130
Her ways observant eyes confess:
Her steps pursuing praises bless.
Her ways observant eyes confess:
Her steps pursuing praises bless.
Carey - 1796 - Key to Practical English Prosody
65
A second Paradise our senses greets,
And Asia watts us all her world of sweets.
66
Already, see! each schoolboy, 'prentice, clerk,
Assumes the pistol, and demands the Park.
67
Nor deem, that all, the tuneful chords who strike,
Are curs'd with base ingratitude . dike.
68. -- Canute.
He vainly bade each boisi'rous wave retreat,
Nor tinge the sat/ace of his royal teet.
69
But ah ! how chang'd! Tue Must", that once was gay,
And wanton laugh'd the darning hours away,
No more shall wander o'er the flow'ry plains,
Or waken Echo with lier rural strains.
70
See, most tremendous ! o'er his beardless face,
Th' enormous beaver, cock'd with soldier grace,
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? 10 Key to English Prosody:
Aslant and edgewise confident\y hurl'd,
Inviting broils, and braving all the world. >
Though my dejected spirits pant for breath,
and my soul flutters or. the verge of death
. <<i. ; /72- v. " '
And why should such (within herself she cried)
hock the lost wealth, a thousand want beside i
One tranquil eve,; when Sol had sunk to rest,
And gilt with splendid lints the glitt'ring west,
Their daily task perform'd, this loving pair
Walk'd forth to breathe the pure salu-| brHous air.
74 .
Friends country, children, wife, no more restrain ;
And fate and nature boast their laws in vain.
75 \ '
Flush'd with revenge, each mis-l-crednt drew \ his da
Ami -piung'd it in the constant Oran's heartt '<
76 . . . . - :
Alas! Hope's rainbow visions, how they fade! ,
How soon the sun-brjght landscape sinks in shade
77
Go, seek distress ; explore the, tents of woe:;' :
Bid the wan cheek with: rosy tints to glow.
78ti . , , . . '. ,
To Eve's fair daughters various virtues fall:
But thou, lov'd charmer, hast excsll'd them all.
Blest she descends into, the-vale of years, 1 : '
? ? Generated for Christian Pecaut (University of Chicago) on 2014-12-26 11:49 GMT / http://hdl. handle. net/2027/hvd. hnjin7 Public Domain, Google-digitized / http://www. hathitrust. org/access_use#pd-google
? Key to English Prosody. ' H
With the lovd partner of her youthfol cares.
80
Smiles oft are fraudful; beauty soon decays ;
But the good woman shall inherit praise.
81
Rouse all thy pow'rs, for better use design'd ;
And know thy native digMt/y of mind.
82 i :
Such were the hours, and such the scenes that charm'd:
So nature glow'd, and so her beauties warm'd.
, ,,. '. < 8s :<. .
The glow of youth bloo'ms lovely in his face,
And fills each active limb with manly grace.
The wrinkled matron opes her treasm'd store
Of fairy tales and legendary lore.
^ ? 85 '. ? : t:
Their tyrant rule has. blighted all thy" time,
And marr'd the promise of thy early prime.
? ,, ' 86 . i: : , i :
Her love instructs a fair and num'rous race
To share his glon'es, and supply his place.
87
See, with what calmness, what contempt of breath,
The sons of Newgale hear the doom of death.
. . 88 < ', '," ! ,"-v"
Why pass in slav'ry here the ling'ring hours,
AVhilerQran dwells iniatriarantine bow'rs?
Where rivers q/'delight for ever flow,
And blushing fruits on trees immortal grow ; 11 - ' *
? ? Generated for Christian Pecaut (University of Chicago) on 2014-12-26 11:49 GMT / http://hdl. handle. net/2027/hvd. hnjin7 Public Domain, Google-digitized / http://www. hathitrust. org/access_use#pd-google
? I a Key to English P rowdy.
Where no rude <tiwpests howl, no storms arise ;
Where suns eternal gild the genial skies,
Unfading flow'reis deck the verdant plains,
And spring in gay profusion ever reigns.
89
Fain would the Muse each be&ii-\-t coin plant | rehearse,
And sing their gloria in immortal verse.
90
ah! heed not, youth, yon Siren's 'witching lay :
Fly from her tempting accents : fly away.
jF5/se are her sounds, her visions vain, though bright--
A flitting rainbow's varied transient light.
91
Each manly sense, each charity refin'd ;
Whate'er diamines or exalts the mind.
92
For wisdom fam'd, for probity renown'd,
She sits in council, with bright honor crown'd.
198
Peace crowns our cities, plenty loads our plains;
And aether rings with grafw/ating strains.
94
Greater than he who vanquish'd first the main,
The Persian with a mil/ton in his train,
Himself soon vanquish'd by the Grecian chief,
And homeward sent in solitary grief.
95. -- Epitaph on an Infant.
Repose in peace, sweet babe! this still domain
Gives no admission to the tyrant, pain.
Thy noblest part, tby spotless soul, is flown
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? Key to English Prosody. 13
To scenes where dread misfortunes are unknown.
96
At length thy long-lost liberty regain :
Tear the strong tie, and break th' inglorious chain:
Freed from false hopes, assume thy native pow'rs,
And give to Reason's rule thy future hours.
To her dominion yield thy trusting soul,
And bend thy wishes to her strong control.
97
Pleas'd have I oft our little babe caress'd,
And view'd him smiling at his mother's breast.
98
Early she rises, ere bright P/f<<bus shines,
and to her damsels sep'rate tasks assigns.
99
if to her farm some field conti-j-gwows lies,
With care she views it, and with prudence buys.
100
Benignanf, from her ever-open door,
She feeds the hungry, and relieves the poor.
101
Hope promis'd future bliss without alloy,
And Fancy's pencil pictur'd scenes of joy.
ah, gilded visions ! fleeting, as they're fair !
How soon those day-dreams vanish'd into air!
102
ies, Europe's polish'd sons approve the plan
That fetters and enslaves their fellow man. . . .
The wretched captive leaves his native shore,
Ne'er to behold his much-lov'd country more.
c
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? 14 Key to English Prosody.
103
Soon will misfortune their bright hopes destroy,
And dash with gall the mantling cup of joy.
104
Nature would droop in everlasting night,
Unbless'd by Sol, great source of heat and light.
10*
When tyrant Frost his strong dominion holds,
And not a blade expands, a bud unfolds *
When gather'd thunders burst abrupt find loud,
And midnight light'ning darts from cloud to cloud,
Or rends, with forceful momentary stroke,
The ivied turrit and the giant oak,
Can faint remembrance of meridian mirth
Bedeck with visiowcry charms the earth ?
106. -- Guilty Conscience.
She calls grim phantoms from the sha-\-dowy deep, j
And sends her Furies forth to torture sleep.
107. -- The kidnapped Negro Woman.
Excess of grief forbade her tears to flow :
She stood a living monument of woe.
No tender friend was near, with kind relief
To calm the wild extravagance of grief:
No pity could the hapless maiden find :
No scenes of sorrow touch the brutal mind.
Th' inhuman villains bore their prize away,
And gain'd the harbour where the vessel lay.
Convey'd on board, she join'd a num'rous band
Of fellow captives, pinion'd hand to hand.
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? Key to English Prosody* 16
108. -- A Slavt-Ship.
There husbands, torn fron> all their hearts held dear,
In sullen sileoce drop the fruitless tear.
Fond mothers there, to gloomy grief consign'd,
Mourn jor the tender babes they left behind.
Heart-cheering hope forsook the horrid place;
And desperation lour'd in ev'ry face.
109
The undertakers say, on corses fed,
" ah I there's no man of va/ue, till he's dead. "
110. -- True Beauty.
What is the blooming tincture of the skin,
To peace of mind, and harmony within ?
What the bright sparkling of the finest eye,
To the soft soothing of a calm reply i
Can comeliness of form, or shape, or air,
With comeliness of words and deeds compare ?
No! those at first th' unwary heart may gain:
But these, these only can that heart retain.
VERSIFICATION.
Iambic Verses of eight syllables, or four feet, with the
accents on the second, fourth, sixth, and eighth sylla-
bles.
HI
And, while thy gracious gifts I feel,
My song shall all thy praise reveal.
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? 16 Key to English Prosody.
112
With freedom bless'd, at early dawn,
I wander o'er the verdant lawn.
113
Unheard I mourn, unknown I sigh,
Unfriended live, unpity'd die.
114
Below, the fleecy mothers stray'd ;
And, round, their sportive lambkins play'd.
115
Thy days, my friend, serenely flow,
Nor any "nterruption know.
116
The search shall teach thee life to prize,
And make thee grateful, good, and wise.
117
The flock in wild disorder fly,
And cast behind a frequent eye.
118
So high at last the contest rose,
From words they almost came to blows.
119
Religion's beams around thee shine,
And cheer thy glooms with light divine.
120
Henceforth to rural haunts I go,
Through summer's heat and winter's snow.
121
Thou fly'st to scenes where Youth and Joy
With Love and Mirth their time employ.
? ? Generated for Christian Pecaut (University of Chicago) on 2014-12-26 11:49 GMT / http://hdl. handle. net/2027/hvd. hnjin7 Public Domain, Google-digitized / http://www. hathitrust. org/access_use#pd-google
? Key to English Prosody.
122
A thousand shapes you wear with ease;
And still, in ev'ry shape, yon please.
123
To Hero's eyes Leauder bow'd :
Her cheek with yielding blushes glow'd.
124
The Muse, to merit ever true, ;
Prepares the meed to valour due.
125
To thee we raise the choral song,
To whom sublimer strains belong.
126
Beneath embow'iing shades supine,
He loves to drown his cares in wine.
187
The steed impatient spurns the ground:
The full-ton'd horns harmonious sound.
128
I neither wealth nor pow'r pursue,
Nor hold forbidden joys in view.
, . 129
And will you then this wealth conceal,
For age to rust, or time to steal ?
130
Her ways observant eyes confess:
Her steps pursuing praises bless.
131
The tim'rous breed the robber knew,
And, trembling, o'er the meadow flew,.
c3
? ? Generated for Christian Pecaut (University of Chicago) on 2014-12-26 11:49 GMT / http://hdl. handle. net/2027/hvd. hnjin7 Public Domain, Google-digitized / http://www. hathitrust. org/access_use#pd-google
? 18 Key to English Prosody.
Their nimblest speed the wolf o'ertook,
And courteous thus the dam bespoke.
J 32
The fragrant airs and genial hours
Were shedding round him dews and flow'rs:
Before his wheels Aurora pass'd ;
And Hesper's'golden lamp was last.
133
By thee, their board with flow'rs is crown'd;
By thee, with songs their walks resound;
By thee, their sprightly mornings shine,
And ev'ning hours in peace decline.
Iambic Verses of eight syllables, with a mixture of
different feet. .
134
Repose, sweet babe! thy crying cease :
For thine's an age of truth and peace.
135
This fact, without another word,
A useful lesson might afford.
136
To one dear ooject ever bound,
For that I ever search around.
137
Where'er she passes, thousands bend;
And thousands, where she moves, attend.
138
The flow'rs, in early bloom disclos'd,
? ? Generated for Christian Pecaut (University of Chicago) on 2014-12-26 11:49 GMT / http://hdl. handle. net/2027/hvd. hnjin7 Public Domain, Google-digitized / http://www. hathitrust. org/access_use#pd-google
? Key to English Prosody.
upon her fragrant breast repos'd.
139
A mother may her son forsake:
But I my cov'nant ne'er will break.
140
One evning, as a simple swain
His flock attended on the plain,
The shining bow he chanc'd to spy,
Which warns us, when a show'r is nigh.
141
If Winter bellow from the north,
Soon the sweet Spring comes dancing forth.
142
Disputes, though short, are far too long,
When both alike are in the wrong.
143
Shut not your hearts, ye rich and great,
Against the wandVer at your gate.
144
Still must i of thy pow'r complain,
and thy too partial hand arraign ?
143
But must the gentle and the kind
Thy fury, undistinguish'd, find ?
146 .
Yet cruel i am call'd, and base,
Who seek the wretched to release.
147
The fox, in deeper cunning vers'd,
The beau^es of her mind rehears'd.
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? 40 Key to English Prosody.
148
Now striking low, now mounting high,
" We're lost! we're lost 1" the sailors cry.
149
Who mirth and viisd6m would combine,
Should to three cups his stint confine.
150
While here my stay I thus prolong,
The silent night steals swlj't along.
151
Now hunger, thirst, and toil combin'd,
To numb her limbs, and wring her mind.
152
Matur'd to hap-l-pier days, \ he may
With ti-\-lial love | your care repay.
153
The cares are past, that fill thy tale:
My present troubles / bewail.
154
But ah ! what dim and dismal shade
Casts this strunge horror o'er the glade ?
155
But now no more the rugged North
Pours half her population forth.
156
Through the thick mist of doubts and fears,
How hideous Death's fairjorm appears!
157
Come, lovely Health ! divinest maid !
And lead me through the rural shade.
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? Key to English Prosody. 21
158
'Tis he, who still his promise keeps,
Though wrapp'd in Death's cold arms he sleeps.
159
Howe'er exalted or depress'd,
Be ever mine the feeling breast.
160
Alike, the foolisA and the vain
Are strangers to the sense humane.
161
Iafe,fiU'd with grief's distressful train,
For ever asks the tear humane.
162
Oh ! woman! love-|Wiest work | of heav'n !
For man's delight and solace giv'n.
163
Soft rising, now the eastern breeze
Plays rustling through the quiv'ring trees.
164
all nature's sysfem if you scan,
The only idle thing is man.
165
Discourse like this attention claim'd :
Grandeur the mother's breast inflam'd.
166
So saying, on the lamb he flies.
Beneath his jaws the victim dies.
167
Now dead appears each well-known scene,
The glassy brook, the meadow green.
? ? Generated for Christian Pecaut (University of Chicago) on 2014-12-26 11:49 GMT / http://hdl. handle. net/2027/hvd. hnjin7 Public Domain, Google-digitized / http://www. hathitrust. org/access_use#pd-google
? 22 Key to English Prosody.
168
Humility they soon shall learn,
and their own emptiness discern.
169
" Past twelve o' clock," the watchman cried
His brief the studious lawyer plied.
370
The wretch with thrilling horror shook ; '
Loose ev'ry joint, and pale his look.
171
To wiser heads attention lend,
And learn this lesson from a friend.
172
Still with the Muse my bosom share,
And sooth to peace corxoding care.
173
So shall he right from wrong discern,
And mercy from oppression learn.
174
Be thou, kind heav'n, the vessel's guide :
For her, the whelming waves divide.
175
Ho ebbing tide thy kindness knows :
Like some perpe-|-raa/ stream, | it flows.
176
Sweet, modest flow'r! *tis thine to dwell,
Secluded, in the thorny dell.
177
Carus, with pain and sickness worn,
Chides the slow night, and sighs for morn.
? ? Generated for Christian Pecaut (University of Chicago) on 2014-12-26 11:49 GMT / http://hdl. handle. net/2027/hvd. hnjin7 Public Domain, Google-digitized / http://www. hathitrust. org/access_use#pd-google
? Key to English Prosody.
178
In bolder notes my song I raise,
The deeds of Hercules to praise.
179
When H\tars4o his name were dress'd,
That he was man, his tears confess'd.
180
Wilh indignation I survey
Such skill and judgement thrown away.
181
The Heliconian fount sublime
Flows inarrtVowsly well in rhime.
182
Your follies, if you can, suspend,
And learn instrucJ/owfrom a friend.
183
A happiness we toil to find,
Which still avoids us, like the wind.
184
His light those mists and clouds dissolv'd,
Which our dark tiation long involv'd.
185
A poor astrologer, they say,
Went out to walk, one luckless day.
186
While such pursuits your thoughts engage,
in d few years you'll live an age.
187
And time, which all things else removes,
Still heightens virtue, and improves.
? ? Generated for Christian Pecaut (University of Chicago) on 2014-12-26 11:49 GMT / http://hdl. handle. net/2027/hvd. hnjin7 Public Domain, Google-digitized / http://www. hathitrust. org/access_use#pd-google
? 24 Key to English Prosody.
188
lie who, at fifty, ts a fool,
Is far too stubborn grown for school.
189
la foreign spoils let others shine:
Intrinsic excellence is thine.
190
A smiling landscape i descried,
Dress'd in the rohes of summer pride.
191
oh! take me to some peaceful dell,
With thee and sweet content to dwell.
192
Already now had night and day
Held o'er the world an equal sway.
193
TremenaoMS ts thy deep abode,
And dire the fury of thy flood.
194
And now, immorta/ at thy side,
Still blooms the beau-\-teous cop-j-tur'd bride
195
The surgy din still louder grows;
The gale with wilder fury blows.
196
Me ample pow'r and wealth attend ;
And o'er the plains my realms extend.
197
Alas ! poor Zimmermann! thy page
Betrays thy mdol&ice and age.
? ? Generated for Christian Pecaut (University of Chicago) on 2014-12-26 11:49 GMT / http://hdl. handle. net/2027/hvd. hnjin7 Public Domain, Google-digitized / http://www. hathitrust. org/access_use#pd-google
? Key to English Prosody.
198
Tird and disabled in the race,
1 quit ambition's fruitless chase.
199
Aloft tVie British banner flies
In folds triumphant to the skies.
200
The hes-l-biun lute | no more can char
Nor rny once-panting bosom warm.
201
Not that with me those prizes shine ;
For neither fame nor wealth is mine.
202
Of heav'n, ask virtue, wisdom, health;
But nerer let thy pray'r be wealth.
203
Still there remains one labor more,
Perhaps a greater than before.
204
Fear, like a fog, precludes the light,
And swells the object to the sight.
205
From side to side Hono-l-nfo turns, |
And now with thirst insa-l-fiafe burns.
206
From hell this frightful monster came
SIn was his sire, and Guilt his name.
207
Let virtue ever be my guide,
And o'er my secret thoughts preside.
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? 26 Key to English Prosody.
208
Soft roll the lucid waves along,
And gently break, the rocks among;
In playful lapse the strand explore,
And waft a pallid corse to shore.
209
Why do you roam to foreign climes,
To study nations, modes, and times--
A science often dearly bought,
And often what avails you nought ?
210
If Heav'n, in ev'ry purpose wise,
The envied lot of wealth denies,
To thee, Humanity, still true,
I'll wish the good 1 cannot do.
211
Our pleasures shortly must decay,
And vanish with ourselves away;
But virtue shall the soul sustain,
And sooth each agonising pain.
212
See next advance terrific Mars,
Who jo}'s in uproar, ruin, wars. --
Fear, Fury, Flight, beside him stand,
Prompt to fulfill his dread command.
213
In plenty thus the summer pass'd;
Revolving winter came at last.
The trees no more a shelter yield :
The verdure withers from the field.
? ? Generated for Christian Pecaut (University of Chicago) on 2014-12-26 11:49 GMT / http://hdl. handle. net/2027/hvd. hnjin7 Public Domain, Google-digitized / http://www. hathitrust. org/access_use#pd-google
? Key to English Prosody.
214
Plain Innocence, in white array'd,
Before thee lifts her fearless head :
Religion's beams around thee shine,
And cheer thy glooms with light divine.
215
Sweet are the flow'rs, that deck the field :
Sweet is the smell, the blossoms yield :
Swett is the summer gale, that blows ;
And sweet, though sweeter you, the rose.
216
When Zephyrs o'er the blossom stray,
And sweets along the air convey,
Sha'n't t the fragrant breeze inhale,
Because you breathe a sweeter gale i
217
awe struck, the much-admiring crowd
Before the virgin vision bow'd ;
Gaz'd with an ever new delight,
And caught fresh virtue at the sight.
218
A gulf, black, fearful, and profound,
Appears, of either world the hound,
Through darkness, leading up to light.
Sense backward shrinks, and shuns the sig
219
Fate steals along with silent tread,
Found oft'nest in what least we dread,
Frowns in the storm with angry brow,
Bid in the sunshine strike* the blow.
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