English Poets of the Eighteenth Century eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 437 pages of information about English Poets of the Eighteenth Century.

English Poets of the Eighteenth Century eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 437 pages of information about English Poets of the Eighteenth Century.
Of whist or cribbage mark th’ amusing game;
The partners changing, but the sport the same: 
Else would the gamester’s anxious ardour cool,
Dull every deal, and stagnant every pool. 
—­Yet must one man, with one unceasing wife,
Play the long rubber of connubial life. 
Yes! human laws, and laws esteemed divine,
The generous passion straighten and confine;
And, as a stream, when art constrains its course,
Pours its fierce torrent with augmented force,
So passion, narrowed to one channel small,
Unlike the former,—­does not flow at all. 
For Love then only flaps his purple wings
When uncontrolled by priestcraft or by kings.

FROM THE NEW MORALITY

[ANTI-PATRIOTISM AND SENTIMENTALITY]

                          With unsparing hand,
  Oh, lash these vile impostures from the land!

First, stern Philanthropy,—­not she who dries
The orphan’s tears, and wipes the widow’s eyes;
Not she who, sainted Charity her guide,
Of British bounty pours the annual tide,—­
But French Philanthropy,—­whose boundless mind
Glows with the general love of all mankind;
Philanthropy, beneath whose baneful sway
Each patriot passion sinks, and dies away. 
Taught in her school t’ imbibe thy mawkish strain,
Condorcet! filtered through the dregs of Paine,
Each pert adept disowns a Briton’s part,
And plucks the name of England from his heart. 
What! shall a name, a word, a sound, control
Th’ aspiring thought, and cramp th’ expansive soul? 
Shall one half-peopled island’s rocky round
A love that glows for all creation bound? 
And social charities contract the plan
Framed for thy freedom, universal man? 
No—­through th’ extended globe his feelings run
As broad and general as th’ unbounded sun! 
No narrow bigot he:  his reasoned view
Thy interests, England, ranks with thine, Peru! 
France at our doors, he seeks no danger nigh,
But heaves for Turkey’s woes th’ impartial sigh;
A steady patriot of the world alone,
The friend of every country but his own. 
Next comes a gentler virtue.—­Ah, beware
Lest the harsh verse her shrinking softness scare. 
Visit her not too roughly; the warm sigh
Breathes on her lips; the tear-drop gems her eye. 
Sweet Sensibility, who dwells inshrined
In the fine foldings of the feeling mind;
With delicate Mimosa’s sense endued,
Who shrinks, instinctive, from a hand too rude;
Or, like the anagillis, prescient flower,
Shuts her soft petals at th’ approaching shower.

  Sweet child of sickly fancy! her of yore
  From her loved France Rousseau to exile bore;
  And while ’midst lakes and mountains wild he ran,
  Full of himself, and shunned the haunts of man,
  Taught her o’er each lone vale and Alpine steep
  To lisp the story of his wrongs, and weep;
  Taught her to cherish still in either

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English Poets of the Eighteenth Century from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.