That mighty, matchless German, who attun'd His lyre seraphic to thy native tongue!- Thou heard'st with grudging and disgusted ear Those great designs attain'd, when, thro' the aisles Of the vast ancient fane, in torrents burst Those floods of harmony, that lift the soul Upon their swelling and tumultuous waves Up to the Throne of God.-O! what is Virtue, If praise of those, who thus their talents ten Ardent improv'd, is folly, or is vice?
Nor only on the wreaths for Genius twined Fall the deep shadows of this Cynic spleen; Mark how ungenerous the beauteous strain Closes, that sings the desolate of heart, Forlorn OMAI, on his native hills
Wandering, with eyes that search the watry waste
He certainly composed his Oratorios for a band whose complete number the comparative fewness of musical performers rendered then unattainable.
1. 10. Is vice-The appropriation of those sums to charitable purposes which were collected at the Handelian comme. morations, places the injustice of Cowper's sarcasm upon a level with its absurdity, accusing them, as it does, of a profane and idolatrous tendency.
1. 13. Beauteous strain-See latter part of the first book of the TASK. The episode begins,
But far above the rest, and with most cause
"For sight of ship from England !"-why pollute Thy lovely requiem to his vanish'd joys
With heartless taunt on the illustrious band That led him hither, and restor❜d him back, At his kind, natural wish, that nobly sprung From patriot love, too probably, alas! Requited ill, and pregnant with the pangs Of fruitless, stung regret. Was it for gain That those illustrious Chiefs, with daring hand, Rais'd the pale curtains of the southern Pole?— Loth as thou art to credit human worth, O! Bard unjust ! thou know'st that not for gold, Gems, or false glory, they explor'd and brav’d Climes dangerous and unknown; but to diffuse The blessings mild of cultivated life Amid the perilous and lonely haunts Of the lugubrious savage, straying slow, Silent and comfortless, o'er pathless wastes Torrid, or frore. Thus on the worth, that rose Its nation's honour, thy immortal muse, Which should record it to succeeding times,
For the bright, fostering dews of just applause, Sheds cankerous scorn. And was it not enough To impute to every wild and idle weed
Of human frailty, such envenom'd juice As slowly circles through thy latent veins, Death-giving hemlock?-Was not that enough, Without enlisting a much favour'd muse
Against Just Praise, the spur of great designs, And O! twice blest, like Mercy? Was thy lyre Thus highly gifted for such warfare rude?
For notes, O! how unlike the strains that stole From the sweet harp of Jesse's pitying son, Before whose kind, assuasive, melting tones Flew the despair which spread her raven-wing O'er the sunk spirit of Saul!-Thee, Bard morose, Churlish amid thy fancy's golden stores, Thee will I teach, censorious as thou art, What is not Virtue. Listen to my verse; Confute it if thou canst ;-if not, admit The force of Truth, though rushing from a lyre Less richly strung, less solemn than thine own!
It was not is not-and can ne'er be virtue, Merely from terror to abstain from vice; Merely to sigh for sufferings, which result From proud unfeeling Man's abuse of power, Careless, or rancorous;-nor yet to seize The rod of indignation, to chastise The vanities and follies of mankind With that asperity, which ill becomes A fellow-mortal frail.-'Tis not to check, With cynic sneer, that fervour of the soul, Which, grateful for the transport Genius gives, Praises the unwearied culture of its powers,
GOD's gift magnificent. No, sacred Virtue, These constitute thee not;-for O 'tis thine With soft compassion's pleading eye to look, And with benign allowance, on each fault Not wearing crime's dark hue, though thee thyself No such weak errors taint. It is to hope Much from the mercy of a parent judge On him he made so frail.-It is to know That all thou see'st of selfish, light, and vain, Far less of sin possesses, than the pride, Rigid and drear, which shuts the censor's heart Against construction charitable; against Tender indulgence.-'Tis to love, applaud, And emulate, whatever has its rise In glad fraternal kindness, and the power Of gratitude, dispersing by its glow
Envy, and Hate, and Fear, which darkling roam That man's cold mind, who feels another's right To Fame's bright wreath, yet brings no votive flower.
Now, if disdainful of my humble verse, It soften not the Satirist's marble breast, O! may he listen to an higher strain, A strain of Inspiration, and it breathes No precept hostile to my lays !-but list, List, I adjure thee! since it much imports Thy welfare temporal, and eternal !—try The censures harsh of thy stern muse, who oft
As with the tongue of missive angels speaks, Try them by test unerring, by the Voice Which sounding brass and tinkling cimbal call'd The human, and angelic strains combin'd, If wanting Charity;-there should they fail, Thy censures harsh to that pure ordeal brought, Reform them, and grow social, just, and kind, Reform them, and be happy!-With firm hand Disroot thy bosom's hemlock !-there it grows, Dark spots denote the weed, illiberal spleen, Adverse to praise, however nobly earn'd, Where latent hope of a reward on high Prompts not its fervour; sullen, bigot-pride,
Hating for errors, less perhaps than thine.
Since on that anxious and indignant brow Genius has long her amaranthine crown Exulting placed, may they, who hold their torch High o'er the paths of Peace, Daughters of Heaven, Star-pointing Hope, and meek-voic'd Charity, Clear that gloom'd brow, illume those eyes severe, Solicitous, and sad!-0, clasp the veil Mild Charity extends, of sky-wove grain, Blessing the hand, which gently lets it fall Upon a brother's frailty! From thy hand When thus it may descend, immortal Hope Shall, with her silver anchor, thy void grasp Smiling supply, and, upward soaring, chase
« AnteriorContinuar » |