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None but the present is our own ;
Grace is not plac'd within our power,
'Tis but one fhort, one fhining hour,
Bright and declining as a fetting fun.
See the white minutes wing'd with hafte
The Now that flies may be the laft;
Seize the falvation e'er 'tis paft,
Nor mourn the bleffing gone :
A thought's delay is ruin here,
A clofing eye, a gasping breath,
Shuts up the golden scene in death,

And drowns you in despair.

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To WILLIAM BLACKBOURN, Efq;

CASIMIR. Lib. II. Od. 2. imitated.

"Quæ tegit canas modo Bruma valles, &c."

MARK how it fnows! how fast the valley fills

And the sweet groves the hoary garment wear;

Yet the warm fun-beams bounding from the hills Shall melt the vail away, and the young green appear.

But when old age has on your temples shed

Her filver-froft, there's no returning fun;

Swift flies our autumn, fwift our fummer 's fled,

When youth, and love, and spring, and golden joys are

gone.

Then

Then cold, and winter, and your aged fnow,
Stick faft upon you; not the rich array,
Not the green garland, nor the rofy bough,
Shall cancel or conceal the melancholy grey.

The chace of pleafures is not worth the pains,
While the bright fands of health run wafting down;
And honour calls you from the softer scenes,
To fell the gaudy hour for ages of renown.

'Tis but one youth, and fhort, that mortals have,
And one old age diffolves our feeble frame;
But there's a heavenly art t' elude the grave,
And with the hero-race immortal kindred claim.
The man that has his country's facred tears
Bedewing his cold hearfe, has liv'd his day:

Thus, Blackbourn, we should leave our names our heirs
Old time and waning moons fweep all the rest away.

TRUE MONARCHY.

THE rifing year beheld th' imperious Gaul

1701

Stretch his dominion, while a hundred towns

Crouch'd to the victor: but a steady foul
Stands firm on its own bafe, and reigns as wide,
As abfolute; and fways ten thousand flaves,
Lufts and wild fancies with a fovereign hand.

We are a little kingdom; but the man
That chains his rebel will to reafon's throne,

Forms

Forms it a large one, whilft his royal mind
Makes heaven its council, from the rolls above
Draws its own statutes, and with joy obeys.

'Tis not a troop of well-appointed guards Create a monarch, not a purple robe

Dy'd in the people's blood, not all the crowns
Or dazzling tiars that bend about the head,
Though gilt with fun-beams and fet round with ftars.
A monarch He that conquers all his fears,
And treads upon them; when he stands alone,
Makes his own camp; four guardian virtues wait
His nightly flumbers, and fecure his dreams.
Now dawns the light; he ranges all his thoughts
In fquare battalions, bold to meet th' attacks
Of time and chance, himself a numerous hoft,
All eye, all ear, all wakeful as the day,
Firm as a rock, and moveless as the centre.

In vain the harlot, pleasure, fpreads her charms,
To lull his thoughts in luxury's fair lap,
To fenfual eafe (the bane of little kings,
Monarchs whose waxen images of fouls
Are moulded into softness); still his mind
Wears its own fhape, nor can the heavenly form
Stoop to be model'd by the wild decrees
Of the mad vulgar, that unthinking herd.

He lives above the crowd, nor hears the noife. Of wars and triumphs, nor regards the shouts Of popular applaufe, that empty found;

Nor

Nor feels the flying arrows of reproach,

Or spite or envy. In himself fecure,

Wisdom his tower, and confcience is his fhield,
His peace all inward, and his joys his own.

Now ambition fwells, my
my

wishes foar,

This be my kingdom: fit above the globe
My rifing foul, and dress thyself around
And shine in virtue's armour, climb the height
Of wisdom's lofty castle, there refide

Safe from the fmiling and the frowning world.

Yet once a day drop down a gentle look
On the great mole-hill, and with pitying eye
Survey the bufy emmets round the heap,
Crouding and bustling in a thousand forms
Of ftrife and toil, to purchafe wealth and fame,
A bubble or a duft: Then call thy thoughts
Up to thyself to feed on joys unknown,
Rich without gold, and great without renown.

TRUE COURAGE.

HONOUR demands my fong. Forget the ground,
My generous Mufe, and fit amongst the stars!
There fing the foul, that, confcious of her birth,
Lives like a native of the vital world,

Amongst thefe dying clods, and bears her ftate
Just to herself: how nobly the maintains
Her character, fuperior to the flesh,

She wields her paffions like her limbs, and knows
The brutal powers were only born t' obey.

This is the man whom ftorms could never make
Meanly complain; nor can a flattering gale
Make him talk proudly: he hath no defire
To read his fecret fate: yet unconcern'd
And calm could meet his unborn destiny,
In all its charming, or its frightful fhapes.

He that unfhrinking, and without a groan,
Bears the first wound, may finish all the war
With meer courageous filence, and come off
Conqueror: for the man that well conceals
The heavy strokes of fate, he bears them well.

He, though th' Atlantic and the Midland feas
With adverfe furges meet, and rise on high
Sufpended 'twixt the winds, then rush amain
Mingled with flames, upon his fingle head,
And clouds, and stars, and thunder, firm he ftands,
Secure of his best life; unhurt, unmov'd;

And drops his lower nature, born for death.
Then from the lofty caftle of his mind
Sublime looks down, exulting, and furveys
The ruins of creation (Souls alone

Are heirs of dying worlds); a piercing glance
Shoots upwards from between his closing lids,
To reach his birth-place, and without a figh
He bids his batter'd flesh lie gently down
Amongst his native rubbish; whilft the fpirit
Breathes and flies upward, an undoubted guest
Of the third heaven, th' unruinable sky.

Thither,

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