Sorrowing joy, Adieu’s
last action,
(Lingering lips must
now disjoin),
What words can ever
speak affection
So thrilling and sincere
as thine!
Written In Friar’s-Carse Hermitage
On Nithside
Thou whom chance may
hither lead,
Be thou clad in russet
weed,
Be thou deckt in silken
stole,
Grave these counsels
on thy soul.
Life is but a day at
most,
Sprung from night,—in
darkness lost;
Hope not sunshine ev’ry
hour,
Fear not clouds will
always lour.
As Youth and Love with
sprightly dance,
Beneath thy morning
star advance,
Pleasure with her siren
air
May delude the thoughtless
pair;
Let Prudence bless Enjoyment’s
cup,
Then raptur’d
sip, and sip it up.
As thy day grows warm
and high,
Life’s meridian
flaming nigh,
Dost thou spurn the
humble vale?
Life’s proud summits
wouldst thou scale?
Check thy climbing step,
elate,
Evils lurk in felon
wait:
Dangers, eagle-pinioned,
bold,
Soar around each cliffy
hold!
While cheerful Peace,
with linnet song,
Chants the lowly dells
among.
As the shades of ev’ning
close,
Beck’ning thee
to long repose;
As life itself becomes
disease,
Seek the chimney-nook
of ease;
There ruminate with
sober thought,
On all thou’st
seen, and heard, and wrought,
And teach the sportive
younkers round,
Saws of experience,
sage and sound:
Say, man’s true,
genuine estimate,
The grand criterion
of his fate,
Is not,—Arth
thou high or low?
Did thy fortune ebb
or flow?
Did many talents gild
thy span?
Or frugal Nature grudge
thee one?
Tell them, and press
it on their mind,
As thou thyself must
shortly find,
The smile or frown of
awful Heav’n,
To virtue or to Vice
is giv’n,
Say, to be just, and
kind, and wise—
There solid self-enjoyment
lies;
That foolish, selfish,
faithless ways
Lead to be wretched,
vile, and base.
Thus resign’d
and quiet, creep
To the bed of lasting
sleep,—
Sleep, whence thou shalt
ne’er awake,
Night, where dawn shall
never break,
Till future life, future
no more,
To light and joy the
good restore,
To light and joy unknown
before.
Stranger, go! Heav’n
be thy guide!
Quod the Beadsman of
Nithside.
The Poet’s Progress
A Poem In Embryo
Thou, Nature, partial
Nature, I arraign;
Of thy caprice maternal
I complain.