Complete works of edward.., p.51

Complete Works of Edward Young, page 51

 

Complete Works of Edward Young
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  Tender as is the female frame,

  Like that brave man you mourn,

  You are a soldier, and to fight

  Superior battles born;

  Beneath a banner nobler far

  Than ever was unfurl’d

  In fields of blood; a banner bright!

  High wav’d o’er all the world.

  It, like a streaming meteor, casts

  A universal light;

  Sheds day, sheds more, eternal day

  On nations whelm’d in night.

  Beneath that banner, what exploit

  Can mount our glory higher,

  Than to sustain the dreadful blow,

  When those we love expire?

  Go forth a moral Amazon;

  Arm’d with undaunted thought;

  The battle won, though costing dear,

  You’ll think it cheaply bought:

  The passive hero, who sits down

  Unactive, and can smile

  Beneath affliction’s galling load,

  Out-acts a Cæsar’s toil:

  The billows stain’d by slaughter’d foes

  Inferior praise afford;

  Reason’s a bloodless conqueror,

  More glorious than the sword.

  Nor can the thunders of huzzas,

  From shouting nations, cause

  Such sweet delight, as from your heart

  Soft whispers of applause:

  The dear deceas’d so fam’d in arms,

  With what delight he’ll view

  His triumphs on the main outdone,

  Thus conquer’d, twice, by you.

  Share his delight; take heed to shun

  Of bosoms most diseas’d

  That odd distemper, an absurd

  Reluctance to be pleas’d:

  Some seem in love with sorrow’s charms,

  And that foul fiend embrace:

  This temper let me justly brand,

  And stamp it with disgrace:

  Sorrow! of horrid parentage!

  Thou second-born of hell!

  Against heaven’s endless mercies pour’d

  How dar’st thou to rebel?

  From black and noxious vapours bred,

  And nurs’d by want of thought,

  And to the door of phrensy’s self

  By perseverance brought,

  Thy most inglorious, coward tears

  From brutal eyes have ran:

  Smiles, incommunicable smiles!

  Are radiant marks of man;

  They cast a sudden glory round

  Th’ illumin’d human face;

  And light in sons of honest joy

  Some beams of Moses’ face:

  Is resignation’s lesson hard?

  Examine, we shall find

  That duty gives up little more

  Than anguish of the mind;

  Resign; and all the load of life

  That moment you remove,

  Its heavy tax, ten thousand cares

  Devolve on one above;

  Who bids us lay our burthen down

  On his almighty hand,

  Softens our duty to relief,

  To blessing a command.

  For joy what cause! how every sense

  Is courted from above

  The year around, with presents rich,

  The growth of endless love!

  But most o’erlook the blessings pour’d,

  Forget the wonders done,

  And terminate, wrapp’d up in sense,

  Their prospect at the sun;

  From that, their final point of view,

  From that their radiant goal,

  On travel infinite of thought,

  Sets out the nobler soul,

  Broke loose from time’s tenacious ties,

  And earth’s involving gloom,

  To range at last its vast domain,

  And talk with worlds to come:

  They let unmark’d, and unemploy’d,

  Life’s idle moments run;

  And doing nothing for themselves,

  Imagine nothing done;

  Fatal mistake! their fate goes on,

  Their dread account proceeds,

  And their not doing is set down

  Amongst their darkest deeds;

  Though man sits still, and takes his ease;

  God is at work on man;

  No means, no moment unemployed,

  To bless him, if he can.

  But man consents not, boldly bent

  To fashion his own fate;

  Man, a mere bungler in the trade,

  Repents his crime too late;

  Hence loud laments: let me thy cause,

  Indulgent father! plead;

  Of all the wretches we deplore,

  Not one by thee was made.

  What is thy whole creation fair?

  Of love divine the child;

  Love brought it forth; and, from its birth,

  Has o’er it fondly smil’d:

  Now, and through periods distant far,

  Long ere the world began,

  Heaven is, and has in travail been,

  Its birth the good of man;

  Man holds in constant service bound

  The blustering winds and seas;

  Nor suns disdain to travel hard

  Their master, man, to please:

  To final good the worst events

  Through secret channels run;

  Finish for man their destin’d course,

  As ’twas for man begun.

  One point (observ’d, perhaps, by few)

  Has often smote, and smites

  My mind, as demonstration strong;

  That heaven in man delights:

  What’s known to man of things unseen,

  Of future worlds, or fates?

  So much, nor more, than what to man’s

  Sublime affairs relates;

  What’s revelation then? a list,

  An inventory just

  Of that poor insect’s goods, so late

  Call’d out of night and dust.

  What various motives to rejoice!

  To render joy sincere,

  Has this no weight? our joy is felt

  Beyond this narrow sphere:

  Would we in heaven new heaven create,

  And double its delight?

  A smiling world, when heaven looks down,

  How pleasing in its sight!

  Angels stoop forward from their thrones

  To hear its joyful lays;

  As incense sweet enjoy, and join,

  Its aromatic praise:

  Have we no cause to fear the stroke

  Of heaven’s avenging rod,

  When we presume to counteract

  A sympathetic God?

  If we resign, our patience makes

  His rod an armless wand;

  If not, it darts a serpent’s sting,

  Like that in Moses’ hand;

  Like that, it swallows up whate’er

  Earth’s vain magicians bring,

  Whose baffled arts would boast below

  Of joys a rival spring.

  Consummate love! the list how large

  Of blessings from thy hand!

  To banish sorrow, and be blest,

  Is thy supreme command.

  Are such commands but ill obey’d?

  Of bliss, shall we complain?

  The man, who dares to be a wretch,

  Deserves still greater pain.

  Joy is our duty, glory, health;

  The sunshine of the soul;

  Our best encomium on the power

  Who sweetly plans the whole:

  Joy is our Eden still possess’d:

  Begone, ignoble grief!

  ’Tis joy makes gods, and men exalts,

  Their nature, our relief;

  Relief, for man to that must stoop,

  And his due distance know;

  Transport’s the language of the sides,

  Content the style below.

  Content is joy, and joy in pain

  Is joy and virtue too;

  Thus, whilst good present we possess,

  More precious we pursue:

  Of joy the more we have in hand,

  The more have we to come;

  Joy, like our money, interest bears,

  Which daily swells the sum.

  “But how to smile; to stem the tide

  Of nature in our veins;

  Is it not hard to weep in joy?

  What then to smile in pains?”

  Victorious joy! which breaks the clouds,

  And struggles through a storm;

  Proclaims the mind as great, as good

  And bids it doubly charm:

  If doubly charming in our sex,

  A sex, by nature, bold;

  What then in yours? ’tis diamond there

  Triumphant o’er our gold.

  And should not this complaint repress,

  And check the rising sigh?

  Yet farther opiate to your pain

  I labour to supply.

  Since spirits greatly damp’d distort

  Ideas of delight,

  Look through the medium of a friend,

  To set your notions right:

  As tears the sight, grief dims the soul;

  Its object dark appears;

  True friendship, like a rising sun,

  The soul’s horizon clears.

  A friend’s an optic to the mind

  With sorrow clouded o’er;

  And gives it strength of sight to see

  Redress unseen before.

  Reason is somewhat rough in man;

  Extremely smooth and fair,

  When she, to grace her manly strength,

  Assumes a female air:

  A friend51 you have, and I the same,

  Whose prudent, soft address

  Will bring to life those healing thoughts

  Which died in your distress;

  That friend, the spirit of my theme

  Extracting for your ease,

  Will leave to me the dreg, in thoughts

  Too common; such as these:

  Let those lament to whom full bowls

  Of sparkling joys are given;

  That triple bane inebriates life,

  Imbitters death, and hazards heaven:

  Woe to the soul at perfect ease!

  ’Tis brewing perfect pains;

  Lull’d reason sleeps, the pulse is king;

  Despotic body reigns;

  Have you52 ne’er pitied joy’s gay scenes,

  And deem’d their glory dark?

  Alas! poor envy! she’s stone-blind,

  And quite mistakes her mark:

  Her mark lies hid in sorrow’s shades,

  But sorrow well subdu’d;

  And in proud fortune’s frown defied

  By meek, unborrow’d good.

  By resignation; all in that

  A double friend may find,

  A wing to heaven, and, while on earth,

  The pillow of mankind:

  On pillows void of down, for rest

  Our restless hopes we place;

  When hopes of heaven lie warm at heart,

  Our hearts repose in peace:

  The peace, which resignation yields,

  Who feel alone can guess;

  ’Tis disbeliev’d by murmuring minds,

  They must conclude it less:

  The loss, or gain, of that alone

  Have we to hope or fear;

  That fate controls, and can invert

  The seasons of the year:

  O! the dark days, the year around,

  Of an impatient mind!

  Thro’ clouds, and storms, a summer breaks,

  To shine on the resign’d:

  While man by that of every grace,

  And virtue, is possess’d;

  Foul vice her pandæmonium builds

  In the rebellious breast;

  By resignation we defeat

  The worst that can annoy;

  And suffer, with far more repose,

  Than worldlings can enjoy.

  From small experience this I speak;

  O! grant to those I love

  Experience fuller far, ye powers,

  Who form our fates above!

  My love were due, if not to those

  Who, leaving grandeur, came

  To shine on age in mean recess,

  And light me to my theme!

  A theme themselves! A theme, how rare!

  The charms, which they display,

  To triumph over captive heads,

  Are set in bright array:

  With his own arms proud man’s o’ercome,

  His boasted laurels die:

  Learning and genius, wiser grown,

  To female bosoms fly.

  This revolution, fix’d by fate,

  In fable was foretold;

  The dark prediction puzzled wits,

  Nor could the learn’d unfold:

  But as those ladies’53 works I read,

  They darted such a ray,

  The latent sense burst out at once,

  And shone in open day:

  So burst, full ripe, distended fruits,

  When strongly strikes the sun;

  And from the purple grape unpress’d

  Spontaneous nectars run.

  Pallas, (’tis said,) when Jove grew dull,

  Forsook his drowsy brain;

  And sprightly leap’d into the throne

  Of wisdom’s brighter reign;

  Her helmet took; that is, shot rays

  Of formidable wit;

  And lance, — or, genius most acute,

  Which lines immortal writ;

  And gorgon shield, — or, power to fright

  Man’s folly, dreadful shone,

  And many a blockhead (easy change!)

  Turn’d, instantly, to stone.

  Our authors male, as, then, did Jove,

  Now scratch a damag’d head,

  And call for what once quarter’d there,

  But find the goddess fled.

  The fruit of knowledge, golden fruit!

  That once forbidden tree,

  Hedg’d-in by surly man, is now

  To Britain’s daughters free:

  In Eve (we know) of fruit so fair

  The noble thirst began;

  And they, like her, have caus’d a fall,

  A fall of fame in man:

  And since of genius in our sex,

  O Addison! with thee

  The sun is set; how I rejoice

  This sister lamp to see!

  It sheds, like Cynthia, silver beams

  On man’s nocturnal state;

  His lessen’d light, and languid powers,

  I show, whilst I relate.

  PART II.

  But what in either sex, beyond

  All parts, our glory crowns?

  “In ruffling seasons to be calm,

  And smile, when fortune frowns.”

  Heaven’s choice is safer than our own;

  Of ages past inquire,

  What the most formidable fate?

  “To have our own desire.”

  If, in your wrath, the worst of foes

  You wish extremely ill;

  Expose him to the thunder’s stroke,

  Or that of his own will.

  What numbers, rushing down the steep

  Of inclination strong,

  Have perish’d in their ardent wish!

  Wish ardent, ever wrong!

  ’Tis resignation’s full reverse,

  Most wrong, as it implies

  Error most fatal in our choice,

  Detachment from the skies.

  By closing with the skies, we make

  Omnipotence our own;

  That done, how formidable ill’s

  Whole army is o’erthrown!

  No longer impotent, and frail,

  Ourselves above we rise:

  We scarce believe ourselves below!

  We trespass on the skies!

  The Lord, the soul, and source of all,

  Whilst man enjoys his ease,

  Is executing human will,

  In earth, and air, and seas;

  Beyond us, what can angels boast?

  Archangels what require?

  Whate’er below, above, is done,

  Is done as —— we desire.

  What glory this for man so mean,

  Whose life is but a span!

  This is meridian majesty!

  This, the sublime of man!

  Beyond the boast of pagan song

  My sacred subject shines!

  And for a foil the lustre takes

  Of Rome’s exalted lines.

  “All, that the sun surveys, subdued,

  But Cato’s mighty mind.”

  How grand! most true; yet far beneath

  The soul of the resign’d:

  To more than kingdoms, more than worlds,

  To passion that gives law;

  Its matchless empire could have kept

  Great Cato’s pride in awe;

  That fatal pride, whose cruel point

  Transfix’d his noble breast;

  Far nobler! if his fate sustain’d

  And left to heaven the rest;

  Then he the palm had borne away,

  At distance Cæsar thrown;

  Put him off cheaply with the world,

  And made the skies his own.

  What cannot resignation do?

  It wonders can perform;

  That powerful charm, “Thy will be done,”

  Can lay the loudest storm.

  Come, resignation! then, from fields,

  Where, mounted on the wing,

  A wing of flame, blest martyrs’ souls

  Ascended to their king.

  Who is it calls thee? one whose need

  Transcends the common size;

  Who stands in front against a foe

  To which no equal rise:

  In front he stands, the brink he treads

  Of an eternal state;

  How dreadful his appointed post!

  How strongly arm’d by fate:

  His threatening foe! what shadows deep

  O’erwhelm his gloomy brow!

  His dart tremendous! —— at fourscore

  My sole asylum, thou!

  Haste, then, O resignation! haste,

  ’Tis thine to reconcile

  My foe, and me; at thy approach

  My foe begins to smile:

  O! for that summit of my wish,

  Whilst here I draw my breath,

  That promise of eternal life,

  A glorious smile in death:

  What sight, heaven’s azure arch beneath,

  Has most of heaven to boast?

  The man resign’d; at once serene,

  And giving up the ghost.

  At death’s arrival they shall smile,

  Who, not in life o’er gay,

  Serious and frequent thought send out

  To meet him on his way:

  My gay coevals! (such there are)

  If happiness is dear;

  Approaching death’s alarming day

 

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