AN EPISTLE TO CURIO
*.
THRICE has the spring beheld thy faded fame
And the fourth winter rises on thy shame
Since I exulting grasp'd the votive shell
In sounds of triumph all thy praise to tell,
Blest could my skill thro' ages make thee shine,
And proud to mix my memory with thine.
But now the cause that wak'd my song before
With praise with triumph crowns the toil no more.
If to the glorious man whose faithful cares,
Nor quell'd by malice nor relax'd by years,
Had aw'd Ambition's wild audacious hate,
And dragg'd at length Corruption to her fate,
[Page 118] If ev'ry tongue its large applauses ow'd,
And wellearn'd laurels ev'ry Muse bestow'd,
If publick justice urg'd the high reward,
And Freedom smil'd on the devoted bard,
Say then, to him whose levity or lust
Laid all a people's gen'rous hopes in dust,
Who taught Ambition firmer heights of pow'r,
And sav'd Corruption at her hopeless hour,
Does not each tongue its execrations owe?
Shall not each Muse a wreath of shame bestow?
And publick justice fanctify th' award,
And Freedom's hand protect th' impartial bard?
Yet, long reluctant, I forbore thy name,
Long watch'd thy virtue like a dying flame,
Hung o'er each glimm'ring spark with anxious eyes,
And wish'd and hop'd the light again would rise;
Put since thy guilt still more entire appears,
Since no art hides, no supposition clears,
Since vengeful Slander now too sinks her blast,
And the first rage of party-hate is past,
Calm as the judge of Truth at length I come
To weigh thy merits and pronounce thy doom;
So may my trust from all reproach be free,
And Earth and Time confirm the fair decree!
There are who say they view'd without amaze
Thy sad reverse of all thy former praise,
That thro' the pageants of a patriot's name
They pierc'd the foulness of thy secret aim,
The publick thunder on a private foe;
But I, whose soul consented to thy cause,
Who felt thy genius stamp its own applause,
Who saw the spirits of each glorious age
Move in thy bosom and direct thy rage,
I scorn'd th' ungen'rous gloss of slavish minds,
The owley'd race whom Virtue's lustre blinds:
Spite of the learned in the ways of vice,
And all who prove that each man has his price,
I still believ'd thy end was just and free,
And yet, ev'n yet believe it—spite of thee;
Ev'n tho' thy mouth impure has dar'd disclaim,
Urg'd by the wretched impotence of shame,
Whatever filial cares thy zeal had paid
To laws infirm and liberty decay'd,
Has begg'd Ambition to forgive the show,
Has told Corruption thou wert ne'er her foe,
Has boasted in thy country's awful ear
Her gross delusion when she held thee dear,
How tame she follow'd thy tempestuous call,
And heard thy pompous tales, and trusted all.—
Rise from your sad abodes ye curst of old
For laws subverted and for cities sold!
Paint all the noblest trophies of your guilt,
The oaths you perjur'd and the blood you spilt;
Yet must you one untempted vileness own,
One dreadful palm reserv'd for him alone;
[Page 120] With study'd arts his country's praise to spurn,
To beg the infamy he did not earn,
To challenge hate when honour was his due,
And plead his crimes where all his virtue knew!
Do robes of state the guarded heart enclose
From each fair feeling human nature knows?
Can pompous titles stun th' enchanted ear
To all that reason all that sense would hear?
Else couldst thou e'er desert thy sacred post,
In such unthankful baseness to be lost?
Else couldst thou wed the emptiness of vice,
And yield thy glories at an idiot's price?
When they who loud for liberty and laws
In doubtful times had fought their country's cause,
When now of conquest and dominion sure
They
[...]ought alone to hold their fruits secure,
When taught by these Oppression hid the face
To leave Corruption stronger in her place,
By silent spells to work the publick fate,
And taint the vitals of the passive state,
Till healing Wisdom should avail no more,
And Freedom loath to tread the poison'd shore,
Then like some guardian god that slies to save
The weary pilgrim from an instant grave,
Whom sleeping and secure the guileful snake
Steals near and nearer thro' the peaceful brake,
Then Curio rose, toward the publick wo
To wake the heedless and incite the slow,
And quell th' enchantress by a mightier charm.
Swift o'er the land the fair contagion
[...]lew,
And with thy country's hopes thy honours grew:
Thee patriot the Patrician roof confest;
Thy pow'rful voice the rescu'd merchant blest;
Of thee with awe the rural hearth resounds;
The bowl to thee the grateful sailor crowns:
Touch'd in the sighing shade with manlier sires
To trace thy steps the lovesick youth aspires;
The learn'd recluse who oft' amaz'd had read
Of Grecian heroes Roman patriots dead,
With new amazement hears a living name
Pretend to share in such forgotten fame;
And he who scorning courts and courtly ways
Left the tame track of these dejected days
The life of nobler ages to renew
In virtues sacred from a monarch's view,
Rous'd by thy labours from the bless'd retreat
Where social ease and publick passions meet,
Again ascending treads the civil scene,
To act and be a man as thou hadst been.
Thus by degrees thy cause superiour grew,
And the great end appear'd at last in view;
We heard the people in thy hopes rejoice,
We saw the senate bending to thy voice;
The friends of freedom hail'd th' approaching reign
Of laws for which our fathers bled in vain,
[Page 122] While venal Faction struck with new dismay
Shrunk at their frown, and self-abandon'd lay.
Wak'd in the shock the Publick Genius rose
Abash'd and keener from his long repose;
Sublime in ancient pride he rais'd the spear
Which slaves and tyrants long were wont to fear:
The City felt his call; from man to man,
From street to street, the glorious horrour ran;
Each crowded haunt was stirr'd beneath his pow'r,
And murm'ring challeng'd the deciding hour.
Lo! the deciding hour at last appears,
The hour of ev'ry freeman's hopes and fears!
Thou, Genius! guardian of the Roman name,
O ever prompt tyrannick rage to tame!
Instruct the mighty moments as they rowl,
And guide each movement steady to the goal.
Ye Spirits! by whose providential art
Succeeding motives turn the changeful heart,
Keep, keep the best in view to Curio's mind,
And watch his fancy and his passions bind!
Ye Shades immortal! who by Freedom led
Or in the field or on the scaffold bled,
Bend from your radiant seats a joyful eye,
And view the crown of all your labours nigh;
See Freedom mounting her eternal throne!
The sword submitted and the laws her own;
See publick Pow'r chastis'd beneath her stands,
With eyes intent and uncorrupted hands!
[Page 123] See private life by wisest arts reclaim'd!
See ardent youth to noblest manners fram'd!
See us acquire whate'er was sought by you
If Curio, only Curio, will be true.
'Twas then—O shame! O trust how ill repaid!
O Latium! oft' by faithless sons betray'd!—
'Twas then—What frenzy on thy reason stole?
What spells unsinew'd thy determin'd soul?
—Is this the man in Freedom's cause approv'd,
The man so great, so honour'd, so belov'd,
This patient slave by tinsel chains allur'd,
This wretched suitor for a boon abjur'd,
This Curio, hated and despis'd by all,
Who fell himself to work his country's fall?
O lost alike to action and repose!
Unknown, unpity'd, in the worst of woes!
With all that conscious undissembled pride
Sold to the insults of a foe defy'd!
With all that habit of familiar same
Doom'd to exhaust the dregs of life in shame!
The sole sad refuge of thy baffled art,
To act a statesman's dull exploded part,
Renounce the praise no longer in thy pow'r,
Display thy virtue tho' without a dow'r,
Contemn the giddy crowd, the vulgar wind,
And shut thy eyes that others may be blind.
—Forgive me, Romans! that I bear to smile
When shameless mouths your majesty defile,
[Page 124] Paint you a thoughless, frantick, headlong, crew,
And cast their own impieties on you:
For witness Freedom! to whose sacred pow'r
My soul was vow'd from reason's earliest hour,
How have I stood exulting to survey
My country's virtues op'ning in thy ray!
How with the sons of ev'ry foreign shore
The more I match'd them honour'd her's the more!
O Race erect! whose native strength of soul
Which kings, nor priests, nor sordid laws, control,
Bursts the tame round of animal affairs,
And seeks a nobler centre for its cares,
Intent the laws of life to comprehend,
And fix dominion's limits by its end,
Who bold and equal in their love or hate,
By conscious reason judging ev'ry state,
The man forget not tho' in rags he lies,
And know the mortal thro' a crown's disguise,
Thence prompt alike with witty scorn to view
Fastidious Grandeur lift his solemn brow,
Or all awake at Pity's soft command
Bend the mild ear and stretch the gracious hand,
Thence large of heart from envy far remov'd,
When publick toils to virtue stand approv'd,
Not the young lover fonder to admire,
Nor more indulgent the delighted sire,
Yet high and jealous of their freeborn name
Fierce as the flight of Jove's destroying flame,
[Page 125] Where'er Oppression works her wanton sway
Proud to confront and dreadful to repay;
But if to purchase Curio's sage applause
My country must with him renounce her cause,
Quit with a slave the path a patriot trod,
Bow the meek knee and kiss the regal rod,
Then still, ye Pow'rs! instruct his tongue to rail,
Nor let his zeal nor let his subject fail,
Else ere he change the style bear me away
To where the Gracchi where the Bruti
* stay!
O long rever'd and late resign'd to shame!
If this uncourtly page thy notice claim,
When the loud cares of bus'ness are withdrawn,
Nor welldrest beggars round thy footsteps fawn,
In that still thoughtful solitary hour
When Truth exerts her unresisted pow'r,
Breaks the false opticks ting'd with Fortune's glare,
Unlocks the breast and lays the passions bare,
Then turn thy eyes on that important scene,
And ask thyself—if all be well within?
Where is the heartfelt worth and weight of soul
Which labour could not stop nor fear control?
Where the known dignity, the stamp of awe,
Which half-abash'd the proud and venal saw?
[Page 126] Where the calm triumphs of an honest cause?
Where the delightful taste of just applause?
Where the strong reason, the commanding tongue,
On which the Senate fir'd or trembling hung?
All vanish'd, all are sold!—and in their room,
Couch'd in thy bosom's deep distracted gloom,
See the pale form of barb'rous Grandeur dwell,
Like some grim idol in a sorc'rer's cell!
To her in chains thy dignity was led,
At her polluted shrine thy honour bled;
With blasted weeds thy awful brow she crown'd,
Thy pow'rful tongue with poison'd philters bound,
That baffled Reason straight indignant flew,
And fair Persuasion from her seat withdrew:
For now no longer Truth supports thy cause,
No longer Glory prompts thee to applause;
No longer Virtue breathing in thy breast,
With all her conscious majesty confest,
Still bright and brighter wakes th' almighty flame
To rouse the feeble and the wilful tame,
And where she sees the catching glimpses rowl
Spreads the strong blaze and all involves the soul;
But cold restraints thy conscious fancy chill,
And formal passions mock thy struggling will;
Or if thy Genius e'er forget his chain,
And reach impatient at a nobler strain,
Soon the sad bodings of contemptuous mirth
Shoot thro' thy breast and stab the gen'rous birth,
[Page 127] Till blind with smart from truth to frenzy tost,
And all the tenour of thy reason lost,
Perhaps thy anguish drains a real tear,
While some with pity some with laughter hear.
—Can art, alas! or genius, guide the head
Where truth and freedom from the heart are fled?
Can lesser wheels repeat their native stroke
When the prime function of the soul is broke?
But come, unhappy Man! thy sates impend;
Come, quit thy friends, if yet thou hast a friend;
Turn from the poor rewards of guilt like thine,
Renounce thy titles and thy robes resign;
For see the hand of Destiny display'd
To shut thee from the joys thou hast betray'd!
See the dire fane of Infamy arise
Dark as the grave and spacious as the skies,
Where from the first of time thy kindred train,
The chiefs and princes of th' unjust, remain!
Eternal barriers guard the pathless road
To warn the wand'rer of the curs'd abode,
But prone as whirlwinds scour the passive sky
The heights surmounted down the steep they fly.
There black with frowns relentless Time awaits,
And goads their footsteps to the guilty gates,
And still he asks them of their unknown aims,
Evolves their secrets and their guilt proclaims,
And still his hands despoil them on the road
Of each vain wreath by lying bards bestow'd,
[Page 128] Break their proud marbles, crush their festal cars,
And rend the lawless trophies of their wars.
At last the gates his potent voice obey,
Fierce to their dark abode he drives his prey,
Where ever arm'd with adamantine chains
The watchful demon o'er her vassals reigns,
O'er mighty names and giant pow'rs of lust,
The Great, the Sage, the Happy, and August
*;
No gleam of hope their baleful mansion cheers,
No sound of honour hails their unbless'd cars,
But dire reproaches from the friend betray'd,
The childless fire and violated maid,
But vengeful vows for guardian laws essac'd,
From towns enslav'd and continents laid waste,
But long Posterity's united groan,
And the sad charge of horrours not their own,
For ever thro' the trembling space resound,
And sink eaxh impious forehead to the ground.
Ye mighty foes of Liberty and Rest
Give way; do homage to a mightier guest!
Ye daring Spirits of the Roman race,
See Curio's toil your proudest claims efface!
—Aw'd at the name fierce Appius
† rising bends,
And hardy Cinna from his throne attends:
[Page 129] "He comes," they cry, "to whom the Fates assign'd
"With surer arts to work what we design'd,
"From year to year the stubborn herd to sway,
"Month all their wrongs and all their rage obey,
"Till own'd their guide and trusted with their pow'r
"He mock'd their hopes in one decisive hour,
"Then tir'd and yielding led them to the chain,
"And quench'd the spirit we provok'd in vain."
But thou, Supreme! by whose eternal hands
Fair Liberty's heroick empire stands,
Whose thunders the rebellious deep control,
And quell the triumphs of the traitor's soul,
O turn this dreadful omen far away!
On Freedom's foes their own attempts repay,
Relume her sacred fire so near supprest,
And six her shrine in ev'ry Roman breast.
Tho' bold Corruption boast around the land
"Let Virtue if she can my baits withstand!"
Tho' bolder now she urge th' accursed claim,
Gay with her trophies rais'd on Curio's shame,
Yet some there are who scorn her impious mirth,
Who know what conscience and a heart are worth.
—O Friend and Father of the human mind,
Whose art for noblest ends our frame design'd!
If I, tho' fated to the studious shade,
Which party-strife nor anxious pow'r invade,
If I aspire in publick virtue's cause
To guide the Muses by sublimer laws,
And give my numbers entrance to the heart:
Perhaps the verse might rouse her smother'd flame,
And snatch the fainting patriot back to fame;
Perhaps by worthy thoughts of humankind
To worthy deeds exalt the conscious mind,
Or dash Corruption in her proud career,
And teach her slaves that Vice was born to fear.
LOVE. AN ELEGY.
Too much my heart of Beauty's pow'r hath known,
Too long to Love hath Reason left her throne,
Too long my Genius mourn'd his myrtle chain,
And three rich years of youth consum'd in vain.
My wishes lull'd with soft inglorious dreams
Forgot the patriot's and the sage's themes;
Thro' each Elysian vale and Fairy grove,
Thro' all th' enchanted paradise of Love,
Misled by sickly Hope's deceitful flame,
Averse to action, and renouncing fame.
At last the visionary scenes decay,
My eyes exulting bless the newborn day
Whose faithful beams detect the dang'rous road
In which my heedless feet securely trod,
And strip the phantoms of their lying charms
That lur'd my soul from Wisdom's peaceful arms.
For silver streams and banks bespread with flow'rs,
For mossy couches and harmonious bow'rs,
Lo! barren heaths appear and pathless woods,
And rocks hung dreadful o'er unfathom'd floods:
For openness of heart, for tender smiles,
Looks fraught with love, and wrath-disarming wiles,
Lo! sullen Spite and perjur'd Lust of Gain,
And cruel Pride and crueller Disdain;
Lo! cordial Faith to idiot airs re
[...]in'd,
Now coolly civil now transporting kind;
For graceful Ease, lo! Affectation walks,
And dull Half-sense for Wit and Wisdom talks:
New to each hour what low delight succeeds,
What precious furniture of hearts and heads!
By nought their prudence but by getting known,
And all their courage in deceiving shown.
See next what plagues attend the lover's state,
What frightful forms of Terrour, Scorn, and Hate!
See burning Fury heav'n and earth defy!
See dumb Despair in icy fetters lie!
See black Suspicion bend his gloomy brow,
The hideous image of himself to view!
And fond Belief with all a lover's flame
Sinks in those arms that points his head with shame!
There wan Dejection falt'ring as he goes,
In shades and silence vainly seeks repose,
Musing thro' pathless wilds consumes the day,
Then lost in darkness weeps the hours away.
Some touch the lyre and others urge the dance;
On ev'ry head the rosy garland glows,
In ev'ry hand the golden goblet flows,
The Siren views them with exulting eyes,
And laughs at bashful Virtue as she flies.
But see behind where Scorn and Want appear,
The grave remonstrance and the witty sneer;
See fell Remorse in action prompt to dart
Her shaky poison thro' the conscious heart!
And Sloth to cancel with oblivious shame
The fair memorial of recording Fame!
Are these delights that one would wish to gain?
Is this th' Elysium of a sober brain?
To wait for happiness in female smiles,
Bear all her scorn, be caught with all her wiles,
With pray'rs, with bribes, with lies, her pity crave,
Bless her hard bonds, and boast to be her slave,
To feel for trifles a distracting train
Of hopes and terrours equally in vain,
This hour to tremble and the next to glow?
Can Pride, can Sense, can Reason, stoop so low,
When Virtue at an easier price displays
The sacred wreaths of honourable praise,
When Wisdom utters her divine decree
To laugh at pompous Folly and be free?
I bid adieu then to these woful scenes,
I bid adieu to all the sex of queens;
That lets a woman's will his ease control.
There laugh ye Witty! and rebuke ye Grave!
For me I scorn to boast that I'm a slave;
I bid the whining brotherhood be gone:
Joy to my heart! my wishes are my own.
Farewell the female heav'n the female hell,
To the great god of Love a glad farewell.
Is this the triumph of thy awful name?
Are these the splendid hopes that urg'd thy aim
When first my bosom own'd thy haughty sway,
When thus Minerva heard thee boasting say,
"Go, martial Maid! elsewhere thy arts employ,
"Nor hope to shelter that devoted boy;
"Go teach the solemn sons of Care and Age,
"The pensive statesmen and the midnight sage;
"The young with me must other lessons prove,
"Youth calls for Pleasure, Pleasure calls for Love;
"Behold his heart thy grave advice disdains,
"Behold I bind him in eternal chains?"
Alas! great Love, how idle was the boast!
Thy chains are broken and thy lessons lost;
Thy wilful rage has tir'd my suff'ring heart,
And passion, reason, forc'd thee to depart.
But wherefore dost thou linger on thy way,
Why vainly search for some pretence to stay
When crowds of vassals court thy pleasing yoke
And countless victims bow them to the stroke?
[Page 134] Lo! round thy shrine a thousand youths advance,
Warm with the gentle ardours of romance
Each longs t' assert th cause with feats of arms,
And make the world consess Dulcinea's charms.
Ten thousand girls with flow'ry chaplets crown'd
To groves and streams thy tender triumph
[...]ound,
Each bids the stream in murmurs speak her flame,
Each calls the grove to sigh her shepherd's name:
But if thy pride such easy honours scorn,
If nobler trophies must thy toil adorn,
Behold yon' flow'ry antiquated maid
Bright in the bloom of threescore years display'd,
Her shalt thou bind in thy delightful chains,
And thrill with gentle pangs her wither'd veins,
Her frosty cheek with crimson blushes dye,
With dreams of rapture melt her maudlin eye.
Turn then thy labours to the servile crowd,
Entice the wary and control the proud,
Make the sad miser his best gains forego,
The solemn statesman sigh to be a beau,
The bold coquette with fondest passion burn,
The Bacchanalian o'er his bottle mourn,
And that chief glory of thy pow'r maintain
"To poise ambition in a female brain."
Be these thy triumphs, but no more presume
That my rebellious heart will yield thee room:
I know thy puny force thy simple wiles,
I break triumphant thro' thy slimsy toils:
[Page 135] I see thy dying lamp's last languid glow,
Thy arrows blunted and unbrac'd thy bow;
I feel diviner fires my breast inflame
To active science and ingenuous fame,
Resume the paths my earliest choice began,
And lose with pride the lover in the man.
A BRITISH PHILIPPICK, OCCASIONED BY THE INSULTS OF THE SPANIARDS, AND THE PRESENT PREPARATIONS FOR WAR, 1738.
WHENCE this unwonted transport in my breast?
Why glow my thoughts? and whither would the Muse
Aspire with rapid wing? Her country's cause
Demands her efforts: at that sacred call
She summons all her ardour, throws aside
The trembling lyre, and with the warriour's trump
She means to thunder in each British ear;
And if one spark of honour or of fame,
Disdain of insult, dread of infamy,
One thought of publick virtue, yet survive,
She means to wake it, rouse the gen'rous flame,
With patriot zeal inspirit ev'ry breast,
And
[...]ire each British heart with British wrongs.
Alas, the vain attempt! What influence now
Can the Muse boast? or what attention now
Is paid to fame or virtue? Where is now
The British spirit, gen'rous, warm, and brave,
To free the suppliant nations? Where indeed
If that protection once to strangers giv'n
Be now withheld from sons! each nobler thought
That wa
[...]'d our
[...]ires is lost and bury'd now
In luxury and avarice. Baneful vice!
H
[...]w it unmans a nation! Yet I'll try;
[...] aim to shake this vile degen'rate sloth,
I'll dare to rouse Britannia's dreaming sons
To fame, to virtue, and impart around
A gen'rous feeling of compatriot woes.
Come then the various pow'rs of forceful Speech,
All that can move, awaken, fire, transport!
Come the bold ardour of the Theban bard,
Th' arousing thunder of the patriot Greek,
The soft persuasion of the Roman sage!
Come all! and raise me to an equal height,
A r
[...]pture worthy of my glorious cause,
Lest my best efforts failing should debase
The sacred them
[...], for with no common wing
The Muse attempts to soar. Yet what need these?
My country's fame, my freeborn British heart,
Shall be my best inspirers, raise my flight
High as the Theban's pinion, and with more
Than Greek or Roman flame exalt my soul.
Oh! could I give the vast ideas birth
Expressive of the thoughts that flame within,
No more should lazy Luxury detain
[Page 137] Our ardent youth, no more should Britain's sons
Sit tamely passive by, and careless hear
The pray'rs, sighs, groans, (immortal insamy!)
Of fellow Britons with oppression sunk
In bitterness of soul demanding aid,
Calling on Britain their dear native land,
The land of Liberty, so greatly sam'd
For just redress, the land so often dy'd
With her best blood, for that arousing cause
The freedom of her sons; those sons that now
Far from the manly blessings of her sway
Drag the vile fetters of a Spanish lord.
And dare they, dare the vanquish'd sons of Spain,
Enslave a Briton? Have they then forgot,
So soon forgot, the great th' immortal day
When rescu'd Sicily with joy beheld
The swift-wing'd thunder of the British arm
Disperse their navies, when their coward bands
Fled like the raven from the bird of Jove,
From swift impending vengeance fled in vain?
Are these our lords? and can Britannia see
Her soes oft' vanquish'd thus defy her pow'r,
Insult her standard and enslave her sons,
And not arise to justice? Did our sires,
Unaw'd by chains, by exile, or by death,
Preserve inviolate her guardian rights,
To Britons ever sacred, that their sons
Might give them up to Spaniards?—Turn your eyes,
[Page 138] Turn ye degen'rate! who with haughty boast
Call yourselves Britons, to that dismal gloom,
That dungeon dark and deep, where never thought
Of joy or peace can enter; see the gates
Harsh-creaking open; what an hideous void,
Dark as the yawning grave! while still as death
A frightful silence reigns: there on the ground
Behold your brethren chain'd like beasts of prey,
There mark your num'rous glories, there behold
The look that speaks unutterable wo,
The mangled limb, the faint the deathful eye,
With famine sunk, the deep-heart bursting groan
Suppress'd in silence; view the loathsome food
Refus'd by dogs; and oh the stinging thought!
View the dark Spaniard glorying in their wrongs,
The deadly priest triumphant in their woes,
And thund'ring worse damnation on their souls,
While that pale form in all the pangs of death
Too faint to speak, yet eloquent of all
His native British spirit yet untam'd,
Raises his head, and with indignant srowns
Of great defiance and superiour scorn
Looks up and dies.—Oh! I'm all on fire!
But let me spare the theme, lest future times
Should blush to hear that either conquer'd Spain
Durst offer Britain such outrageous wrong
Or Britain tamely bore it.—
Descend ye guardian Heroes of the land!
[Page 139] Scourges of Spain descend! behold your sons,
See how they run the same heroick race,
How prompt how ardent in their country's cause,
How greatly proud t'assert their British blood,
And in their deeds reflect their fathers' fame!
Ah! would to Heav'n ye did not rather see
How dead to virtue in the publick cause,
How cold, how careless, how to glory deaf,
They shame your laurels and belie their birth!
Come ye great Spirits, Cav'ndish, Rawleigh, Blake!
And ye of later name, your country's pride,
Oh come! disperse these lazy fumes of sloth,
Teach British hearts with British fires to glow;
In wak'ning whispers rouse our ardent youth,
Blazon the triumphs of your better days,
Paint all the glorious scenes of rightful war
In all its splendours; to their swelling souls
Say how ye bow'd th' insulting Spaniards' pride,
Say how ye thunder'd o'er their prostrate heads,
Say how ye broke their lines and fir'd their ports,
Say how not death in all its srightful shapes
Could damp your souls or shake the great resolve
For right and Britain; then display the joys
The patriot's soul exalting while he views
Transported millions hail with loud acclaim
The guardian of their civil sacred rights;
(How greatly welcome to the virtuous man
Is death for others' good!) the radiant thoughts
[Page 140] That beam celestial on his passing soul,
Th' unfading crowns awaiting him above,
The exalting plaudit of the Great Supreme,
Who in his actions with complacence views
His own reflected splendour; then descend
Tho' to a lower yet a nobler scene;
Paint the just honours to his relicks paid,
Shew grateful millions weeping o'er his grave,
While his fair fame in each progressive age
For ever brightens, and the wise and good
Of ev'ry land in universal choir
With richest incense of undying praise
His urn encircle, to the wond ring world
His num'rous triumphs blazon, while with awe,
With filial rev'rence, in his steps they tread,
And copying ev'ry virtue ev'ry fame
Transplant his glories into second life,
And with unsparing hand make nations blest
By his example. Vast immense rewards
For all the turmoils which the virtuous mind
Encounters here! Yet, Britons! are ye cold?
Yet deaf to glory, virtue, and the call
Of your poor injur'd countrymen? Ah! no:
I see ye are not; ev'ry bosom glows
With native greatness, and in all its state
The British spirit rises. Glorious change!
Fame, Virtue, Freedom, welcome! Oh! forgive
The Muse, that ardent in her sacred cause
[Page 141] Your glory question'd; she beholds with joy,
She owns, she triumphs, in her wish'd mistake.
See from her seabeat throne in awful march
Britannia tow'rs! upon her laurel crest
The plumes majestick nod; behold she heaves
Her guardian shields, and terrible in arms
For battle shakes her adamantine spear;
Loud at her foot the British Lion roars,
Frighting the nations: haughty Spain full soon
Shall hear and tremble. Go then, Britons! forth
Your country's daring champions; tell your foes,
Tell them in thunders o'er their prostrate land,
You were not born for slaves: let all your deeds
Shew that the sons of those immortal men,
The stars of shining story, are not slow
In virtue's path to emulate their sires,
T' assert their country's rights, avenge her sons,
And hurl the bolts of Justice on her soes.