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.

  His tufted cottage rising through the snow,
  He meets the roughness of the middle waste,
  Far from the track and blest abode of man,
  While round him night resistless closes fast,
  And every tempest, howling o’er his head,
  Renders the savage wilderness more wild! 
  Then throng the busy shapes into his mind
  Of covered pits unfathomably deep
  (A dire descent!), beyond the power of frost;
  Of faithless bogs; of precipices huge,
  Smoothed up with snow; and—­what is land unknown,
  What water—­of the still unfrozen spring,
  In the loose marsh or solitary lake,
  Where the fresh fountain from the bottom boils. 
  These check his fearful steps; and down he sinks
  Beneath the shelter of the shapeless drift,
  Thinking o’er all the bitterness of death,
  Mixed with the tender anguish nature shoots
  Through the wrung bosom of the dying man—­
  His wife, his children, and his friends unseen. 
  In vain for him th’ officious wife prepares
  The fire fair-blazing and the vestment warm;
  In vain his little children, peeping out
  Into the mingling storm, demand their sire,
  With tears of artless innocence.  Alas! 
  Nor wife nor children more shall he behold,
  Nor friends nor sacred home:  on every nerve
  The deadly Winter seizes, shuts up sense,
  And, o’er his inmost vitals creeping cold,
  Lays him along the snows a stiffened corse,
  Stretched out and bleaching in the northern blast.

  Ah, little think the gay licentious proud
  Whom pleasure, power, and affluence surround;
  They who their thoughtless hours in giddy mirth
  And wanton, often cruel, riot waste;
  Ah, little think they, while they dance along,
  How many feel, this very moment, death
  And all the sad variety of pain: 
  How many sink in the devouring flood,
  Or more devouring flame; how many bleed,
  By shameful variance betwixt man and man;
  How many pine in want, and dungeon glooms,

  Shut from the common air, and common use
  Of their own limbs; how many drink the cup
  Of baleful grief, or eat the bitter bread
  Of misery; sore pierced by wintry winds,
  How many shrink into the sordid hut
  Of cheerless poverty; how many shake
  With all the fiercer tortures of the mind,
  Unbounded passion, madness, guilt, remorse;
  Whence tumbled headlong from the height of life,
  They furnish matter for the tragic Muse;
  Even in the vale, where wisdom loves to dwell,
  With friendship, peace, and contemplation joined,
  How many, racked with honest passions, droop
  In deep retired distress; how many stand
  Around the deathbed of their dearest friends,
  And point the parting anguish.  Thought fond man
  Of these, and all the thousand nameless ills,
  That one incessant struggle render life,
  One scene of toil, of suffering, and of

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