The Poetical Works of Edward Young - BestLightNovel.com
You’re reading novel The Poetical Works of Edward Young Part 21 online at BestLightNovel.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit BestLightNovel.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
EPITAPH
On Lord Aubrey Beauclerk(45), in Westminster Abbey, 1740.
Whilst Britain boasts her empire o'er the deep, This marble shall compel the brave to weep: As men, as Britons, and as soldiers, mourn; 'Tis dauntless, loyal, virtuous Beauclerk's urn.
Sweet were his manners, as his soul was great, And ripe his worth, though immature his fate; Each tender grace that joy and love inspires, Living, he mingled with his martial fires: Dying, he bid Britannia's thunders roar; And Spain still felt him, when he breath'd no more.
EPITAPH AT WELWYN, HERTFORDs.h.i.+RE.
If fond of what is rare, attend!
Here lies an honest man, Of perfect piety, Of lamblike patience, My friend, James Barker; To whom I pay this mean memorial, For what deserves the greatest.
An example Which shone through all the clouds of fortune, Industrious in low estate, The lesson and reproach of those above him.
To lay this little stone Is my ambition; While others rear The polish'd marbles of the great!
Vain pomp; A turf o'er virtue charms us more.
E. Y. 1749.
A LETTER TO MR. TICKELL,
Occasioned by the Death of the Right Hon. Joseph Addison, Esq., 1719.
-Tu nunc eris alter ab illo.
-VIRG.
O long with me in Oxford groves confin'd, In social arts and sacred friends.h.i.+p join'd; Fair Isis' sorrow, and fair Isis' boast, Lost from her side, but fortunately lost; Thy wonted aid, my dear companion! bring, And teach me thy departed friend to sing: A darling theme! once powerful to inspire, And now to melt, the muses' mournful choir: Now, and now first, we freely dare commend His modest worth, nor shall our praise offend.
Early he bloom'd amid the learned train, And ravish'd Isis listen'd to his strain.
"See, see," she cried, "old Maro's muse appears, Wak'd from her slumber of two thousand years: Her finish'd charms to Addison she brings, Thinks in his thought, and in his numbers sings.
All read transported his pure cla.s.sic page; Read, and forget their climate and their age."
The state, when now his rising fame was known, Th' unrival'd genius challeng'd for her own, Nor would that one, for scenes for action strong, Should let a life evaporate in song.
As health and strength the brightest charms dispense, Wit is the blossom of the soundest sense: Yet few, how few, with lofty thoughts inspir'd, With quickness pointed, and with rapture fir'd, In conscious pride their own importance find, Blind to themselves, as the hard world is blind!
Wit they esteem a gay but worthless power, The slight amus.e.m.e.nt of a leisure hour; Unmindful that, conceal'd from vulgar eyes, Majestic wisdom wears the bright disguise.
Poor Dido fondled thus, with idle joy, Dread Cupid, lurking in the Trojan boy; Lightly she toy'd, and trifled with his charms, And knew not that a G.o.d was in her arms.
Who greatest excellence of thought could boast, In action, too, have been distinguish'd most: This Sommers(46) knew, and Addison sent forth From the malignant regions of the north, To be matur'd in more indulgent skies, Where all the vigour of the soul can rise; Thro' warmer veins where sprightlier spirits run, And sense enliven'd sparkles in the sun.
With secret pain the prudent patriot gave The hopes of Britain to the rolling wave, Anxious, the charge to all the stars resign'd, And plac'd a confidence in sea and wind.
Ausonia soon receiv'd her wondering guest, And equal wonder in her turn confess'd, To see her fervours rival'd by the pole, Her l.u.s.tre beaming from a northern soul: In like surprise was her aeneas lost, To find his picture grace a foreign coast.
Now the wide field of Europe he surveys, Compares her kings, her thrones and empires weighs, In ripen'd judgment and consummate thought; Great work! by Na.s.sau's favour cheaply bought.
He now returns to Britain a support, Wise in her senate, graceful in her court; And when the public welfare would permit, The source of learning, and the soul of wit.
O Warwick! (whom the muse is fond to name, And kindles, conscious of her future theme,) O Warwick! by divine contagion bright!
How early didst thou catch his radiant light!
By him inspir'd, how s.h.i.+ne before thy time, And leave thy years, and leap into thy prime!
On some warm bank, thus, fortunately born, A rose-bud opens to a summer's morn, Full-blown ere noon her fragrant pride displays, And shows th' abundance of her purple rays.
Wit, as her bays, was once a barren tree; We now, surpris'd, her fruitful branches see; Or, orange-like, till his auspicious time It grew indeed, but s.h.i.+ver'd in our clime: He first the plant to richer gardens led, And fix'd, indulgent, in a warmer bed: The nation, pleas'd, enjoys the rich produce, And gathers from her ornament her use.
When loose from public cares the grove he sought, And fill'd the leisure interval with thought, The various labours of his easy page, A chance amus.e.m.e.nt, polish'd half an age.
Beyond this truth old bards could scarce invent, Who durst to frame a world by accident.
What he has sung, how early and how well, The Thames shall boast, and Roman Tiber tell.
A glory more sublime remains in store, Since such his talents, that he sung no more.
No fuller proof of power th' Almighty gave, Making the sea, than curbing her proud wave.
Nought can the genius of his works transcend, But their fair purpose and important end; To rouse the war for injur'd Europe's laws, To steel the patriot in great Brunswick's cause; With virtue's charms to kindle sacred love, Or paint th' eternal bowers of bliss above.
Where hadst thou room, great author! where to roll The mighty theme of an immortal soul?
Through paths unknown, unbeaten, whence were brought Thy proofs so strong for immaterial thought?
One let me join, all other may excel.
"How could a mortal essence think so well?"
But why so large in the great writer's praise?
More lofty subjects should my numbers raise; In him (ill.u.s.trious rivalry!) contend The statesman, patriot, Christian, and the friend!
His glory such, it borders on disgrace To say he sung the best of human race.
In joy once join'd, in sorrow now for years, Partner in grief, and brother of my tears, Tickell! accept this verse, thy mournful due; Thou further shalt the sacred theme pursue; And, as thy strain describes the matchless man, Thy life shall second what thy muse began.
Though sweet the numbers, though a fire divine Dart through the whole, and burn in every line, Who strives not for that excellence he draws, Is stain'd by fame, and suffers from applause.
But haste to thy ill.u.s.trious task; prepare The n.o.ble work well trusted to thy care, The gift(47) bequeath'd by Addison's command, To Craggs made sacred by his dying hand.
Collect the labours, join the various rays, The scatter'd light in one united blaze; Then bear to him so true, so truly lov'd, In life distinguished, and in death approv'd, Th' immortal legacy. He hangs awhile In generous anguish o'er the glorious pile; With anxious pleasure the known page reviews, And the dear pledge with falling tears bedews.
What though thy tears, pour'd o'er thy G.o.dlike friend, Thy other cares for Britain's weal suspend?
Think not, O patriot! while thy eyes o'erflow, Those cares suspended for a private woe; Thy love to him is to thy country shown; He mourns for her who mourns for Addison.
REFLECTIONS ON THE PUBLIC SITUATION OF THE KINGDOM
Inscribed to the Duke of Newcastle.
Holles! immortal in far more than fame!
Be thou ill.u.s.trious in far more than power.
Great things are small when greater rise to view Tho' station'd high, and press'd with public cares, Disdain not to peruse my serious song, Which peradventure may push by the world: Of a few moments rob Britannia's weal, And leave Europa's counsels less mature!
For thou art n.o.ble, and the theme is great.
Nor shall or Europe or Britannia blame Thine absent ear, but gain by the delay.
Long vers'd in senates and in cabinets, States' intricate demands and high debates!
As thou of use to those, so this to thee; And in a point that empire far outweighs, That far outweighs all Europe's thrones in one.