Bolder, the horned tribes, or less of heat
And teasing insects patient, far from shore
Immerge their chests; and, while the hungry swarm
Now soars aloft, now resolute descends,
Lash their tormented sides; and, stamping quick
And oft, the muddy fluid scatter round.
And teasing insects patient, far from shore
Immerge their chests; and, while the hungry swarm
Now soars aloft, now resolute descends,
Lash their tormented sides; and, stamping quick
And oft, the muddy fluid scatter round.
Carey - 1796 - Key to Practical English Prosody
the poor elves, pa/e-fac'd, in tatter'd garb,
Motley with half-spun threads and cotton flakes,
Trudge, drooping, to the niany-storipd pile,
Where thousand spindles whirling stun the ear,
Confus'd. There, prisan'd close, they wretched moil.
Sweet age! pervert&Zfrtfm its proper end !
When childhood toils, the field should be the scene.
822
Pensive, alone, I walk the desert wilds,
Pacing the earth with slow and sluggish steps,
Avoiding watchfully all human haunts;
Intently \\gtlant with speed to shun
The saucy stare and prying eyes of man;
For, Jong of gay and cheerful thought bereft, -
My form betrays the inward fire that wastes | me".
823
Fresh from bis den, yon hollow trunk, behold
The wild-cat, dead-i-#&i of | the savage tribes
That roam in British forests--wont on high
To seise the rapid squirrel, <Sr by guile
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? Key to English Prosody. 15 1
Pluckfrtim her nest the unsuspecting dove,
fr, to the ground descending, thin the race
That bores the sandy warren. ***
824. -- Home.
ThUre is a magic in that little word :
it is a mystic circle', that surrounds
Comforts and virtues, never known heyond
The hallow'd limit. Often has my heart
ask'dftir that quiet haven : haven'd now,
I think of those, in this world's ai/derness
Who wander on, and find no home of rest.
825
Meanwhile the little songsters, prompt to cheer
Their mates close brooding in the brake below,
Strain their shrill throats; or, Kith parental care,
From twig to twig their timid offspring lead ;
Teach them to seise th' unwary gnat, to poise
Their pinions in short flights, their strength to prove,
And vent'rous trust the bosom of the air.
826
Where shall I turn me ? whifAeV shall 1 bend
My weary way? Thus zcorn with toil and faint,
Bow, through the thorny mazes 5/* th is wood,
Attain my distant dwelling? That deep cry,
That rings along the forest, seems to sound
My parting knell: it is the midnight howl
Of hungry monsters prov/Mngfor their prey.
827. -- Civilised Society.
Blest he,. though und'isUnguish'dfrom the crowd
liy wealth or dignity, who dwells secure
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? 152 Keif to English Prosody.
Where man, by nature fierce, has laid aside
His fierceness, having learn'd, though slow to learn,
The manners and the arts of civil life.
His wants indeed are many: but supply
Is ob-\-vioiis, plac'd | within the easy reach
Of temp'rate wishes and indus-l-friows hands. |
823
o ye, who court the silent calm retreats
Of contemplation, &nd who most prefer
The sotitHry walk -- as suiting^best
Their views, who sigh to pierce the secret haunts
Of Nature, marking her vagaries strange,
And, bold and unrestrain'd as she, to muse
The free, the rapt'rous lay -- still pace along
Your lonely way ; and be your musings sweet.
829. -- Parental Authority.
Behold your friend, your best, your truest friend,
A parent, whose authority, in show
When most severe, and must'ring all its force,
is but the graver counfe/iawce of love,
Whose favor, like the clouds of spring, may lour,
And utter now and then an awful voice,
But has a blessing m its darkest frown,
Threafning at once and nourishing the plant.
830. -- Profusion.
It is a hungry vice. It eats up all
That gives society its beauty, strength,
Convenience, and security, and use ;
Makes men mere vermin, wovthy to be trapp'd:
And gibbeted, as fast as catchpole claws
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? Key to English Prosody. ' 153
Can seise the slipp'ry prey ; unties the knot
Of union, and converts the sacred band,
That holds mankind togethe"r, to a scourge.
831. . -- The Owl.
Night-long she mourns, perch'd in some vacant niche,
Or time-rent crevice. Sometimes to the woods
She bends her silent slowly-moving wing,
and on some leafless tree, dead of old age,
Sits watchiiigfor her prey. But, should the foot
Of man intrude into her solemn shades,
^tartlM, he hears the wither'd, breaking branch
Crash as she rises : -- further in the gloom,
To deeper so/iVwrfcs she wings her way. .
832. -- The Swallows.
Long ere the wint'ry gusts, with chilly sweep,
Sigh through the leafless groves, the swallow tribes,
Heav'n-warn'd, in airy bevies congregate,
Or clust'ring sit, as if in deep consult
What time to launch : but, lingmwg, they wait,
Until the (eeble of the latest broods
Have gather'd strength the seaward path to brave.
At last the farewell twitter, spreading, sounds:
Aloft they fly, and melt in distant air.
833. -- Death.
Death! where the. magic in that empty name,
That chills my inmost heart ? Why, at the thought,
Starts the" cold dew of fear on ev'ry limb ?
There &re no terrors to surround the grave,
When the calm mind, collected in itself,
Surveys that Marrow house. The ghastly train,
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? 154 Key to English Prosody.
That haunt the midnight of deli-\-rhus guilt, \
Then vanish. --tn that home of endless rest,
all sorrows cease. *****
834. -- A January Night in Town.
There Vice and Folly run their giddy rounds :
There eager crowds are lmi-\-rying to" | the sight
Of feign'd distress, yet have not time lo hear
The shiv'ring orphan's pray'r. The flaring lamps
Of gilded cha-|-j'lilts, drawn | by pamper'd steeds,
Illume the snowy street: the silent wheels
On heedless passewgtr steal wnperceiv'd,
Bearing the splendid fair to flutter round
Amid the mazy Xatfrinths of the dance.
835. -- A February Night in a Village.
While yet the night is long and drear and chill,
Soon as the slanting sun has sunk from 'view,
The sounding anvil cheerily invites
The weary hind to leave his twinkling fire,
And bask himself before the furnace glare ;
Where, blest with unbought mirth, the rustic ring
(Their faces lintW with the yellow blaze)
Beguile the hours, nor envy rooms of state.
836. -- April.
Light now the western gale sweeps o'er the plain ;
Gently it wave's the rwutefs cascade :
Gently it parts the lock on Beauty's brow,
And lifts the tress&,. from the snowy neck,
And bends the flow'rs, and makes the lily stoop,
As if to kiss its image in the wave,
Or curls with softest breath the glassy pool.
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? Key to English Prosody. 155
Lead where yon fountain sparAVes through the glade,
o'er whtise clear brink the pale narcissus bends,
That loves to trace its beauty in the wave; [leaves,
Where Zephyr, whisp'nng through the trembling
Dtps his tight pinions in the current clear,
And sprinkles freshness o'er the languid flow'rs.
837. -- May. -- Birds' Nests.
Now frtim the wild-flow'r bank the little bird
Picks the soft moss, and to the thicket flies,
And oft returns, and oft the work renews,
'Till all the curious fabric hangs complete;
Alas! but ill conceal'd frpm school-boy's eye,
Who, heed/ess bf the warbler's saddest plaint,
Tears frtim the bush the toil of ma-\-ny an hour. |
838. -- June.
Unhappy he, whti, in this season, pent
Within the darksome gloom of city lane,
Pines for the flow'ry paths and woody shades,
Frtim which the love of lucre or of pow'r
Entic'd his youthful steps. In vain he turns
The rich descriptive page of Thomson's Muse,
And strives to fancy th&t the lovely scenes
Are present. So the hand of childhood tries
To grasp the pictur'd bunch of fruit or flow'rs,
But, disappointed, feels the canvas smooth.
839. -- September.
At sultry hour of noon, the reaper band
Rest from their toil. Around their simple fare,
upon the stubble spread, blithestime they form
A circling groupe, while humbly waits behind
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? 156 Key to English Prosody.
The wistful dog, and, with expressive look
And pawing foot, implores his little share.
The short repast, season d with simple mirth,
And not without the song, gives place to sleep.
With sheaf beneath his head, the rustic youth
Enjoys sweet slumbers, while the maid he loves
Steals to his side, and screens him from the sun.
840. -- October.
Hush'd are the faded woods: no bird is heard,
Save where the red-breast mourns the falling leaf.
At close of shorten'd day, the reaper, tir'd,
With sic/c/e on his shoulder, homeward hies, [low,
Night comes with threat'ning storm,first a>A? sp'ring f
Sighing amid the boughs ; then, by degrees,
With violence redoubled at each pause,
Furious it rages, scaring startled sleep.
841. -- December.
Loud blows the blast. While, s\ielter'dfpom its rage,
The social circle feel their joys enhanc'd,
ah! little think they of the lab'ring ship,
Amid the uproar of the winds and waves--
The waves unseen, save by the lightnings glare,
Or cannon's flash, sad signal Hf distress.
The trembling crew each moment think they feel
The shock of sunken rock. At last they strike.
Borne on the blast, their dying voices reach,
Faintly, the sea-girt hamlet. Help is vain.
842
Can fertile mturt to the eye present
A nobler scene, than when the setting sun
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? Key to English Prosody. 157
Gleams oh the fading prospect, and illumes,
With a last stream of light, the spacious view ?
Such h the death of Virtue ; such the glow
8/her last hour, that animates the mind,
WhUn on the te/iSr of a well-spent life
The mental eye reverts, and gazes still,
Till the' dim shades of death o'erwheim the sight,
And lull the sense* m a long repose.
843
england! with all thy faults, I love thee still,
My counfry, and, while yet a nook is left,
Where English minds and manners may be found,
Shall be' constraint to love thee. Though thy clime
Be fickle', and thy year, most pari, deform'd
With dripping rains, or v/ithcr'd by a frost,
I would not yet exchange thy sullen skies
And fields without a flow'r, for warmer France
With all her vines, nor for Ausonia's groves
Of golden fruitage, and her myrtle bow'rs.
844. -- Spring.
How swells the raptur'd bosom, while the eye
Wanders, xmsatSd with delight, from shade
To shade, from grove to. thicke\/rowj near gioups
To yon primaeval' woods, with dark'ning sweep
Retiring,. Snd with beauty sees the whole
Kindfe, and glow with renovated life!
For, now, at Spring's re. animating call,
Each native tif the forVst, frUm the trunk
Tow'ring and huge, down (6 the tangled bush,
Its own peculiar character resumes.
r
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? 158 Key to English Prosody.
845
Sec, from bis cave beneath yon bramb\y bank,
The fox glide forth, scenting the feather'd prey
Perch'd at the neighb'ring cottage. --Creeping slow,
The weasel, and in si/enc* through the fern
Steals on the dozing lev'ref. Frtim her seat
She starts, and bears away th' assailant, fix'd
Fast to her neck, and, from the flowing: vein,
Sucking the vital current. Lo ! she falls :--
The puny murd'rer slinks into the brake
From the drain d carcase, sated With the blood.
846
Thus, when her standard civilising art
Plants on some barb'rous shore, to mountains bleak,
And craggy fastnesses his warrior sons
The angry Genius tif the waste withdraws;
There bids them,from the influence abhorr'd
Of science free, their sangj/<<wory rites,
Their manners rude, and savage laws uphold ;
Till fate shall once more pour thlm from their caves,
Impatient e'er their long-lost plains again
To spread the veil of ignorance and night. ,
847. -- Botany Bay. . ?
Why, stem Remembrance, must thy iron hand
Harrow my soul. ' why calls thy cruel pow'r
The fields of 'England to my exil'd eyes--
The joys which once were mine ? e'en now I see
The lowly, lovely dwelling: even now
Behold the woodbine clasping tls white walls, *
And hear the fearless Red-breasts chirp around,
? ? Generated for Christian Pecaut (University of Chicago) on 2014-12-26 11:50 GMT / http://hdl. handle. net/2027/hvd. hnjin7 Public Domain, Google-digitized / http://www. hathitrust. org/access_use#pd-google
? Key to English Prosody. 15! )
To ask their morning meal: for i was wont,
With friendly hand, to give their morning meal,
Was wont to love their song, when ling'ring mom
Streak'd tfer the chilly landscape the dim light.
848 *'
Behold yon pool, by un-exhausted springs
Still wiirtur'd, draw the multitudes that graze
The plain adjarf/ff. --on the bank worn bare,
And printed with ten f/iiwsand steps, the colts
In shifting groups combine; tir, to the brink
Descending, dip their pasteV/is in the wave.
Bolder, the horned tribes, or less of heat
And teasing insects patient, far from shore
Immerge their chests; and, while the hungry swarm
Now soars aloft, now resolute descends,
Lash their tormented sides; and, stamping quick
And oft, the muddy fluid scatter round.
849
The glow of eve is faded. Scarce the West
Retains a pale rnenio-|-rja7 of | the beams
That fir'd it, when the horizontal clouds,
With purple dies and fissures edged with gold,
Streak'd till calm ather; while, through sparkling haze,
The faint hills gltmmev'd, fainter, as their chain
Approach'd the fount of brightness, fainter still
As sunk the parting orb, and with the sky
In uhdistingM/sAable splendor join'd
Milder, still milder, the subsiding glow
Spar'd the pain'd eye-ball, and, with sober rays
Quench'd in the gath'ring dusk, refresh'd the sight.
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? 160 Key to English Prosody.
850. -- The Finding of Moses.
Slow glides the Nile: amid the margin flags,
Clos'd in a bulrush ark, the babe is kft,
Left by a mother's hand. His sister waits
Far off; and, pale, 'tween hope and fear, beholds .
The royal maid, surrounds? by her train,
Approach the river bank, approach the spot
Where sleeps the iunocHnt. She sees them stoop
To view the ark. The rushy lid is op'd,
And wakes the infant, smiling in his tears ;
As when, along a little mountain lake^
The summer south-wind breathes with gentle sigh,
And parts the reeds, unveilifwg, as they bend,
A water lily floating on the wave.
851
What prodigie"s can pow'r divine perform
More grand than it produces year by year,
And all in sight of inattentive man ?
Fami/tar with th' effect, we slight the cause,
and, in the constancy of nature's course,
The regular return of genial months,
And renovariow of a faded world,
See nought to wonder at. Should God agaiu,
As once in Q\-\-be$n, ? >>-|-terrupt the race
VfthV unde-|-i>j4fi<<g | and punc-|-rwa/ sm, \
How would the world admire ! But speaks it less
An nggncy divine, to make him know
His moment when to sink and when to rise.
age a/ter age, than to arrest his course :
all a? behold is mirfcli: but, seen
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? Key to English Prosody. , 16 i
So duly, all is miracle in vain.
i 852. -- Cruel Punishment of a Negro Slave.
Inhuman sons of Europe ! not content
With dooms of death, your victim high you hung
Encag'd, to scorch beneath the torrid ray,
And feed, alive, the hungry fowls of heav'n.
Around the bars already, see, they cling !
The vulture's head . looks through: she strives in vain
To force her way. The lesser birds await
'Till worn-out nature sinks : then on they pounce,
And tear the quiv'ring flesh. In agony
The victim wakes, and rolls his wretched eye? ,
And feebly drives the rav'ning flocks away.
Most dread/'w//y he groans: 'tis thirst, third, thirst,
Direst of human torments ! Down a^ain
He sinks : again he feels the tort'ring beak.
853. -- Ovid's Departure into Exile*.
In mem'ry's faithful mhitir while I scan
Tn' afflictive scenes of that disastrous night --
That night of deepest woe, when, torn by fate
From all my heart held dear, to joyous Rome
Son? owlng | 1 bade adieu -- the briny drop
E'en now rolls down my cheek. --The morn approat h'd
Of that tremendous day, by Caesar's will
Foredoom'd the pe-\-riod, whin, \ within thy bounds,
ah! wiucA-lov'd lratj/1 my ling'ring steps
No more might dare to tread : -- nor adequate
Had been th allotted time, nor had my mind
* From his " Tristin," bouV 1. el. 3.
p3
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? 1G'2 Key to English Prosody.
(Howe'er submissive f6 the stern decree)
Due energy exerted, to prepare
For the impending hour: -- the fond delay.
Too I5ng indulg'd, had frozen up my soul,
And numb'd the thinking faculty within | me.
Heedless, 1 chose not, from the me-l-nial throng J
"What faithful slave in Scythian wilds should ease
My va-l-nous wants, | what sympathising friend
Escort me on my way; nor store of dress
Meet for this rude unge'l-nial clime, | nor aught
To life's enjoyment requisite, engag'd
My providential care. Of sense bereft
f stood, as who, by lightning stunn'd, retains
The vital spark, unconscious that he lives.
At length excess of grief the cloud dispell'd,
That erst my reason had eclips'd; and, thought
Resuming its lost empire, 1 address,
In last, sad, parting speech, the mourning few
Who now remain, of, late, so numVous friends.
THE END.
. 1. OillM. Printer, Ciown Court, Fleet S'. rrct, Lontlcu.
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? Published by Baldwi n,Ck a dock, md Jot, 47, Paternoster-Row.
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contribute more to precise and elegant writing. "--Blair's Led.
IMPROVED FRENCH DICTIONARY.
M. DE LEVIZAC's New FRENCH and ENGLISH and
ENGLISH and FRENCH DICTIONARY ; neatly printed in a
portable size for the convenience of Travellers, and adapted to
the present improved method of Teaching the French Language:
obviating the imperfections and omissions of our French Dic-
tionaries, of which the Teachers and Students of that Language
have long felt the serious inconvenience, by the expulsion of obso-
lete Words, and the introduction of several Thousand useful
Words not to be found in any similar Work ; by M.
Motley with half-spun threads and cotton flakes,
Trudge, drooping, to the niany-storipd pile,
Where thousand spindles whirling stun the ear,
Confus'd. There, prisan'd close, they wretched moil.
Sweet age! pervert&Zfrtfm its proper end !
When childhood toils, the field should be the scene.
822
Pensive, alone, I walk the desert wilds,
Pacing the earth with slow and sluggish steps,
Avoiding watchfully all human haunts;
Intently \\gtlant with speed to shun
The saucy stare and prying eyes of man;
For, Jong of gay and cheerful thought bereft, -
My form betrays the inward fire that wastes | me".
823
Fresh from bis den, yon hollow trunk, behold
The wild-cat, dead-i-#&i of | the savage tribes
That roam in British forests--wont on high
To seise the rapid squirrel, <Sr by guile
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? Key to English Prosody. 15 1
Pluckfrtim her nest the unsuspecting dove,
fr, to the ground descending, thin the race
That bores the sandy warren. ***
824. -- Home.
ThUre is a magic in that little word :
it is a mystic circle', that surrounds
Comforts and virtues, never known heyond
The hallow'd limit. Often has my heart
ask'dftir that quiet haven : haven'd now,
I think of those, in this world's ai/derness
Who wander on, and find no home of rest.
825
Meanwhile the little songsters, prompt to cheer
Their mates close brooding in the brake below,
Strain their shrill throats; or, Kith parental care,
From twig to twig their timid offspring lead ;
Teach them to seise th' unwary gnat, to poise
Their pinions in short flights, their strength to prove,
And vent'rous trust the bosom of the air.
826
Where shall I turn me ? whifAeV shall 1 bend
My weary way? Thus zcorn with toil and faint,
Bow, through the thorny mazes 5/* th is wood,
Attain my distant dwelling? That deep cry,
That rings along the forest, seems to sound
My parting knell: it is the midnight howl
Of hungry monsters prov/Mngfor their prey.
827. -- Civilised Society.
Blest he,. though und'isUnguish'dfrom the crowd
liy wealth or dignity, who dwells secure
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? 152 Keif to English Prosody.
Where man, by nature fierce, has laid aside
His fierceness, having learn'd, though slow to learn,
The manners and the arts of civil life.
His wants indeed are many: but supply
Is ob-\-vioiis, plac'd | within the easy reach
Of temp'rate wishes and indus-l-friows hands. |
823
o ye, who court the silent calm retreats
Of contemplation, &nd who most prefer
The sotitHry walk -- as suiting^best
Their views, who sigh to pierce the secret haunts
Of Nature, marking her vagaries strange,
And, bold and unrestrain'd as she, to muse
The free, the rapt'rous lay -- still pace along
Your lonely way ; and be your musings sweet.
829. -- Parental Authority.
Behold your friend, your best, your truest friend,
A parent, whose authority, in show
When most severe, and must'ring all its force,
is but the graver counfe/iawce of love,
Whose favor, like the clouds of spring, may lour,
And utter now and then an awful voice,
But has a blessing m its darkest frown,
Threafning at once and nourishing the plant.
830. -- Profusion.
It is a hungry vice. It eats up all
That gives society its beauty, strength,
Convenience, and security, and use ;
Makes men mere vermin, wovthy to be trapp'd:
And gibbeted, as fast as catchpole claws
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? Key to English Prosody. ' 153
Can seise the slipp'ry prey ; unties the knot
Of union, and converts the sacred band,
That holds mankind togethe"r, to a scourge.
831. . -- The Owl.
Night-long she mourns, perch'd in some vacant niche,
Or time-rent crevice. Sometimes to the woods
She bends her silent slowly-moving wing,
and on some leafless tree, dead of old age,
Sits watchiiigfor her prey. But, should the foot
Of man intrude into her solemn shades,
^tartlM, he hears the wither'd, breaking branch
Crash as she rises : -- further in the gloom,
To deeper so/iVwrfcs she wings her way. .
832. -- The Swallows.
Long ere the wint'ry gusts, with chilly sweep,
Sigh through the leafless groves, the swallow tribes,
Heav'n-warn'd, in airy bevies congregate,
Or clust'ring sit, as if in deep consult
What time to launch : but, lingmwg, they wait,
Until the (eeble of the latest broods
Have gather'd strength the seaward path to brave.
At last the farewell twitter, spreading, sounds:
Aloft they fly, and melt in distant air.
833. -- Death.
Death! where the. magic in that empty name,
That chills my inmost heart ? Why, at the thought,
Starts the" cold dew of fear on ev'ry limb ?
There &re no terrors to surround the grave,
When the calm mind, collected in itself,
Surveys that Marrow house. The ghastly train,
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? 154 Key to English Prosody.
That haunt the midnight of deli-\-rhus guilt, \
Then vanish. --tn that home of endless rest,
all sorrows cease. *****
834. -- A January Night in Town.
There Vice and Folly run their giddy rounds :
There eager crowds are lmi-\-rying to" | the sight
Of feign'd distress, yet have not time lo hear
The shiv'ring orphan's pray'r. The flaring lamps
Of gilded cha-|-j'lilts, drawn | by pamper'd steeds,
Illume the snowy street: the silent wheels
On heedless passewgtr steal wnperceiv'd,
Bearing the splendid fair to flutter round
Amid the mazy Xatfrinths of the dance.
835. -- A February Night in a Village.
While yet the night is long and drear and chill,
Soon as the slanting sun has sunk from 'view,
The sounding anvil cheerily invites
The weary hind to leave his twinkling fire,
And bask himself before the furnace glare ;
Where, blest with unbought mirth, the rustic ring
(Their faces lintW with the yellow blaze)
Beguile the hours, nor envy rooms of state.
836. -- April.
Light now the western gale sweeps o'er the plain ;
Gently it wave's the rwutefs cascade :
Gently it parts the lock on Beauty's brow,
And lifts the tress&,. from the snowy neck,
And bends the flow'rs, and makes the lily stoop,
As if to kiss its image in the wave,
Or curls with softest breath the glassy pool.
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? Key to English Prosody. 155
Lead where yon fountain sparAVes through the glade,
o'er whtise clear brink the pale narcissus bends,
That loves to trace its beauty in the wave; [leaves,
Where Zephyr, whisp'nng through the trembling
Dtps his tight pinions in the current clear,
And sprinkles freshness o'er the languid flow'rs.
837. -- May. -- Birds' Nests.
Now frtim the wild-flow'r bank the little bird
Picks the soft moss, and to the thicket flies,
And oft returns, and oft the work renews,
'Till all the curious fabric hangs complete;
Alas! but ill conceal'd frpm school-boy's eye,
Who, heed/ess bf the warbler's saddest plaint,
Tears frtim the bush the toil of ma-\-ny an hour. |
838. -- June.
Unhappy he, whti, in this season, pent
Within the darksome gloom of city lane,
Pines for the flow'ry paths and woody shades,
Frtim which the love of lucre or of pow'r
Entic'd his youthful steps. In vain he turns
The rich descriptive page of Thomson's Muse,
And strives to fancy th&t the lovely scenes
Are present. So the hand of childhood tries
To grasp the pictur'd bunch of fruit or flow'rs,
But, disappointed, feels the canvas smooth.
839. -- September.
At sultry hour of noon, the reaper band
Rest from their toil. Around their simple fare,
upon the stubble spread, blithestime they form
A circling groupe, while humbly waits behind
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? 156 Key to English Prosody.
The wistful dog, and, with expressive look
And pawing foot, implores his little share.
The short repast, season d with simple mirth,
And not without the song, gives place to sleep.
With sheaf beneath his head, the rustic youth
Enjoys sweet slumbers, while the maid he loves
Steals to his side, and screens him from the sun.
840. -- October.
Hush'd are the faded woods: no bird is heard,
Save where the red-breast mourns the falling leaf.
At close of shorten'd day, the reaper, tir'd,
With sic/c/e on his shoulder, homeward hies, [low,
Night comes with threat'ning storm,first a>A? sp'ring f
Sighing amid the boughs ; then, by degrees,
With violence redoubled at each pause,
Furious it rages, scaring startled sleep.
841. -- December.
Loud blows the blast. While, s\ielter'dfpom its rage,
The social circle feel their joys enhanc'd,
ah! little think they of the lab'ring ship,
Amid the uproar of the winds and waves--
The waves unseen, save by the lightnings glare,
Or cannon's flash, sad signal Hf distress.
The trembling crew each moment think they feel
The shock of sunken rock. At last they strike.
Borne on the blast, their dying voices reach,
Faintly, the sea-girt hamlet. Help is vain.
842
Can fertile mturt to the eye present
A nobler scene, than when the setting sun
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? Key to English Prosody. 157
Gleams oh the fading prospect, and illumes,
With a last stream of light, the spacious view ?
Such h the death of Virtue ; such the glow
8/her last hour, that animates the mind,
WhUn on the te/iSr of a well-spent life
The mental eye reverts, and gazes still,
Till the' dim shades of death o'erwheim the sight,
And lull the sense* m a long repose.
843
england! with all thy faults, I love thee still,
My counfry, and, while yet a nook is left,
Where English minds and manners may be found,
Shall be' constraint to love thee. Though thy clime
Be fickle', and thy year, most pari, deform'd
With dripping rains, or v/ithcr'd by a frost,
I would not yet exchange thy sullen skies
And fields without a flow'r, for warmer France
With all her vines, nor for Ausonia's groves
Of golden fruitage, and her myrtle bow'rs.
844. -- Spring.
How swells the raptur'd bosom, while the eye
Wanders, xmsatSd with delight, from shade
To shade, from grove to. thicke\/rowj near gioups
To yon primaeval' woods, with dark'ning sweep
Retiring,. Snd with beauty sees the whole
Kindfe, and glow with renovated life!
For, now, at Spring's re. animating call,
Each native tif the forVst, frUm the trunk
Tow'ring and huge, down (6 the tangled bush,
Its own peculiar character resumes.
r
? ? Generated for Christian Pecaut (University of Chicago) on 2014-12-26 11:50 GMT / http://hdl. handle. net/2027/hvd. hnjin7 Public Domain, Google-digitized / http://www. hathitrust. org/access_use#pd-google
? 158 Key to English Prosody.
845
Sec, from bis cave beneath yon bramb\y bank,
The fox glide forth, scenting the feather'd prey
Perch'd at the neighb'ring cottage. --Creeping slow,
The weasel, and in si/enc* through the fern
Steals on the dozing lev'ref. Frtim her seat
She starts, and bears away th' assailant, fix'd
Fast to her neck, and, from the flowing: vein,
Sucking the vital current. Lo ! she falls :--
The puny murd'rer slinks into the brake
From the drain d carcase, sated With the blood.
846
Thus, when her standard civilising art
Plants on some barb'rous shore, to mountains bleak,
And craggy fastnesses his warrior sons
The angry Genius tif the waste withdraws;
There bids them,from the influence abhorr'd
Of science free, their sangj/<<wory rites,
Their manners rude, and savage laws uphold ;
Till fate shall once more pour thlm from their caves,
Impatient e'er their long-lost plains again
To spread the veil of ignorance and night. ,
847. -- Botany Bay. . ?
Why, stem Remembrance, must thy iron hand
Harrow my soul. ' why calls thy cruel pow'r
The fields of 'England to my exil'd eyes--
The joys which once were mine ? e'en now I see
The lowly, lovely dwelling: even now
Behold the woodbine clasping tls white walls, *
And hear the fearless Red-breasts chirp around,
? ? Generated for Christian Pecaut (University of Chicago) on 2014-12-26 11:50 GMT / http://hdl. handle. net/2027/hvd. hnjin7 Public Domain, Google-digitized / http://www. hathitrust. org/access_use#pd-google
? Key to English Prosody. 15! )
To ask their morning meal: for i was wont,
With friendly hand, to give their morning meal,
Was wont to love their song, when ling'ring mom
Streak'd tfer the chilly landscape the dim light.
848 *'
Behold yon pool, by un-exhausted springs
Still wiirtur'd, draw the multitudes that graze
The plain adjarf/ff. --on the bank worn bare,
And printed with ten f/iiwsand steps, the colts
In shifting groups combine; tir, to the brink
Descending, dip their pasteV/is in the wave.
Bolder, the horned tribes, or less of heat
And teasing insects patient, far from shore
Immerge their chests; and, while the hungry swarm
Now soars aloft, now resolute descends,
Lash their tormented sides; and, stamping quick
And oft, the muddy fluid scatter round.
849
The glow of eve is faded. Scarce the West
Retains a pale rnenio-|-rja7 of | the beams
That fir'd it, when the horizontal clouds,
With purple dies and fissures edged with gold,
Streak'd till calm ather; while, through sparkling haze,
The faint hills gltmmev'd, fainter, as their chain
Approach'd the fount of brightness, fainter still
As sunk the parting orb, and with the sky
In uhdistingM/sAable splendor join'd
Milder, still milder, the subsiding glow
Spar'd the pain'd eye-ball, and, with sober rays
Quench'd in the gath'ring dusk, refresh'd the sight.
? ? Generated for Christian Pecaut (University of Chicago) on 2014-12-26 11:50 GMT / http://hdl. handle. net/2027/hvd. hnjin7 Public Domain, Google-digitized / http://www. hathitrust. org/access_use#pd-google
? 160 Key to English Prosody.
850. -- The Finding of Moses.
Slow glides the Nile: amid the margin flags,
Clos'd in a bulrush ark, the babe is kft,
Left by a mother's hand. His sister waits
Far off; and, pale, 'tween hope and fear, beholds .
The royal maid, surrounds? by her train,
Approach the river bank, approach the spot
Where sleeps the iunocHnt. She sees them stoop
To view the ark. The rushy lid is op'd,
And wakes the infant, smiling in his tears ;
As when, along a little mountain lake^
The summer south-wind breathes with gentle sigh,
And parts the reeds, unveilifwg, as they bend,
A water lily floating on the wave.
851
What prodigie"s can pow'r divine perform
More grand than it produces year by year,
And all in sight of inattentive man ?
Fami/tar with th' effect, we slight the cause,
and, in the constancy of nature's course,
The regular return of genial months,
And renovariow of a faded world,
See nought to wonder at. Should God agaiu,
As once in Q\-\-be$n, ? >>-|-terrupt the race
VfthV unde-|-i>j4fi<<g | and punc-|-rwa/ sm, \
How would the world admire ! But speaks it less
An nggncy divine, to make him know
His moment when to sink and when to rise.
age a/ter age, than to arrest his course :
all a? behold is mirfcli: but, seen
? ? Generated for Christian Pecaut (University of Chicago) on 2014-12-26 11:50 GMT / http://hdl. handle. net/2027/hvd. hnjin7 Public Domain, Google-digitized / http://www. hathitrust. org/access_use#pd-google
? Key to English Prosody. , 16 i
So duly, all is miracle in vain.
i 852. -- Cruel Punishment of a Negro Slave.
Inhuman sons of Europe ! not content
With dooms of death, your victim high you hung
Encag'd, to scorch beneath the torrid ray,
And feed, alive, the hungry fowls of heav'n.
Around the bars already, see, they cling !
The vulture's head . looks through: she strives in vain
To force her way. The lesser birds await
'Till worn-out nature sinks : then on they pounce,
And tear the quiv'ring flesh. In agony
The victim wakes, and rolls his wretched eye? ,
And feebly drives the rav'ning flocks away.
Most dread/'w//y he groans: 'tis thirst, third, thirst,
Direst of human torments ! Down a^ain
He sinks : again he feels the tort'ring beak.
853. -- Ovid's Departure into Exile*.
In mem'ry's faithful mhitir while I scan
Tn' afflictive scenes of that disastrous night --
That night of deepest woe, when, torn by fate
From all my heart held dear, to joyous Rome
Son? owlng | 1 bade adieu -- the briny drop
E'en now rolls down my cheek. --The morn approat h'd
Of that tremendous day, by Caesar's will
Foredoom'd the pe-\-riod, whin, \ within thy bounds,
ah! wiucA-lov'd lratj/1 my ling'ring steps
No more might dare to tread : -- nor adequate
Had been th allotted time, nor had my mind
* From his " Tristin," bouV 1. el. 3.
p3
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? 1G'2 Key to English Prosody.
(Howe'er submissive f6 the stern decree)
Due energy exerted, to prepare
For the impending hour: -- the fond delay.
Too I5ng indulg'd, had frozen up my soul,
And numb'd the thinking faculty within | me.
Heedless, 1 chose not, from the me-l-nial throng J
"What faithful slave in Scythian wilds should ease
My va-l-nous wants, | what sympathising friend
Escort me on my way; nor store of dress
Meet for this rude unge'l-nial clime, | nor aught
To life's enjoyment requisite, engag'd
My providential care. Of sense bereft
f stood, as who, by lightning stunn'd, retains
The vital spark, unconscious that he lives.
At length excess of grief the cloud dispell'd,
That erst my reason had eclips'd; and, thought
Resuming its lost empire, 1 address,
In last, sad, parting speech, the mourning few
Who now remain, of, late, so numVous friends.
THE END.
. 1. OillM. Printer, Ciown Court, Fleet S'. rrct, Lontlcu.
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? Published by Baldwi n,Ck a dock, md Jot, 47, Paternoster-Row.
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contribute more to precise and elegant writing. "--Blair's Led.
IMPROVED FRENCH DICTIONARY.
M. DE LEVIZAC's New FRENCH and ENGLISH and
ENGLISH and FRENCH DICTIONARY ; neatly printed in a
portable size for the convenience of Travellers, and adapted to
the present improved method of Teaching the French Language:
obviating the imperfections and omissions of our French Dic-
tionaries, of which the Teachers and Students of that Language
have long felt the serious inconvenience, by the expulsion of obso-
lete Words, and the introduction of several Thousand useful
Words not to be found in any similar Work ; by M.
