Slike strani
PDF
ePub

XXXIX.

Conscious her glance met his! She thought and sigh'd,
His dumb reserve had prov'd a twofold bane:
Then, like a blaze of light, his mystic pride

She saw unveil'd, and own'd its generous strain;
And joy'd, that mantled e'en in throngs profane,
Tho' for a while obscur'd, baronial blood;

Yet, (not of her ancestral honours vain)
View'd genius, first of every earthly good,
Rise paramount o'er birth, in its own hardihood!

XL.

And Edwin! where, where lurks the peasant lad? Clans, earldoms, wealth, and beauty, all thine own! Born the low peasant of the uncultur'd shade,

66

Thy proud inheritance"-thy harp alone!

But, from the cot evolving to the throne,

As, nature, men, and manners meet thy views,
Shall not the sister-arts in loftier tone

Through life, delight and dignity diffuse;
And, feeling well their worth, the million bless thy Muse?

MADRIGAL.

FROM THE FRENCH OF COCQUARD.

I FEEL when I see you a joy past expressing;
When no longer I see you, in anguish I fall!
Ah, to see you for ever would mine were the blessing;
Or would that I never had seen you at all!

R. A. D.

STANZAS

ON A FAVOURITE PLANTATION IN THE GROUNDS OF C. W. ESQ. ADDRESSED TO MISS W.

BY DR. RUSSELL.

I.

FOLLY, or Fancy, what they will,

Let fools your sweet plantation call; No matter if the sound be ill,

Since what we see is beauteous all.

II.

The Cyprian shades, as bards have sung,
Were sacred to the Queen of Love;
There, on the myrtles, Cupid hung
His bow, there sat the fav'rite dove.

[ocr errors]

But she, who makes these trees her care,
The Nymph that haunts this lovely shade,
Tho' as the Cyprian goddess fair,

Is chaster than the Delian Maid.

IV.

To friendship sacred be this place;
Keep, wanton Cupid, far away;
These walks shall Dora's presence grace,
While I to friendship tune my lay.

STANZAS

WRITTEN IN A SEAT IN THE SAME PLANTATION.

BY THE SAME.

1.

DORA, one day, no matter when,

While sitting on this seat, was saying, "I'll live a maid; I hate these men, Their sex is ever our's betraying.

[ocr errors]

"Grant me, ye powers, but this request,
In my retreat from fops and folly,
Let me with one fair friend be blest!

One female friend will bless your Dolly.'

III.

Young Cupid, from a neighbouring tree,

Heard the grave Nymph her thoughts expressing, "And is it so, sage miss?" said he,

[ocr errors]

"Then why this care display'd in dressing?

IV.

Why, but some coxcomb's heart to win,
This gadding to all public places?

Why, but to take some racer in,

"

This coaching still to all the races ?

V.

Why, when a beau appears in view,

Those dimpling smiles, that bosom panting? Why, in each cheek, that change of hue?

Why, but I'll quickly stop your canting.

VI.

"I'll show the world how they're abus'd,
Such grave gay baggages believing;
Know then, by me, you stand accus'd
Both of pursuing man, and thieving.

66

VII.

Nay, never hope your tricks to hide, (Come, hold your head up, hold it higher) You stole, I saw you, from my side

This dart, and threw it at yon 'squire."

VIII.

The Nymph, enrag'd, at Cupid's charge,
(But Cupid ne'er was whipt for lying)
Disdain'd to answer him at large,
Thus only with just pride replying:

IX.

"Were man, young sir, what I pursue,
Need I thy dart to pierce his liver?
My pencil, boy, which Homer drew,
Is of more force than half thy quiver."

EPIGRAM

ON THE

REPRESENTATION OF TIMOUR THE TARTAR. 1813. BY B. H. BROWNE, M. D.

LET the Houynhnhms no longer be reckon'd a fable, Now all our great actors are brought from the stable!

A NIGHT PIECE.

WRITTEN IN Autumn, 1811.

BY JAMES HOGG, THE ETTRICK SHEPHERD.

How lonely is this wildered scene,

When silence, from her vault so blue,
Steals soft o'er Teviot's mountains green,
To sleep embalmed in midnight dew!

All hail ye hills, whose towering height,
Like shadows scoop the yielding sky!
And thou, mysterious guest of night!
Dread traveller of immensity!

Stranger of heaven, I bid thee hail!
Shred from the pall of glory riven,
That flashest in celestial gale;

Broad pennon of the king of Heaven!

Art thou the flag of woe and death
From angel's ensign-staff unfurl'd?
Art thou the standard of his wrath,
Waved o'er a sordid sinful world?

No, from thy pure, pellucid beam,
That erst o'er plains of Bethlehem shone,
No latent evil we can deem;

Fair herald of th' eternal throne !

« PrejšnjaNaprej »