Imágenes de páginas
PDF
EPUB

Beauty and valour did his short life grace,
The grief and glory of his noble race!
Early abroad he did the world survey,
As if he knew he had not long to stay;
Saw what great Alexander in the East,
And mighty Julius conquer'd in the West;
Then, with a mind as great as theirs, he came
To find at home occasion for his fame;
Where dark confusion did the nations hide,
And where the juster was the weaker side.
Two loyal brothers took their sov'reign's part,
Employ'd their wealth, their courage, and their

art;

The elder1 did whole regiments afford;

The younger brought his conduct and his sword.
Born to command, a leader he begun,
And on the rebels lasting honour won.
The horse, instructed by their general's worth,
Still made the king victorious in the north.
Where Ca'ndish fought, the Royalists prevail'd;
Neither his courage nor his judgment fail'd.
The current of his vict'ries found no stop,
Till Cromwell came, his party's chiefest prop.
Equal success had set these champions high,
And both resolved to conquer or to die.
Virtue with rage, fury with valour strove;
But that must fall which is decreed above!
Cromwell, with odds of number and of fate,
Removed this bulwark of the church and state;
Which the sad issue of the war declared,
And made his task, to ruin both, less hard.
So when the bank, neglected, is o'erthrown,
The boundless torrent does the country drown.

The elder': afterwards Earl of Devonshire.

3

10

20

30

Thus fell the young, the lovely, and the brave;- 35 Strew bays and flowers on his honoured grave!

EPITAPH ON THE LADY SEDLEY.1

HERE lies the learned Savil's heir,
So early wise, and lasting fair,

That none, except her years they told,
Thought her a child, or thought her old.
All that her father knew or got,
His art, his wealth, fell to her lot;
And she so well improved that stock,
Both of his knowledge and his flock,
That wit and fortune, reconciled
In her, upon each other smiled.
While she to every well-taught mind.
Was so propitiously inclined,
And gave such title to her store,
That none, but th' ignorant, were poor.
The Muses daily found supplies,
Both from her hauds and from her eyes.
Her bounty did at once engage,

And matchless beauty warm their rage.
Such was this dame in calmer days,
Her nation's ornament and praise!
But when a storm disturb'd our rest,
The port and refuge of the oppress'd.
This made her fortune understood,
And look'd on as some public good.
So that (her person and her state,
Exempted from the common fate)

10

1 'Lady Sedley': daughter of Sir Henry Savil, provost of Eton, and who married Sir John Sedley.

M

[blocks in formation]

In all our civil fury she
Stood, like a sacred temple, free.
May here her monument stand so,
To credit this rude age! and show
To future times, that even we
Some patterns did of virtue see;
And one sublime example had
Of good, among so many bad.

EPITAPH,

TO BE WRITTEN UNDER THE LATIN INSCRIPTION UPON THE TOMB OF THE ONLY SON OF THE LORD ANDOVER.1

'Tis fit the English reader should be told,

In our own language, what this tomb does hold.
"Tis not a noble corpse alone does lie
Under this stone, but a whole family.

His parents' pious care, their name, their joy,
And all their hope, lies buried with this boy;
This lovely youth! for whom we all made moan,
That knew his worth, as he had been our own.

Had there been space and years enough allow'd,
His courage, wit, and breeding to have show'd,
We had not found, in all the num'rous roll
Of his famed ancestors, a greater soul;
His early virtues to that ancient stock
Gave as much honour, as from thence he took.
Like buds appearing ere the frosts are past,
To become man he made such fatal haste,
And to perfection labour'd so to climb,
Preventing slow experience and time,

16 Lord Andover': the eldest son of the Earl of Berkshire.

10

That 'tis no wonder Death our hopes beguiled; 19 He's seldom old that will not be a child.

EPITAPH UNFINISHED.

GREAT Soul! for whom Death will no longer stay,
But sends in haste to snatch our bliss away.
O cruel Death! to those you take more kind,
Than to the wretched mortals left behind!
Here beauty, youth, and noble virtue shined,
Free from the clouds of pride that shade the mind.
Inspired verse may on this marble live,
But can no honour to thy ashes give-

[merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small]

Exul eram, requiesque mihi, non fama, petita est,
Mens intenta suis ne foret usque malis:

Namque ubi mota calent sacra mea pectora Musa,

Altior humano spiritus ille malo est.

OVID. De Trist. lib. iv. el. I.

'These were Waller's latest poems, composed when he was eighty-two.

ARGUMENTS.

I. Asserting the authority of the Scripture, in which this love is revealed.— II. The preference and love of God to man in the creation.-III. The same love more amply declared in our redemption.-IV. How necessary this love is to reform mankind, and how excellent in itself.-V. Showing how happy the world would be, if this love were universally embraced.— VI. Of preserving this love in our memory, and how useful the contemplation thereof is.

CANTO I.

THE Grecian Muse has all their gods survived,
Nor Jove at us, nor Phoebus is arrived;
Frail deities! which first the poets made,
And then invoked, to give their fancies aid.
Yet if they still divert us with their rage,
What may be hoped for in a better age,
When not from Helicon's imagined spring,
But Sacred Writ, we borrow what we sing?
This with the fabric of the world begun,
Elder than light, and shall outlast the sun.
Before this oracle, like Dagon, all
The false pretenders, Delphos, Ammon, fall;
Long since despised and silent, they afford
Honour and triumph to th' Eternal Word.

As late philosophy1 our globe has graced,
And rolling earth among the planets placed,
So has this book entitled us to heaven,

And rules to guide us to that mansion given;
Tells the conditions how our peace was made,
And is our pledge for the great Author's aid.
His power in Nature's ample book we find,
But the less volume does express his mind.

This light unknown, bold Epicurus taught
That his bless'd gods vouchsafe us not a thought,
Late philosophy': that of Copernicus.

[blocks in formation]
« AnteriorContinuar »