I Whose infants owe them less Its gaudy parent fly. You were a mother! at your bosom fed The babes that loved you. You, with laughing eye, Without the mother's bitter groans : By touch, or taste, by looks or tones The mother of your infant's soul ! His chariot-planet round the goal of day, A moment turned his awful face away ; New influences in your being rose, Thenceforth your soul rejoiced to see Where once the Austrian fell Beneath the shaft of Tell! ODE TO TRANQUILLITY. Than all the family of Fame! To thee I gave my early youth, Who late and lingering seeks thy shrine, And dire remembrance interlope, But me thy gentle nand will lead And breaks the busy moonlight clouds, The feeling heart, the searching soul, Aloof, with hermit-eye 1 scan The present works of present man- TO A YOUNG FRIEND, ON HIS PROPOSING TO DOMESTICATE WITH THE AUTHOR. COMPOSED IN 1796. A MOUNT, not wearisome and bare and steep, But a green mountain variously up-piled, Where o'er the jutting rocks soft mosses creep, Or colored lichens with slow oozing weep; Where cypress and the darker yew start wild ; And ʼmid the summer torrent's gentle dash Dance brightened the red clusters of the ash; Beneath whose boughs, by those still sounds be guiled, Calm Pensiveness might muse herself to sleep; Till haply startled by some fleecy dam, That rustling on the bushy cliff above, With melancholy bleat of anxious love, Made meek inquiry for her wandering lamb: Such a green mountain 'twere most sweet to climb, E’en while the bosom ached with loneliness— How more than sweet, if some dear friend should bless The adventurous toil, and up the path sublime Now lead, now follow: the glad landscape round, Wide and more wide, increasing without bound) O then 'twere loveliest sympathy, to mark The berries of the half-uprooted ash Dripping and bright; and list the torrent's dash, Beneath the cypress, or the yew more dark, Seated at ease, on some smooth mossy rock; Till high o'er head his beckoning friend appears, And from the forehead of the topmost crag Shouts eagerly : for haply there uprears That shadowing pine its old romantic limbs, Which latest shall detain the enamored sight Seen from below, when eve the valley dims, Tinged yellow with the rich departing light; And haply, basoned in some unsunned cleft, A beauteous spring, the rock's collected tears, Sleeps sheltered there, scarce wrinkled by the gale ! Together thus the world's vain turmoil left, Stretched on the crag, and shadowed by the pine, And bending o'er the clear delicious fount, Ah! dearest youth! it were a lot divine To cheat our noons in moralizing mood, While west-winds fanned our temples toil-bedewed : Then downwards slope, oft pausing, from the mount, To some lone mansion, in some woody dale, Where smiling with blue eye, domestic bliss Gives this the husband's, that the brother's kiss ! Thus rudely versed in allegoric lore, To glad and fertilize the subject plains ; Where Inspiration, his diviner strains Low murmuring, lay; and starting from the rocks And from the stirring world up-lifted high, And oft the melancholy theme supply) Pours all its healthful greenness on the soul, We'll smile at wealth, and learn to smile at fame, Our hopes, our knowledge, and our joys the same, As neighboring fountains image, each the whole : Then when the mind hath drunk its fill of truth, We'll discipline the heart to pure delight, Rekindling sober joy's domestic flame. They whom I love shall love thee, honored youth ! Now may Heaven realize this vision bright! LINES TO W. L. WHILE HE SANG A SONG TO PURCELL'S MUSIC. WHILE my young cheek retains its healthful hues, L--! methinks, I would not often hear For which my miserable brethren weep! But should uncomforted misfortunes steep |