not shoot;
  • My morning walks I now could bear to lose,
  • And bless’d the shower that gave me not to choose:
  • In fact, I felt a languor stealing on; 480
  • The active arm, the agile hand were gone;
  • Small daily actions into habits grew,
  • And new dislike to forms and fashion new;
  • I loved my trees in order to dispose, }
  • I number’d peaches, look’d how stocks arose, }
  • Told the same story oft--in short, began to prose. }
  • “My books were changed; I now preferred the truth
  • To the light reading of unsettled youth;
  • Novels grew tedious, but, by choice or chance,
  • I still had interest in the wild romance. 490
  • There is an age, we know, when tales of love
  • Form the sweet pabulum our hearts approve;
  • Then as we read we feel, and are indeed,
  • We judge, th’ heroic men of whom we read;
  • But in our after life these fancies fail;
  • We cannot be the heroes of the tale;
  • The parts that Cliffords, Mordaunts, Bevilles play
  • We cannot--cannot be so smart and gay.
  • “But all the mighty deeds and matchless powers
  • Of errant knights we never fancied ours, 500
  • And thus the prowess of each gifted knight
  • Must at all times create the same delight;
  • Lovelace a forward youth might hope to seem,
  • But Lancelot never--that he could not dream;
  • Nothing reminds us in the magic page
  • Of old romance, of our declining age.
  • If once our fancy mighty dragons slew,
  • This is no more than fancy now can do;
  • But when the heroes of a novel come,
  • Conquer’d and conquering, to a drawing-room, 510
  • We no more feel the vanity that sees
  • Within ourselves what we admire in these;
  • And so we leave the modern tale, to fly
  • From realm to realm with Tristram or Sir Guy.
  • “Not quite a Quixote, I could not suppose
  • That queens would call me to subdue their foes;
  • But, by a voluntary weakness sway’d,
  • When fancy call’d, I willingly obey’d.
  • “Such I became, and I believed my heart
  • Might yet be pierced by some peculiar dart 520
  • Of right heroic kind, and I could prove
  • Fond of some peerless nymph who deign’d to love,
  • Some high-soul’d virgin, who had spent her time
  • In studies grave, heroic and sublime;
  • Who would not like me less that I had spent
  • Years eight and forty, just the age of Kent--
  • But not with Kent’s discretion, for I grew
  • Fond of a creature whom my fancy drew:
  • A kind of beings who are never found
  • On middle-earth, but grow on fairy-ground. 530
  • “These found I not; but I had luck to find
  • A mortal woman of this fairy kind;
  • A thin, tall, upright, serious, slender maid,
  • Who in my own romantic regions stray’d;
  • From the world’s glare to this sweet vale retired,
  • To dwell unseen, unsullied, unadmired;
  • In all her virgin excellence, above
  • The gaze of crowds, and hopes of vulgar love.
  • “We spoke of noble deeds in happier times,
  • Of glorious virtues, of debasing crimes. 540
  • Warm was the season, and the subject too,
  • And therefore warm in our discourse we grew.
  • Love made such haste, that ere a month was flown
  • Since first we met, he had us for his own:
  • Riches are trifles in an hero’s sight,
  • And lead to questions low and unpolite;
  • I nothing said of money or of land,
  • But bent my knee, and fondly ask’d her hand;
  • And the dear lady, with a grace divine,
  • Gave it, and frankly answer’d, ‘it is thine.’ 550
  • “Our reading was not to romance confined,
  • But still it gave its colour to the mind;
  • Gave to our studies something of its force,
  • And made profound and tender our discourse;
  • Our subjects all, and our religion, took
  • The grave and solemn spirit of our book;
  • And who had seen us walk, or heard us read,
  • Would say, ‘these lovers are sublime indeed.’
  • “I knew not why, but when the day was named
  • My ardent wishes felt a little tamed; 560
  • My mother’s sickness then awaked my grief,
  • And yet, to own the truth, was some relief;
  • It left uncertain that decisive time
  • That made my feelings nervous and sublime.
  • “Still all was kindness, and at morn and eve
  • I made a visit, talk’d, and took my leave:
  • Kind were the lady’s looks, her eyes were bright,
  • And swam, I thought, in exquisite delight;
  • A lovely red suffused the virgin cheek,
  • And spoke more plainly than the tongue could speak; 570
  • Plainly all seem’d to promise love and joy,
  • Nor fear’d we ought that might our bliss destroy.
  • “Engaged by business, I one morn delay’d
  • My usual call on the accomplish’d maid;
  • But soon, that small impediment removed,
  • I paid the visit that decisive proved;
  • For the fair lady had, with grieving heart,
  • So I believed, retired to sigh apart:
  • I saw her friend, and begg’d her to entreat
  • My gentle nymph her sighing swain to meet. 580
  • “The gossip gone--What dæmon, in his spite }
  • To love and man, could my frail mind excite, }
  • And lead me curious on, against all sense of right? }
  • There met my eye, unclosed, a closet’s door--
  • Shame! how could I the secrets there explore?
  • Pride, honour, friendship, love, condemn’d the deed,
  • And yet, in spite of all, I could proceed!
  • I went, I saw--Shall I describe the hoard
  • Of precious worth in seal’d deposits stored
  • Of sparkling hues? Enough--enough is told, 590
  • ’Tis not for man such mysteries to unfold.
  • Thus far I dare--Whene’er those orbits swam
  • In that blue liquid that restrain’d their flame,
  • As showers the sunbeams--when the crimson glow
  • Of the red rose o’erspread those cheeks of snow,
  • I saw, but not the cause--’twas not the red
  • Of transient blush that o’er her face was spread;
  • ’Twas not the lighter red, that partly streaks
  • The Catherine pear, that brighten’d o’er her cheeks,
  • Nor scarlet blush of shame--but such disclose 600
  • The velvet petals of the Austrian rose,
  • When first unfolded: warm the glowing hue,
  • Nor cold as rouge, but deep’ning on the view.
  • Such were those cheeks--the causes unexplored
  • Were now detected in that secret hoard;
  • And ever to that rich recess would turn
  • My mind, and cause for such effect discern.
  • Such was my fortune, O! my friends, and such
  • The end of lofty hopes that grasp’d too much.
  • This was, indeed, a trying time in life, 610
  • I lost at once a mother and a wife;
  • Yet compensation came in time for these,
  • And what I lost in joy, I gain’d in ease.”--
  • “But,” said the squire, “did thus your courtship cease?
  • Resign’d your mistress her betroth’d in peace?”--
  • “Yes; and had sense her feelings to restrain,
  • Nor ask’d me once my conduct to explain;
  • But me she saw those swimming eyes explore,
  • And explanation she required no more.
  • Friend to the last, I left her with regret-- 620
  • Nay, leave her not, for we are neighbours yet.
  • “These views extinct, I travell’d, not with taste,
  • But so that time ran wickedly to waste;
  • I penn’d some notes, and might a book have made,
  • But I had no connexion with the trade;
  • Bridges and churches, towers and halls, I saw,
  • Maids and madonnas, and could sketch and draw:
  • Yes, I had made a book, but that my pride
  • In the not making was more gratified.
  • “There was one feeling upon foreign ground, 630
  • That more distressing than the rest was found:
  • That, though with joy I should my country see,
  • There none had pleasure in expecting me.
  • “I now was sixty, but could walk and eat;
  • My food was pleasant, and my slumbers sweet;
  • But what could urge me at a day so late
  • To think of women?--my unlucky fate.
  • It was not sudden; I had no alarms,
  • But was attack’d when resting on my arms;
  • Like the poor soldier: when the battle raged 640
  • The man escaped, though twice or thrice engaged;
  • But, when it ended, in a quiet spot
  • He fell, the victim of a random-shot.
  • “With my good friend the vicar oft I spent
  • The evening hours in quiet, as I meant;
  • He was a friend in whom, although untried
  • By ought severe, I found I could confide;
  • A pleasant, sturdy disputant was he, }
  • Who had a daughter--such the Fates decree, }
  • To prove how weak is man--poor yielding man, like me. }
  • “Time after time the maid went out and in, 651
  • Ere love was yet beginning to begin;
  • The first awakening proof, the early doubt,
  • Rose from observing she went in and out.
  • My friend, though careless, seem’d my mind to explore,
  • ‘Why do you look so often at the door?’
  • I then was cautious, but it did no good,
  • For she, at least, my meanings understood;
  • But to the vicar nothing she convey’d
  • Of what she thought--she did not feel afraid. 660
  • “I must confess, this creature in her mind
  • Nor face had beauty that a man would blind;
  • No poet of her matchless charms would write,
  • Yet sober praise they fairly would excite.
  • She was a creature form’d man’s heart to make
  • Serenely happy, not to pierce and shake;
  • If she were tried for breaking human hearts,
  • Men would acquit her--she had not the arts.
  • Yet without art, at first without design,
  • She soon became the arbitress of mine; 670
  • Without pretensions--nay, without pretence,
  • But by a native strange intelligence
  • Women possess when they behold a man
  • Whom they can tease, and are assured they can;
  • Then ’tis their soul’s delight and pride to reign }
  • O’er the fond slave, to give him ease or pain, }
  • And stretch and loose by turns the weighty viewless chain, }
  • “Though much she knew, yet nothing could she prove;
  • I had not yet confess’d the crime of love;
  • But, in an hour when guardian-angels sleep, 680
  • I fail’d the secret of my soul to keep;
  • And then I saw the triumph in those eyes
  • That spoke--‘Ay, now you are indeed my prize.’
  • I almost thought I saw compassion, too,
  • For all the cruel things she meant to do.
  • Well I can call to mind the managed air
  • That gave no comfort, that brought no despair,
  • That in a dubious balance held the mind,
  • To each side turning, never much inclined.
  • “She spoke with kindness--thought the honour high, 690
  • And knew not how to give a fit reply;
  • She could not, would not, dared not, must not deem
  • Such language proof of ought but my esteem;
  • It made her proud--she never could forget
  • My partial thoughts--she felt her much in debt:
  • She who had never in her life indulged
  • The thought of hearing what I now divulged:
  • I, who had seen so many and so much--
  • It was an honour--she would deem it such.
  • Our different years, indeed, would put an end } 700
  • To other views, but still her father’s friend }
  • To her, she humbly hoped, would his regard extend. }
  • Thus, saying nothing, all she meant to say,
  • She play’d the part the sex delights to play;
  • Now by some act of kindness giving scope
  • To the new workings of excited hope,
  • Then by an air of something like disdain,
  • But scarcely seen, repelling it again;
  • Then for a season, neither cold nor kind,
  • She kept a sort of balance in the mind, 710
  • And, as his pole a dancer on the rope,
  • The equal poise on both sides kept me up.
  • “Is it not strange that man can fairly view
  • Pursuit like this, and yet his point pursue;
  • While he the folly fairly will confess,
  • And even feel the danger of success?
  • But so it is, and nought the Circes care
  • How ill their victims with their poison fare,
  • When thus they trifle, and with quiet soul
  • Mix their ingredients in the maddening bowl: 720
  • Their high regard, the softness of their air,
  • The pitying grief that saddens at a prayer,
  • Their grave petitions for the peace of mind
  • That they determine you shall never find,
  • And all their vain amazement that a man
  • Like you should love--they wonder how you can.
  • “For months the idler play’d her wicked part,
  • Then fairly gave the secret of her heart.
  • ‘She hoped’--I now the smiling gipsy view--
  • ‘Her father’s friend would be her lover’s too; 730
  • Young Henry Gale’--‘But why delay so long?’--
  • ‘She could not tell--she fear’d it might be wrong,
  • But I was good’--I knew not, I was weak,
  • And spoke as love directed me to speak.
  • “When in my arms their boy and girl I take,
  • I feel a fondness for the mother’s sake;
  • But though the dears some softening thoughts excite,
  • I have no wishes for the father’s right.
  • “Now all is quiet, and the mind sustains
  • Its proper comforts, its befitting pains; 740
  • The heart reposes; it has had its share }
  • Of love, as much as it could fairly bear; }
  • And what is left in life that now demands its care? }
  • “For O! my friends, if this were all indeed;
  • Could we believe that nothing would succeed;
  • If all were but this daily dose of life,
  • Without a care or comfort, child or wife;
  • These walks for health with nothing more in view;
  • This doing nothing, and with labour too;
  • This frequent asking when ’tis time to dine; 750
  • This daily dosing o’er the news and wine;
  • This age’s riddle, when each day appears
  • So very long, so very short the years;
  • If this were all--but let me not suppose-- }
  • What then were life! whose virtues, trials, woes, }
  • Would sleep th’ eternal sleep, and there the scene would close. }
  • “This cannot be--but why has Time a pace
  • That seems unequal in our mortal race?
  • Quick is that pace in early life, but slow,
  • Tedious and heavy, as we older grow; 760
  • But yet, though slow, the movements are alike,
  • And with no force upon the memory strike,
  • And therefore tedious as we find them all,
  • They leave us nothing we in view recal;
  • But days that we so dull and heavy knew
  • Are now as moments passing in review,
  • And hence arises ancient men’s report,
  • That days are tedious, and yet years are short.”
  • TALES OF THE HALL.
  • BOOK XI.
  • _THE MAID’S STORY._
  • A Mother’s Advice--Trials for a young Lady--Ancient
  • Lovers--The Mother a Wife--Grandmamma--Genteel
  • Economy--Frederick, a young Collegian--Grandmamma
  • dies--Retreat with Biddy--Comforts of the
  • Poor--Return Home--Death of the Husband--Nervous
  • Disorders--Conversion--Frederick a Teacher--Retreat
  • to Sidmouth--Self-examination--The Mother
  • dies--Frederick a Soldier--Retirement with a
  • Friend--Their Happiness how interrupted--Frederick
  • an Actor--Is dismissed and supported--A last
  • Adventure.
  • TALES OF THE HALL.
  • BOOK XI.
  • _THE MAID’S STORY._
  • Three days remain’d their friend, and then again
  • The Brothers left themselves to entertain;
  • When spake the younger--“It would please me well
  • To hear thy spinster-friend her story tell;
  • And our attention would be nobly paid
  • Thus to compare the Bachelor and Maid.”
  • “Frank as she is,” replied the squire, “nor one
  • Is more disposed to show what she has done
  • With time, or time with her: yet all her care
  • And every trial she might not declare 10
  • To one a stranger; but to me, her friend,
  • She has the story of those trials penn’d;
  • These shalt thou hear, for well the maid I know,
  • And will her efforts and her conquests show.
  • Jacques is abroad, and we alone shall dine,
  • And then to give this lady’s tale be mine;
  • Thou wilt attend to this good spinster’s life,
  • And grieve and wonder she is not a wife;
  • But if we judge by either words or looks,
  • Her mode of life, her morals, or her books, 20
  • Her pure devotion, unaffected sense,
  • Her placid air, her mild benevolence,
  • Her gay good humour, and her manners free,
  • She is as happy as a maid can be;
  • If as a wife, I know not, and decline
  • Question like this, till I can judge of thine.”
  • Then from a secret hoard drew forth the squire }
  • His tale, and said, “Attention I require-- }
  • My verse you may condemn, my theme you must admire.” }
  • * * * * *
  • I to your kindness speak, let that prevail, 30
  • And of my frailty judge as beings frail.----
  • My father, dying, to my mother left
  • An infant charge, of all things else bereft;
  • Poor, but experienced in the world, she knew
  • What others did, and judged what she could do;
  • Beauty she justly weigh’d, was never blind
  • To her own interest, and she read mankind:
  • She view’d my person with approving glance,
  • And judged the way my fortune to advance;
  • Taught me betimes that person to improve, 40
  • And make a lawful merchandize of love;
  • Bade me my temper in subjection keep,
  • And not permit my vigilance to sleep;
  • I was not one, a miss, who might presume
  • Now to be crazed by mirth, now sunk in gloom;
  • Nor to be fretful, vapourish, or give way
  • To spleen and anger, as the wealthy may;
  • But I must please, and all I felt of pride,
  • Contempt, and hatred, I must cast aside.
  • “Have not one friend,” my mother cried, “not one; 50
  • That bane of our romantic triflers shun;
  • Suppose her true, can she afford you aid?
  • Suppose her false, your purpose is betray’d;
  • And then in dubious points, and matters nice,
  • How can you profit by a child’s advice?
  • While you are writing on from post to post,
  • Your hour is over, and a man is lost;
  • Girls of their hearts are scribbling, their desires,
  • And what the folly of the heart requires,
  • Dupes to their dreams--but I the truth impart, 60
  • You cannot, child, afford to have a heart.
  • Think nothing of it; to yourself be true,
  • And keep life’s first great business in your view--
  • Take it, dear Martha, for a useful rule,
  • She who is poor is ugly or a fool;
  • Or, worse than either, has a bosom fill’d
  • With soft emotions, and with raptures thrill’d.
  • “Read not too much, nor write in verse or prose,
  • For then you make the dull and foolish foes;
  • Yet those who do deride not nor condemn, 70
  • It is not safe to raise up foes in them;
  • For though they harm you not, as blockheads do,
  • There is some malice in the scribbling crew.”
  • Such her advice; full hard with her had dealt
  • The world, and she the usage keenly felt.
  • “Keep your good name,” she said, “and that to keep
  • You must not suffer vigilance to sleep.
  • Some have, perhaps, the name of chaste retain’d,
  • When nought of chastity itself remain’d;
  • But there is danger--few have means to blind 80
  • The keen-eyed world, and none to make it kind.
  • “And one thing more--to free yourself from foes
  • Never a secret to your friend disclose;
  • Secrets with girls, like loaded guns with boys,
  • Are never valued till they make a noise;
  • To show how trusted, they their power display;
  • To show how worthy, they the trust betray;
  • Like pence in children’s pockets secrets lie
  • In female bosoms--they must burn or fly.
  • “Let not your heart be soften’d; if it be, 90
  • Let not the man his softening influence see;
  • For the most fond will sometimes tyrants prove,
  • And wound the bosom where they trace the love.
  • But to your fortune look, on that depend }
  • For your life’s comfort; comforts that attend }
  • On wealth alone--wealth gone, they have their end.” }
  • Such were my mother’s cares to mend my lot,
  • And such her pupil they succeeded not.
  • It was conceived the person I had then
  • Might lead to serious thoughts some wealthy men, 100
  • Who, having none their purpose to oppose,
  • Would soon be won their wishes to disclose.
  • My mother thought I was the very child
  • By whom the old and amorous are beguiled:
  • So mildly gay, so ignorantly fair,
  • And pure, no doubt, as sleeping infants are;
  • Then I had lessons how to look and move,
  • And, I repeat, make merchandize of love.
  • Thrice it was tried if one so young could bring
  • Old wary men to buy the binding ring; 110
  • And on the taper finger, to whose tip
  • The fond old swain would press his withering lip,
  • Place the strong charm:--and one would win my heart
  • By re-assuming youth--a trying part;
  • Girls, he supposed, all knew the young were bold,
  • And he would show that spirit in the old;
  • In boys they loved to hear the rattling tongue,
  • And he would talk as idly as the young;
  • He knew the vices our Lotharios boast,
  • And he would show of every vice the ghost, 120
  • The evil’s self, without disguise or dress,
  • Vice in its own pure native ugliness:
  • Not, as the drunkenness of slaves, to prove
  • Vice hateful, but that seeing, I might love.
  • He drove me out, and I was pleased to see
  • Care of himself: it served as care for me;
  • For he would tell me, that he should not spare
  • Man, horse, or carriage, if I were not there:
  • Provoked at last, my malice I obey’d,
  • And smiling said, “Sir, I am not afraid.” 130
  • This check’d his spirit; but he said, “Could you
  • Have charge so rich, you would be careful too.”
  • And he, indeed, so very slowly drove,
  • That we dismiss’d the over-cautious love.
  • My next admirer was of equal age, }
  • And wish’d the child’s affection to engage, }
  • And keep the fluttering bird a victim in his cage. }
  • He had no portion of his rival’s glee,
  • But gravely praised the gravity in me;
  • Religious, moral, both in word and deed, 140
  • But warmly disputatious in his creed;
  • Wild in his younger time, as we were told,
  • And therefore like a penitent when old.
  • Strange he should wish a lively girl to look
  • Upon the methods his repentance took!
  • Then he would say, he was no more a rake
  • To squander money for his passions’ sake;
  • Yet, upon proper terms, as man discreet,
  • He with my mother was disposed to treat,
  • To whom he told, “the price of beauty fell 150
  • In every market, and but few could sell;
  • That trade in India, once alive and brisk,
  • Was over done, and scarcely worth the risk.”
  • Then stoop’d to speak of board, and what for life
  • A wife would cost----if he should take a wife.
  • Hardly he bargain’d, and so much desired,
  • That we demurr’d; and he, displeased, retired.
  • And now I hoped to rest, nor act again
  • The paltry part for which I felt disdain,
  • When a third lover came within our view, 160
  • And somewhat differing from the former two.
  • He had been much abroad, and he had seen
  • The world’s weak side, and read the hearts of men;
  • But all, it seem’d, this study could produce,
  • Was food for spleen, derision, and abuse;
  • He levell’d all, as one who had intent
  • To clear the vile and spot the innocent;
  • He praised my sense, and said I ought to be
  • From girl’s restraint and nursery maxims free;
  • He praised my mother; but he judged her wrong 170
  • To keep us from th’ admiring world so long;
  • He praised himself; and then his vices named,
  • And call’d them follies, and was not ashamed.
  • He more than hinted that the lessons taught
  • By priests were all with superstition fraught;
  • And I must think them for the crowd design’d,
  • Not to alarm the free and liberal mind.
  • Wisdom with him was virtue. They were wrong
  • And weak, he said, who went not with the throng;
  • Man must his passions order and restrain 180
  • In all that gives his fellow-subjects pain;
  • But yet of guilt he would in pity speak,
  • And as he judged, the wicked were the weak.
  • Such was the lover of a simple maid,
  • Who seem’d to call his logic to his aid,
  • And to mean something; I will not pretend
  • To judge the purpose of my reasoning friend,
  • Who was dismiss’d, in quiet to complain
  • That so much labour was bestow’d in vain.
  • And now my mother seem’d disposed to try 190
  • A life of reason and tranquillity.
  • Ere this, her health and spirits were the best,
  • Hers the day’s trifling, and the nightly rest;
  • But something new was in her mind instill’d;
  • Unquiet thoughts the matron bosom fill’d;
  • For five and forty peaceful years she bore
  • Her placid looks, and dress becoming wore:
  • She could a compliment with pleasure take,
  • But no absurd impression could it make.
  • Now were her nerves disorder’d; she was weak, 200
  • And must the help of a physician seek:
  • A Scotch physician, who had just began
  • To settle near us, quite a graceful man,
  • And very clever, with a soft address,
  • That would his meaning tenderly express.
  • Sick as my mother seem’d, when he inquired
  • If she was ill, he found her well attired;
  • She purchased wares so showy and so fine,
  • The venders all believed th’ indulgence mine;--
  • But I, who thrice was woo’d, had lovers three, 210
  • Must now again a very infant be;
  • While the good lady, twenty years a wife,
  • Was to decide the colour of his life:
  • And she decided. She was wont t’ appear
  • To these unequal marriages severe;
  • Her thoughts of such with energy she told,
  • And was repulsive, dignified, and cold;
  • But now, like monarchs weary of a throne,
  • She would no longer reign--at least alone.
  • She gave her pulse, and, with a manner sweet, 220
  • Wish’d him to feel how kindly they could beat;
  • And ’tis a thing quite wonderful to tell
  • How soon he understood them, and how well.
  • Now, when she married, I from home was sent,
  • With grandmamma to keep perpetual Lent;
  • For she would take me on conditions cheap,
  • For what we scarcely could a parrot keep:
  • A trifle added to the daily fare
  • Would feed a maiden who must learn to spare.
  • With grandmamma I lived in perfect ease; 230
  • Consent to starve, and I was sure to please.
  • Full well I knew the painful shifts we made }
  • Expenses all to lessen or evade, }
  • And tradesmen’s flinty hearts to soften and persuade. }
  • Poor grandmamma among the gentry dwelt
  • Of a small town, and all the honour felt;
  • Shrinking from all approaches to disgrace
  • That might be mark’d in so genteel a place;
  • Where every daily deed, as soon as done, }
  • Ran through the town as fast as it could run-- } 240
  • At dinners what appear’d--at cards who lost or won. }
  • Our good appearance through the town was known,
  • Hunger and thirst were matters of our own;
  • And you would judge that she in scandal dealt
  • Who told on what we fed, or how we felt.
  • We had a little maid, some four feet high,
  • Who was employ’d our household stores to buy;
  • For she would weary every man in trade,
  • And tease t’ assent whom she could not persuade.
  • Methinks I see her, with her pigmy light, 250
  • Precede her mistress in a moonless night;
  • From the small lantern throwing through the street
  • The dimm’d effulgence at her lady’s feet;
  • What time she went to prove her well-known skill
  • With rival friends at their beloved quadrille.
  • “And how’s your pain?” inquired the gentle maid,
  • For that was asking if with luck she play’d;
  • And this she answer’d as the cards decreed,
  • “O Biddy! ask not--very bad indeed;”
  • Or, in more cheerful tone, from spirit light, 260
  • “Why, thank you, Biddy, pretty well to-night.”
  • The good old lady often thought me vain,
  • And of my dress would tenderly complain;
  • But liked my taste in food of every kind,
  • As from all grossness, like her own, refined.
  • Yet when she hinted that on herbs and bread
  • Girls of my age and spirit should be fed,
  • Whate’er my age had borne, my flesh and blood,
  • Spirit and strength, the interdict withstood;
  • But, though I might the frugal soul offend 270
  • Of the good matron, now my only friend,
  • And though her purse suggested rules so strict,
  • Her love could not the punishment inflict;
  • She sometimes watch’d the morsel with a frown,
  • And sigh’d to see, but let it still go down.
  • Our butcher’s bill, to me a monstrous sum,
  • Was such that, summon’d, he forbore to come:
  • Proud man was he, and when the bill was paid,
  • He put the money in his bag and play’d,
  • Jerking it up, and catching it again, 280
  • And poising in his hand in pure disdain;
  • While the good lady, awed by man so proud,
  • And yet disposed to have her claims allow’d,
  • Balanced between humility and pride,
  • Stood a fall’n empress at the butcher’s side,
  • Praising his meat as delicate and nice----
  • “Yes, madam, yes! if people pay the price.”
  • So lived the lady, and so murmur’d I,
  • In all the grief of pride and poverty.
  • Twice in the year there came a note to tell 290
  • How well mamma, who hoped the child was well;
  • It was not then a pleasure to be styled,
  • By a mamma of such experience, ‘Child!’
  • But I suppressed the feelings of my pride,
  • Or other feelings set them all aside.
  • There was a youth from college, just the one
  • I judged mamma would value as a son;
  • He was to me good, handsome, learn’d, genteel,
  • I cannot now what then I thought reveal;
  • But, in a word, he was the very youth 300
  • Who told me what I judged the very truth,
  • That love like his and charms like mine agreed,
  • For all description they must both exceed.
  • Yet scarcely can I throw a smile on things
  • So painful, but that Time his comfort brings,
  • Or rather throws oblivion on the mind,
  • For we are more forgetful than resign’d.
  • We both were young, had heard of love and read,
  • And could see nothing in the thing to dread,
  • But like a simple pair our time employ’d 310
  • In pleasant views to be in time enjoy’d.
  • When Frederick came, the kind old lady smiled
  • To see the youth so taken with her child;
  • A nice young man, who came with unsoil’d feet
  • In her best room, and neither drank nor eat.
  • Alas! he planted in a vacant breast
  • The hopes and fears that robb’d it of its rest.
  • All now appear’d so right, so fair, so just,
  • We surely might the lovely prospect trust;
  • Alas! poor Frederick and his charmer found 320
  • That they were standing on fallacious ground:
  • All that the father of the youth could do
  • Was done--and now he must himself pursue
  • Success in life; and, honest truth to state,
  • He was not fitted for a candidate.
  • I, too, had nothing in this world below,
  • Save what a Scotch physician could bestow,
  • Who for a pittance took my mother’s hand;
  • And, if disposed, what had they to command?
  • But these were after fears, nor came t’ annoy 330
  • The tender children in their dreams of joy;
  • Who talk’d of glebe and garden, tithe and rent,
  • And how a fancied income should be spent;
  • What friends, what social parties we should see,
  • And live with what genteel economy;
  • In fact, we gave our hearts as children give,
  • And thought of living as our neighbours live.
  • Now, when assured ourselves that all was well,
  • ’Twas right our friends of these designs to tell;
  • For this we parted.--Grandmamma, amazed, 340
  • Upon her child with fond compassion gazed;
  • Then pious tears appear’d, but not a word
  • In aid of weeping till she cried, “Good Lord!”
  • She then, with hurried motion, sought the stairs,
  • And, calling Biddy, bade her come to prayers.
  • Yet the good lady early in her life
  • Was call’d to vow the duties of a wife;
  • She sought the altar by her friends’ advice,
  • No free-will offering, but a sacrifice;
  • But here a forward girl and eager boy 350
  • Dared talk of life, and turn their heads with joy!
  • To my mamma I wrote in just the way
  • I felt, and said what dreaming lasses say:
  • How handsome Frederick was, by all confess’d,
  • How well he look’d, how very well he dress’d;
  • With learning much, that would for both provide,
  • His mother’s darling, and his father’s pride;
  • ‘And then he loves me more than mind can guess,
  • Than heart conceive, or eloquence express.’
  • No letter came a doubtful mind to ease, 360
  • And, what was worse, no Frederick came to please;
  • To college gone--so thought our little maid--
  • But not to see me! I was much afraid;
  • I walk’d the garden round, and deeply sigh’d,
  • When grandmamma grew faint! and dropt, and died:
  • A fate so awful and so sudden drove
  • All else away, and half extinguish’d love.
  • Strange people came; they search’d the house around,
  • And, vulgar wretches! sold whate’er they found:
  • The secret hoards that in the drawers were kept, 370
  • The silver toys that with the tokens slept,
  • The precious beads, the corals with their bells,
  • That laid secure, lock’d up in secret cells,
  • The costly silk, the tabby, the brocade,
  • The very garment for the wedding made,
  • Were brought to sale, with many a jest thereon!
  • “Going--a bridal dress--for----Going!--Gone.”
  • That ring, dear pledge of early love and true, }
  • That to the wedded finger almost grew, }
  • Was sold for six and ten-pence to a Jew! } 380
  • Great was the fancied worth; but ah! how small
  • The sum thus made, and yet how valued all!
  • But all that to the shameful service went
  • Just paid the bills, the burial, and the rent;
  • And I and Biddy, poor deserted maids!
  • Were turn’d adrift to seek for other aids.
  • Now left by all the world, as I believed,
  • I wonder’d much that I so little grieved;
  • Yet I was frighten’d at the painful view
  • Of shiftless want, and saw not what to do. 390
  • In times like this the poor have little dread,
  • They can but work, and they shall then be fed;
  • And Biddy cheer’d me with such thoughts as this,
  • “You’ll find the poor have their enjoyments, Miss!”
  • Indeed I saw, for Biddy took me home
  • To a forsaken hovel’s cold and gloom;
  • And while my tears in plenteous flow were shed,
  • With her own hands she placed her proper bed,
  • Reserved for need. A fire was quickly made,
  • And food, the purchase for the day, display’d; 400
  • She let in air to make the damps retire,
  • Then placed her sad companion at her fire;
  • She then began her wonted peace to feel,
  • She [brought] her wool, and sought her favourite wheel;
  • That as she turn’d, she sang with sober glee,
  • “Begone, dull Care! I’ll have no more with thee”;
  • Then turn’d to me, and bade me weep no more,
  • But try and taste the pleasures of the poor.
  • When dinner came, on table brown and bare
  • Were placed the humblest forms of earthen ware, 410
  • With one blue dish, on which our food was placed,
  • For appetite provided, not for taste.
  • I look’d disgusted, having lately seen
  • All so minutely delicate and clean;
  • Yet, as I sate, I found to my surprise
  • A vulgar kind of inclination rise,
  • And near my humble friend, and nearer, drew,
  • Tried the strange food, and was partaker too.
  • I walk’d at eve, but not where I was seen,
  • And thought, with sorrow, what can Frederick mean? 420
  • I must not write, I said, for I am poor;
  • And then I wept till I could weep no more.
  • Kind-hearted Biddy tried my griefs to heal,
  • This is a nothing to what others feel;
  • Life has a thousand sorrows worse than this,
  • A lover lost is not a fortune, Miss!
  • One goes, another comes, and which is best
  • There is no telling--set your heart at rest.”
  • At night we pray’d--I dare not say a word
  • Of our devotion, it was so absurd; 430
  • And very pious upon Biddy’s part,
  • But mine were all effusions of the heart;
  • While she her angels call’d their peace to shed,
  • And bless the corners of our little bed.
  • All was a dream! I said, is this indeed }
  • To be my life? and thus to lodge and feed, }
  • To pay for what I have, and work for what I need? }
  • Must I be poor? and Frederick, if we meet,
  • Would not so much as know me in the street?
  • Or, as he walk’d with ladies, he would try 440
  • To be engaged as we were passing by--
  • And then I wept to think that I should grow
  • Like them whom he would be ashamed to know.
  • On the third day, while striving with my fate,
  • And hearing Biddy all its comforts state,
  • Talking of all her neighbours, all her schemes,
  • Her stories, merry jests, and warning dreams,
  • With tales of mirth and murder--O! the nights
  • Past, said the maiden, in such dear delights,
  • And I was thinking, can the time arrive 450
  • When I shall thus be humbled, and survive?--
  • Then I beheld a horse and handsome gig,
  • With the good air, tall form, and comely wig
  • Of Doctor Mackey--I in fear began
  • To say, Good heaven, preserve me from the man!
  • But fears ill reason--heaven to such a mind
  • Had lent a heart compassionate and kind.
  • From him I learnt that one had call’d to know
  • What with my hand my parents could bestow;
  • And when he learn’d the truth, in high disdain 460
  • He told my fate, and home return’d again.
  • “Nay, be not grieved, my lovely girl; but few
  • Wed the first love, however kind and true;
  • Something there comes to break the strongest vow,
  • Or mine had been my gentle Mattie now.
  • When the good lady died--but let me leave
  • All gloomy subjects--’tis not good to grieve.”
  • Thus the kind Scotchman soothed me; he sustain’d
  • A father’s part, and my submission gain’d,
  • Then my affection; and he often told 470
  • My sterner parent that her heart was cold.
  • He grew in honour--he obtain’d a name--
  • And now a favourite with the place became;
  • To me most gentle, he would condescend
  • To read and reason, be the guide and friend;
  • He taught me knowledge of the wholesome kind,
  • And fill’d with many a useful truth my mind.
  • Life’s common burden daily lighter grew;
  • And even Frederick lessen’d in my view.
  • Cold and repulsive as he once appear’d, 480
  • He was by every generous act endear’d;
  • And, above all, that he with ardour fill’d
  • My soul for truth--a love by him instill’d;
  • Till my mamma grew jealous of a maid
  • To whom an husband such attention paid:
  • Not grossly jealous, but it gave her pain,
  • And she observed, “He made her daughter vain;
  • And what his help to one who must not look
  • To gain her bread by poring on a book?”
  • This was distress; but this, and all beside, 490
  • Was lost in grief--my kinder parent died;
  • When praised and loved, when joy and health he gave,
  • He sank lamented to an early grave;
  • Then love and we the parent and the child,
  • Lost in one grief, allied and reconciled.
  • Yet soon a will, that left me half his worth,
  • To the same spirit gave a second birth;
  • But ’twas a mother’s spleen; and she indeed
  • Was sick, and sad, and had of comfort need.
  • I watch’d the way her anxious spirit took, 500
  • And often found her musing o’er a book;
  • She changed her dress, her church, her priest, her prayer,
  • Join’d a new sect, and sought her comforts there.
  • Some strange, coarse people came, and were so free
  • In their addresses, they offended me;
  • But my mamma threw all her pride away--
  • More humble she as more assuming they.
  • “And what,” they said, as having power, “are now
  • The inward conflicts? do you strive? and how?”
  • Themselves confessing thoughts so new and wild, 510
  • I thought them like the visions of a child.
  • “Could we,” they ask, “our best good deeds condemn? }
  • And did we long to touch the garment’s hem? }
  • And was it so with us? for so it was with them.” }
  • A younger few assumed a softer part,
  • And tried to shake the fortress of my heart;
  • To this my pliant mother lent her aid,
  • And wish’d the winning of her erring maid.
  • I was constrain’d her female friends to hear;
  • But suffer’d not a bearded convert near; 520
  • Though more than one attempted, with their whine.
  • And “Sister! sister! how that heart of thine?”
  • But this was freedom I for ever check’d:
  • Mine was a heart no brother could affect.
  • But, “would I hear the preacher, and receive
  • The dropping dew of his discourse at eve?
  • The soft, sweet words?” I gave two precious hours
  • To hear of gifts and graces, helps and powers;
  • When a pale youth, who should dismiss the flock,
  • Gave to my bosom an electric shock. 530
  • While in that act, he look’d upon my face
  • As one in that all-equalizing place;
  • Nor, though he sought me, would he lay aside
  • Their cold, dead freedom, or their dull, sad pride.
  • Of his conversion he with triumph spoke,
  • Before he orders from a bishop took;
  • Then how his father’s anger he had braved,
  • And, safe himself, his erring neighbours saved.
  • Me he rejoiced a sister to behold
  • Among the members of his favourite fold; 540
  • He had not sought me; the availing call
  • Demanded all his love, and had it all;
  • But, now thus met, it must be heaven’s design.--
  • Indeed! I thought; it never shall be mine!--
  • Yes, we must wed. He was not rich: and I
  • Had of the earthly good a mean supply;
  • But it sufficed. Of his conversion then
  • He told, and labours in converting men;
  • For he was chosen all their bands among--
  • Another Daniel! honour’d, though so young. 550
  • He call’d me sister; show’d me that he knew
  • What I possess’d; and told what it would do;
  • My looks, I judge, express’d my full disdain; }
  • But it was given to the man in vain: }
  • They preach till they are proud, and pride disturbs the brain. }
  • Is this the youth once timid, mild, polite?
  • How odious now, and sick’ning to the sight!
  • Proud that he sees, and yet so truly blind,
  • With all this blight and mildew on the mind!
  • Amazed, the solemn creature heard me vow 560
  • That I was not disposed to take him now.
  • “Then, art thou changed, fair maiden? changed thy heart?”
  • I answered, “No; but I perceive thou art.”
  • Still was my mother sad, her nerves relax’d,
  • And our small income for advice was tax’d;
  • When I, who long’d for change and freedom, cried,
  • ‘Let sea and Sidmouth’s balmy air be tried.’
  • And so they were, and every neighbouring scene,
  • That make the bosom, like the clime, serene;
  • Yet were her teachers loth to yield assent; 570
  • And not without the warning voice we went;
  • And there was secret counsel all unknown
  • To me--but I had counsel of my own.
  • And now there pass’d a portion of my time
  • In ease delicious, and in joy sublime--
  • With friends endear’d by kindness--with delight
  • In all that could the feeling mind excite,
  • Or please, excited; walks in every place
  • Where we could pleasure find and beauty trace,
  • Or views at night, where on the rocky steep 580
  • Shines the full moon, or glitters on the deep.
  • Yes, they were happy days; but they are fled!
  • All now are parted--part are with the dead!
  • Still it is pleasure, though ’tis mix’d with pain,
  • To think of joys that cannot live again--
  • Here cannot live; but they excite desire
  • Of purer kind, and heavenly thoughts inspire!
  • And now my mother, weaken’d in her mind,
  • Her will, subdued before, to me resign’d.
  • Wean’d from her late directors, by degrees 590
  • She sank resign’d, and only sought for ease.
  • In a small town upon the coast we fix’d,
  • Nor in amusement with associates mix’d.
  • My years--but other mode will I pursue,
  • And count my time by what I sought to do.
  • And was that mind at ease? could I avow
  • That no once leading thoughts engaged me now?
  • Was I convinced th’ enthusiastic man
  • Had ruin’d what the loving boy began?
  • I answer doubting--I could still detect 600
  • Feelings too soft--yet him I could reject:
  • Feelings that came when I had least employ--
  • When common pleasures I could least enjoy--
  • When I was pacing lonely in the rays
  • Of a full moon, in lonely walks and ways--
  • When I was sighing o’er a tale’s distress,
  • And paid attention to my Bible less.
  • These found, I sought my remedies for these;
  • I suffer’d common things my mind to please,
  • And common pleasures; seldom walk’d alone, 610
  • Nor when the moon upon the waters shone;
  • But then my candles lit, my window closed,
  • My needle took, and with my neighbours prosed;
  • And in one year--nay, ere the end of one,
  • My labour ended, and my love was done.
  • My heart at rest, I boldly look’d within,
  • And dared to ask it of its secret sin;
  • Alas! with pride it answer’d, “Look around,
  • And tell me where a better heart is found.”
  • And then I traced my virtues; O! how few, 620
  • In fact, they were, and yet how vain I grew;
  • Thought of my kindness, condescension, ease,
  • My will, my wishes, nay, my power to please;
  • I judged me prudent, rational, discreet,
  • And void of folly, falsehood and deceit;
  • I read, not lightly, as I some had known,
  • But made an author’s meaning all my own;
  • In short, what lady could a poet choose
  • As a superior subject for his muse?
  • So said my heart; and Conscience straight replied-- }
  • “I say the matter is not fairly tried: } 631
  • I am offended, hurt, dissatisfied. }
  • First of the Christian graces, let me see
  • What thy pretensions to humility?
  • Art thou prepared for trial? Wilt thou say
  • ‘I am this being,’ and for judgment pray?
  • And, with the gallant Frenchman, wilt thou cry,
  • When to thy judge presented, ‘thus am I--
  • Thus was I formed--these talents I possess’d--
  • So I employed them--and thou know’st the rest?’” 640
  • Thus Conscience; and she then a picture drew,
  • And bade me think and tremble at the view.
  • One I beheld--a wife, a mother--go
  • To gloomy scenes of wickedness and wo;
  • She sought her way through all things vile and base,
  • And made a prison a religious place;
  • Fighting her way--the way that angels fight
  • With powers of darkness--to let in the light.
  • Tell me, my heart, hast thou such victory won
  • As this, a sinner of thy sex, has done, 650
  • And calls herself a sinner? What art thou?
  • And where thy praise and exaltation now?
  • Yet is she tender, delicate, and nice,
  • And shrinks from all depravity and vice;
  • Shrinks from the ruffian gaze, the savage gloom,
  • That reign where guilt and misery find an home--
  • Guilt chain’d, and misery purchased; and with them
  • All we abhor, abominate, condemn--
  • The look of scorn, the scowl, th’ insulting leer
  • Of shame, all fix’d on her who ventures here. 660
  • Yet all she braved! she kept her stedfast eye
  • On the dear cause, and brush’d the baseness by.
  • So would a mother press her darling child
  • Close to her breast, with tainted rags defiled.
  • But thou hast talents truly! say, the ten:
  • Come, let us look at their improvement then.
  • What hast thou done to aid thy suffering kind,
  • To help the sick, the deaf, the lame, the blind?
  • Hast thou not spent thy intellectual force
  • On books abstruse, in critical discourse? 670
  • Wasting in useless energy thy days,
  • And idly listening to their common praise,
  • Who can a kind of transient fame dispense,
  • And say--“a woman of exceeding sense.”
  • Thus tried, and failing, the suggestions fled,
  • And a corrected spirit reign’d instead.
  • My mother yet was living; but the flame
  • Of life now flash’d, and fainter then became;
  • I made it pleasant, and was pleased to see
  • A parent looking as a child to me. 680
  • And now our humble place grew wond’rous gay; }
  • Came gallant persons in their red array: }
  • All strangers welcome there, extremely welcome they. }
  • When in the church I saw inquiring eyes
  • Fix’d on my face with pleasure and surprise;
  • And soon a knocking at my door was heard;
  • And soon the lover of my youth appear’d--
  • Frederick, in all his glory, glad to meet,
  • And say, “his happiness was now complete.”
  • He told his flight from superstitious zeal; 690
  • But first what torments he was doom’d to feel:
  • The tender tears he saw from women fall--
  • The strong persuasions of the brethren all--
  • The threats of crazed enthusiasts, bound to keep
  • The struggling mind, and awe the straying sheep--
  • From these, their love, their curses, and their creed,
  • Was I by reason and exertion freed.
  • Then, like a man who often had been told
  • And was convinced success attends the bold,
  • His former purpose he renew’d, and swore 700
  • He never loved me half so well before:
  • Before he felt a something to divide
  • The heart, that now had not a love beside.
  • In earlier times had I myself amused,
  • And first my swain perplex’d, and then refused--
  • Cure for conceit; but now in purpose grave,
  • Strong and decisive the reply I gave.
  • Still he would come, and talk as idlers do,
  • Both of his old associates and his new;
  • Those who their dreams and reveries receive 710
  • For facts, and those who would not facts believe.
  • He now conceived that truth was hidden, placed
  • He knew not where, she never could be traced;
  • But that in every place, the world around,
  • Might some resemblance of the nymph be found.
  • Yet wise men knew these shadows to be vain,
  • Such as our true philosophers disdain--
  • “They laugh to see what vulgar minds pursue-- }
  • Truth, as a mistress, never in their view-- }
  • But there the shadow flies, and that, they cry, is true.” }
  • Thus, at the college and the meeting train’d, 721
  • My lover seem’d his acmè to have gain’d;
  • With some compassion I essay’d a cure:
  • “If truth be hidden, why art thou so sure?”
  • This he mistook for tenderness, and cried,
  • “If sure of thee, I care not what beside!”
  • Compelled to silence, I, in pure disdain,
  • Withdrew from one so insolent and vain;
  • He then retired; and, I was kindly told,
  • In pure compassion grew estranged and cold. 730
  • My mother died; but, in my grief, drew near
  • A bosom friend, who dried the useless tear;
  • We lived together: we combined our shares
  • Of the world’s good, and learn’d to brave its cares.
  • We were the ladies of the place, and found
  • Protection and respect the country round;
  • We gave, and largely, for we wish’d to live
  • In good repute--for this ’tis good to give;
  • Our annual present to the priest convey’d
  • Was kindly taken--we in comfort pray’d. 740
  • There none molested in the crimson pew
  • The worthy ladies, whom the vicar knew;
  • And we began to think that life might be--
  • Not happy all, but innocently free.
  • My friend in early life was bound to one
  • Of gentle kindred, but a younger son.
  • He fortune’s smile with perseverance woo’d,
  • And wealth beneath the burning sun pursued.
  • There, urged by love and youthful hope, he went,
  • Loth; but ’twas all his fortune could present. 750
  • From hence he wrote; and, with a lover’s fears,
  • And gloomy fondness, talk’d of future years;
  • To her devoted, his Priscilla found
  • His faithful heart still suffering with its wound,
  • That would not heal. A second time she heard;
  • And then no more; nor lover since appear’d.
  • Year after year the country’s fleet arrived,
  • Confirm’d her fear, and yet her love survived;
  • It still was living; yet her hope was dead,
  • And youthful dreams, nay, youth itself, was fled; 760
  • And he was lost: so urged her friends, so she
  • At length believed, and thus retired with me.
  • She would a dedicated vestal prove,
  • And give her virgin vows to heaven and love;
  • She dwelt with fond regret on pleasures past,
  • With ardent hope on those that ever last;
  • Pious and tender, every day she view’d
  • With solemn joy our perfect solitude;
  • Her reading, that which most delighted her,
  • That soothed the passions, yet would gently stir; 770
  • The tender, softening, melancholy strain, }
  • That caused not pleasure, but that vanquished pain, }
  • In tears she read, and wept, and long’d to read again. }
  • But other worlds were her supreme delight,
  • And there, it seem’d, she long’d to take her flight;
  • Yet patient, pensive, arm’d by thoughts sublime,
  • She watch’d the tardy steps of lingering time.
  • My friend, with face that most would handsome call,
  • Possess’d the charm that wins the heart of all;
  • And, thrice entreated by a lover’s prayer, 780
  • She thrice refused him with determined air.
  • “No! had the world one monarch, and was he
  • All that the heart could wish its lord to be--
  • Lovely and loving, generous, brave, and true--
  • Vain were his hopes to waken hers anew!”
  • For she was wedded to ideal views,
  • And fancy’s prospects, that she would not lose,
  • Would not forego to be a mortal’s wife,
  • And wed the poor realities of life.
  • There was a day, ere yet the autumn closed, 790
  • When, ere her wintry wars, the earth reposed;
  • When from the yellow weed the feathery crown,
  • Light as the curling smoke, fell slowly down;
  • When the wing’d insect settled in our sight,
  • And waited wind to recommence her flight;
  • When the wide river was a silver sheet,
  • And on the ocean slept th’ unanchor’d fleet;
  • When from our garden, as we look’d above,
  • There was no cloud, and nothing seem’d to move;
  • Then was my friend in ecstasies--she cried, 800
  • “There is, I feel there is, a world beside!
  • Martha, dear Martha! we shall hear not then
  • Of hearts distress’d by good or evil men,
  • But all will constant, tender, faithful be--
  • So had I been, and so had one with me;
  • But in this world the fondest and the best
  • Are the most tried, most troubled, and distress’d:
  • This is the place for trial, here we prove,
  • And there enjoy, the faithfulness of love.
  • “Nay, were he here in all the pride of youth, 810
  • With honour, valour, tenderness, and truth,
  • Entirely mine, yet what could I secure,
  • Or who one day of comfort could insure?
  • “No! all is closed on earth, and there is now
  • Nothing to break th’ indissoluble vow;
  • But in that world will be th’ abiding bliss,
  • That pays for every tear and sigh in this.”
  • Such her discourse, and more refined it grew,
  • Till she had all her glorious dream in view;
  • And she would further in that dream proceed 820
  • Than I dare go, who doubtfully agreed.
  • Smiling I ask’d, again to draw the soul
  • From flight so high, and fancy to control,
  • “If this be truth, the lover’s happier way
  • Is distant still to keep the purposed day;
  • The real bliss would mar the fancied joy,
  • And marriage all the dream of love destroy.”
  • She softly smiled, and, as we gravely talk’d,
  • We saw a man who up the gravel walk’d--
  • Not quite erect, nor quite by age depress’d; 830
  • A travell’d man, and as a merchant dress’d.
  • Large chain of gold upon his watch he wore,
  • Small golden buckles on his feet he bore;
  • A head of gold his costly cane display’d,
  • And all about him love of gold betray’d.
  • This comely man moved onward, and a pair
  • Of comely maidens met with serious air;
  • Till one exclaim’d, and wildly look’d around,
  • “O heav’n, ’tis Paul!” and dropt upon the ground;
  • But she recover’d soon, and you must guess 840
  • What then ensued, and how much happiness.
  • They parted lovers, both distress’d to part;
  • They met as neighbours, heal’d, and whole of heart.
  • She in his absence look’d to heaven for bliss;
  • He was contented with a world like this:
  • And she prepared in some new state to meet
  • The man now seeking for some snug retreat.
  • He kindly told her he was firm and true,
  • Nor doubted her, and bade her then adieu!
  • “What shall I do?” the sighing maid began, 850
  • “How lost the lover! O, how gross the man!”
  • For the plain dealer had his wish declared,
  • Nor she, devoted victim! could be spared.
  • He spoke as one decided; she as one
  • Who fear’d the love, and would the lover shun.
  • “O Martha, sister of my soul! how dies
  • Each lovely view! for can I truth disguise,
  • That this is he? No! nothing shall persuade:
  • This is a man the naughty world has made,
  • An eating, drinking, buying, bargaining man-- 860
  • And can I love him? No! I never can.
  • What once he was, what fancy gave beside,
  • Full well I know, my love was then my pride;
  • What time has done, what trade and travel wrought,
  • You see! and yet your sorrowing friend is sought;
  • But can I take him?”--“Take him not,” I cried,
  • “If so averse--but why so soon decide?”
  • Meantime a daily guest the man appear’d,
  • Set all his sail, and for his purpose steer’d;
  • Loud and familiar, loving, fierce and free, 870
  • He overpower’d her soft timidity:
  • Who, weak and vain, and grateful to behold
  • The man was hers, and hers would be the gold--
  • Thus sundry motives, more than I can name,
  • Leagued on his part, and she a wife became.
  • A home was offer’d, but I knew too well
  • What comfort was with married friends to dwell;
  • I was resign’d, and had I felt distress,
  • Again a lover offer’d some redress.
  • Behold, a hero of the buskin hears 880
  • My loss, and with consoling love appears.
  • Frederick was now a hero on the stage,
  • In all its glories, rhapsody, and rage;
  • Again himself he offer’d, offer’d all
  • That his an hero of the kind can call:
  • He for my sake would hope of fame resign,
  • And leave the applause of all the world for mine.
  • Hard fate was Frederick’s never to succeed,
  • Yet ever try--but so it was decreed.
  • His mind was weakened; he would laugh and weep, 890
  • And swore profusely I had murder’d sleep,
  • Had quite unmann’d him, cleft his heart in twain,
  • And he should never be himself again.
  • He _was_ himself: weak, nervous, kind, and poor,
  • Ill dress’d and idle, he besieged my door;
  • Borrow’d,--or, worse; made verses on my charms,
  • And did his best to fill me with alarms.
  • I had some pity, and I sought the price
  • Of my repose--my hero was not nice:
  • There was a loan, and promise I should be } 900
  • From all the efforts of his fondness free, }
  • From hunger’s future claims, or those of vanity. }
  • “Yet,” said he, bowing, “do to study take!
  • O! what a Desdemona wouldst thou make!”
  • Thus was my lover lost; yet even now
  • He claims one thought, and this we will allow.
  • His father lived to an extreme old age,
  • But never kind!--his son had left the stage,
  • And gain’d some office, but an humble place,
  • And that he lost! Want sharpen’d his disgrace, 910
  • Urged him to seek his father--but too late:
  • His jealous brothers watch’d and barr’d the gate.
  • The old man died; but there is one who pays
  • A moderate pension for his latter days;
  • Who, though assured inquiries will offend,
  • Is ever asking for this unknown friend:
  • Some partial lady, whom he hopes to find
  • As to his wants so to his wishes kind.
  • “Be still,” a cool adviser sometimes writes--
  • “Nay, but,” says he, “the gentle maid invites-- 920
  • Do, let me know the young! the soft! the fair!”
  • “Old man,” ’tis answer’d, “take thyself to prayer!
  • Be clean, be sober, to thy priest apply,
  • And--dead to all around thee--learn to die!”
  • Now had I rest from life’s strong hopes and fears,
  • And no disturbance mark’d the flying years;
  • So on in quiet might those years have past,
  • But for a light adventure, and a last.
  • A handsome boy, from school-day bondage free,
  • Came with mamma to gaze upon the sea; 930
  • With soft blue eye he look’d upon the waves,
  • And talk’d of treacherous rocks, and seamen’s graves.
  • There was much sweetness in his boyish smile,
  • And signs of feelings frank, that knew not guile.
  • The partial mother, of her darling proud,
  • Besought my friendship, and her own avow’d;
  • She praised her Rupert’s person, spirit, ease,
  • How fond of study, yet how form’d to please.
  • In our discourse he often bore a part,
  • And talk’d, heaven bless him, of his feeling heart; 940
  • He spoke of pleasures souls like his enjoy,
  • And hated Lovelace like a virtuous boy;
  • He felt for Clementina’s holy strife,
  • And was Sir Charles as large and true as life;
  • For Virtue’s heroines was his soul distress’d;
  • True love and guileless honour fill’d his breast,
  • When, as the subjects drew the frequent sigh, }
  • The tear stood trembling in his large blue eye, }
  • And softly he exclaim’d, “Sweet, sweetest sympathy!” }
  • When thus I heard the handsome stripling speak, 950
  • I smiled assent, and thought to pat his cheek;
  • But when I saw the feelings blushing there,
  • Signs of emotions strong, they said--forbear!
  • The youth would speak of his intent to live
  • On that estate which heaven was pleased to give--
  • There with the partner of his joys to dwell,
  • And nurse the virtues that he loved so well;
  • The humble good of happy swains to share,
  • And from the cottage drive distress and care;
  • To the dear infants make some pleasures known, 960
  • And teach, he gravely said, the virtues to his own.
  • He loved to read in verse, and verse-like prose,
  • The softest tales of love-inflicted woes;
  • When, looking fondly, he would smile and cry,
  • “Is there not bliss in sensibility?”
  • We walk’d together, and it seem’d not harm
  • In linking thought with thought, and arm with arm;
  • Till the dear boy would talk too much of bliss,
  • And indistinctly murmur--“such as this.”
  • When no maternal wish her heart beguiled, 970
  • The lady call’d her son “her darling child;”
  • When with some nearer view her speech began,
  • She changed her phrase, and said, “the good young man!”
  • And lost, when hinting of some future bride,
  • The woman’s prudence in the mother’s pride.
  • Still decent fear and conscious folly strove
  • With fond presumption and aspiring love;
  • But now too plain to me the strife appear’d,
  • And what he sought I knew, and what he fear’d:
  • The trembling hand and frequent sigh disclosed 980
  • The wish that prudence, care, and time opposed.
  • Was I not pleased, will you demand?--Amused
  • By boyish love, that woman’s pride refused?
  • This I acknowledge, and from day to day
  • Resolved no longer at such game to play;
  • Yet I forbore, though to my purpose true,
  • And firmly fix’d to bid the youth adieu.
  • There was a moonlight eve, serenely cool,
  • When the vast ocean seem’d a mighty pool;
  • Save the small rippling waves that gently beat, 990
  • We scarcely heard them falling, at our feet.
  • His mother absent, absent every sound
  • And every sight that could the youth confound;
  • The arm, fast lock’d in mine, his fear betray’d,
  • And, when he spoke not, his designs convey’d;
  • He oft-times gasp’d for breath, he tried to speak,
  • And studying words, at last had words to seek.
  • Silent the boy, by silence more betray’d,
  • And fearing lest he should appear afraid,
  • He knelt abruptly, and his speech began-- 1000
  • “Pity the pangs of an unhappy man.”
  • “Be sure,” I answer’d, “and relieve them too--
  • But why that posture? What the woes to you?
  • To feel for others’ sorrows is humane,
  • But too much feeling is our virtue’s bane.
  • “Come, my dear Rupert! now your tale disclose,
  • That I may know the sufferer and his woes.
  • Know, there is pain that wilful man endures,
  • That our reproof and not our pity cures;
  • For though for such assumed distress we grieve, 1010
  • Since they themselves as well as us deceive,
  • Yet we assist not.”----The unhappy youth,
  • Unhappy then, beheld not all the truth.
  • “O! what is this?” exclaim’d the dubious boy;
  • “Words that confuse the being they destroy?
  • So have I read the gods to madness drive
  • The man condemn’d with adverse fate to strive.
  • O! make thy victim, though by misery, sure,
  • And let me know the pangs I must endure;
  • For, like the Grecian warrior, I can pray, 1020
  • Falling, to perish in the face of day.”
  • “Pretty, my Rupert; and it proves the use
  • Of all that learning which the schools produce.
  • But come, your arm--no trembling, but attend
  • To sober truth, and a maternal friend.
  • “You ask for pity?”--“O! indeed I do.”
  • “Well then, you have it, and assistance too:
  • Suppose us married!”--“O! the heavenly thought!”
  • “Nay--nay, my friend, be you by wisdom taught;
  • For wisdom tells you, love would soon subside, 1030
  • Fall, and make room for penitence and pride;
  • Then would you meet the public eye, and blame
  • Your private taste, and be o’erwhelm’d with shame:
  • How must it then your bosom’s peace destroy
  • To hear it said, ‘The mother and her boy!’
  • And then to show the sneering world it lies,
  • You would assume the man, and tyrannize;
  • Ev’n Time, Care’s general soother, would augment
  • Your self-reproaching, growing discontent.
  • “Add twenty years to my precarious life, 1040
  • And lo! your aged, feeble, wailing wife;
  • Displeased, displeasing, discontented, blamed;
  • Both, and with cause, ashaming and ashamed.
  • When I shall bend beneath a press of time,
  • Thou wilt be all erect in manhood’s prime;
  • Then wilt thou fly to younger minds t’ assuage }
  • Thy bosom’s pain, and I in jealous age }
  • Shall move contempt, if still; if active, rage; }
  • And, though in anguish all my days are past,
  • Yet far beyond thy wishes they may last-- 1050
  • May last till thou, thy better prospects fled,
  • Shall have no comfort when thy wife is dead.
  • “Then thou in turn, though none will call thee old,
  • [Wilt] feel thy spirit fled, thy bosom cold;
  • No strong or eager wish to make the will,
  • Life will appear to stagnate and be still,
  • As now with me it slumbers: O! rejoice
  • That I attend not to that pleading voice;
  • So will new hopes this troubled dream succeed,
  • And one will gladly hear my Rupert plead.” 1060
  • Ask you, while thus I could the youth deny
  • Was I unmoved?--Inexorable I,
  • Fix’d and determined; thrice he made his prayer,
  • With looks of sadness first, and then despair;
  • Thrice doom’d to bear refusal, not exempt,
  • At the last effort, from a slight contempt.
  • “Did his distress, his pains, your joy excite?--”
  • No; but I fear’d his perseverance might.
  • Was there no danger in the moon’s soft rays,
  • To hear the handsome stripling’s earnest praise? 1070
  • Was there no fear that while my words reproved
  • The eager youth, I might myself be moved?
  • Not for his sake alone I cried “persist
  • No more,” and with a frown the cause dismiss’d.
  • Seek you th’ event?--I scarcely need reply:
  • Love, unreturn’d, will languish, pine, and die.
  • We lived awhile in friendship; and with joy
  • I saw depart in peace the amorous boy.
  • We met some ten years after, and he then
  • Was married, and as cool as married men; 1080
  • He talk’d of war and taxes, trade and farms,
  • And thought no more of me, or of my charms.
  • We spoke; and when, alluding to the past,
  • Something of meaning in my look I cast,
  • He, who could never thought or wish disguise,
  • Look’d in my face with trouble and surprise.
  • To kill reserve, I seized his arm, and cried,
  • “Know me, my lord!” when laughing, he replied,
  • Wonder’d again, and look’d upon my face,
  • And seem’d unwilling marks of time to trace; 1090
  • But soon I brought him fairly to confess,
  • That boys in love judge ill of happiness.
  • Love had his day--to graver subjects led,
  • My will is govern’d, and my mind is fed;
  • And to more vacant bosoms I resign
  • The hopes and fears that once affected mine.
  • ERRATA.
  • VOL. II.
  • [_The lines cited from the several poems are those of the poems;
  • those cited from title-pages containing mottoes are the lines of the
  • pages._]
  • Page 6 l. 21 for _or_ read _but_. p. 13 l. 5 for _With_ read _In_.
  • _ib._ l. 13 for 2 read 1. _ib._ l. 17 for _Act II. Scene 7_ read
  • _Act IV. Scene 2_. p. 27 l. 5 several lines omitted after _and such_.
  • _ib._ l. 9 for 4 read 3. _ib._ l. 12 for _o’er_ read _in_. _ib._ l.
  • 14 for _Egean_ read _Ægean_. _ib._ l. 15 for _Emilia_ read _Æmilia_.
  • _ib._ l. 16 for 5 read 1. _ib._ l. 18 for _she bad_ read _he bade_.
  • _ib._ l. 21 for _th’ insolent_ read _the insolent_. _ib._ l. 24 for
  • _fate_ read _state_. _ib._ l. 25 for _you_ read _ye_. p. 28 l. 13
  • for _Pain_ read _Pains_. p. 41 l. 3 for _then_ read _there . . ._.
  • _ib._ l. 11 for 3 read 1. p. 47 l. 204 for _Chesterfield_ read
  • _‘Chesterfield.’_ p. 56 l. 4 for _ever true and humble_ read _a
  • true and humble wife_. _ib._ l. 10 for _The fatal time_ read _The
  • leisure and the fearful time_. _ib._ l. 11 for _all ceremonies and_
  • read _the ceremonious_. _ib._ l. 18 for _impiety, thou impious_ read
  • _impiety and impious_. _ib._ l. 20 for 2 read 1. p. 67 l. 4 for
  • _peculiar_ read _particular_. _ib._ l. 5 for _she_ read _he_. _ib._
  • l. 6 for _her_ read _his_. _ib._ l. 7 for _her_ read _his_. _ib._
  • l. 16 for _Tempest_ read _The Tempest_. p. 69 l. 50 for _Marcus_
  • read _‘Marcus.’_ p. 76 l. 344 for _divine!_ read _‘divine!’_. p. 87
  • l. 3 for _make a curtsy_ read _make curtsy_. _ib._ l. 4 for _but
  • for_ read _but yet for_. _ib._ l. 11 for _amble, you nick-name_
  • read _you amble, and you lisp, and nick-name_. _ib._ l. 15 for _Am
  • I contemn’d_ read _Stand I condemn’d_. _ib._ l. 16 for _II_. read
  • _III_. p. 92 l. 166 _‘Chaste, sober, solemn’ and ‘devout.’_ Not in
  • inverted commas. p. 93 l. 197 for _what woman_ read _that woman_. p.
  • 95 l. 265 for _than_ read _then_. p. 101 l. 4 for _Or_ read _Could_.
  • _ib._ a line omitted after ll. 6, 7 and 8 respectively. p. 103 l. 46
  • for _Lea_ read _lea_. p. 113 l. 8 for _As You Like It_ read _Much
  • Ado about Nothing, Act II. Scene 1_. _ib._ l. 11 _Act IV. Scene 3_
  • omitted. _ib._ l. 14 for _hence_ read _home_. _ib._ ll. 16-20 ’_Be
  • the Sweet Helen’s Knell_‘ is printed as immediately preceding the
  • rest of these lines, instead of following them 28 lines later. For
  • _He left a wife_ read _He lost a wife_. In the Shakspearean text
  • these words form the latter part of a line, and are followed by a
  • line and a half here omitted. p. 116 l. 75 for _beauty bless’d_ read
  • _beauty-bless’d_. p. 124 after line 3 a line omitted. _ib._ l. 9 for
  • _sometimes_ read _something_. _ib._ l. 13 for _Measure for Measure,
  • Act II. Scene 4_ read _Much Ado about Nothing, Act III. Scene 1_.
  • p. 134 l. 3 for _heavens_ read _heaven_. p. 145 l. 11 for _with purged_
  • read _in purged_. p. 159 l. 13 for _upon_ read _of_. _ib._ l. 16 for
  • _pitiable_ read _pitiful and_. _ib._ l. 17 for _But thou art_ read
  • _Thou stern_. p. 185 l. 13 for _for it_ read _for ’t_. p. 194 l. 311
  • for _dosed_ read _dozed_. p. 211 l. 8 for _in thee_ read _of thee_.
  • _ib._ l. 12 for _but tyrannous_ read _but it is tyrannous_. p. 228
  • ll. 3 and 6 _She_ and _Her_ are substituted for _He_ and _His_ in
  • the original passage. _ib._ l. 9 for _there is_ read _there’s_. p.
  • =242= l. 4 for _Taming the Shrew_ read _Taming of the Shrew_. _ib._
  • l. 7 for _Act V. Scene 2_ read _Act II. Scene 1_. p. =249= l. 233
  • for _has_ read _had_. p. =251= l. 6 for _with my troll-my-dames_
  • read _with troll-my-dames_. _ib._ l. 7 for _Scene 2_ read _Scene 3_.
  • _ib._ l. 9 for _holding_ read _hiding_. p. =253= l. 31 for _of as_
  • read _as of_. p. =259= l. 272 for _seems_ read _seemed_. p. =261=
  • l. 372 for _I boy_ read _I a boy_. p. =264= l. 6 for _practice may_
  • read _practices_. _ib._ l. 8 for _with hinds_ read _with his hinds_.
  • _ib._ l. 12 for _being what_ read _being the thing_. p. =276= l. 10
  • for _He has_ read _He is_. p. =308= l. 200 for _know_ read _knew_. p.
  • =341= l. 298 for _hear_ read _heard_. p. =351= l. 184 for _look’d_
  • read _look_. p. =381= l. 344 for _bounded_ read _bonded_. p. =391=
  • l. 738 for _comfort_ read _comforts_. p. =397= l. 91 for _it_ read
  • _its_. p. =409= ll. 556-8 three inverted commas, instead of four,
  • prefixed to each line, and no single inverted comma at the end of
  • l. 558. p. =413= l. 716 for _parent’s_ read _parents’_. p. =415= l.
  • 807 for _peasant’s_ read _peasants’_. p. =423= l. 116 for _Has_ read
  • _Had_. p. =449= l. 731 no inverted comma before and after the words
  • But why delay so long? p. 461 ll. 358-9 no inverted commas prefixed
  • to these lines, and no inverted comma at the end of l. 359. p. =462=
  • l. 404 for _bought_ read _brought_. p. =466= l. 567 no inverted
  • comma at beginning or end of this line. p. =468= l. 636 no third
  • inverted comma before and after the words _I am this being_. _ib._
  • ll. 638-40 no third inverted comma before the word _thus_ in l. 638
  • or before ll. 639 and 640 or at the end of l. 640. p. =469= ll. 692-7
  • two inverted commas before each of these lines and at the close of
  • l. 697. p. =470= ll. 714-7 two inverted commas before each of these
  • lines and at the end of l. 717. p. =478= l. 1054 for _will_ read
  • _wilt_.
  • VARIANTS.
  • =TALES=. Variants in edition of 1812 (first edition), and ‘Original
  • MS.’ readings given as footnotes in Life and Poems (1834). These
  • latter are distinguished as ‘O.M.’
  • Preface: p. =5=, l. 1. present Volume. p. =10=, l. 22. Ahitophel. l.
  • 23. Ogg. pp. =10-11=. _instead of_ l. 30-l. 5:
  • It has been asked, if Pope was a poet? No one, I conceive, will
  • accuse me of vanity in bringing forward this query, or suppose me
  • capable of comparing myself with a man so eminent: but persons very
  • unlike in other respects may, in one particular, admit of comparison,
  • or rather the same question may be applied to both. Now, who will
  • complain that a definition of poetry, which excludes a great part of
  • the writings of Pope, will shut out him? I do not lightly take up
  • the idea, but I conceive that by that kind of definition, one half
  • of our most agreeable English versification (most generally held, by
  • general readers, to be agreeable and good) will be excluded, and an
  • equal quantity, at least of very moderate, or, to say truly, of very
  • wretched composition, will be taken in. (O.M.)
  • =Tale 1.= _The edition of 1834 contains the following note to the
  • Quotations_: These mottoes are many, because there is a reference
  • in them not only to the characters, but frequently to the incidents
  • also; and they are all taken from Shakspeare, because I could more
  • readily find them in his scenes, than in the works of any other poet
  • to whom I could have recourse. (O.M.)
  • l. 310. tyger. l. 371. skulks.
  • =Tale 2.= Second Quotation. Hath written. Third Quotation. fire and
  • flood. _instead of_ ll. 191-4:
  • In a clear eve the lover sail’d, and one
  • As clear and bright on aged Allen shone:
  • On the spot sanction’d by the last embrace
  • The old man stood! and sigh’d upon the place. (O.M.)
  • _instead of_ ll. 253-274:
  • Oft to his children had the father told
  • Where he resided in the years of old;
  • When, without thought, his feeling and his pride
  • The native town adorn’d and magnified;
  • The streets, the markets, and the quays were all
  • Spacious and grand, and every building tall:
  • The tower and church were sea-marks leagues from land--
  • Men were amazed to see them look so grand!
  • His father’s house was then in Allen’s eyes,
  • But far increased in beauty and in size;
  • And their small area where the schoolboys play’d,
  • Room for an army had his fancy made:
  • But now the dark and feeble mind debased,
  • Contracted, sullied all that fancy graced,
  • All spaces dwindled--streets but alleys seem’d:
  • Then dreamt he now, or absent had he dream’d?
  • The church itself, the lofty tower, the scene
  • Of so much glory, was debased and mean:
  • The mind each object in dull clothing dress’d,
  • And its own sadness on each scene impress’d. (O.M.)
  • =Tale 3.= l. 57. expence. l. 92. indure. _instead of_ ll. 105-7:
  • Because in beaten ways we ever tread,
  • And man by man, as sheep by sheep, is led,
  • None start aside, but in the paths proceed, (O.M.)
  • l. 377. controul. l. 398. controul. l. 502. conns. l. 514. controul.
  • =Tale 4.= Third Quotation, sundred. l. 32. teazing.
  • =Tale 5.= l. 334. expence. l. 348. extacy. l. 492. teaz’d. l. 662.
  • controuling. l. 703. curt’sy’d.
  • =Tale 6.= First Quotation. curtesy . . . curtesy. Third Quotation.
  • gig. l. 226. doat.
  • =Tale 7.= l. 46. besprinkled. l. 162. rustics. l. 370. needs.
  • =Tale 8.= First Quotation. pityless. l. 36. teaze. l. 39. saught. l.
  • 256. controul. l. 325. intranc’d.
  • =Tale 9.= l. 15. mamas. l. 32. Montague. l. 55. to his failings
  • blind. l. 56. the mind. l. 57. pourtray’d. l. 187. we knew not--’twas
  • her fate.
  • =Tale 10.= Third Quotation. this spring. l. 106. dykes. l. 116, note.
  • Laver. l. 148. Trav’ler. l. 162. Trav’ler’s. l. 211. teiz’d. l. 288.
  • Trav’ler. l. 321. Trav’ler. l. 349. dykes. l. 354. Trav’ler.
  • =Tale 11.= l. 15. Sampson. l. 42. was dignity. l. 127. Africk’s. l.
  • 233, arbor’s. l. 297. bad.
  • =Tale 13.= l. 307. Colin.
  • =Tale 14.= Fourth Quotation. rooted sinew. l. 89. Who knows?--or
  • build. l. 352. teaze. l. 377. controul. l. 495, wo.
  • =Tale 15.= l. 10. earthy. l. 158. controul. l. 164. conceiving that
  • the coming day. l. 248. are these sinners. l. 406. temptations.
  • =Tale 16.= l. 499. secresy. l. 581. æra.
  • =Tale 17.= Third Quotation, l. 3. act of our necessities. l. 139.
  • controul. l. 299. paniers. l. 409. smoaky.
  • =Tale 18.= l. 196. controul.
  • =Tale 19.= l. 154. controul. l. 180. controul.
  • =Tale 20.= l. 119. expence. l. 132. expence. l. 204. teaz’d. l. 212.
  • t’excuse it as a woman’s way.
  • =Tale 21.= l. 47. teaze. l. 50. controul. l. 53. uncontroul’d. l.
  • 186. tenour.
  • =TALES OF THE HALL. Variants in edition of 1819 (first edition).=
  • =‘Original MS.’ readings given as footnotes in Life and Poems
  • (1834).= These are distinguished as ‘O.M.’
  • =Variants in Crabbe MSS. in the possession of the Cambridge
  • University Press.= These are distinguished as ‘U.P.’
  • =Variants in Crabbe MSS. in the possession of Mrs Mackay.= These are
  • distinguished as ‘M.’
  • =Book I.=
  • l. 151. inforce.
  • =Book II.=
  • _Instead of_ ll. 15-20:
  • Yet with this difference might observers find
  • Some kindred powers and features of the mind.
  • A love of honour in both spirits ruled,
  • But here by temper, there by trouble cool’d;
  • Their favourite objects, studies, themes, pursuits,
  • Had various beauties, merits, ends, and fruits. (O.M.)
  • _instead of_ ll. 63-70:
  • Joel nor time nor seasons could command,
  • He took his comforts as they came to hand;
  • Nor came they often, nor delay’d so long,
  • That they were habits either weak or strong;
  • What seem’d habitual was the urgent force
  • Of stern necessity that shaped his course. (O.M.)
  • =Book III.=
  • _Instead of_ ll. 7-14:
  • “Oh! there’s a wicked little world in schools,
  • Where mischief suffers and oppression rules;
  • Where mild, quiescent children oft endure
  • What a long placid life shall fail to cure;
  • Where virtuous boys, who shrink from early sin,
  • Meet guilty rogues, who love to draw them in,
  • Who take a pleasure at their just surprise,
  • Who make them wicked, and proclaim them wise.” (O.M.)
  • _instead of_ ll. 23-34:
  • “Behold him now, without the least pretence
  • To such command----behold him five years hence;
  • Mix’d in the world, his interest in his sight,
  • How smooth he looks, his language how polite,
  • No signs of anger, insult, scorn are seen;
  • The address is mild, the temper is serene;
  • His fiery passions are resign’d and still,
  • They yield to reason, or obey his will.
  • But are they dead?--Not so: should he attain
  • The wish’d-for fortune, they will live again;
  • Then shall the Tyrant be once more obey’d,
  • And all be Fags, whom he can make afraid.” (O.M.)
  • _instead of_ ll. 90-7:
  • “But when he sits in judgment, and decrees
  • What men should rule us, and what books should please,
  • And thus the merit of a critic gains,
  • Only for blowing out a Frenchman’s brains,
  • I must demur, and in my mind retrace
  • The accountant Hector, and his rueful face;
  • But on he blunders! thinking he is wise,
  • Who has much strength, no matter where it lies.” (O.M.)
  • _instead of_ ll. 192-7:
  • “Again was made the offer, and again,
  • With threats, with noble promises, in vain.
  • When my Lord saw that nothing could be done,
  • He nobly cried,--‘I’ll fit him as my son;
  • Sir, will you go?’ As meekly as a saint,
  • Charles humbly begg’d to stay on land and paint.” (O.M.)
  • _instead of_ ll. 204-29:
  • “Stubborn though mild, and fearing to offend,
  • He gain’d his freedom, and he lost his friend:
  • My Lord appeal’d to all the world, and cried,--
  • ‘There never breathed such stubbornness and pride;
  • Do what you please, Sir, I am justified.’
  • So said my Lord; for he was grieved to find
  • Such vile ingratitude in base mankind.
  • “The boy then wrote for bread. I saw him thrice;
  • His passions placid, he without a vice:
  • He sometimes painted, but was uninspired
  • By genius, unprotected, unadmired;
  • But pensive, sober, diligent, employ’d }
  • His every hour, his life without a void, }
  • He sought for little, nothing he enjoy’d. }
  • I fear he thought himself, because distress’d,
  • An injured genius, by the world oppress’d.” (O.M.)
  • _instead of_ ll. 253-60:
  • “Years past away; I think some twenty-five,
  • Again I saw him, and but just alive,
  • And still forbidding, silent, sullen, proud,
  • As one whose claims were just, and not allow’d.
  • He saw me, saw my sympathy with pain, }
  • Received my humble offers with disdain, }
  • And sternly told me not to come again.” } (O.M.)
  • _instead of_ ll. 296-301:
  • “Thou, Charles! unaided by a noble friend,
  • Hadst spent a careful life, as others spend;
  • But when thy patron’s vanity and thine
  • Were made by cruel fortune to combine,
  • ’Twas then th’ unhappy wretch was lifted high
  • On golden stilts, and seem’d to touch the sky;
  • But when the tempter hand withdraws the props,
  • The vision closes, and the victim drops.” (O.M.)
  • _instead of_ ll. 362-87:
  • “The boy was tall, but with a mincing air,
  • Blue, languid eyes, pale cheek, and flaxen hair;
  • His temper fretful, but his spirits mild, }
  • Loved by mamma, by all her maidens styled }
  • The wittiest darling, and the sweetest child. }
  • In those dear times, when that mamma had rule,
  • There was much play, few lessons, and no school;
  • But, oh! misfortune--when the lady died,
  • No second wife her honour’d place supplied,
  • But one dishonour’d; and she quickly sent
  • All who had grief to grieve in banishment:
  • No longer now was there the rush of joy,
  • The flood of fondness o’er the happy boy;
  • No more indulgence by the maidens shown,
  • For master’s pleasure, purchase of their own;
  • But they as spies were to new service sent,
  • And the sad boy to school and banishment.” (O.M.)
  • Book IV.
  • _Instead of_ ll. 3-22:
  • “Brother,” said George, “when I beheld you last,
  • The time how distant!--Well! the time is past--
  • I had not then these comforts you behold,
  • Things that amuse us when we’re getting old.
  • These Pictures now! experienced men will say,
  • They’re genuine all, and so perhaps they may;
  • They cost the money, that I’m sure is true,
  • And therefore, Richard, I will say it too.
  • Music you find; for hither ladies come;
  • They make infernal uproar in the room.
  • I bear it. Why? because I must expect
  • To pay for honour, and I fear neglect.
  • And if attraction from your person flies,
  • You must some pleasure from your purse devise:
  • But this apart--the triflers should not know
  • That they can comfort or regret bestow.” (O.M.)
  • _instead of_ ll. 76-7:
  • “That gun itself, that breaks upon the ear,
  • Has something suited to the dying year.”
  • “The dying partridge!” cried, with much disdain,
  • Th’ offended ’Squire--“Our laws are made in vain:
  • The country, Richard, would not be amiss,
  • But for these plagues, and villanies like this;
  • Wealth breeds the curse that fixes on the land,
  • And strife and heritage go hand in hand.” (O.M.)
  • _instead of_ ll. 88-130:
  • They walk’d along, through mead and shaded wood,
  • And stubble ground, where late abundance stood,
  • And in the vale, where winter waters glide,
  • O’er pastures stretching up the mountain side.
  • With a shrewd smile, but mix’d with look severe,
  • The landlord view’d the promise of the year.
  • “See! that unrivall’d flock! they, they alone
  • Have the vast body on the slender bone;
  • They are the village boast, the country’s theme,
  • Fleece of such staple! flesh in such esteem!”
  • Richard gave praise, but not in rapturous style;
  • He chose his words, and spoke them with a smile:
  • “Brother,” said he, “and if I take you right,
  • I am full glad--these things are your delight;
  • I see you proud, but,”--speaking half aside--
  • “Is, now, the pleasure equal to the pride?”
  • A transient flush on George’s face appear’d,
  • Cloudy he look’d, and then his looks were cleared:
  • “Look at yon hind!” said he,--“in very deed,
  • His is the pride and pleasure in the breed;
  • He has delight, he judges--I the name,
  • And the whole praise--I speak it to my shame.
  • Oh! Richard, Richard, tell me, if you can,
  • What will engage and fix the mind of man?”
  • “Suppose,” said he, “we look about the green, }
  • In yonder cots some objects may be seen, }
  • T’ excite our pity, or relieve our spleen,” }
  • “Oh! they are thieves and blockheads,” George replied,
  • “Unjust, ungrateful, and unsatisfied;
  • To grasp at all, their study, thought, and care,
  • All would be thieves and plunderers, if they dare;
  • His envious nature not a clown conceals,
  • But bluntly shows the insolence he feels.”
  • “And whence,” said Richard, “should the vice proceed,
  • But from their want of knowledge, and their need?
  • Let them know more, or let them better feel,
  • And I’ll engage they’ll neither threat nor steal.”
  • “Brother,” said George, “your pity makes you blind
  • To all that’s vile and odious in mankind;
  • ’T is true your notions may appear divine,
  • But for their justice--let us go and dine.” (O.M.)
  • =Book V.=
  • l. 182. woe. l. 415. controul.
  • =Book VI.=
  • _The Book opens:_
  • The evening came: “My Brother, what employs
  • Thy mind?” said Richard; “what disturbs thy joys?
  • Hast thou not all the good the world can give,
  • And liv’st a life that kings might sigh to live?
  • Can nothing please thee? Thou wert wont to seize
  • On passing themes, and make the trifles please.
  • Thy Muse has many a pleasant fancy bred,
  • And clothed in lively manner!----is she dead?”
  • “Not dead but sick, and I too weary grow
  • Of reaping nothing from the things I sow.
  • What is the pleasure--thou perhaps canst say--
  • Of playing tunes, if none can hear thee play?
  • Timid and proud, the world I cannot court,
  • Nor show my labours for the critic’s sport.
  • Hast thou the courage, Richard? hast thou tried
  • An Author’s perils? hast thou felt his pride?
  • For vain the efforts, and they quickly tire,
  • If we alone our precious things admire.”
  • “Not so,” said Richard, and acquired a look
  • That some expression from his feelings took;
  • “Oh! my dear Brother, if this Muse of mine,
  • Who prompts the idle thought, the trifling line,
  • If she who calmly looks around, nor more
  • Muse of the Mad, the Foolish, and the Poor,
  • If she can pleasure--and she can--impart,
  • Can wing the fancy, can enlarge the heart;
  • What must a Muse of strength, of force, of fire,
  • In the true Poet’s ample mind inspire?
  • What must he feel, who can the soul express
  • Of saint or hero?--he must be no less.
  • Nor less of evil minds he knows the pain,
  • But quickly lost the anguish and the stain,
  • While with the wisest, happiest, purest, best,
  • His soul assimilates and loves to rest.
  • Crowns would I spurn, and empires would I lose,
  • For inspiration from the sacred Muse.”
  • “A song,” said George, “and I my secret store,
  • Confined in dust and darkness, will explore.
  • Poet with poet, bard and critic too,
  • We fear no censure, and dread no review.
  • A judge so placed must be to errors kind,
  • And yield the mercy that he hopes to find;
  • Begin then, Richard, put thy fears aside; }
  • Shall I condemn, who must myself be tried? }
  • In me at least my Brother may confide. }
  • In hope of wearing, I shall yield the bays,
  • And my self-love shall give my rival praise.” (O.M.)
  • _instead of_ ll. 18-30:
  • “Wilt thou explain? I shall not grieve to share
  • A lover’s sorrow, or a husband’s care?”
  • Kindness like this had moved a sterner man,
  • Richard much more. He smiled, and thus began:--
  • “No more I loved the sea; that plunge had tamed
  • My blood, by youth in idleness inflamed:
  • To my affairs I forced my mind t’ attend,
  • And sought the town to counsel with a friend.
  • Much we debated--Could I now resign
  • My earthly views, and look to things divine?
  • Could I to merchandise my mind persuade,
  • And wait in patience for the gain of trade?
  • Or if I could not early habits quit,
  • Had I a stock, and could subsist on wit?
  • “Measures like these became my daily themes,
  • My airy castles, my projector’s dreams.
  • But health, so long neglected, now became
  • No more the blessing of my failing frame:
  • A fever seized it, of that dangerous kind,
  • That while it taints the blood, infects the mind.
  • I traced her flight as Reason slowly fled,
  • And her last act assured me Hope was dead:
  • But Reason err’d, and when she came again
  • To aid the senses and direct the brain,
  • She found a body weak, but well disposed
  • For life’s enjoyments, and the grave was closed.
  • But danger past, and my recovery slow, }
  • I sought the health that mountain gales bestow, }
  • And quiet walks where peace and violets grow. }
  • “Now, my dear Brother, when the languid frame
  • Has this repose, and when the blood is tame,
  • Yet strength increasing, and when every hour
  • Gives some increase of pleasure and of power,
  • When every sense partakes of fresh delight,
  • And every object wakes an appetite;
  • When the mind rests not, but for ever roves
  • On all around, and as it meets approves;
  • Then feels the heart its bliss, that season then is love.
  • “Think of me thus disposed, and think me then
  • Retired from crowded streets and busy men,
  • In a neat cottage, by the sweetest stream
  • That ever warbled in a poet’s dream;
  • An ancient wood behold, so vast, so deep,
  • That hostile armies might in safety sleep,
  • Where loving pairs had no observers near,
  • And fearing not themselves, had none to fear;
  • There to fair walks, fresh meadows, and clear skies,
  • I fled as flee the weary and the wise.” (O.M.)
  • _instead of_ ll. 174-5:
  • “With whom she tarried, a delighted guest!
  • Delightful ever! blessing still and bless’d.” (O.M.)
  • l. 359. woe.
  • =Book VII=.
  • _Instead of_ ll. 533-4:
  • And thus she said, and with an air designed
  • To look and be affectionate and kind. (U.P.)
  • l. 551. woe. _instead of_ ll. 593-8:
  • Come, my dear Friend, discard that Brow of Care:
  • What was at first intended all things are;
  • All by the mighty Cause for bliss designed
  • The only good of Matter and in Mind.
  • So was I taught by one who taught me all
  • That I the first and only good can call! (U.P.)
  • _instead of_ ll. 601-2;
  • I meant again, in spite of every Cow,
  • To pass that way and hear my Shepherd’s Vow. (U.P.)
  • _after_ l. 625:
  • When the sun is descended the moon will arise;
  • And sweeter her softer and mellower Ray,
  • When the blossom no longer is fair in our Eyes,
  • The Fruit will enlarge and our losses repay;
  • And when from the cheek the young Roses decay,
  • Tis a Sign that the Fire is collected within:
  • No longer for Boys the light flower to display,
  • But manly Affections to wake and to win. (U.P.)
  • _instead of_ ll. 626-41:
  • My Damon was the first to wake
  • The Flame that slept but cannot die;
  • My Damon is the last to take
  • The best the truest softest Sigh.
  • The Life between is nothing worth:
  • O! cast it all as vile away.
  • Save the sweet Day that gave it Birth,
  • And this a fonder happier Day.
  • O tell me not what I have done,
  • When there is so much done amiss;
  • For who can fate and madness shun
  • In such bewildering World as this?
  • Love can a thousand Faults forgive,
  • Or with a tender Smile reprove;
  • And now let nought in Memory live,
  • But that we meet and that we love. (U.P.)
  • _instead of_ ll. 664-7:
  • Were you not Witness how I blossomed then,
  • Blushing and blooming in the Eyes of Men;
  • Made by one sex a Goddess, and denied
  • Respect and notice by the other’s Pride? (U.P.)
  • _instead of_ ll. 682-91:
  • Is it not written, he who came to save
  • The adultress [ ] of her Crime forgave;
  • Would the lost sheep all graciously restore,
  • And bade the weeping Sinner sin no more?
  • Yes, this is true, but where the Eye that reads
  • The broken Spirit or the Heart that bleeds?
  • But where the Heart that could the Deed deplore,
  • And where the Hand that would the Mind restore;
  • That could the sinful Soul on trust receive
  • And, tho’ all urged against Belief, believe? (U.P.)
  • _instead of_ ll. 702-9:
  • With Spirits low and ill-directed Mind
  • She soon her [ ] of penitence resigned;
  • And rushed again into the World, prepar’d
  • To do whatever thoughtless Frenzy dared.
  • And so she perished!
  • Nay! while yet disposed
  • T’ enjoy the world, the world’s adventures closed. (U.P.)
  • _instead of_ ll. 736-7:
  • To save from sin the long expected pay,
  • And call hence Souls whose bodies waste away. (U.P.)
  • _instead of_ ll. 742-3:
  • And I a fellow sinner! who enquired
  • If ought beside the feeble Heart required
  • Was by, to watch the Dawn of Hope, to cheer
  • The drooping Spirit, and to prove how dear
  • The [Loving] Soul may be whose Turning is sincere. (U.P.)
  • _instead of_ l. 751:
  • To think for what was formed this Creature Man! (U.P.)
  • _instead of_ l. 757:
  • Gold, to enlarge the Treasures that abound. (U.P.)
  • _after_ l. 766:
  • I shuddered, R[ichard], at the general View--
  • The Work undone--What yet I had to do! (U.P.)
  • l. 781. woe. l. 782. woe. l. 789. woe.
  • Book VIII.
  • _Variant of_ ll. 33-67:
  • The Brothers’ Subject on their Morning Ride
  • Was, as it chanced, the Misery of Pride!
  • * * * * *
  • [illegible attempts.]
  • The very Virtues suffer! and but few
  • Altho’ unshamed bear Want and pity too.
  • This is the Serpent Poverty that Stings!
  • And Wealth, thus flying, certain misery brings.
  • * * * * *
  • The Wretched then the common fate deplore
  • And mourn Enjoyments that return no more.
  • They who so dearly loved in happier times
  • Doubt the tried Worth; their Sorrows are their Crimes.
  • They spoil the Temper; they disturb the rest;
  • Men fly the Scold, the Comforter, the Guest. (M.)
  • _instead of_ ll. 48-53:
  • “Oh! that we had the virtuous pride to show
  • We know ourselves what all about us know;
  • Nor, when our board contains a single dish,
  • Tell lying tales of market-men and fish!
  • We know ’tis hard from higher views to fall--
  • What is not hard when life is trial all?” (O.M.)
  • _after_ l. 67:
  • “But I digress, dear Richard, who despise
  • Tellers of tales, who stop and moralize;
  • As some good editors of Esop used
  • Their privilege, and readers’ sense abused:
  • Who half a page to write their fable took,
  • And just a page and half to swell their book.
  • But to that gentle being I return,
  • And, as I treat of patience, let me learn.” (O.M.)
  • _instead of_ ll. 106-7:
  • “Like Saul’s fair daughters, as by Cowley sung;
  • Not from a monarch, but a yeoman sprung.” (O.M.)
  • _after_ l. 113:
  • Who gazed at Jane saw Wonder and Delight;
  • Who looked on Lucy blessd the pleasing Sight.
  • * * * * *
  • The Air of Lucy her Admirers held
  • In pleasing Bondage; that of Jane repell’d. (M.)
  • _after_ l. 119:
  • Lucy not often could those Looks command,
  • But had the sober praise and offered Hand;
  • For those who breathed for Jane those Sighs of fire
  • Asked not their Reason, What do I desire?
  • While Lucy’s Lovers felt the Wishes rise
  • And could explain the purport of their Sighs.
  • In future day one spake how Friendships please,
  • And one, a Lover, whom we charm and teize;
  • And then began the speech of Jane to raise
  • Men’s awe, and Lucy’s to obtain their praise. (M.)
  • _instead of_ ll. 196-207:
  • Now Lucy’s Lover was a plain good Man,
  • Who meant to marry on a saving Plan.
  • Jane is perhaps the prettier one to view,
  • He judged; but [has] the Keener Judgment too;
  • And, if her Eye be more than Lucy’s bright,
  • And beams upon you with a fiercer Light,
  • A face may be admired; but, put the Case
  • A Man shall marry, what avails a face?
  • A Wife that[’s] pretty her Conditions makes;
  • A Wife that[’s] prudent rather gives than takes.
  • Beauty will cost require and Wealth command,
  • But there is Safety in a closing Hand;
  • And what if Lucy to the needy sends
  • Too great a portion and the deed defends,
  • That ’tis her own; there’s prudence in the Words
  • That will preserve the Good that is her Lord’s.
  • Besides, there’s not a Virtue we possess
  • So soon restrain’d as giving to distress;
  • And, then, a rival makes a woman nice,
  • And Jane’s admirer will enhance her price.
  • Thus, thinking but concealing what he thought,
  • This cautious Lover Lucy’s favour sought. (M.)
  • _after_ l. 231:
  • Or why the Fear? and all that seemed so good
  • Was only Slyness rightly understood;
  • Then, too, his father living held the Son
  • From the sad Course he was disposed to run. (M.)
  • _instead of_ ll. 255-8:
  • “Near to the village, where they now abide,
  • In their own style--the vulgar call it pride--
  • Dwelt the fair sisters: good they were and kind,
  • That prying scandal scarce could error find--
  • And candour none--they spent, they spared, they gave
  • Just as they ought to give, to spare, to save;
  • Like two queen-myrtles in an arbour’s side,
  • So they abode, and so might still abide,
  • But for a blight! it wounds me at the heart,
  • That I have grief and anguish to impart.” (O.M.)
  • l. 287. alchemist. _after_ l. 419:
  • “Thus fill’d with fear, that evening they attend
  • To his last home an ancient village-friend;
  • And they, reflecting on the old man’s days,
  • Who living had their love, and now their praise--
  • That good old man, with so much native sense,
  • Such health and ease, such hope with competence:
  • They could but own, if such should be their lot,
  • They should be thankful!--It, alas! was not.” (O.M.)
  • l. 550. ecstacy. _after_ l. 824:
  • “I read your looks, my Brother, you would give
  • Largely to these--they should in comfort live,
  • Nor labour thus; but you would find it hard
  • To gain assent: professions they regard
  • As their experience bids them, and they run
  • From ready love, as they would treachery shun;
  • Yet have I woo’d them long, and they attend
  • With growing trust--they treat me as a friend,
  • And talk of my probation; but, afraid,
  • They take my counsel, but refuse my aid.” (O.M.)
  • =Book IX=.
  • _Instead of_ ll. 150-5:
  • “The weeks fled smoothly, five or six, before,
  • Bless’d in the present, he could think of more.
  • Two months beside were at his villa spent, }
  • Where first enraptured, he became content; }
  • Then went to town, scarce knowing why he went. }
  • His lady with him, as a wife should be--
  • Talk of a moon of honey! there were three.” (O.M.)
  • _instead of_ ll. 176-7:
  • “For pairs not loving, cannot music find,
  • And loving pairs have music in the mind.” (O.M.)
  • =Book XI=.
  • _The Book opens_:
  • That gentle Spinster, whom our Squire approved
  • So well, they judged aright who said he loved;
  • Though, when they thought to what the love would lead,
  • They err’d--for neither would so far proceed.
  • This Maiden Lady, to her promise just,
  • Gave them her story.--She could safely trust
  • Her neighbours both: the one she long had known,
  • The other kindness and respect had shown.
  • Frankly not fearless, from her early youth,
  • She gave her tale, nor would disguise a truth;
  • Timid in places, and with some restraint,
  • But still resolved the very facts to paint,
  • With plaintive smile she prefaced what she spoke,
  • And the Friends listen’d with attentive look. (O.M.)
  • _after_ l. 67:
  • “Think not of love! it is a chance indeed,
  • When love and prudence side by side proceed.
  • Nay, when they do, I doubtfully approve--
  • Love baffles prudence--Oh! beware of love.” (O.M.)
  • _variant of_ ll. 109-32:
  • He knew that Girls had heard that youth is bold,
  • And he would show how youthful were the old.
  • * * * * *
  • He knew the Vices that the youthful boast,
  • And he desired to show the form and Ghost
  • Of naked Evil, rob’d of every Grace
  • That could our Anger or Contempt displace--
  • Not as the drunken Slave to make me think
  • How odious Vice, but hoping I should drink.
  • * * * * *
  • Repelled awhile, he answered, Did you drive
  • A Charge so precious, fear would be alive. (U.P.)
  • _instead of_ ll. 150-1:
  • He said that Beauty now would scarcely sell;
  • The drug was plenteous, and the Market fell. (U.P.)
  • _after_ l. 163:
  • And the weak side of woman--but he spied,
  • So it appeared to me, the viler side. (U.P.)
  • _instead of_ ll. 164-5:
  • And all that this superior knowledge meant
  • Was to delude the weak and innocent. (U.P.)
  • _variant of_ ll. 190-221:
  • My Mother too seemed now disposed to try
  • A Life of Reason and Tranquillity;
  • She had till lately health and Spirits kept;
  • She ate in Comfort, and in Quiet slept.
  • But our late Subject was a kind that fills
  • The Mind, and poison in the Heart instills.
  • For five and forty years my Mother bore
  • Her Placid Looks, and Dress becoming wore;
  • She would a Compliment with pleasure take
  • That no undue Impression seemed to make;
  • But now her Nerves became disturbed and weak,
  • And we must Aid from a Physician seek:
  • A Scotch Physician, who had just began
  • To settle here--a very handsome Man,
  • And very wise, for I with Lovers twain
  • Was in his eye a very Child again;
  • While my dear Mother, twenty years a Wife,
  • Was to decide the Fortune of his life;
  • And she decided---In a general way
  • Mama her power was willing to display.
  • * * * * *
  • But now like Monarch weary of a Throne
  • She would no longer reign, at least alone!
  • She held her pulse, and with a Look so sweet
  • Gave him to feel how softly they could beat. (U.P.)
  • _after_ l. 227:
  • It was reported, nay it was believed
  • That both the wary parties were deceived;
  • For both had learnt the wicked world to cheat
  • And be a match for all its vile Deceit. (U.P.)
  • _instead of_ ll. 323-5:
  • Was just his present purpose to pursue,
  • Send him to college and there let him learn
  • To live, and to his numerous brothers turn! (U.P.)
  • _variant of_ ll. 336-7:
  • In fact our hearts we gave as Lovers give
  • Before we asked if we as Men could live.
  • I lov’d the Youth, nor had I doubts that he }
  • Had tender thoughts and faithful Hopes like me, }
  • And, as our Love was now, so would it ever be. } (U.P.)
  • _instead of_ l. 410:
  • Were placed our yellow plates of Stafford Ware. (U.P.)
  • _instead of_ ll. 433-4:
  • While Biddy slept, upon a Bed so hard
  • And coarse, I laid and was of Sleep debarred. (U.P.)
  • _instead of_ ll. 508-14:
  • And what, as armed with right and power they asked,
  • Are your Soul’s Contests? and their own unmasked.
  • Confessing thoughts so strange and views so wild
  • I thought them Dreams, or fancies of a Child
  • Could she, they ask, her best attempts condemn, }
  • And did she long to touch the Garment’s hem, }
  • And was it so with her, for so it was with them?} (U.P.)
  • _instead of_ ll. 517-26:
  • My Mother kindly lent her teachers Aid
  • To win the Soul of her deluded maid;
  • I was compelled her female friends to hear,
  • But suffer’d not one bearded teacher near;
  • Tho’ more than one attempted with their whine
  • And ‘Sister! Sister!’ turn to love divine;
  • But my contending Spirit to direct
  • Was what I vow’d no Brother should effect;
  • But O! their Preacher, would I could receive
  • His precious dropping of the Dew at Eve! (U.P.)
  • _instead of_ ll. 533-6:
  • But soon appear’d and spoke in mode correct,
  • With all the cold dead freedom of the Sect;
  • Of his Conversion with conceit he spoke
  • Before he orders from his Bishop took. (U.P.)
  • _after_ l. 548:
  • He then with self-applause his valour told
  • And how his boyish Love for me grew cold. (U.P.)
  • _instead of_ ll. 566-9:
  • On Sidmouth terrace pace at morn and noon,
  • Or view from Dawlish rocks the full-orb’d moon,
  • At Exmouth beacon the far bay explore, }
  • Or quiet sit at Teignmouth’s pebbly shore; }
  • These scenes are lovely all, and will your peace restore. } (O.M.)
  • _instead of_ ll. 574-87:
  • Dear scenes of social comfort, friendly ease,
  • The power of pleasing, the delight to please;
  • When friends agreed the views around t’ explore,
  • When sympathising minds exchanged their store;
  • When fear was banish’d, and no form desired,
  • But such as decency and sense required;
  • When each in meeting wore the looks that make
  • Such strong impression, and preclude mistake;
  • When looks, and words, and manner all declare
  • What hearts, and thoughts, and dispositions are--
  • In fact, when we in various modes express }
  • That we are happy all! all answer yes! }
  • This is indeed approach to perfect happiness. }
  • Dear objects! scatter’d in the world around,
  • Whom do ye gladden? where may ye be found?
  • Ye who excited joy by day, by night,
  • Ye who delighted to dispense delight,
  • Ye who to please the sadden’d temper strove,
  • Who, when ye loved not, show’d the effect of love,
  • Ye who are blessings wheresoe’er ye dwell,
  • Accept the wishes of a long farewell! (O.M.)
  • _instead of_ ll. 600-1:
  • “No, I confess, there was a proneness yet
  • To think with foolish fondness and regret.” (U.P.)
  • _variant of_ ll. 620-38:
  • Are we not good, benevolent and just;
  • Must not all love us? We are sure they must.
  • Are we not read in works of every kind;
  • Are we not prudent, rational, refined;
  • Are not our thoughts correct, our words discreet, }
  • And our Life void of folly, fraud, deceit; }
  • And where can we on Earth a purer Spirit meet? }
  • Here the Heart ceased; I answer’d to the Heart:
  • A vile Deceiver, and a vain, thou art.
  • First, thy Religion I can plainly see
  • Wants the first requisite--Humility.
  • We are so pure, the humble mind’s [resource],
  • Truth and Repentance, we may drop of course,
  • And with the gallant Frenchman at the Cry
  • Of the last Day say boldly, here am I! (U.P.)
  • _variant of_ ll. 649-52:
  • What is the good that thy whole life has done
  • Compared with her one day, a single one? (O.M.)
  • _variant of_ ll. 692-7:
  • The tears of tender Souls which for him fell, }
  • And strong Persuasion, Brother! all is well. }
  • Tarry, and Heav’n is thine; depart, and there is hell.-- }
  • So I from frenzy’s Zeal and folly’s Creed
  • Was by Exertion and Discretion freed. (U.P.)
  • _variant of_ ll. 712-20:
  • Still he would come, and talk as idlers do }
  • Both of his old opinions and his new; }
  • For now he was convinced that nothing could be true. }
  • Barriers so strong against all Truth were placed
  • That by the wise no Tenet was embraced.
  • This was religion here that there was spurned;
  • Then how could Truth be anywhere discerned?
  • Her as a mistress Men indeed pursue }
  • In Chace for ever, never in their view; }
  • And who shall dare affirm that anything is true? } (U.P.)
  • _variant of_ ll. 816-27:
  • But in that world the faithful Youth shall view
  • One like himself, as generous and as true.
  • Such our Discourse; but, growing more refin’d,
  • And suited only to a Soul resigned--
  • For she would far in her fair View proceed
  • And as I could, I doubted or agreed--
  • I asked if Lovers took the wiser Way
  • Who to their Death their Union would delay,
  • For fear that Marriage should the Vision spoil
  • And the pure pleasure of the fancy soil? (U.P.)
  • _variant of_ ll. 834-49:
  • And all betrayed a Man who had of Gold a store.
  • The comely Man moved, onward, and a pair
  • Of comely Maidens waited, with an Air
  • Of Doubt, till one exclaim’d with Voice profound,
  • And, O! ’tis Henry, dropt upon the Ground.
  • But she recovered, and, I pray you, guess
  • What then ensued and how much Happiness.
  • Just as the Lover chanc’d his Home to find,
  • The Lady fixed on other home her Mind;
  • They parted Lovers who were grieved to part;
  • They met as Neighbours! heal’d was either heart.
  • Each on the others Looks could raptured dwell,
  • They now could say, You look extremely well.
  • She had prepared in some blessed world to meet;
  • The Knight, of purchasing a snug Retreat,
  • In this and there in good Regard to live:
  • Among their Friends ’twas all it now could give. (U.P.)
  • _variant of_ ll. 864-75:
  • What Time has done, gross food and vulgar Trade
  • Has all impaired that Love and Nature made.
  • I cannot take him--I my Friend approved,
  • Who dare refuse when she no longer loved.
  • But he was loud and loving, fierce and free,
  • And weak and timid vain and grateful She.
  • Thus sundry motives more than I can name
  • Rose on his side, and she a Wife became. (U.P.)
  • _instead of_ ll. 890-3:
  • Yet his the Comfort of an Heart that feels
  • A single day, and that the morrow heals;
  • And yet he grieved a while, and he would weep,
  • And swear profusely I had murdered sleep;
  • Had quite unman’d him for heroic Vein,
  • And he could only murmur and complain. (U.P.)
  • _variant of_ ll. 903-4:
  • Yet e’er we parted he his Prayer renewed,
  • And urged me “Do not live in Solitude!
  • Wert thou my Lady to the Study take
  • O! what a Desdemona wouldst thou make.” (U.P.)
  • _after_ l. 904:
  • And then he spouted--till I cried, Is he
  • The man I loved? Oh! that could never be.
  • No! time upon the outward beauty preys,
  • And the mind’s beauty in its vice decays. (O.M.)
  • _instead of_ ll. 910-2:
  • But that he lost, and with a wither’d hand.
  • Stood at his father’s gate, as beggars stand;
  • But his were jealous brethren, and they kept
  • Their dying father from him, till he slept. (O.M.)
  • _instead of_ ll. 926-8:
  • And no Adventure marked the waste of Years;
  • I thought me past them, but I met with one,
  • A call to Folly e’er the pasts were done. (U.P.)
  • VARIANTS. VOL. I. ADDENDA.
  • =THE LIBRARY=. ‘Original MS.’ readings given as footnotes Life and
  • Poems (1834).
  • _After_ l. 4:
  • Where can the wretched lose their cares, and hide
  • The tears of sorrow from the eyes of pride?
  • Can they in silent shades a refuge find
  • From all the scorn and malice of mankind?
  • From wit’s disdain, and wealth’s provoking sneer, }
  • From folly’s grin, and humour’s stupid leer, }
  • And clamour’s iron tongue, censorious and severe? }
  • There can they see the scenes of nature gay,
  • And shake the gloomy dreams of life away?
  • Without a sigh, the hope of youth give o’er,
  • And with aspiring honour climb no more.
  • Alas! we fly to peaceful shades in vain;
  • Peace dwells within, or all without is pain:
  • No storm-tost sailor sighs for slumbering seas--
  • He dreads a tempest, but desires a breeze.
  • The placid waves with silent swell disclose
  • A clearer view, and but reflect his woes.
  • So life has calms, in which we only see
  • A fuller prospect of our misery.
  • When the sick heart, by no design employ’d,
  • Throbs o’er the past, or suffer’d, or enjoy’d,
  • In former pleasures finding no relief,
  • And pain’d anew in every former grief.
  • Can friends console us when our cares distress,
  • Smile on our woes, and make misfortunes less?
  • Alas! like winter’d leaves, they fall away,
  • Or more disgrace our prospects by delay;
  • The genial warmth, the fostering sap is past,
  • That kept them faithful, and that held them fast.
  • Where shall we fly?--to yonder still retreat,
  • The haunt of Genius and the Muses’ seat,
  • Where all our griefs in others’ strains rehearse,
  • Speak with old Time, and with the dead converse;
  • Till Fancy, far in distant regions flown,
  • Adopts a thousand schemes, and quits her own;
  • Skims every scene, and plans with each design,
  • Towers in each thought, and lives in every line;
  • From clime to clime with rapid motion flies,
  • Weeps without woe, and without sorrow sighs;
  • To all things yielding, and by all things sway’d,
  • To all obedient, and by all obey’d;
  • The source of pleasures, noble and refined,
  • And the great empress of the Poet’s mind.
  • Here led by thee, fair Fancy, I behold
  • The mighty heroes, and the bards of old!
  • For here the Muses sacred vigils keep,
  • And all the busy cares of being sleep;
  • No monarch covets war, nor dreams of fame,
  • No subject bleeds to raise his tyrant’s name,
  • No proud great man, or man that would be great,
  • Drives modest merit from its proper state,
  • Nor rapine reaps the good by labour sown,
  • Nor envy blasts a laurel, but her own.
  • Yet Contemplation, silent goddess, here,
  • In her vast eye, makes all mankind appear,
  • All Nature’s treasures, all the stores of Art,
  • That fire the fancy, or engage the heart,
  • The world’s vast views, the fancy’s wild domain,
  • And all the motley objects of the brain:
  • Here mountains hurl’d on mountains proudly rise,
  • Far, far o’er Nature’s dull realities;
  • Eternal verdure decks a sacred clime,
  • Eternal spring for ever blooms in rhyme,
  • And heroes honour’d for imputed deeds,
  • And saints adored for visionary creeds,
  • Legends and tales, and solitude and sighs,
  • Poor doating dreams, and miserable lies,
  • The empty bubbles of a pensive mind,
  • And Spleen’s sad effort to debase mankind.
  • Here Wonder gapes at Story’s dreadful page,
  • And Valour mounts by true poetic rage,
  • And Pity weeps to hear the mourning maid,
  • And Envy saddens at the praise convey’d.
  • Devotion kindles at the pious strain,
  • And mocks the madness of the fool’s disdain:
  • Here gentle Delicacy turns her eye
  • From the loose page, and blushes her reply,
  • Alone, unheeded, calls her soul to arms,
  • Fears every thought, and flies from all alarms.
  • Pale Study here, to one great point resign’d;
  • Derides the various follies of mankind;
  • As distant objects sees their several cares,
  • And with his own their trifling work compares;
  • But still forgets like him men take their view,
  • And near their own, his works are trifling too:--
  • So suns and planets scarcely fill the eye
  • When earth’s poor hills and man’s poor huts are nigh;
  • But, were the eye in airy regions tost,
  • The world would lessen, and her hills be lost;
  • And were the mighty orbs above us known,
  • No world would seem so trifling as our own.
  • Here looking back, the wond’ring soul surveys
  • The sacred relics of departed days,
  • Where grace, and truth, and excellence reside,
  • To claim our praise, and mortify our pride;
  • Favour’d by fate, our mighty fathers found
  • The virgin Muse, with every beauty crown’d:
  • They woo’d and won; and, banish’d their embrace,
  • She comes a harlot to their feebler race:
  • Deck’d in false taste, with gaudy shows of art
  • She charms the eye, but touches not the heart;
  • By thousands courted, but by few caress’d,
  • False when pursued, and fatal when possess’d.
  • From hence we rove, with Fancy for our guide,
  • O’er this wide world, and other worlds more wide,
  • Where other suns their vital power display,
  • And round revolving planets dart the day;
  • Where comets blaze, by mortals unsurvey’d,
  • And stray where Galileo never stray’d;
  • Where God himself conducts each vast machine,
  • Uncensured by mankind, because unseen.
  • Here, too, we trace the varied scenes of life,
  • The tyrant husband, the retorting wife,
  • The hero fearful to appear afraid,
  • The thoughts of the deliberating maid;
  • The snares for virtue, and the turns of fate,
  • The lie of trade, and madness of debate;
  • Here force deals death around, while fools applaud,
  • And caution watches o’er the lips of fraud;
  • Whate’er the world can show, here scorn derides,
  • And here suspicion whispers what it hides--
  • The secret thought, the counsel of the breast,
  • The coming news, and the expected jest. . . .
  • High panegyric, in exalted style,
  • That smiles for ever, and provokes a smile,
  • And Satire, with her fav’rite handmaids by--
  • Here loud abuse, there simpering irony. . . .
  • All now display’d, without a mask are known,
  • And every vice in nature, but our own.
  • Yet Pleasure too, and Virtue, still more fair,
  • To this blest seat with mutual speed repair;
  • The social sweets in life’s securer road,
  • Its bliss unenvied, its substantial good,
  • The happy thought that conscious virtue gives,
  • And all that ought to live, and all that lives.
  • _after_ l. 104:
  • Maxims I glean, of mighty pith and force,
  • And moral themes to shine in a discourse,
  • But, tired with these, I take a lighter train,
  • Tuned to the times, impertinent and vain.
  • The tarts which wits provide for taste decay’d,
  • And syllabubs by frothy witlings made,
  • An easy, idle, thoughtless, graceless throng,
  • Pun, jest, and quibble, epigram and song,
  • Trifles to which declining genius bends,
  • And steps by which aspiring wit ascends.
  • Now sad and slow, with cautious step I tread,
  • And view around the venerable dead;
  • For where in all her walks shall study seize
  • Such monuments of human state as these?
  • _after_ l. 430:
  • “Ah! happy age,” the youthful poet cries,
  • “Ere laws arose--ere tyrants bade them rise;
  • No land-marks then the happy swain beheld,
  • Nor lords walk’d proudly o’er the furrow’d field;
  • Nor through distorted ways did Avarice roam,
  • To fetch delights for Luxury at home:
  • But mutual joy the friends of Nature proved,
  • And swains were faithful to the nymphs they loved.”
  • “Mistaken bards! all nations first were rude;
  • Man! proud, unsocial, prone to solitude:
  • O’er hills, or vales, or floods, was fond to roam--
  • The mead his garden, and the rock his home:
  • For flying prey he searched a savage coast--
  • Want was his spur, and liberty his boast.”
  • _after_ l. 570:
  • Ah! lost, for ever lost, to me these charms,
  • These lofty notions and divine alarms,
  • Too dearly bought--maturer judgment calls
  • My pensive soul from tales and madrigals--
  • For who so blest or who so great as I,
  • Wing’d round the globe with Rowland or Sir Guy?
  • Alas! no more I see my queen repair
  • To balmy bowers that blossom in the air,
  • Where on their rosy beds the Graces rest,
  • And not a care lies heavy on the breast.
  • No more the hermit’s mossy cave I choose,
  • Nor o’er the babbling brook delight to muse;
  • My doughty giants all are slain or fled,
  • And all my knights--blue, green, and yellow--dead!
  • Magicians cease to charm me with their art,
  • And not a griffin flies to glad my heart.
  • No more the midnight fairy tribe I view,
  • All in the merry moonshine tippling dew.
  • The easy joys that charm’d my sportive youth,
  • Fly Reason’s power, and shun the voice of Truth.
  • Maturer thoughts severer taste prepares,
  • And baffles every spell that charm’d my cares.
  • Can Fiction, then, the noblest bliss supply,
  • Or joy reside in inconsistency?
  • _after_ l. 594:
  • But who are these, a tribe that soar above,
  • And tell more tender tales of modern love?
  • A NOVEL train! the brood of old Romance,
  • Conceived by Folly on the coast of France,
  • That now with lighter thought, and gentler fire,
  • Usurp the honours of their drooping sire;
  • And still fantastic, vain, and trifling, sing
  • Of many a soft and inconsistent thing,--
  • Of rakes repenting, clogg’d in Hymen’s chain--
  • Of nymph reclined by unpresuming swain--
  • Of captains, colonels, lords, and amorous knights,
  • That find in humbler nymphs such chaste delights,
  • Such heavenly charms, so gentle, yet so gay,
  • That all their former follies fly away.
  • Honour springs up, where’er their looks impart
  • A moment’s sunshine to the harden’d heart--
  • A virtue, just before the rover’s jest,
  • Grows like a mushroom in his melting breast.
  • Much, too, they tell of cottages and shades,
  • Of balls, and routs, and midnight masquerades,
  • Where dangerous men and dangerous mirth reside,
  • And Virtue goes--on purpose to be tried.
  • These are the tales that wake the soul to life,
  • That charm the sprightly niece and forward wife,
  • That form the manners of a polish’d age,
  • And each pure easy moral of the Stage.
  • Thus to her friend the ever-faithful she--
  • The tender Delia--writes, securely free--
  • Delia from school was lately bold to rove,
  • Where yet Lucinda meditated love.
  • “Oh thou, the partner of my pensive breast,
  • And, but for one! its most delightful guest,
  • But for that one of whom ’twas joy to talk,
  • When the chaste moon gleam’d o’er our ev’ning walk,
  • And cooing fondly in the neighbouring groves
  • The pretty songsters all enjoy’d their loves;
  • Receive! as witness all ye powers! I send,
  • With melting heart, this token of thy friend.
  • “Calm was the night! and every breeze was low;
  • Swift ran the stream--but, ah! the moments slow!
  • Fly swift, ye moments! slowly run, thou stream,
  • And on thy margin let a maiden dream.
  • “Methought he came, my Harry, young and gay,
  • The very youth that stole my heart away.
  • I wake. Surprise! yet guess how blest was I!
  • With looks of love--the very youth was by.
  • ‘Whose is that form my Delia’s bosom hides?
  • What youth divinely blest within presides?’
  • He spoke and sigh’d. His sighs my fear supprest,
  • He seized his angel form, and actions spoke the rest.
  • “Oh, Virtue! brighter than the noon-tide ray!
  • Still guide my steps, and guide them nature’s way;
  • With sacred precepts fill the youthful mind,
  • Soothe all its cares, and force it to be kind.”
  • Thus, gentle passions warm the generous maid,
  • No more reluctant, and no more afraid;
  • Thus Virtue shines, and in her loveliest dress
  • Not over nice, nor Virtue to excess.
  • Near these I look, and lo! a reptile race,
  • In goodly vests conceal the want of grace;
  • The brood of Humour, Fancy, Frolic, Fun,
  • The tale obscene, the miserable pun;
  • The jest that Laughter loves, he knows not why,
  • And Whim tells quaintly with distorted eye.
  • Here Languor, yawning, pays his first devoirs,
  • And skims sedately o’er his dear Memoirs;
  • Here tries his tedious moments to employ,
  • And, palsied by enjoyment, dreams of joy;
  • From all the tribe his little knowledge steals,
  • From dull “Torpedoes,” and “Electric Eels;”
  • And every trifle of a trifling age,
  • That shames the closet, or degrades the Stage.
  • _after_ l. 602:
  • Here as I stand, of sovereign power possess’d,
  • A vast ambition fires my swelling breast;
  • I deal destruction round, and, all severe,
  • Damn with a dash, and censure with a sneer;
  • Or from the Critic wrest a sinking cause,
  • Rejudge his justice, and repeal his laws;
  • Now half by judgment guided, half by whim,
  • I grasp disputed power, and tyrannise like him;
  • Food for the mind I seek; but who shall find
  • The food that satisfies the craving mind?
  • Like fire it rages; and its fatal rage
  • What pains can deaden, and what care assuage?
  • Choked by its fuel, though it clouded lies,
  • It soon eats through, and craves for new supplies;
  • Now here, now there, with sudden fury breaks
  • And to its substance turns whate’er it takes.
  • To weighty themes I fly with eager haste,
  • And skim their treasures like the man of taste;
  • From a few pages learn the whole design, }
  • And damn a book for one suspicious line, }
  • Or steal its sentiments, and call them mine! }
  • =THE BIRTH OF FLATTERY=. ‘Original MS.’ readings given as footnotes
  • in Life and Poems (1834).
  • _Instead of_ ll. 1-9:
  • Muse of my Spenser, who so well could sing
  • The Passions, and the sources whence they spring;
  • Who taught the birth, the bearings, and the ties,
  • The strong connections, nice dependencies,
  • Of these the Foes of Virtue and the Friends,
  • With whom she rises and with whom descends--
  • A Syren’s birth, a Syren’s power I trace,
  • Aid me, oh! Herald of the Fairy-race;
  • Say whence she sprang, to what strange fortune born,
  • And why we love and hate, desire and scorn.
  • _instead of_ ll. 29-40:
  • From whom she sprang, not one around her knew,
  • Nor why she came, nor what she had in view,
  • Labour she loved not, had no wealth in store,
  • Pursued no calling, yet was never poor,
  • A thousand gifts her various arts repaid,
  • And bounteous fairies blest the thriving maid;
  • For she had secret means of easy gains,
  • And Cunning was her name among the swains.
  • =SIR EUSTACE GREY=. ‘Original MS.’ readings given as footnotes in
  • Life and Poems (1834).
  • _Instead of_ ll. 29-32:
  • The worthy doctor, and a friend.
  • ’Tis more than kind to visit one
  • Who has not now to spare or spend.
  • _instead of_ l. 75:
  • Worms, doctor, worms, and so are we.
  • _instead of_ ll. 100-7:
  • Madman! shall He who made this all,
  • The parts that form the whole reject?
  • Is aught with him so great or small,
  • He cannot punish or protect?
  • Man’s folly may his crimes neglect,
  • And hope the eye of God to shun;
  • But there’s of all the account correct--
  • Not one omitted--no, not one.
  • _instead of_ ll. 144-7:
  • Nay, frown not--chide not--but allow
  • Pity to one so sorely tried:
  • But I am calm--to fate I bow
  • And all the storms of life abide.
  • _instead of_ ll. 260-7:
  • Ills that no medicines can heal,
  • And griefs that no man can forget;
  • Whatever cares the mind can fret,
  • The spirits wear, the bosom gall--
  • Pain, hunger, prison, duns, and debt
  • Foul-fiends and fear,--I’ve felt ye all.
  • =THE HALL OF JUSTICE=. ‘Original MS.’ readings given as footnotes in
  • Life and Poems (1834).
  • Part I.
  • _Instead of_ ll. 9-12:
  • What is my crime? a deed of love;
  • I fed my child with pilfer’d food:
  • Your laws will not the act approve,
  • The law of Nature deems it good.
  • _instead of_ ll. 43-6:
  • My years, indeed, are sad and few,
  • Though weak these limbs, and shrunk this frame:
  • For Grief has done what Time should do;
  • And I am old in care and shame.
  • Part II.
  • _instead of_ ll. 29-34:
  • Compell’d to feast in full delight
  • When I was sad and wanted power,
  • Can I forget that dismal night?
  • Ah! how did I survive the hour?
  • _instead of_ ll. 39-41:
  • And there my father-husband stood--
  • I felt no words can tell you how--
  • As he was wont in angry mood,
  • And thus he cried, “Will God allow,
  • Preface: p. 92, l. 21. _The following footnote to the words_, His
  • Dedication, _was omitted in Vol. I_: Neither of these were adopted.
  • The author had written, about that time, some verses to the memory of
  • Lord Robert Manners, brother to the late Duke of Rutland; and these,
  • by a junction, it is presumed, not forced or unnatural, form the
  • concluding part of “The Village.”
  • END OF VOL. II.
  • CAMBRIDGE: PRINTED BY JOHN CLAY, M.A., AT THE UNIVERSITY PRESS.
  • End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Poems, Volume 2 (of 3), by George Crabbe
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