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<TEI.2><TEIHEADER><FILEDESC><TITLESTMT><TITLE>Poems on Various Subjects.</TITLE><AUTHOR><NAME>Williams, Helen Maria, </NAME><DATE>1762&hyphen;1827</DATE></AUTHOR><RESPSTMT><NAME>Farida Khosh,</NAME><RESP>creation of electronic text.</RESP></RESPSTMT></TITLESTMT><EDITIONSTMT><EDITION>Electronic edition</EDITION></EDITIONSTMT><EXTENT>338Kb</EXTENT><PUBLICATIONSTMT><PUBLISHER>British Women Romantic Poets Project</PUBLISHER><PUBPLACE>Shields Library, University of California, Davis, California 95616</PUBPLACE><DATE>2000</DATE><IDNO>WillHPoems</IDNO><AVAILABILITY><P>Copyright &copy; 2000, University of California. </P><P>This edition may be copied freely by individuals for personal use, research, and teaching (including distribution to classes) as long as this statement of availability is included in the text.  It may be linked to by internet editions of all kinds.</P>
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REND="italics">This text may not be not be reproduced as a commercial or non&hyphen;profit product, in print or from an information server.</HI></P><P>Available at: http://www.lib.ucdavis.edu/English/BWRP/Works/WillHPoems.sgm</P></AVAILABILITY></PUBLICATIONSTMT><SERIESSTMT><TITLE>Davis British Women Romantic Poets Series</TITLE><IDNO>33</IDNO><RESPSTMT><NAME>Nancy Kushigian,</NAME><RESP>General Editor</RESP><NAME>Charlotte Payne,</NAME><RESP>Managing Editor</RESP></RESPSTMT></SERIESSTMT><SOURCEDESC><BIBLFULL><TITLESTMT><TITLE>Poems on various subjects: with introductory remarks on the present state of science and literature in France</TITLE><AUTHOR>Williams, Helen Maria</AUTHOR></TITLESTMT><PUBLICATIONSTMT><PUBLISHER> G. and W. B. Whittaker</PUBLISHER><PUBPLACE>London, </PUBPLACE><DATE>1823</DATE></PUBLICATIONSTMT><NOTESSTMT><NOTE>[This text was scanned from its original in the Shields Library Kohler Collection, University of California, Davis.  Kohler ID no. I:1350.  Another copy available on microfilm as Kohler I:1350mf.]</NOTE></NOTESSTMT></BIBLFULL></SOURCEDESC></FILEDESC><ENCODINGDESC><PROJECTDESC><P>The editors thank the Shields Library, University of California, Davis, for its support for this project.</P><P>Purchase of software has been made possible by a research grant from the Librarians' Association of the University of California, Davis chapter.</P></PROJECTDESC><EDITORIALDECL><P>All poems, line groups, and lines are represented.
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<L>[Title Page]
</DIV1><TITLEPAGE><PB
ID="piii" N="[iii]"><DOCTITLE><TITLEPART>POEMS<LB>
ON<LB>
VARIOUS  SUBJECTS.
</TITLEPART><TITLEPART TYPE="sub">WITH<LB> INTRODUCTORY REMARKS<LB>
ON<LB>
THE  PRESENT  STATE<LB>
OF<LB>
SCIENCE AND LITERATURE<LB>
IN<LB>
FRANCE.</TITLEPART></DOCTITLE><BYLINE>BY <DOCAUTHOR>HELEN MARIA WILLIAMS.</DOCAUTHOR></BYLINE><MILESTONE
N="============" UNIT="typography"><DOCIMPRINT><PUBPLACE>LONDON:</PUBPLACE><LB><PUBLISHER>G. AND W. B. WHITTAKER, </PUBLISHER>AVE&hyphen;MARIA LANE.<MILESTONE
N="_____" UNIT="typography"><DOCDATE>1823.</DOCDATE></DOCIMPRINT></TITLEPAGE><PB
ID="PIV" N="[iv]"><PB ID="pv" N="[v]"><DIV1 TYPE="dedication"><P>TO<LB>
CHARLES L. COQUEREL
<LB>
&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;AND<LB>AUGUSTIN COQUEREL,<LB>&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;THESE POEMS<LB>
&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;ARE INSCRIBED,<LB>
BY THEIR AFFECTIONATE AUNT,</P><SIGNED>HELEN MARIA WILLIAMS.</SIGNED><PB
ID="pvi" N="[vi]"><PB ID="pvii" N="[vii]"></DIV1><DIV1
TYPE="table of contents"><HEAD>CONTENTS.</HEAD><LIST><ITEM>An Address to Poetry<REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p3">3</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Peruvian Tales:&mdash; Alzira, Tale I.<REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p19">19</REF></ITEM><ITEM>&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;Alzira, Tale II. <REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p29">29</REF></ITEM><ITEM>&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;Zilia, Tale III.<REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p36">36</REF></ITEM><ITEM>&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;Cora, Tale IV.<REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p46">46</REF></ITEM><ITEM>&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;Aciloe, Tale V.<REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p55">55</REF></ITEM><ITEM>&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;Cora, Tale VI.<REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p69">69</REF></ITEM><ITEM>The Bastille, a Vision <REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p85">85</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Euphelia, an Elegy<REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p92">92</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Duncan, an Ode <REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p103">103</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Queen Mary's Complaint <REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p107">107</REF></ITEM><ITEM>To Sensibility <REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p111">111</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Edwin and Eltrada, a Legendary Tale<REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p117">117</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Ode to Peace<REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p140">140</REF></ITEM><ITEM>The Morai <REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p145">145</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Scotch Ballad<REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p156">156</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Song<REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p159">159</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Song<REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p162">162</REF></ITEM><ITEM>On the Bill which was passed in England for regulating the Slave&hyphen;<LB>&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;Trade; a short time before its Abolition<REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p166">166</REF></ITEM><ITEM>An American Tale <REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p181">181</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Part of an Irregular Fragment <REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p190">190</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Sonnet to Hope<REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p203">203</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Sonnet to Twilight<REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p204">204</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Sonnet on reading Burn's "Mountain Daisy."<REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p205">205</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Sonnet to the Moon <REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p206">206</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Sonnet to Peace of Mind <REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p207">207</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Sonnet to Mrs. Bates <REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p209">209</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Sonnet to Expression <REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p210">210</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Sonnet to Love<REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p211">211</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Sonnet to Disappointment<REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p212">212</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Sonnet to Simplicity<REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p213">213</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Sonnet to the  Strawberry<REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p214">214</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Sonnet to the Curlew<REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p215">215</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Sonnet to the Torrid Zone<REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p216">216</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Sonnet to the Calbassia Tree<REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p217">217</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Sonnet to the White Bird of the Tropic<REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p218">218</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Dulce Domum, an old Latin Ode, sung annually by the Win&hyphen;<LB>&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;chester Boys upon leaving college at the vacation, translated at the<LB>&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;
request of Dr. Joseph Warton <REF REND="align right" TARGET="p219">219</REF></ITEM><PB
ID="pviii" N="viii"><ITEM>Elegy on a Young Thrush, which escaped from the Writer's hand,<LB>&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;
and falling down the area of a house, could not be found<REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p222">222</REF></ITEM><ITEM>The Linnet and the Cat<REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p225">225</REF></ITEM><ITEM>To Dr. Moore, in answer to a Poetical Epistle written to me by<LB>&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;
him in Wales, September 1791<REF REND="align right" TARGET="p229">229</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Hymn, imitated from the French<REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p234">234</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Imitation of Lines written by Roucher, below his Picture, which a<LB>&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;
fellow&hyphen;prisoner had drawn, and which he sent to his Wife and<LB>&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;
Children the day before his Execution.&mdash;1794<REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p236">236</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Imitation of Lines addressed by M. D&mdash;&mdash;,  a young Man of twenty&hyphen;<LB>&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;
four years of age, the night before his execution, to a Young<LB>&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;
Lady to whom he was engaged.&mdash;1794<REF REND="align right" TARGET="p237">237</REF></ITEM><ITEM>To a Friend, who sent me Flowers, when confined by illness<REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p239">239</REF></ITEM><ITEM>The Complaint of the Goddess of the Glaciers to Doctor Darwin <REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p241">241</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Verses addressed to my two Nephews, on Saint Helen's Day, 1809<REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p245">245</REF></ITEM><ITEM>To James Forbes, Esq.  Author of "The Oriental Memoirs," who <LB>&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;asked for some lines of my hand&hyphen;writing on leaving France,<LB>&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;
after his captivity at Verdun <REF REND="align right" TARGET="p251">251</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Lines written on the Pillar erecting to the Memory of Mr. Barlow,<LB>&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;
Minister of the United States at Paris, who died at Narowith,<LB>&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;
in Poland, on his return from Wilna, Dec. 26, 1812<REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p253">253</REF></ITEM><ITEM>To the Baron De Humboldt, on his bringing me some Flowers in
March<REF REND="align right" TARGET="p255">255</REF></ITEM><ITEM>To Mrs. K&mdash;&mdash;, on her sending me an English Christmas Plum&hyphen;<LB>&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;
cake at Paris<REF REND="align right" TARGET="p256">256</REF></ITEM><ITEM>The Travellers in Haste;  addressed to Thomas Clarkson, Esq. in<LB>&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;
1814, when many English arrived at Paris, but remained a<LB>&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;
very short time<REF REND="align right" TARGET="p258">258</REF></ITEM><ITEM>To James Forbes, Esq. on his bringing me Flowers from Vaucluse,<LB>&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;and which he had preserved by means of an ingenious process in<LB>&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;
their original beauty<REF REND="align right" TARGET="p262">262</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Lines on the tomb of a favourite dog<REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p264">264</REF></ITEM><ITEM>The Charter; addressed to my nephew Athanase C. L. Coquerel,<LB>&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;
on his wedding day, 1819 <REF REND="align right" TARGET="p266">266</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Lines addressed to A. C., an infant, on his first new&hyphen;year's day, 1821<REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p273">273</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Lines to Helen, a new&hyphen;born infant, 1821<REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p276">276</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Lines written in the Album of the Baroness D' H&mdash;&mdash;         , to her two<LB>&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;
daughters<REF REND="align right" TARGET="p277">277</REF></ITEM><ITEM>A Hymn<REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p279">279</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Paraphrase.&mdash;<SIC
CORR="Psalm">Psalam</SIC> lxxiv, 16, 17<REF REND="align right" TARGET="p281">281</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Paraphrase.&mdash;Isaiah xlix, 15<REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p284">284</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Paraphrase.&mdash;Matt. vii, 22<REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p288">288</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Paraphrase.&mdash;Matt. vi, 4 <REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p291">291</REF></ITEM><ITEM>Hymn, written among the Alps<REF
REND="align right" TARGET="p293">293</REF> </ITEM></LIST></DIV1><PB
ID="pix" N="[ix]"><DIV1 TYPE="introduction"><HEAD>INTRODUCTION.</HEAD><MILESTONE
N="=====" UNIT="typography"><P>S<EMPH REND="smallcaps">OME</EMPH> of the following poems, the productions of
my early youth, and which were published many
years since in two small volumes, have been long
out of print; others have been scattered in different
works, and several are now for the first time presented to the Public.</P><P>I feel that I have little to urge in behalf of these
slight compositions, which I wish to preserve. They
bear a character of melancholy that nature and early
sorrows have made the habitual disposition of my
mind;  this is all I shall venture to say of them, for
they scarcely deserve the honours of a grave defence.</P><P>I have indeed endeavoured to correct some of their
inaccuracies, yet I feel far more apprehension than
usual at the publication of the present volume: this
may be easily explained.  I have long renounced any
attempts in verse, confining my pen almost entirely to
sketches of the events of the Revolution. I have seen<PB ID="px" N="x">
what I relate, and therefore I have written with
confidence; I have there been treading on the territory of History, and a trace of my footsteps will
perhaps be left.  My narratives make a part of that
marvellous story which the eighteenth century has
to record to future times, and the testimony of a
witness will be heard.  Perhaps, indeed, I have
written too little of events which I have known so
well;  but the convulsions of states form accumulations of private calamity that distract the attention
by overwhelming the heart, and it is difficult to
describe the shipwreck when sinking in the storm.</P><P>
    Four poems only of this collection have any
reference to public events. The first in the order
of time is one of my earliest productions, and appeared many years ago under the title of Peru;
which title, although vague, seemed to promise far
more than it performed.  I have now adopted what
appears to me a more appropriate denomination, that
of Peruvian Tales in Verse;  I have not ventured to
dignify them with the appellation of historical, although they are chiefly composed of facts taken from
Robertson's History of Spanish America, which first
suggested the idea of this subject to my mind.  In
relating the adventures of that period, it was little<PB ID="pxi" N="xi">
necessary to seek to inspire interest by having recourse to fiction;  misery and oppression have at all
times composed the great materials of human history,
and the fashion has not passed away; it may be traced
from the fifteenth to the nineteenth century, from the
invasion of Peru to that of Naples.<REF
ID="williams1" N="asterisk" RESP="author" TARGET="williams-note1">&ast;</REF> With respect to the Peruvian Tales I shall only add, that I have
corrected them with care, and, above all, have found
sufficient time to make them shorter.</P><P>The second poem to which I allude is entitled "A
Poem on the Bill passed for regulating the Slave
Trade." This Bill was passed a short time before
that glorious law, by which England renounced for
ever her share of oppression.  On the Continent of
Europe, egotism, and an antient respect for abuses,
have raised an army of opponents to the abolition;
and their path has not yet been crossed by a Wilberforce or a Clarkson&mdash;
<LB><Q><L REND="indent8">&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;"In Heaven they write</L><L
REND="indent3">&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;Names, such as <EMPH
REND="italics">their's</EMPH>, in characters of light"<REF
ID="williams2" N="dagger" RESP="author" TARGET="williams-note2">&dagger;</REF></L></Q></P><NOTE
ID="williams-note1" N="asterisk" RESP="author" PLACE="foot of page xi" TARGET="williams1">&ast; The events which took place twenty years ago at Naples were well fitted to be the precursors of those that have followed. The sketch I published in 1801, of the Revolution of Naples in 1799, together with copies of the original documents of the violated treaty, which were confided to me by the persons in whose possession they had been placed, have been inserted by Mr. Belsham in his continuation of Hume, and have therefore become a part of history.</NOTE>
<NOTE
ID="williams-note2" N="dagger" RESP="author" PLACE="foot of page xi" TARGET="williams2">&dagger; Mr. Rogers' Human Life, p. 15.</NOTE><PB
ID="pxii" N="xii"><P>The third poem I have to mention is an Ode on the
taking of the Bastille. Of that event I shall only
say, in those eloquent words,<REF
ID="williams3" N="asterisk" RESP="author" TARGET="williams-note3">&ast;</REF>  which have hung
on my recollection across the lapse of years, and
amidst scenes of revolutionary danger, "it was an
action not to be excused but applauded;  not to be
pardoned but admired: I shall not descend to
vindicate acts which history will teach the remotest posterity to admire, and which is destined
to kindle in unborn millions the holy enthusiasm of freedom."</P><P>The fourth poem which bears on its brow the
mark of politics, is an Ode on the Peace signed between
the French and English at Amiens, in the year
1801. I shall offer no apology either for the sentiments
or predictions contained in that little poem.
It is so easy to make mistakes in the common calculations 
of life, that error may well be pardoned in
marking the phases of a mighty revolution, which
sweeps away hopes and predictions with other things,
and leaves us to perceive too late that we have "read
the book of destiny amiss."<REF
ID="williams4" N="dagger" RESP="author" TARGET="williams-note4">&dagger;</REF> The only memorable
circumstance in the history of this Ode is its having

<NOTE
ID="williams-note3" N="asterisk" PLACE="foot of page xii" TARGET="williams3">&ast; Answer of Sir James Mackintosh to Burke.</NOTE>
 <NOTE
ID="williams-note4" N="dagger" RESP="author" PLACE="foot of page xii" TARGET="williams4">&dagger;Mrs. Barbauld's Corsica.</NOTE>
<PB ID="pxiii" N="xiii">
incurred the displeasure of Buonaparte: he found it
in a corner of the Morning Chronicle, and it was
translated into French by his order.  He pretended to
be highly irritated at the expression "encircled by thy
subject&hyphen;waves," applied to England, and which he
said was treasonable towards France; but what he
really resented was, that his name was not once pronounced in the Ode. However singular it may seem
that he should have paid the slightest attention to
such a circumstance, it is nevertheless true.  The
ambitious find time for every thing, and while they
appear to be wholly absorbed by great objects, never
lose sight of the most minute if connected with their
own egotism. Buonaparte is no more; and perhaps
we are too much disposed to forgive his treasons
against liberty in favour of the expiation he has
made.  But those who have abused power must not
escape the sentence of posterity because they were
unfortunate. Buonaparte must appear at the bar of
history to give an account of his legions, and of that
immense stock of human happiness confided to his
care, and which he, guilty spendthrift, threw away.</P><P>I shall add no further observations respecting the
 following poems; previous apologies soften little of
 critical rigour, and, considered as a stranger in Eng&hyphen;<PB
ID="pxiv" N="xiv">
land (although my heart throbs at its name), my portion 
of indulgence will perhaps be scanty.  My
literary patrons belonged to "the days of other years,"
when a ray of favour sometimes fell on my early
essays in verse.  I can now only expect that, it being
the nature of the English public to be just, I shall
meet with no more severity than I deserve.</P><P> B<EMPH REND="smallcaps">EFORE</EMPH> I close these pages I cannot resist seizing
the occasion of protesting against the opinions which
have of late gone forth in England, respecting "the
present degenerate State of Science and Literature
in France."  I consider it the more a duty to offer
some remarks on this subject, these assertions having
been made under the high authority of a Journal no
less distinguished for its liberal principles than for the
ability with which it is written. An accusation
therefore, coming from that quarter, against modern
France, wears something like an air of justice.</P><P ID="fr">The professors of science in this country may
indeed be safely left to defend themselves. The
learned only are fit to be their own judges, and I
know not what my eulogium could add to such names
as those of La Place, Delambre, Hauy, Cuvier, Jus&hyphen;
              <PB ID="pxv" N="xv">sieu, Gay&hyphen;Lussac, Arrago, Biot, Thenard, and many
others worthy to augment the list. Some of those
persons belong, from their age to the new order of
things; and others, whose talents had already shed
lustre on the old monarchy, proceeded in their
learned labours during the course of the Revolution,
and even amidst the crimes that marked the reign of
terror, as if they sought to console mankind for those
passing horrors by the eternal lessons of wisdom and
truth.  What, for instance, can be more noble and
affecting than the conduct of Condorcet and Rabaut
St. Etienne, at that period?  who,  while <HI REND="italics"><FOREIGN
LANG="fre">hors la loi</FOREIGN></HI>,
and certain, if their retreat were discovered, of being
dragged without trial to the scaffold, pursued with
the calmness of a superior nature the lofty speculations of philosophy, and left posthumous works, in
which they disdained to make the slightest allusion
to their own desperate situation, which for both terminated
 in death!<REF ID="williams5" N="asterisk" RESP="author" TARGET="williams-note5">&ast;</REF>
    <NOTE
ID="williams-note5" N="asterisk" RESP="author" PLACE="foot of page xv" TARGET="williams5">&ast; This last work of Condorcet is entitled "<FOREIGN
LANG="fre">Sur la Perfectibilit&eacute; de l'Homme</FOREIGN>;" that of Rabaut St. Etienne Was a "Treatise on Public Instruction," which fell into the hands of the Omars of the day, and was destroyed. But a collection of his letters that have been preserved, and are now in the possession of Madam Rabaut&hyphen;Pommier, his sister&hyphen;in&hyphen;law,
will be published; they throw more light on the first years of the Revolution than any work that has yet appeared. He has also left a collection of Sermons, which he had preached in "the Desert," the sole temple of the French Protestants before the Revolution.</NOTE>
<PB ID="pxvi" N="xvi">
</P><P> It being my particular purpose at present to plead
the cause of the Poets, I shall hastily pass over the
merits of the French literati, and the orators at the
bar and in the legislature, who have acquired celebrity
 under the auspices of liberty.  It would indeed
be superfluous to relate what is already well known;
to repeat, for instance, that the admirable philosophical discourses of M. Daunou on history, the brilliant
memoirs of M. Le Montey, the transcendent
genius of Madame de Stael, belong to the new order
of things; or, that at the bar, Dupin, Odillon&hyphen;Barrot, Berville, the advocates of freedom, may stand
with brow erect before the celebrated lawyers of the
old despotism, who perhaps possessed equal abilities,
but defended a less noble cause.</P><P>French eloquence, shackled in a thousand ways
before the Revolution, burst at once into splendour,
when the delegates of the people were permitted to
proclaim their rights, and discuss their interests.
The Constituent Assembly furnished models of public
speaking;  and the small minority of the Convention,
the immortal members of the Gironde, proved that
the purest source of eloquence is found in the love
of liberty;  they who, after having vainly pleaded her
cause, gloriously died in its defence: and such men,<PB ID="pxvii" N="xvii">
among whom are found the Hampdens, the Sidneys,
the Russels of their country, have been styled, in a
tone of irony, <HI REND="italics">"revolutionary worthies!"</HI> and this
expression is not found in a manifesto of the Holy
Alliance, dated from their head&hyphen;quarters at Naples,
but comes from the head&hyphen;quarters of science, literature, and liberal principles, at Edinburgh!
   </P><P> When, after the fall of Buonaparte, the legislators
ceased to be mute, eloquence revived with the use
of speech. The most splendid talents in the Chamber of Deputies belong exclusively to the minority;
the partizans of the past can boast of no such orators
as Benjamin Constant, Royer&hyphen;Collard, Daunou, General Foy, Chauvelin, Manuel, Saint&hyphen;Aulaire, Fran&ccedil;ois de Nantes, D'Argenson, Dupont de L'Eure,
Girardin, Etienne, Bignot, &amp;c.  Arguments and votes
are found, indeed, to have little connection at the
<HI REND="italics"><FOREIGN LANG="fre">appel&hyphen;nominal</FOREIGN></HI>, but reason and eloquence have a
mighty power over public opinion, not only in France
but throughout Europe. The enlightened traveller
now visits Paris, not merely to gaze upon the fa&ccedil;ade
of the Louvre, or the master&hyphen;pieces of art; he hastens
to the sanctuary where the great interests of mankind
are nobly defended, and where the vanquished obtain
the palms.
<PB ID="pxviii" N="xviii">
</P><P>Before I attempt to give a Sketch of the Influence
of the Revolution on French Poetry, it may be
proper to repeat, what I have already observed in a
work lately published, that, in this country, politics
have long absorbed almost entirely the public mind;
not only on account of their magnitude, but because
the connection of political events with the fate of
individuals is here far more immediate and overwhelming than in old settled governments.  It has,
indeed, been pretended that, the Revolution being
now terminated, the people have given their dismission
 from public affairs; but this is not quite exact:
if they no longer place themselves in the breach, they
still maintain a post of observation, and their vigilant
jealousy of the Charter, sole compensation of all their
sacrifices, leaves them little leisure for letters and
arts. Yet at every period of the Revolution, even at
the gloomy epocha of terror, there existed some
minds who sought in books their most soothing consolations amidst their own dangers, or, which perhaps
they found more difficult to bear, the dangers of those
who were dear to them.  It requires to have been in
such perilous situations to know the rapture of turning 
for a moment to Literature, from the turbulence
of a world in commotion. Even then, also, were
<PB ID="pxix" N="xix">
found a chosen few worthy to guard the vestal flame
of the Muses; and the complainings of the poet were
heard at intervals amidst the fury of the political
tempest. The great event of the Revolution has had
an influence in this country on the whole existence of
man;  on his thoughts, his principles, his manners,
and his taste; and no doubt Poetry has been subject
to its irresistible ascendency.  From the natural connection that exists between our feelings and our situation,
a new state of society must have led the vivid
imagination of the poet to new images, and his heart,
tremblingly awake to every human sympathy, must
have felt new emotions. Enough has been said of
the crimes of the Revolution, and perhaps too little
of those examples of self&hyphen;abrogation, those deeds of
devotedness, those sublime public virtues, which seem
to slumber in the soul in ordinary times, and which
it requires the greatness of such a circumstance to call
forth. The contemplation of those noble actions,
piercing like the beautiful colours of the rainbow
through the blackness of the cloud, and seeming also
the symbols of security on which man might still
repose, were well fitted to awaken lofty thoughts, and
produce those habits of deep and serious meditation
which gave birth to the marvels of intellectual energy.</P><P>Louis the Fourteenth has, indeed, the glory of<PB
ID="pxx" N="xx">
giving his name to the Augustan age of literature in
France; but there can be no reason on that account
to believe that superstition and slavery are favourable
to letters.  What is there in common between despotism and genius? they may meet together, like many
an ill&hyphen;assorted pair, but the union was never made in
heaven, and every generous feeling of our nature
conspires to forbid the banns. Had Racine lived in
our days, no doubt his mind would have taken a
different tone, and feeling; he would have written
more after his own heart; far from the ceremonial of
a court by which he was sometimes shackled, he
would have seized the philosophic spirit of the
times, and allied the fervour of the patriot with the
pathetic tenderness of the poet; and surely he would
never have died of despondency because a monarch,
on whose reign his divine genius sheds so bright a
lustre, gave him an angry look.<REF
ID="williams6" N="asterisk" RESP="author" TARGET="williams-note6">&ast;</REF>
 <NOTE
ID="williams-note6" N="asterisk" RESP="author" PLACE="foot of page xx" TARGET="williams6"> &ast; The Revolution has even created a new phraseology in France. Many new words have been introduced, the result of new circumstances. But this is a truth which the French admit with reluctance: they tremble at the slightest innovation in their language, and consider every addition to its vocabulary as a profanation. Those upstart words seem despised like the people, by the privileged orders, for having no ancestry. The French Academy stedfastly persist in excluding many parliamentary terms which the Chamber of Deputies have resolutely adopted. Even the word <HI
REND="italics"><FOREIGN LANG="fre">Budjet</FOREIGN></HI>, although a most uncouth sound to a French ear, is completely naturalized,
in defiance of the Academicians. The new denomination of <HI REND="italics">romantic</HI> in literature, gives a French critic the same kind of shivering fit, as that of
<HI REND="italics">liberal</HI> in politics produces on the nerves of an <HI
REND="italics">ultra</HI>.</NOTE><PB ID="pxxi" N="xxi"></P><P>It were easy to exemplify the propitious effects
which the new order of things has produced on
Poetry in many remarkable instances but I shall
confine myself to a few examples. There existed
two poets in France at the period of the revolution,
pre&hyphen;eminent above the rest: Le Brun, and Delille.
Their poetry differed as much as their political opinions; that of Le Brun is daring and original; that
of Delille elegant and polished; but the Revolution
exerted a powerful influence on both.  Le Brun
hailed that event with all the fervour of an impassioned 
spirit; his patriotic odes, and invocations to
Liberty have<LB>
 <Q><L REND="indent7">&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;"Thoughts that breathe, and words that burn."</L></Q></P><P>Liberty lends his age new fires, and gives his
 muse the exulting glow of youth; he sweeps the
 chords of his lyre with a bolder hand, and draws
 forth tones of more lofty inspiration; he stamps upon
 his verse all the vehemence of his political sentiments,
 and proves that what Pope has said of the sorrows
 of love may be applied to the triumphs of liberty:<LB>

<Q><L REND="indent7">&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank;&blank; "He best can paint them who shall feel them most."</L></Q></P><P>Le Brun sometimes honoured me with his visits,
 and loved to recite his poetical compositions, even to
 a large circle;  this is one of the last things a man of
 letters in England would chuse to undertake; but it
<PB ID="pxxii" N="xxii">
has always been the practice and the fashion, under
every regime, in France.  His tall meagre form,
and his long thin visage, became full of animation
while he repeated his verses; he seemed possessed
by a kind of poetic furor;  his eye flashed fire, his
voice was sonorous; but, with a temper impetuous as
his song, he could bear no interruption;  irritated by
the slightest movement, the lowest whisper in the
apartment, he would suddenly pause, and sometimes
inflexibly refuse to proceed.  Irascible in his temper,
warm in his friendships, and no less violent in his
enmities, he excelled in epigram, which he could
point with a cruel skill that never missed its aim.
Upon the whole, it cannot be denied that Le Brun
was a greater poet for having witnessed the Revolution;
that his muse took a higher flight after escaping from the trammels in which poetry had been
confined in France; and that, by mingling the dearest
interests of mankind with the passionate language of
the muse, he gave his divine art a charm and an
empire till then unknown in his country.<REF
ID="williams7" N="asterisk" RESP="author" TARGET="williams-note7">&ast;</REF>

   <NOTE
ID="williams-note7" N="asterisk" RESP="author" PLACE="foot of page xxii" TARGET="williams7"> &ast; Le Brun had the good fortune to have a poet for the editor of his works, M. Guingen&eacute;, who was a member of the Institute, well known for his taste and erudition, for many elegant literary and poetical productions, and an history of Italian literature, which is considered as a classical work. The memory of this accomplished and enlightened friend of liberty, will ever be cherished by those who enjoyed the privilege of his society, and the fascinating powers of his conversation.</NOTE><PB
ID="pxxiii" N="xxiii"></P><P>Delille, the contemporary of Le Brun, and like
him advanced in age at the period of the Revolution,
was one of its most resolute antagonists. But we
are sometimes subject, by a sort of fatality, to the
influence of what we hate; Delille, impelled by his
political opinions to emigrate, took refuge in England, where he no doubt enlarged the sphere of his
ideas, acquired perhaps more greatness of thought,
and enriched his imagination with bolder images.
While devoted to old systems of politics, he learnt to
adorn the new systems of science with the most
beautiful colouring of poetry.  Even their rugged
nomenclature becomes flexible to the will of the
hand who possessed a peculiar power of bending the
French language to his purpose, while he preserved
all its grace and harmony.</P><P>Thus a new situation combined with the general
progress of modern improvement and discovery, to
make Delille a greater poet, in spite of his political
prejudices, and almost against his will. He would
have been satisfied to look at what could be seen of
nature by a poet's eye, through the narrow casements
of a gothic castle; but he was borne down the torrent&hyphen;stream of the Revolution, and his muse was<PB
ID="pxxiv" N="xxiv">forced to walk abroad amidst scenery of more extensive beauty and sublimer grandeur.</P><P>There belongs to Delille's character a moral excellence which cannot be passed unnoticed, and that was
his stedfast adherence to his principles. He was
called, in the eloquent language of M. de Chateaubriand, <FOREIGN LANG="fre">"le courtisan de l'adversit&eacute;;"</FOREIGN> and he has
been celebrated also for his unshaken fidelity by a
young poet now no more, Charles Loyson,<REF
ID="williams8" N="asterisk" RESP="author" TARGET="williams-note8">&ast;</REF> who has
joined with the name of Delille that of the venerable
poet and patriot Ducis, the translator of Hamlet
and Macbeth. Ducis braved far longer than Delille
the power of Buonaparte; refused all his gifts, and
<PB ID="pxxv" N="xxv">
honours, the red ribbon, and the place of senator,
and acquired the title of the last of the Romans.
The following are the lines of Charles Loyson:<LB>

<Q><L REND="indent5"><FOREIGN LANG="fre">"Voyez&hyphen;vous ce tyran? la foule en vain l'encense</FOREIGN></L><L
REND="indent5"><FOREIGN LANG="fre">"De Ducis, de Delille, il entend la silence,</FOREIGN></L><L
REND="indent5"><FOREIGN LANG="fre">"Qu'il soumette &agrave; ses loix l'Europe, et l'Univers,</FOREIGN></L><L
REND="indent5"><FOREIGN LANG="fre">"De leur muse inflexible il n'aura pas un vers."</FOREIGN></L></Q></P><P>Those who have passed through the various phases
of a revolution, know how to appreciate the virtue of
independence.<REF
ID="williams9" N="asterisk" RESP="auhor" TARGET="williams-note9">&ast;</REF></P><NOTE
ID="williams-note8" N="asterisk" RESP="author" PLACE="foot of page xxiv" TARGET="williams8"><P>&ast; This young poet died not long since, of a consumption. His last composition, a farewell to life, is entitled "<FOREIGN
LANG="fre">Le Jeune Po&egrave;te au Lit de Mort</FOREIGN>," where he laments his untimely fate in a strain of beautifully plaintive verse. I shall transcribe a few of the stanzas.</P><Q><LG
TYPE="stanza"><L REND="indent3"><FOREIGN LANG="fre">"Couvrez mon lit de fleurs, couronnez&hyphen;en ma t&ecirc;te;</FOREIGN></L><L
REND="indent3"><FOREIGN LANG="fre">Placez, placez ma lyre en mes tremblantes mains;</FOREIGN></L><L
REND="indent3"><FOREIGN LANG="fre">Je sal&ucirc;rai la mort par une hymne de f&ecirc;te;</FOREIGN></L><L
REND="indent3"><FOREIGN LANG="fre">Vous, de mes derniers chants r&eacute;p&eacute;ter les refrains.</FOREIGN></L></LG><LG
TYPE="stanza"><L REND="indent3"><FOREIGN LANG="fre">"Mais quel trouble s'&eacute;l&egrave;ve en mon &acirc;me affaiblie?</FOREIGN></L><L
REND="indent3"><FOREIGN LANG="fre">Pourquoi tombent soudain ces transports g&eacute;n&eacute;reux?</FOREIGN></L><L
REND="indent3"><FOREIGN LANG="fre">Mes regards, malgr&eacute; moi, se tournent vers la vie,</FOREIGN></L><L
REND="indent3"><FOREIGN LANG="fre">Et ma lyre ne rend que des sons douloureux.</FOREIGN></L></LG><LG
TYPE="stanza"><L REND="indent3"><FOREIGN LANG="fre">"Malheureux que je suis! je n'ai rien fait encore</FOREIGN></L><L
REND="indent3"><FOREIGN LANG="fre">Qui puisse du tr&eacute; pas sauver mon souvenir!</FOREIGN></L><L
REND="indent3"><FOREIGN LANG="fre">J'emporte dans la tombe un nom que l'on ignore,</FOREIGN></L><L
REND="indent3"><FOREIGN LANG="fre">Et tout entier la mort  m'enl&egrave;ve &agrave; l'avenir!"</FOREIGN></L></LG></Q></NOTE><P>Among the poets whose compositions have embellished the Revolution, and softened its stern aspect,
Chenier seems to require a particular mention,
because he has been attacked with peculiar severity,
not in his writings, but in his moral character; he is
accused of nothing less than being an accomplice in
the murder of his brother, or, at least, of having
made no effort to save him from the scaffold. This
<NOTE
ID="williams-note9" N="asterisk" RESP="author" PLACE="foot of page xxv" TARGET="williams9">&ast; It must be acknowledged that the fine arts too often follow the impulsion of power.  Of this the first exhibition of painting at the Louvre, after the Restoration, furnished a striking evidence.  We had been accustomed to see nothing but battles on every canvas, and the figure of Napoleon ever in the foreground of the piece.  But suddenly "all pomp and circumstance of war" disappeared;  the snows of Wagram stained with blood melted away; the fields of Austerlitz and Jena sunk from the
horizon;  and marshals, soldiers, cannon, precipices, camps, and broken bridges, were all swept into one common ruin.  The walls were crowded with Madonas and processions, and not one single warrior fixed the eye but the good Henry the Fourth, always dear indeed to the French, and to whom they have never forgotten their allegiance.</NOTE><PB
ID="pxxvi" N="xxvi">
accusation is a detestable calumny, and the story of
the letter comparing him to Cain, a fable invented by
his relentless enemies. Chenier was naturally of a
timid disposition, which served as a pretext for those
horrible suggestions;  but there is the most positive
evidence that he pleaded for his brother with all the
energy of which he was capable;  and what evidence
would it require to believe the contrary? It is true
that Chenier omitted doing one thing which would
have silenced his adversaries, and that was to die with
his brother, whom he could not save: he had perhaps
no other way left of obliging them to admit that he
had done what he could. There are cases in times
of revolution in which dying is the only means of
escaping censure.  Chenier had talents that excited
envy, without having those qualities of the heart that
obtain pardon for intellectual superiority; he was not
amiable, either in the French or English definition of
the term;  his manners had no charm, and his virtues
no gentleness.  His genius for poetry was allied with
a distinguished taste for the kindred art of music;  his
voluntaries on the piano were delightful, and he possessed a fine voice;  but when asked to play or sing, he
never forgot to refuse;  he sat down at the instrument
to please himself, and if he gave pleasure to others it
<PB ID="pxxvii" N="xxvii">
was not his fault.  When I first came to France he inhabited the same hotel with myself and my family, and
used to pass his evenings in our society.  When we
were dragged to prison in the time of terror, as
guilty of being born in England, Chenier happened
to meet us as we descended the staircase, surrounded
by soldiers and revolutionary commissaries, and passed
by us without daring to take off his hat.  This slight
circumstance serves to shew that he was a timid man;
but there are many gradations in morals between
weakness and the barbarous sacrifice of a brother.
Had Chenier been a terrorist, of which he is accused,
he would have had no dangers to dread;  guilt was
the order of the day, and had nothing to fear but its
own reproaches. Chenier's apprehensions never led
him to join that sanguinary faction, like some others,
whose apostacy at that fatal period gave occasion to
observe, that in moments of peril nothing is more
atrocious than fear.  He was an object of suspicion to
Robespierre, and had his tyranny been prolonged,
would no doubt have been his victim. The writings
of Chenier are all on the side of freedom and philosophy; 
he was one of the poets who were best
inspired by the new order of things; and if he had not
the courage as a legislator to "wield a fierce demo&hyphen;
<PB ID="pxxviii" N="xxviii">
cracy, and thunder in the forum," he has in his
quality of poet nobly defended the cause of his country.
It must ever be lamented that, like too many
French philosophers, he had not learnt to separate the
abuses of Catholicism from the doctrines of Christianity.  He wished to instruct man to break the
chains of superstition: but he sent the unbound captive to wander amidst the deserts of infidelity, without
one hope to cheer his path.</P><P> France is still rich in tragic poets. The tragedies
of Chenier, Reynouard, Le Mercier, Arnaud, Jouy,
Casimir and De Lavigne, are composed in the most
philosophical spirit.  Instead of compelling the sages
and heroes of antiquity to talk the language of modern
gallantry, the passions and the sorrows of the drama
are connected with the great political interests of
mankind;  and on the French stage this is now the
surest way of awakening that contagious sympathy,
which becomes so powerful when the audience are
already of one mind. The most popular piece that
has appeared for a long time on the French stage is
the new tragedy of "Sylla," by M. Jouy. It is a noble
production of genius; and the poet has displayed in
Sylla many features of a family likeness with our
own modern dictator.  Liberty is destroyed in Rome,
<PB ID="pxxix" N="xxix">
and nothing but victory is left. The Roscius of our
times gives also a peculiar interest to the piece, when,
wrapping himself in his purple robe, he seizes so
precisely the fugitive tones and gestures of Napoleon,
which are not yet traditional, but in the memory of
all, that it seems as if the perturbed spirit had swept
along the surges, and returned to tread the scene.
When Talma exclaims,
<LB>

<Q><L REND="indent5"><FOREIGN LANG="fre">"Du poids de ma grandeur plus accabl&eacute; que vous,</FOREIGN></L><L
REND="indent5"><FOREIGN LANG="fre">"Je viens briser le joug qui nous fatiguait tous,"</FOREIGN></L></Q>
<LB>and throws aside the purple, and breaks his golden
palm, we recollect that it was expected by many
that Napoleon would have performed the same part
at the Champ de Mai. Had he done so, he would
probably have changed his own destiny, and that of
Europe.</P><P>In the beautiful and pathetic tragedy of M. de Lavigne, entitled "The Paria," one passage (conveying
a lesson of tolerance) was applauded with rapture,
which the young poet probably borrowed from
Shakespeare. The Paria, who is the hero of the
piece, belongs to a reprobated caste of the Hindoos;
he exclaims, speaking of the Divinity,<LB>

<Q><L REND="indent5"><FOREIGN LANG="fre">"Nous sommes ses enfans.  Comme sur leur visage</FOREIGN></L><L
REND="indent5"><FOREIGN LANG="fre">"N'a&hyphen;t&hyphen;il pas sur le n&ocirc;tre imprim&eacute; son image?&mdash;</FOREIGN></L><PB
ID="Pxxx" N="xxx"><L REND="indent5"><FOREIGN LANG="fre">"Ces mortels, comme nous, sont condamn&eacute;s aux larmes,</FOREIGN></L><L
REND="indent5"><FOREIGN LANG="fre">"Soumis aux m&ecirc;mes maux, bless&eacute; des m&ecirc;mes armes;</FOREIGN></L><L
REND="indent5"><FOREIGN LANG="fre">"Les m&ecirc;mes passions nous br&ucirc;lent de leurs feux;</FOREIGN></L><L
REND="indent5"><FOREIGN LANG="fre">"Ils souffrent comme nous, et nous aimons comme eux."</FOREIGN></L></Q></P><P>M. de Lavigne had perhaps read "Hath not a Jew
eyes? hath not a Jew hands, organs, dimensions,
senses, affections, passions?"</P><P>France has been always rich in comic authors,
and she can now boast of Picard, Duval, Merville,<REF
ID="williams10" N="asterisk" RESP="author" TARGET="williams-note10">&ast;</REF>
Andrieux, and others of distinguished merit. Andrieux is professor of poetry at the College de France,
and no one knows better than himself the secret of
attracting a crowded audience. He encourages his
pupils in their love of study, and never mingles, with
invocations to the genius of antient Greece and
Rome, any philippics against liberal principles, or
treats the rising generation, like some others, with
as much acrimony as if it were a misdemeanor to be
young.  Professors may argue, and statesmen may

    <NOTE
ID="williams-note10" N="asterisk" RESP="author" PLACE="foot of page xxx" TARGET="williams10">&ast;A new comedy by M. Merville, entitled "<FOREIGN
LANG="fre">Les Quatre Ages</FOREIGN>," has
very lately appeared at the Th&eacute;&acirc;tre Fran&ccedil;ais, and obtained the distinguished applause it deserved.  The dramatic censors had indeed clipped several fine passages respecting the French youth, but the public perceived that a great deal of beauty and merit had escaped their inexorable
scissars.  In picturing the four ages of man, it was natural to say something of the generous sentiments that belong to the young;  but that part of the community is so obnoxious, not only to the <HI
REND="italics">ultras</HI>
of France, but the <HI REND="italics">ultras</HI> of all Europe, that a foreign minister at Verona lately proposed, it is said, to the Congress, the following <HI
REND="italics">arr&ecirc;t&eacute;</HI>: <FOREIGN LANG="fre"> "La Jeunesse Fran&ccedil;aise est, et demeur&eacute; supprim&eacute;e!"</FOREIGN>
</NOTE><PB ID="pxxxi" N="xxxi">
knit their brows: but they might as well hope to
change the course and order of nature, as teach the
youth of France to unlearn the lesson of their lives,
and adopt opinions that are falling, like their partizans, into old age and decrepitude. How will the young be persuaded that the principles on which the Revolution is founded are less true, because the adherents of the past consider the Revolution as an innovation; or, that absolute power is better than liberty, because it has the merit of being old?  The young have a chord in their hearts which vibrates to noble
impulses;  they have reached that glowing hour of
enthusiasm when visions of perfection and happiness
visit the imagination;  when liberty wears an angel
form, and is not merely hailed as a principle, but
adored as a passion. The youth of France know that
freedom is the dear&hyphen;bought legacy which the Revolution has bequeathed them, and they understand the
price and value of their patrimony. They have
thrown aside the levity of the French youth heretofore;  they are less gay, less brilliant: but their minds have more dignity and elevation; their manners are simple, and their thoughts are serious; for they feel that their conduct must solve the great question, whether France is worthy to be free. They have also
<PB ID="pxxxii" N="xxxii">
been nurtured amidst stupendous circumstances, and
have seen in some sort, living, and embodied before
their eyes, events of such magnitude, as the youth of
other countries have only marvelled at in their school&hyphen;books; where, perhaps amidst the ordinary occurrences of history, some tattered page, the record of freedom or glory, denotes in its worn condition how often it has been turned over.  It is indeed a part of the delinquency of their age to be irritable; they may be won by confidence, but they would rebel against oppression, for they have not reached that
period when the buoyant spirit recedes into timidity;
when sacrifices and self&hyphen;devotedness lose their perilous charm, and caution takes its place among the
virtues.  But while they guard their rights they
remember their duties, and injustice alone would
find in them "something that's dangerous."  They
have also, in the midst of the lengthened controversy
between old and new politics, Time for their auxiliary, impelling them forward with vigorous wings,
and brushing from his broad pinion the decaying
obstacles in his way.</P><P>I shall transcribe the names of only a few poets to
  whom we owe some elegant compositions; such as
  Vig&eacute;e, Tissot, Merville, Millvoye, Viennet; Madame
<PB ID="pxxxiii" N="xxxiii">
de Salm, Madame Dufresnoy, and Madame Victoire
Babois.<REF ID="williams11" N="asterisk" RESP="author" TARGET="williams-note11">&ast;</REF> Esmenard's poem "On Navigation" is
considered as a classical work.<REF
ID="williams12" N="dagger" RESP="author" TARGET="williams-note12">&dagger;</REF></P><P>One of the most popular poets of the present time
is M. Beranger, a writer of such songs as rather merit
the name of odes, or hymns to liberty. They are for
the most part local, and therefore would be less
relished elsewhere than in France, where the allusions to persons and things are seized upon instantaneously; some are of a more general nature, and prove that a great deal of philosophy may be comprized in the burden of a song. M. Beranger lately published a collection of these celebrated compositions, of which an immense number were sold in a
few days; but he was guilty of casting a shade over
his glory, by inserting some productions which religion and morals are, alas, compelled to put on their
<HI REND="italics">index</HI>. His genius was rich enough to have been less
parsimonious of a few pages which the Muse of His&hyphen;
   <NOTE
ID="williams-note11" N="asterisk" RESP="author" PLACE="foot of page xxxiii" TARGET="williams11"> &ast; Madame de Salm has written several didactic poems of great merit;  she is eminently the poet of reason; Madame Dufresnoy has acquired great celebrity by some beautiful love elegies, and some philosophical essays in prose;  and Madame Victoire Babois has composed a succession
of elegiac complaints on the loss of an only child.  It has been said of the famous French actress, Mlle. Duchesnois,<FOREIGN
LANG="fre"> "qu'elle a des larmes dans la voix;"</FOREIGN> and with no less propriety, it may be said of Madame Babois, that there are tears in her words.</NOTE>
<NOTE
ID="williams-note12" N="dagger" RESP="author" PLACE="foot of page xxxiii" TARGET="williams12">&Dagger;M. Esmenard, and the Marquis de Boufflers did me the honour of translating some of the following Poems into French verse.
</NOTE><PB ID="pxxxiv" N="xxxiv">
tory would wish, as she did for the Great Cond&eacute;, to
tear out. M. Beranger ought to have remembered
that he also belongs to History:  Anacreon is as well
known to posterity as Themistocles.  M. Beranger
was tried for sedition, and condemned to a short imprisonment; while in captivity he caused his trial to
be published, and inserted the forbidden songs on
which his condemnation was founded.  For that
offence he was ordered to be tried a second time at
the Cour D'Assises, the Old Bailey of Paris. There
the poetical culprit appeared as on a scene of triumph.
The court was filled with all the wits and the elegant
women of Paris;  he was defended by the admirable
eloquence of M. Dupin, and the Jury were reminded
by M. Berville of the fate that awaited the persecutors of the Muses in all ages;  of his guilt who exiled 
Ovid;  of the eternal infamy of him who imprisoned
Tasso; and the recorded severity of him from whose
presence Racine departed and died. M. Beranger
was acquitted.</P><P>One young poet only in France M. La Martine,
  has ranged himself under the banners of power;
  he has addressed odes to the high&hyphen;priest of intolerance the Abb&eacute; Menais; and invocations, not on
  stamped paper, but in Pindaric measures, to the
<PB ID="pxxxv" N="xxxv">
Attorney General. M. La Martine has, however real
talents, and his muse has, without his leave, borrowed
energy from freedom.</P><P> I shall forbear further to enumerate the poets who
have laid their votive offerings on the altar of liberty,
and whom the austere critics of the north would
perhaps call <HI REND="italics"><FOREIGN LANG="fre">des illustres inconnues</FOREIGN></HI>. They may be so in England, for a poet seldom acquires honour except in his own country; his name may be pronounced abroad, but he is only understood at home. It is the poetry of that language in which we have lisped in
numbers, in which we first heard the voice that is
dearest to us, in which we have breathed our earliest
accents of joy and sorrow, that strongly affects the
heart; that penetrates its inmost folds, and awakens
its most deep&hyphen;felt emotions: the poetry of a language which we have learnt with the dictionary has
no such prerogative.  My long residence in France
qualifies me perhaps as much as any stranger to taste
the charms of French poetry, and I am not insensible
to its influence;  but when I seek for consolation from
verse I take up Pope, or Thomson. Science and
History can be taught to speak every language, but
Poetry knows only her own.  The prejudices, therefore, that prevail every where against the poetry of other countries are natural enough;  the poet is not
<PB ID="pxxxvi" N="xxxvi">understood by foreigners in his original tongue, and
when his verse is translated, its enchantment is fled.
Sir Walter Scott's novels have been read eagerly in
French, but his poetry in its Parisian costume has lost
all the simple graces of the Highland plaid;  no
Caledonian vapours hang upon the hill;  no native
voices are in the hall;  the strings of the minstrel's
harp are slackened, and there is little music in the
murmurs of the Yarrow.</P><P>But it is time to conclude this imperfect sketch of
the tendencies of the Revolution on poetry.  If we
are just, we shall not only absolve liberty of the
crimes by which it has been profaned, but we shall
beware of asserting that the new order of things has
in any manner degenerated, rather than exalted the
human mind, or enfeebled genius instead of giving
fresh strength to its pinion.  No; the Revolution has
produced more energy of talent, more seriousness of
thought, more virtue, more philanthropy, and more
religion, than existed in this country at any former
period.  How can I resist mentioning, though it may
be a digression, a recent and affecting proof of the
progress of philanthropy, in the devotedness of the
four French physicians, who lately hastened to pass
the belt thrown around the desolate city of Barcelona,
<PB ID="pxxxvii" N="xxxvii">
to separate the living creation from the domain of
 death;  who, like Howard, "plunged into the infection of hospitals," and while they risqued their lives
 for strangers, rejected the uncounted gold which the
 families of the sick threw at their feet, for services it
  would have  profaned, but never could pay.  These
  glorious philanthropists<LB>

<Q><L REND="indent8">"drew purer breath,</L><L REND="indent4">"While Nature sicken'd, and each gale was death,"</L></Q>
<LB>
with the exception of one young physician, M.
 Mazet, who fell the martyr of humanity.  Two
 nations weep over his fate;  two monuments will
 record his virtue.  He has left a widowed mother to
 deplore his loss;  but she may well exclaim, in the
 words of an English father, "I would not give my
dead son for any living son in Christendom"<REF
ID="williams13" N="asterisk" RESP="author" TARGET="williams-note13">&ast;</REF></P><NOTE
ID="williams-note13" N="asterisk" RESP="author" PLACE="foot of page xxxvii" TARGET="williams13">&ast;It seems scarcely necessary to mention the pilgrimage of <HI
REND="italics"><FOREIGN LANG="fre">les Soeurs
de la Charit&eacute;</FOREIGN></HI> to attend the sick of Barcelona; pity is their vocation, and to them might be applied what was said by M. Thomas, the Celebrated academician, of the virtues of Madame Necker, "<FOREIGN
LANG="fre">le roman des autres est son histoire</FOREIGN>." </NOTE><P>Religion is also become more than ever an object
of respect in this country; there prevails a general
ardour of inquiry, a general wish for light and information on that subject. The French feel the importance of having a religion, and the want of its compensations and its hopes. But it will readily be   
<PB ID="pxxxviii" N="xxxviii">
believed, that what the thinking part of so enlightened a people desire, is not the religion of the
Jesuists;  that it has nothing in common with the
ravings of the missionaries, who fancy themselves
Bossuets because they are fanatics;  with the miracles
of Amiens and of Saint Genevi&eacute;ve, since she retook
the Pantheon;  or with that bigot zeal of proselytism,
which, in its cruel perfidy, tears a Protestant child
from her father, and teaches her that the way to
merit heaven is to violate every duty on earth.  Such
vain and gloomy superstition may shelter itself under
the banner of religion, as the guilty, in some countries, take refuge within the precincts of a temple;  but it is no less reprehended by every liberal Catholic than by persons of other persuasions. The religion sought for by the French nation is that which is founded on the principles of rational inquiry, and on the sublime morality and the eternal truths of the Gospel;  that religion, without which life in its utmost
blessedness would be a path of weariness, but which,
to those whose passage through the world has led
them amidst such tremendous scenes as have convulsed society to its very foundations, is all that can
calm the agitations of memory, all that can console
for what is irreparable.</P><PB ID="pxxxix" N="xxxix"><P>I conclude with the wish that the above observations
may have had some power to persuade the reader,
that the Revolution has left some talents, some morality, and some religion in France.
</P></DIV1><PB ID="pxl" N="xl"><DIV1><HEAD>NOTE.</HEAD><P>Since the foregoing pages were written, I have
heard that Mr. O'Meara, in his Memoirs of Buonaparte,
asserts that, having lent the Emperor a volume I
published "On the Events of his Government of a
Hundred Days," Buonaparte declared  first, that it
was a very silly composition, filled with a string of
falsehoods;  secondly, that he had never worn any
other breastplate than his flannel&hyphen;waistcoat; and
thirdly, that the book, foolish as it was, must have
been <HI REND="italics">well paid</HI>.  With regard to the imputation of
my work being silly, it is before the Public and
must defend itself; but when Buonaparte added
"that it was filled with falsehoods," he well knew
that all it uttered was truth;  and indeed so much
anger has something of a guilty air;  nothing is
calmer than innocence. With respect to the slight
circumstance of his having worn, during the latter
part of his reign, some kind of mysterious &aelig;gis
beneath his flannel&hyphen;waistcoat, I shall only repeat that
it was a fact of public notoriety at Paris, and that it
gave a very awkward appearance to his person. But
<PB ID="pxli" N="xli">
I hasten from his coating to a far more serious allegation against me, that of having been <HI
REND="italics">well paid</HI>.  What
pages of my volume deserved best the recompense?
Was it the tribute offered to Kosciusko, the hero of
Poland;  or to La Fayette, the veteran of liberty in
two worlds? It is the misfortune of those who write
in times of revolution, that every successive Government begins by proclaiming principles which the
friend of liberty is tempted to applaud, and as regularly ends by governing in its own way. Exulting in the fall of one tyranny, the heart deludes itself with the hope of better things from new rulers, who take care, in their turn, to convict the dreamer of folly.  All I said of Buonaparte, in that volume, were well known facts, upon which the stamp of fate was impressed, and which, while I traced them in a feeble
sketch, History had already seized, and graven with
her iron pen. If the glow of enthusiastic feeling
were not one of the things which it is difficult to
buy or sell, the person by whom I might most reasonably be suspected of having been heretofore paid,
was Buonaparte himself.  But no: when I offered
incense at his shrine, when I never pronounced his
name without emotion, he had no recompense to give: he was not then an Emperor.  My first lavish
<PB ID="pxlii" N="xlii">
panegyric on Buonaparte, in my "Tour through
Switzerland," was published before he went to Egypt,
when no imperial diadem bound his brows, and he
was only the Deliverer of Italy. At the date of my
succeeding eulogium, in "A Sketch of the State of
France towards the End of the Eighteenth Century,"
he was simply first Consul, with no other title than
that of citizen; but I own I praised him as extravagantly as if consuls, like kings, could do no wrong.  His imperial purple at length cured my enthusiasm, and no odes of my inditing hailed his coronation, or his marriage;  I saluted with no acclamations the daughter of the C&aelig;sars, and essayed no imitation of
Pollio on the birth of the King of Rome.</P><P>Weary of military despotism, I rejoiced indeed in
the deliverance of the country, although not insensible
to the bitter pang which must have rankled in the
breast of the fallen monarch;  but while his misfortunes are pitied by the lovers of liberty, they must not be compelled to mourn over him as its friend.  He! who finished the Revolution by undoing all it had done; who overthrew its best and most sacred institutions, with the mockery of a Senate that was prostrate, and a Legislature that was mute; who gave back to France her courtly pageantry her titles, her
<PB ID="pxliii" N="xliii">
distinctions, her feudal majorats, and wrested from
her those equal rights for which she had sacrificed
them all;  till at length his frantic ambition, unsatisfied with the inheritance of empires, brought hosts of strangers within the gates of the capital, while Liberty hid her prostrate head the dust. It was he who accustomed Europe to the action of immense masses of armed men, and thus gave rise to those
Holy Alliances of bayonets, which hover over the
nations with new invasions, new despotism and consequently new revolutions. 
</P><PB ID="pxliv" N="[xliv]"></DIV1></FRONT>
<BODY><DIV1><PB ID="p1" N="[1]"><HEAD TYPE="Book of poem">POEMS.</HEAD><PB
ID="p2" N="[2]"><PB ID="p3" N="[3]"><HEAD>POEMS.</HEAD><MILESTONE
N="===========" UNIT="typography"><DIV2 TYPE="poems"><HEAD TYPE="poems">AN<LB>
ADDRESS TO POETRY.
</HEAD>
<LABEL N="I">I.</LABEL>
<LG TYPE="stanza"><L REND="indent2">W<HI REND="smallcaps">HILE</HI> envious crowds the summit view,</L><L
REND="indent1"> Where Danger with Ambition strays;</L><L REND="indent2">Or far, with anxious step, pursue</L><L
REND="indent1">Pale Av'rice, thro' his winding ways;</L><L REND="indent2">The selfish passions in their train,</L><L
REND="indent1">Whose force the social ties unbind,</L><L REND="indent1">And chill the love of human kind,</L><L>And make fond Nature's best emotions vain;</L></LG>
<PB ID="p4" N="4"><LABEL N="ii">II.</LABEL><LG TYPE="stanza"><L
REND="indent2">O, P<HI REND="smallcaps">OESY</HI>! O nymph most dear,</L><L
REND="indent1">To whom I early gave my heart,&mdash;</L><L REND="indent2">Whose voice is sweetest to my ear</L><L
REND="indent1">Of aught in nature or in art;</L><L REND="indent2">Thou, who canst all my breast controul,</L><L
REND="indent1">Come, and thy harp of various cadence bring,</L><L
REND="indent1">And long with melting music swell the string</L><L>That suits the present temper of my soul.</L></LG>
<LABEL N="III.">III.</LABEL><LG TYPE="stanza"><L REND="indent2">O! ever gild my path of woe,</L><L
REND="indent1">And I the ills of life can bear;</L><L REND="indent2">Let but thy lovely visions glow,</L><L
REND="indent1">And chase the forms of real care;</L><L REND="indent2">O still, when tempted to repine</L><L
REND="indent1">At partial Fortune's frown severe,</L><L REND="indent1">Wipe from my eyes the anxious tear,</L><L>And whisper that thy soothing joys are mine!</L></LG><PB
ID="p5" N="5"><LABEL>IV.</LABEL><LG TYPE="stanza"><L REND="indent2">When did my fancy ever frame</L><L
REND="indent1">A dream of joy by thee unblest?</L><L REND="indent2">When first my lips pronounc'd thy name,</L><L
REND="indent1">New pleasure warm'd my infant breast.</L><L REND="indent2">I lov'd to form the jingling rhyme,</L><L
REND="indent1">The measur'd sounds, tho' rude, my ear could please,</L><L
REND="indent1">Could give the little pains of childhood ease,</L><L>And long have sooth'd the keener pains of time.</L></LG>
<LABEL>V.</LABEL><LG TYPE="stanza"><L REND="indent2">The idle crowd in fashion's train,</L><L
REND="indent1">Their trifling comment, pert reply,</L><L REND="indent2">Who talk so much, yet talk in vain,</L><L
REND="indent1">How pleas'd for thee, O nymph, I fly!</L><L REND="indent2">For thine is all the wealth of mind,</L><L
REND="indent1">Thine the unborrow'd gems of thought;</L><L REND="indent2">The flash of light by souls refin'd,</L><L>From heav'n's empyreal source exulting caught.</L></LG><PB
ID="p6" N="6"><LABEL>VI. </LABEL><LG TYPE="stanza"><L REND="indent1">And ah! when destin'd to forego</L><L>The social hour with those I love,&mdash;</L><L
REND="indent1">That charm which brightens all below,</L><L>That joy all other joys above,</L><L
REND="indent1">And dearer to this breast of mine,</L><L>O Muse! than aught thy magic power can give,&mdash;</L><L
REND="indent1">Then on the gloom of lonely sadness shine,</L><L>And bid thy airy forms around me live.</L></LG><LABEL>VII.</LABEL><LG
TYPE="stanza"><L REND="indent2">Thy page, O S<HI REND="smallcaps">HAKESPEARE</HI>! let me view,</L><L
REND="indent1">Thine! at whose name my bosom glows;</L><L REND="indent2">Proud that my earliest breath I drew</L><L
REND="indent1">In that blest isle where S<HI REND="smallcaps">HAKESPEARE</HI> rose!</L><L
REND="indent2">Where shall my dazzled glances roll?</L><L REND="indent1">Shall I pursue gay Ariel's flight?</L><L
REND="indent1">Or wander where those hags of night</L><L>With deeds unnam'd shall freeze my trembling soul?</L></LG><PB
ID="p7" N="7"><LABEL> VIII.</LABEL><LG TYPE="stanza"><L REND="indent2">Plunge me, foul sisters! in the gloom</L><L
REND="indent1">Ye wrap around yon blasted heath:</L><L REND="indent2">To hear the harrowing rite I come,</L><L
REND="indent1">That calls the angry shades from death!</L><L REND="indent2">Away&mdash;my frighted bosom spare!</L><L
REND="indent1">Let true Cordelia pour her filial sigh,</L><L REND="indent1">Let Desdemona lift her pleading eye,</L><L>And poor Ophelia sing in wild despair!</L></LG><LABEL> IX.</LABEL><LG
TYPE="stanza"><L REND="indent2">When the bright noon of summer streams</L><L
REND="indent1">In one wide flash of lavish day,</L><L REND="indent2">As soon shall mortal count the beams,</L><L
REND="indent1">As tell the powers of S<HI REND="smallcaps">HAKESPEARE'S</HI> lay!</L><L
REND="indent2">O, Nature's Poet! the untaught,</L><L REND="indent1">The simple mind thy tale pursues,</L><L
REND="indent1">And wonders by what art it views</L><L>The perfect image of each native thought.</L></LG><PB
ID="p8" N="8"><LABEL> X.</LABEL><LG TYPE="stanza"><L REND="indent2">In those still moments, when the breast,</L><L
REND="indent1">Expanded, leaves its cares behind,</L><L REND="indent2">Glows by some higher thought possest,</L><L
REND="indent1">And feels the energies of mind;</L><L REND="indent2">Then, awful M<HI
REND="smallcaps">ILTON</HI>, raise the veil</L><L REND="indent1">That hides from human eye the heav'nly throng!</L><L
REND="indent1">Immortal sons of light! I hear your song,</L><L>I hear your high&hyphen;tun'd harps creation hail!</L></LG><LABEL>XI</LABEL><LG
TYPE="stanza"><L REND="indent2">Well might creation claim your care,</L><L
REND="indent1">And well the string of rapture move,</L><L REND="indent2">When all was perfect, good, and fair,</L><L
REND="indent1">When all was music, joy, and love!</L><L REND="indent2">Ere Evil's inauspicious birth</L><L
REND="indent1">Chang'd Nature's harmony to strife;</L><L REND="indent1">And wild Remorse, abhorring life,</L><L>And deep Affliction, spread their shade on earth.</L></LG><PB
ID="p9" N="9"><LABEL>XII</LABEL><LG TYPE="stanza"><L REND="indent1">Blest Poesy! O, sent to calm</L><L
REND="indent2">The human pains which all must feel,</L><L REND="indent1">Still shed on life thy precious balm,</L><L
REND="indent2">And every wound of nature heal!</L><L REND="indent2">Is there a heart of human frame</L><L
REND="indent1">Along the burning track of torrid light,</L><L REND="indent1">Or 'mid the fearful waste of polar night,</L><L>That never glow'd at thy inspiring name?</L></LG><LABEL>XIII.</LABEL><LG
TYPE="stanza"><L REND="indent2">Ye Southern Isles,<REF
ID="williams14" N="asterisk" RESP="author" TARGET="williams-note14">&ast; </REF>emerg'd so late</L><L
REND="indent1">Where the Pacific billow rolls,</L><L REND="indent2">Witness, though rude your simple state,</L><L
REND="indent1">How heav'n&hyphen;taught verse can melt your souls!</L><L
REND="indent2">Say, when you hear the wand'ring bard,</L><L REND="indent1">How thrill'd ye listen to his lay,</L><L
REND="indent1">By what kind arts ye court his stay,&mdash;</L><L>All savage life affords his sure reward.</L></LG>
<Q><NOTE
ID="williams-note14" N="asterisk" RESP="author" PLACE="foot of page 9" TARGET="williams14"> &ast; "The song of the bards or minstrels of Otaheite was unpremeditated,
and accompanied with music. They were continually going about from
place to place; and they were rewarded by the master of the house with such
things as the one wanted, and the other could spare."
<BIBL> &mdash;<HI REND="italics">Cook's Voyage.</HI></BIBL>
</NOTE></Q>
<PB ID="p10" N="10"><LABEL> XIV.</LABEL><LG TYPE="stanza"><L REND="indent2">So, when great H<HI
REND="smallcaps">OMER</HI>'<HI REND="smallcaps">S</HI> chiefs prepare,</L><L
REND="indent1">Awhile from War's rude toils releas'd,</L><L REND="indent2">The pious hecatomb, and share</L><L
REND="indent1">The flowing bowl, and genial feast:</L><L REND="indent2">Some heav'nly minstrel sweeps the lyre,</L><L
REND="indent1">While all applaud the poet's native art;</L><L REND="indent1"> For him they heap the viand's  choicest part,</L><L>And copious goblets crown the Muse's fire.</L></LG><LABEL>XV.</LABEL><LG
TYPE="stanza"><L REND="indent2">Ev'n<EMPH REND="italics"> here</EMPH>, in scenes of pride and gain,</L><L
REND="indent1">Where faint each genuine feeling glows;</L><L REND="indent2"><EMPH
REND="italics">Here</EMPH>, Nature asks, in want and pain,</L><L REND="indent1">The dear illusions verse bestows;</L><L
REND="indent2">The poor, from hunger, and from cold,</L><L REND="indent1">Spare one small coin, the ballad's price,</L><L
REND="indent1">Admire their poet's quaint device,</L><L>And marvel much at all his rhymes unfold.</L></LG><PB
ID="p11" N="11"><LABEL>  XVI.</LABEL><LG TYPE="stanza"><L REND="indent2">Ye children, lost in forests drear,</L><L
REND="indent1">Still o'er your wrongs each bosom grieves,</L><L REND="indent2">And long the red&hyphen;breast shall be dear,</L><L
REND="indent1">Who strew'd each little corpse with leaves;</L><L REND="indent2">For you my earliest tears were shed,</L><L
REND="indent1">For you the gaudy doll I pleas'd forsook,</L><L REND="indent1">And heard, with hands uprais'd, and eager look,</L><L>The cruel tale, and wish'd ye were not dead!</L></LG><LABEL> XVII.</LABEL><LG
TYPE="stanza"><L REND="indent2">And still on Scotia's northern shore,</L><L
REND="indent1">"At times, between the rushing blast,"</L><L REND="indent2">Recording mem'ry loves to pour</L><L
REND="indent1">The mournful song of ages past;</L><L REND="indent2">Come, lonely Bard "of other years!"</L><L
REND="indent1">While dim the half&hyphen;seen moon of varying skies,</L><L
REND="indent1">While sad the wind along the grey moss sighs,</L><L>And give my pensive heart "the joy of tears!"</L></LG><PB
ID="p12" N="12"><LABEL>XVIII.</LABEL><LG TYPE="stanza"><L REND="indent2">The various tropes that splendour dart</L><L
REND="indent1">Around the modern poet's line,</L><L REND="indent2">Where, borrow'd from the sphere of art,</L><L
REND="indent1">Unnumber'd gay allusions shine,</L><L REND="indent2">Have not a charm my breast to please</L><L
REND="indent1">Like the blue mist, the meteor's beam,</L><L REND="indent1">The dark&hyphen;brow'd rock, the mountain stream,</L><L>And the light thistle waving in the breeze.</L></LG><LABEL>XIX.</LABEL><LG
TYPE="stanza"><L REND="indent2">Wild Poesy, in haunts sublime,</L><L
REND="indent1"> Delights her lofty note to pour;</L><L REND="indent2">She loves the hanging rock to climb,</L><L
REND="indent1">And hear the sweeping torrent roar!</L><L REND="indent2">The little scene of cultur'd grace</L><L
REND="indent1">But faintly her expanded bosom warms;</L><L REND="indent1">She seeks the daring stroke, the awful charms,</L><L>Which Nature's pencil throws on Nature's face.</L></LG><PB
ID="p13" N="13"><LABEL>XX.</LABEL><LG TYPE="stanza"><L REND="indent2">O, Nature! thou whose works divine</L><L
REND="indent1">Such rapture in this breast inspire,</L><L REND="indent2">As makes me dream one spark is mine</L><L
REND="indent1">Of Poesy's celestial fire;</L><L REND="indent2">When doom'd, "in cities pent," to leave</L><L
REND="indent1">The kindling morn's unfolding view,</L><L REND="indent1"> Which ever wears some aspect new,</L><L>And all the shadowy forms of soothing eve;</L></LG><LABEL> XXI.</LABEL><LG
TYPE="stanza"><L REND="indent2">Then, T<HI REND="smallcaps">HOMSON</HI>, then be ever near,</L><L
REND="indent1">And paint whatever season reigns;</L><L REND="indent2">Still let me see the varying year,</L><L
REND="indent1">And worship Nature in thy strains;</L><L REND="indent2">Now, when the wint'ry tempests roll,</L><L
REND="indent1">Unfold their dark and desolating form,</L><L REND="indent1">Rush in the savage madness of the storm,</L><L>And spread those horrors that exalt my soul!</L></LG><PB
ID="p14" N="14"><LABEL>XXII.</LABEL><LG TYPE="stanza"><L REND="indent2">And, P<HI
REND="smallcaps">OPE</HI> the music of thy verse</L><L REND="indent1">Shall winter's dreary gloom dispel,</L><L
REND="indent2">And fond remembrance oft rehearse</L><L REND="indent1">The moral song she knows so well;</L><L
REND="indent2">The sportive sylphs shall flutter here,&mdash;</L><L
REND="indent1">There Eloise, in anguish pale,</L><L REND="indent1">"Kiss with cold lips the sacred veil,</L><L>"And drop with every bead too soft a tear!"</L></LG>
<LABEL>XXIII.</LABEL>
<LG TYPE="stanza"><L REND="indent2">When disappointment's sick'ning pain</L><L
REND="indent1">With chilling sadness numbs my breast,</L><L REND="indent2">That feels its dearest hope was vain,</L><L
REND="indent1">And bids its fruitless struggles rest;</L><L REND="indent2">When those for whom I wish to live,</L><L
REND="indent1">With cold suspicion wrong my aching heart;</L><L REND="indent1">Or, doom'd from those for ever lov'd to part,</L><L>And feel a sharper pang than death can give;</L></LG>
<PB ID="p15" N="15">
<LABEL>XXIV.</LABEL><LG TYPE="stanza"><L REND="indent2">Then with the mournful Bard I go,</L><L
REND="indent1">Whom "melancholy mark'd her own,"</L><L REND="indent2">While tolls the curfew, solemn, slow,</L><L
REND="indent1">And wander amid graves unknown;</L><L REND="indent2">With yon pale orb, lov'd poet, come!</L><L
REND="indent1">While from those elms long shadows spread,</L><L REND="indent1">And where the lines of light are shed,</L><L>Read the fond record of the rustic tomb!</L></LG>
<LABEL> XXV.</LABEL><LG TYPE="stanza"><L REND="indent2">Or let me o'er old Conway's flood</L><L
REND="indent1">Hang on the frowning rock, and trace</L><L REND="indent2">The characters that, wove in blood,</L><L
REND="indent1">Stamp'd the dire fate of E<HI REND="smallcaps">DWARD'S</HI> race;</L><L
REND="indent2">Proud tyrant! tear thy laurell'd plume;</L><L REND="indent1">How poor thy vain pretence to deathless fame!</L><L
REND="indent1">The injur'd Muse records thy lasting shame,</L><L>And she has power to "ratify thy doom."</L></LG>
<PB ID="p16" N="16"><LABEL> XXVI.</LABEL>
<LG TYPE="stanza"><L REND="indent2">Nature, when first she smiling came,</L><L
REND="indent1">To wake within the human breast</L><L REND="indent2">The sacred Muse's hallow'd flame,</L><L
REND="indent1">And earth, with heav'n's rich spirit blest!</L><L REND="indent2">Nature in that auspicious hour,</L><L
REND="indent1">With awful mandate, bade the Bard</L><L REND="indent1">The register of glory guard,</L><L>And gave him o'er all mortal honours power.</L></LG><LABEL>XXVII.</LABEL><LG
TYPE="stanza"><L REND="indent2">Can Fame on Painting's aid rely?</L><L
REND="indent1">Or lean on Sculpture's trophy'd bust?&mdash;</L><L
REND="indent2">The faithless colours bloom to die,</L><L REND="indent1">The crumbling pillar mocks its trust;</L><L
REND="indent2">But thou, O Muse, immortal maid!</L><L REND="indent1">Canst paint the godlike deeds that praise inspire,</L><L
REND="indent1">Or worth, that lives but in the mind's desire,</L><L>In tints that only shall with Nature fade!</L></LG><PB
ID="p17" N="17"><LABEL>XXVIII.</LABEL><LG TYPE="stanza"><L REND="indent2">O tell me, partial nymph! what rite,</L><L
REND="indent1">What incense sweet, what homage true,</L><L REND="indent2">Draws from thy fount of purest light</L><L
REND="indent1">The flame it lends a chosen few?</L><L REND="indent2">Alas! these lips can never frame</L><L
REND="indent1">The mystic vow that moves thy breast;</L><L REND="indent1">Yet by thy joys my life is blest,</L><L>And my fond soul shall consecrate thy name.</L></LG></DIV2><PB
ID="p18" N="[18]"><PB ID="p19" N="[19]"><DIV2><HEAD REND="poems">PERUVIAN TALES.</HEAD><PB
ID="p20" N="[20]"><DIV3 TYPE="part of poem"><PB ID="p21" N="[21]"><HEAD>ALZIRA.</HEAD><HEAD
TYPE="sub">TALE I.</HEAD><MILESTONE N="___________" UNIT="typography"><OPENER>Description of Peru, and of its Productions&mdash;Virtues of the People;<LB>
 and of their Monarch, A<EMPH REND="smallcaps">TALIBA</EMPH>&mdash;His love for A<EMPH
REND="smallcaps">LZIRA</EMPH>&mdash;Their Nup&hyphen;<LB>tials celebrated&mdash;Character of Z<EMPH
REND="smallcaps">ORAI</EMPH>, her Father&mdash;Descent of the<LB>
Genius of Peru&mdash;Prediction of the Fall of that Empire.</OPENER><MILESTONE
N="___________" UNIT="typography"><LG TYPE="stanza"><L REND="indent1"> W<HI
REND="smallcaps">HERE</HI> the Pacific deep in silence laves</L>
<L>The western shore, with slow, and languid waves,</L><L>There, lost P<HI
REND="smallcaps">ERUVlA</HI>! bloom'd thy cultur'd bowers,</L><L>Thy vallies fragrant with perennial flowers;</L><L>There, far above, the Pine unbending rose,</L><L>Along the pathway of thy mountain snows;</L><L>The Palms fling high in air their feather'd heads,</L><L>While each broad leaf an ample shadow spreads;</L><PB
ID="p22" N="22"><L>The Orange, and the rich Ananas bloom,</L><L>And humid Balsams ever shed perfume;</L><L>The Bark, reviving shrub! Ah, not in vain</L><L>Thy rosy blossoms tinge P<HI
REND="smallcaps">ERUVIA'S</HI> plain;</L><L>Ye fost'ring gales around those blossoms blow,</L><L>Ye balmy dew&hyphen;drops o'er the tendrils flow!</L><L>Lo, as the health&hyphen;diffusing plant aspires,</L><L>Disease relents, and hov'ring death retires;</L><L>Affection sees new lustre light the eye,</L><L>And feels her vanish'd peace again is nigh.</L><L>The Pacas,<REF
ID="williams15" N="asterisk" RESP="author" TARGET="williams-note15">&ast;</REF> and Vicunnas<REF
ID="williams16" N="dagger" RESP="author" TARGET="williams-note16">&dagger;</REF> sport around,</L><L>And the meek Lamas<REF
ID="williams17" N="double dagger" RESP="author" TARGET="williams-note17">&Dagger;</REF>, burden'd, press the ground.</L><L>The Mocking&hyphen;bird his varying note essays,</L><L>And charms the grove with imitative lays;</L><L>The plaintive Humming&hyphen;bird unfolds his wing</L><L>Of vivid plumage to the ray of spring;</L><L>Then sinks, soft burthen, on the humid flower,</L><L>His food, the dewdrops of the morning hour.</L><PB
ID="p23" N="23"><L REND="indent1">Nor less, P<HI REND="smallcaps">ERUVIA</HI>, for thy favour'd clime,</L><L>The Virtues rose unsullied and sublime;</L><L>There melting Charity, with ardour warm,</L><L>Spreads her wide mantle o'er the shiv'ring form;</L><L>Cheer'd with the festal song her rural toils,</L><L>While in the lap of age she pour'd the spoils;<REF
ID="williams18" N="asterisk" RESP="author" TARGET="williams-note18">&ast;</REF></L><L>There the mild Inca, A<HI
REND="smallcaps">TALIBA</HI> sway'd,</L><L>His high behest the willing heart obey'd;</L><L>Descendant of a scepter'd, sacred race,</L><L>Whose origin from glowing suns they trace.</L><L>Love's soft emotions now his soul possest,</L><L>And fix'd A<HI
REND="smallcaps">LZIRA'S </HI>image in his breast.</L><L>In that blest clime affection never knew</L><L>A selfish purpose, or a thought untrue;</L><L>Not as on Europe's shore, where wealth and pride,</L><L>From mourning love the venal breast divide;</L><L>Yet Love, if there from sordid shackles free,</L><L>One faithful bosom yet belongs to thee;</L><PB
ID="p24" N="24"><L>On that fond heart the purest bliss bestow,</L><L>Or give, for thou canst give, a charm to woe;</L><L>Ah, never may that heart in vain deplore</L><L>The pang that tortures when belov'd no more.</L><L>And from that agony the spirit save,</L><L>When unrelenting yawns th' untimely grave;</L><L>When death dissolves the ties for ever dear,</L><L>When frantic passion pours her parting tear;</L><L>With all the wasting pains she only feels,</L><L>Hangs on the quiv'ring lip that silence seals;</L><L>Views fondness struggling in the closing eye,</L><L>And marks it mingling in the falt'ring sigh;</L><L>As the lov'd form, while folded to her breast,</L><L>Breathes the last moan that gives its struggles rest;</L><L>Leaves her to pine in grief that none can share,</L><L>And find the world a desert to despair.</L><L
REND="indent1">Bright was the lustre of the orient ray</L><L>That joyful wak'd A<HI
REND="smallcaps">LZIRA'S</HI> nuptial day;</L><L>Her auburn hair spread loosely on the wind,</L><L>The virgin train with rosy chaplets bind;</L><PB
ID="p25" N="25"><L>While the fresh flowers that form her bridal <SIC>wreathe</SIC></L><L>Seem deeper hues and richer scents to breathe.</L><L>The gentle tribe now sought the hallow'd fane,</L><L>Where warbling vestals pour'd the choral strain;</L><L>There aged Z<HI
REND="smallcaps">ORAI</HI> his A<HI REND="smallcaps">LZIRA</HI> prest,</L><L>With love parental, to his anxious breast;</L><L>Priest of the Sun! within the sacred shrine</L><L>His fervent spirit breath'd the strain divine;</L><L>With careful hand the guiltless off'ring spread,</L><L>With pious zeal the clear libation shed.</L><L>Nor vain the incense of erroneous praise</L><L>When meek devotion's soul the tribute pays;</L><L>On wings of purity behold it rise,</L><L>While bending mercy wafts it to the skies!</L><L>P<HI
REND="smallcaps">ERUVIA</HI>!  O delightful land in vain</L><L>The virtues flourish'd on thy beauteous plain;</L><L>For soon shall burst the unrelenting storm</L><L> O'er thy mild head, and crush thy prostrate form!</L><L>Recording Fame shall mark thy desp'rate fate,</L><L>And distant ages weep for ills so great!</L><PB
ID="p26" N="26"><L>Now o'er the deep dull Night her mantle flung,</L><L>Dim on the wave the moon's faint crescent hung;</L><L>P<HI
REND="smallcaps">ERUVIA'S</HI> Genius sought the liquid plain,</L><L>Sooth'd by the languid murmurs of the main;</L><L>When sudden clamour the illusion broke,</L><L>Wild on the surface of the deep it spoke;</L><L>A rising breeze expands her flowing veil,</L><L>Aghast with fear, she spies a flying sail&mdash;</L><L>The lofty mast impends, the banner waves,</L><L>The ruffled surge th' incumbent vessel laves;</L><L>With eager eye she views her destin'd foe</L><L>Lead to her peaceful shores th' advent'rous prow;</L><L>Trembling she knelt, with wild, disorder'd air,</L><L>And pour'd with frantic energy her prayer:</L><L>"O, ye avenging spirits of the deep!</L><L>Mount the blue lightning's wing, o'er ocean sweep;</L><L>Loud from your central caves the shell resound,</L><L>That summons death to your abyss profound;</L><L>Call the pale spectre from his dark abode,</L><L>To print the billow, swell the black'ning flood,</L><PB
ID="p27" N="27"><L>Rush o'er the waves, the rough'ning deep deform,</L><L>Howl in the blast, and animate the storm&mdash;</L><L>Relentless powers! for not one quiv'ring breeze</L><L>Has ruffled yet the surface of the seas&mdash;</L><L>Swift from your rocky steeps ye Condors<REF
ID="williams19" N="asterisk" RESP="author" TARGET="williams-note19">&ast;</REF> stray,</L><L>Wave your black plumes, and cleave th' aerial way;</L><L>Proud in terrific force your wings expand,</L><L>Press the firm earth, and darken all the strand;</L><L>Bid the stern foe retire with wild affright,</L><L>And shun the region veil'd in partial night.</L><L>Vain hope, devoted land! I read thy doom,</L><L>My sad prophetic soul can pierce the gloom;</L><L>I see, I see my lov'd, my favour'd clime</L><L>Consum'd, and wasted in its early prime.</L><L>But not in vain this beauteous land shall bleed,</L><L>Too late shall Europe's race deplore the deed.</L><L>Region abhorr'd! be gold the tempting bane,</L><L>The curse that desolates thy hostile plain;</L><PB
ID="p28" N="28"><L>May pleasure tinge with venom'd drops the bowl,</L><L>And luxury unnerve the sick'ning soul."</L>
<L REND="indent1">Ah, not in vain she pour'd th' impassion'd tear;</L><L>Ah, not in vain she call'd the powers to hear!</L><L>When borne from lost P<HI
REND="smallcaps">ERUVIA'S</HI> bleeding land,</L><L>The guilty treasures beam'd on Europe's strand;</L><L>Each sweet affection fled the tainted shore,</L><L>And virtue wander'd, to return no more.</L></LG><NOTE
ID="williams-note15" N="asterisk" RESP="author" PLACE="foot of page 22" TARGET="williams15">&ast; The Paca is a domestic animal of Peru.</NOTE>
<NOTE
ID="williams-note16" N="dagger" RESP="author" PLACE="foot of page 22" TARGET="williams16">&dagger; The Vicunna is a species of wild goat</NOTE>
<NOTE
ID="williams-note17" N="double dagger" RESP="author" PLACE="foot of page 22" TARGET="williams17">&Dagger; The Lamas are employed as mules in carrying burdens.</NOTE><NOTE
ID="williams-note18" N="asterisk" RESP="author" PLACE="foot of page 23" TARGET="williams18">&ast; The people cheerfully assisted in reaping those fields of which the produce was given to old persons past their labour.</NOTE><NOTE
ID="williams-note19" N="asterisk" RESP="author" PLACE="foot of page 27" TARGET="williams19">&ast; The Condor is an inhabitant of the Andes. Its wings, when expanded, are said to be eighteen feet wide.</NOTE></DIV3><DIV3
TYPE="part of poem"><PB ID="p29" N="[29]"><HEAD>ALZIRA.</HEAD><HEAD
TYPE="sub">TALE II.</HEAD><MILESTONE N="___________" UNIT="typography"><OPENER>P<EMPH
REND="smallcaps">IZARRO</EMPH> lands with the Forces&mdash;His meeting with A<EMPH
REND="smallcaps">TALIBA</EMPH>&mdash;Its un&hyphen;<LB>
happy consequences&mdash;Z<EMPH REND="smallcaps">ORAI</EMPH> dies&mdash;A<EMPH
REND="smallcaps">TALIBA</EMPH> imprisoned, and strangled<LB>
&mdash;Despair  of A<EMPH REND="smallcaps">LZIRA</EMPH>.</OPENER><MILESTONE
N="___________" UNIT="typography"><LG REND="smallcaps" TYPE="stanza"><L
REND="indent1">F<HI REND="smallcaps">LUSH'D</HI> with impatient hope, the martial band,</L><L>By stern P<HI
REND="smallcaps">IZARRO</HI> led, approach the land;</L><L>No terrors arm his hostile brow, for guile</L><L>Seeks to betray with candour's open smile.</L><L>Too artless for distrust, the Monarch springs</L><L>To meet his latent foe on friendship's wings.</L><L>On as he moves, with dazzling splendour crown'd,</L><L>His feather'd chiefs the golden throne surround;</L><L>The waving canopy its plume displays,</L><L>Whose waving hues reflect the morning rays;</L><PB
ID="p30" N="30"><L>With native grace he hails the warrior train,</L><L>Who stood majestic on P<HI
REND="smallcaps">ERUVIA'S</HI> plain,</L><L>In all the savage pomp of armour drest,</L><L>The frowning helmet, and the nodding crest.</L><L>Yet themes of joy P<HI
REND="smallcaps">IZARRO'S</HI> lips impart,</L><L>And charm with eloquence the simple heart;</L><L>Unfolding to the monarch's wond'ring thought</L><L>All that inventive arts the rude have taught.</L><L>And now he bids the musing spirit rise</L><L>Above the circle of surrounding skies;</L><L>Presents the page that sheds Religion's light </L><L>O'er the dark mist of intellectual night:</L><L>While, thrill'd with awe, the monarch trembling stands,</L><L>He dropp'd the hallow'd volume from his hands.</L><L>Sudden,<REF
ID="williams20" N="asterisk" RESP="author" TARGET="williams-note20">&ast;</REF> while frantic zeal each breast inspires,</L><L>And shudd'ring demons fan the rising fires,</L><L>The bloody signal waves, the banners play,</L><L>The naked sabres flash their streaming ray;</L><PB
ID="p31" N="31"><L>The trumpet rolls its animating sound,</L><L>And the loud cannon rend the vault around;</L><L>While fierce in sanguine rage, the sons of Spain</L><L>Rush on Peru's unarm'd, defenceless train!</L><L>The fiends of slaughter urg'd their dire career,</L><L>And virtue's guardian spirits dropped a tear!</L><L>Mild Z<HI
REND="smallcaps">ORAI </HI>fell, deploring human strife,</L><L>And clos'd with prayer his consecrated life!&mdash;</L><L>In vain P<HI
REND="smallcaps">ERUVIA'S</HI> chiefs undaunted stood,</L><L>Shield their lov'd Prince, and bathe his robes in blood;&mdash;</L><L>Touch'd with heroic ardour, cling around,</L><L>And high of soul, receive each fatal wound;</L><PB
ID="p32" N="32"><L>Dragg'd from his throne, and hurried o'er the plain,</L><L>The wretched Monarch swells the captive train;</L><L>With iron grasp the frantic Prince they bear,</L><L>And feel their triumph in his wild despair.&mdash;</L><L>Deep in the gloomy dungeon's lone domain,</L><L>Lost A<HI
REND="smallcaps">TALIBA</HI> wore the galling chain;</L><L>The earth's cold bed refus'd oblivious rest,</L><L>While throbb'd the woes of thousands at his breast;</L><L>A<HI
REND="smallcaps">LZIRA'S</HI> desolating moan he hears,</L><L>And with the monarch's blends the lover's tears.</L><L>Soon had A<HI
REND="smallcaps">LZIRA</HI> felt affliction's dart</L><L>Pierce her soft soul, and rend her bleeding heart;</L><L>Its quick pulsations paus'd, and chill'd with dread,</L><L>A livid hue her fading cheek o'erspread;</L><L>No tear the mourner shed, she breath'd no sigh,</L><L>Her lips were mute, and clos'd her languid eye;</L><L>Fainter, and slower heav'd her shiv'ring breast,</L><L>And her calm'd passions seem'd in death to rest.&mdash;</L><L>At length reviv'd, 'mid rising heaps of slain,</L><L>She prest with hurried step the crimson plain;</L><PB
ID="p33" N="33"><L>The dungeon's gloomy depth she fearless sought,</L><L>For love with scorn of danger arm'd her thought:</L><L>She reach'd the cell where A<HI
REND="smallcaps">TALIBA</HI> lay,</L><L>Where human vultures haste to seize their prey.&mdash;</L><L>In vain her treasur'd wealth P<HI
REND="smallcaps">ERUVIA </HI>gave,</L><L>This dearer treasure from their grasp to save;</L><L>A<HI
REND="smallcaps">LZIRA</HI>! lo, the ruthless murd'rers come,</L><L>This moment seals thy A<HI
REND="smallcaps">TALIBA'S</HI> doom.</L><L>Ah, what avails the shriek that anguish pours?</L><L>The look that mercy's lenient aid implores?</L><L>Torn from thy clinging arms, thy throbbing breast,</L><L>The fatal cord his agony supprest!&mdash;</L><L>In vain the livid corpse she firmly clasps,</L><L>And pours her sorrows o'er the form she grasps,</L><L>The murd'rers soon their struggling victim tear</L><L>From the lost object of her soul's despair!</L><L>The swelling pang unable to sustain,</L><L>Distraction throbb'd in every beating vein;</L><L>Its sudden tumults seize her yielding soul,</L><L>And in her eye distemper'd glances roll&mdash;</L><PB
ID="p34" N="34"><L>"They come!" the mourner cried with panting breath,</L><L>"To give the lost A<HI
REND="smallcaps">LZIRA </HI>rest in death!</L><L>One moment more, ye bloody forms, bestow,</L><L>One moment more for ever cares my  woe&mdash;</L><L>Lo! where the purple evening sheds her light</L><L>On blest remains! O! hide them, pitying night!</L><L>Slow in the breeze I see the verdure wave,</L><L>That shrouds with tufted grass my lover's grave;</L><L>Hark! on its wand'ring wing in mildness blows</L><L>The murm'ring gale, nor wakes his deep repose&mdash;</L><L>And see, yon hoary form still lingers there!</L><L>Dishevell'd by rude winds his silver hair;</L><L>O'er his chill'd bosom falls the winter rain,</L><L>I feel the big drops on my wither'd brain.</L><L>Not for himself that tear his bosom steeps,</L><L>For his lost child it flows&mdash;for me he weeps!</L><L>No more the dagger's point shall pierce thy breast,</L><L>For calm and lovely is thy silent rest;</L><L>Yet still in dust these eyes shall see thee roll,</L><L>Still the sad thought shall waste A<HI
REND="smallcaps">LZIRA'S</HI> soul&mdash;</L><PB ID="p35" N="35"><L>What bleeding phantom moves along the storm?</L><L>It is my A<HI
REND="smallcaps">TALIBA'S</HI> well&hyphen;known form!</L><L>Approach! A<HI
REND="smallcaps">LZIRA'S</HI> breast no terrors move,</L><L>Her fears are all for ever lost in love.</L><L>Safe on the hanging cliff I now can rest,</L><L>And press its pointed pillow to my breast&mdash;</L><L>He weeps! in heaven he weeps!&mdash;I feel his tear&mdash;</L><L>It chills my trembling heart, yet still 'tis dear.</L><L>To him all joyless are the realms above,</L><L>That pale look speaks of pity and of love!</L><L>Ah come, descend in yonder bending cloud,</L><L>And wrap A<HI
REND="smallcaps">LZIRA</HI> in thy misty shroud!"</L><L>As roll'd her wand'ring glances wild around,</L><L>She snatch'd a reeking sabre from the ground;</L><L>Firmly her lifted hand the weapon prest,</L><L>And deep she plung'd it in her panting breast!</L><L>" 'Tis but a few short moments that divide "&mdash;</L><L>She falt'ring said&mdash;then sunk on earth and died!</L></LG><NOTE
ID="williams-note20" N="asterisk" RESP="author" PLACE="foot of page 30" TARGET="williams20">&ast; Pizarro, who during a long conference had with difficulty restrained his soldiers, eager to seize the rich spoils of which they had now so near a view, immediately gave the signal of assault. At once the martial music struck up, the cannon and muskets began to fire, the horse sallied out fiercely to the charge, the infantry rushed on sword in hand. The Peruvians, astonished at the suddenness of an attack which they did not expect,
and dismayed with the destructive effects of the fire&hyphen;arms, fled with universal consternation on every side. Pizarro, at the head of his chosen band, advanced directly towards the Inca; and though his nobles crowded
around him with officious zeal, and fell in numbers at his feet, while they vied one with another in sacrificing their own lives that they might cover the sacred person of their sovereign, the Spaniards soon penetrated to the royal seat; and Pizarro, seizing the Inca by the arm, dragged him
to the ground, and carried him a prisoner to his quarters.<BIBL><HI
REND="italics"> Robertson's History of America.</HI></BIBL>
</NOTE></DIV3><DIV3 TYPE="part of poem "><PB ID="p36" N="[36]"><HEAD>ZILIA.</HEAD><HEAD
TYPE="sub">TALE III.</HEAD><MILESTONE N="___________" UNIT="typography"><OPENER>P<EMPH
REND="smallcaps">IZARRO</EMPH> takes possession of Cuzco&mdash;The fanaticism of V<EMPH
REND="smallcaps">ALVERDA</EMPH>, a<LB>Spanish priest&mdash;Its dreadful effects&mdash;A Peruvian priest put to the tor&hyphen;<LB>ture&mdash;His Daughter's distress&mdash;He is rescued by L<EMPH
REND="smallcaps">AS</EMPH> C<EMPH REND="smallcaps">ASAS</EMPH>, a Spa&hyphen;<LB>nish ecclesiastic&mdash;And led to a place of safety, where he dies&mdash;His<LB>
Daughter's narration of her sufferings&mdash;Her death.</OPENER><MILESTONE
N="___________" UNIT="typography"><LG TYPE="stanza"><L REND="indent1">Now stern P<HI
REND="smallcaps">IZARRO</HI> seeks the distant plains,</L><L REND="indent1">Where beauteous Cuzco lifts her golden fanes.</L><L
REND="indent1">The meek Peruvians gaz'd in wild dismay,</L><L REND="indent1">Nor barr'd the dark Oppressor's sanguine way;</L><L
REND="indent1">And soon on Cuzco, where the dawning light</L><L REND="indent1">Of glory shone, foretelling day more bright,</L><L
REND="indent1">Where the young arts had shed unfolding flowers,</L><L
REND="indent1">A scene of spreading desolation lowers!</L><PB ID="p37" N="37"><L
REND="indent1">While buried deep in everlasting shade,</L><L REND="indent1">That lustre sickens, and those blossoms fade.</L><L
REND="indent1">And yet, devoted land, not gold alone,</L><L REND="indent1">Or dire ambition wak'd thy rising groan;</L><L
REND="indent1">For lo! a fiercer fiend, with joy elate,</L><L REND="indent1">Feasts on thy suff'rings, and impels thy fate:</L><L
REND="indent1">Fanatic Fury rears her sullen shrine,</L><L REND="indent1">Where vultures prey, where venom'd adders twine;</L><L
REND="indent1">Her savage arm with purple torrents stains</L><L REND="indent1">Thy rocking temples, and thy falling fanes;</L><L
REND="indent1">Her blazing torches flash the mounting fire,</L><L
REND="indent1">She grasps the sabre, and she lights the pyre;</L><L
REND="indent1">Her voice is thunder rending the still air,</L><L REND="indent1">Her glance the baleful lightning's lurid glare;</L><L
REND="indent1">Her lips unhallow'd breathe their impious strain,</L><L
REND="indent1">And pure Religion's sacred voice profane;</L><L REND="indent1">Whose precepts pity's mildest deeds approve,</L><L
REND="indent1">Whose law is mercy, and whose soul is love.</L><L REND="indent1">And see, fanatic Fury wakes the storm&mdash;</L><L
REND="indent1">She wears the stern V<HI REND="smallcaps">ALVERDA'S</HI> hideous form;</L><PB
ID="p38" N="38"><L REND="indent1">His bosom never felt another's woes,</L><L
REND="indent1">No shriek of anguish breaks its dark repose.</L><L
REND="indent1">The temple nods&mdash;an aged form appears&mdash;</L><L
REND="indent1">He beats his breast, he rends his silver hairs&mdash;</L><L
REND="indent1">V<HI REND="smallcaps">ALVERDA</HI> drags him from the blest abode,</L><L
REND="indent1">Where his meek spirit humbly sought its God;</L><L
REND="indent1">See, to his aid his child, soft Z<HI REND="smallcaps">ILIA</HI>, springs,</L><L
REND="indent1">And steeps in tears the robe to which she clings!</L><L
REND="indent1">Now bursting from P<HI REND="smallcaps">ERUVIA'S</HI> frighted throng,</L><L
REND="indent1">Two warlike youths impetuous rush'd along;</L><L REND="indent1">One grasp'd his twanging bow with furious air,</L><L
REND="indent1">While in his troubled eye sat fierce despair;</L><L
REND="indent1">But all in vain his erring weapon flies,</L><L REND="indent1">Pierc'd by a thousand wounds, on earth he lies.</L><L
REND="indent1">His drooping head the trembling Z<HI REND="smallcaps">ILIA</HI> rais'd,</L><L
REND="indent1">And on the youth in speechless anguish gaz'd;</L><L
REND="indent1">While he who fondly shared his danger flew,</L><L REND="indent1">And from his bleeding breast a poignard drew.</L><L
REND="indent1">"Deep in my faithful bosom let me hide</L><L REND="indent1">The fatal steel that would our souls divide,"&mdash;</L><PB
ID="p39" N="39"><L REND="indent1">He quick exclaims&mdash;the dying warrior cries</L><L
REND="indent1">"Ah yet forbear!&mdash;by all the sacred ties</L><L
REND="indent1">That bind our hearts, forbear!"&mdash;in vain he spoke,</L><L
REND="indent1">Friendship with frantic zeal impels the stroke!</L><L
REND="indent1">"Thyself for ever lost, thou hop'st in vain,"</L><L
REND="indent1">The youth replied, "my spirit to detain;</L><L REND="indent1">From thee my soul, in childhood's earliest year,</L><L
REND="indent1">Caught the light pleasure and the passing tear;</L><L
REND="indent1">Thy friendship then my young affections blest</L><L
REND="indent1">The first pure passion of my infant breast;</L><L REND="indent1">And still in death I feel its strong controul,</L><L
REND="indent1">Its sacred impulse wings my fleeting soul,</L><L REND="indent1">That only lingers here till thou depart,</L><L
REND="indent1">Whose image lives upon my fainting heart!"&mdash;</L><L
REND="indent1">In vain the gen'rous youth, with panting breath,</L><L
REND="indent1">Pour'd these last murmurs in the ear of death;</L><L
REND="indent1">He reads the fatal truth in Z<HI REND="smallcaps">ILIA'S</HI> eye,</L><L
REND="indent1">And gives to friendship his expiring sigh.&mdash;</L><L
REND="indent1">But now with rage V<HI REND="smallcaps">ALVERDA'S</HI> glances roll,</L><L
REND="indent1">And mark the vengeance rankling in his soul;</L><PB
ID="p40" N="40"><L REND="indent1">He bends his gloomy brow &mdash;his lips impart</L><L
REND="indent1">The brooding purpose of his venom'd heart;</L><L REND="indent1">He bids the hoary priest in mutter'd strains</L><L
REND="indent1">Abjure his faith, forsake his native fanes,</L><L REND="indent1">While yet the ling'ring pangs of torture wait,</L><L
REND="indent1">While yet V<HI REND="smallcaps">ALVERDA'S</HI> power suspends his fate.</L><L
REND="indent1">"Vain man," the victim cried, "to hoary years</L><L
REND="indent1">Know death is mild, and virtue feels no fears;</L><L
REND="indent1">Cruel of spirit, come! let tortures prove</L><L REND="indent1">The power I serv'd in life in death I love."</L><L
REND="indent1">He ceas'd&mdash;with rugged cords his limbs they bound,</L><L
REND="indent1">And drag the aged suff'rer on the ground;</L><L REND="indent1">They grasp his feeble frame, his tresses tear;</L><L
REND="indent1">His robe they rend, his shrivell'd bosom bare.</L><L
REND="indent1">Ah, see his uncomplaining soul sustain</L><L REND="indent1">The sting of insult and the dart of pain!</L><L
REND="indent1">His stedfast spirit feels one pang alone,</L><L REND="indent1">A child's despair awakes one bitter groan&mdash;</L><L
REND="indent1">The mourner kneels to catch his parting breath,</L><L
REND="indent1">To soothe the agony of ling'ring death:</L><PB ID="p41" N="41"><L
REND="indent1">No moan she breath'd, no tear had power to flow,</L><L
REND="indent1">Still on her lip expir'd th' unutter'd woe;</L><L REND="indent1">Yet ah, her livid cheek, her stedfast look,</L><L
REND="indent1">The desolated soul's deep anguish spoke&mdash;</L><L
REND="indent1">Mild victim! close not yet thy languid eyes;</L><L
REND="indent1">Pure spirit! claim not yet thy kindred skies;</L><L
REND="indent1">A pitying angel comes to stay thy flight,</L><L REND="indent1">L<HI
REND="smallcaps">AS</HI>C<HI REND="smallcaps">ASAS</HI><REF
ID="williams21" N="asterisk" RESP="author" TARGET="williams-note21">&ast;</REF> bids thee view returning light;</L><L
REND="indent1">Ah, let that sacred drop, to virtue dear,</L><L REND="indent1">Efface thy wrongs&mdash;receive his precious tear;</L><L
REND="indent1">See his flush'd cheek with indignation glow,</L><L
REND="indent1">While from his lips the tones of pity flow.&mdash;</L><L
REND="indent1">"Oh, suff'ring Lord!" he cried, "whose streaming blood,</L><L
REND="indent1">Was pour'd for man&mdash;earth drank the sacred flood,</L><L
REND="indent1">Whose mercy in the mortal pang forgave</L><L REND="indent1">The murd'rous band, Thy love alone could save;</L><L
REND="indent1">Forgive&mdash;thy goodness bursts each narrow bound</L><L
REND="indent1">Which feeble thought, and human hope surround;</L><PB
ID="p42" N="42"><L REND="indent1">Forgive the guilty wretch, whose impious hand</L><L
REND="indent1">From thy pure altar flings the flaming brand;</L><L
REND="indent1">In human blood that hallow'd altar steeps,</L><L REND="indent1">Libation dire! while groaning nature weeps;</L><L
REND="indent1">The limits of thy mercy dares to scan,</L><L REND="indent1">The object of thy love, his victim,&mdash;man.</L><L
REND="indent1">While yet I linger, lo, the suff'rer dies,</L><L REND="indent1">I see his frame convuls'd,&mdash;I hear his sighs!</L><L
REND="indent1">Whoe'er controuls the purpose of my heart,</L><L REND="indent1">First in this breast shall plunge his guilty dart."</L><L
REND="indent1">With hurried step he flew, with eager hands</L><L REND="indent1">He broke the fetters, burst the cruel bands.</L><L
REND="indent1">As the fall'n angel heard with awful fear,</L><L REND="indent1">The cherub's grave rebuke, in grace severe,</L><L
REND="indent1">And fled, while horror plum'd his impious crest,<REF
ID="williams22" N="asterisk" RESP="author" TARGET="williams-note22">&ast;</REF></L><L
REND="indent1">The form of virtue as she stood confest;</L><L REND="indent1">So fierce V<HI
REND="smallcaps">ALVERDA </HI>sullen mov'd along,</L><L REND="indent1">Abash'd, and follow'd by the hostile throng.</L><PB
ID="p43" N="43"><L REND="indent1">At length the hoary victim, freed from chains,</L><L
REND="indent1">L<HI REND="smallcaps">AS</HI> C<HI REND="smallcaps">ASAS </HI>gently leads to safer plains;</L><L
REND="indent1">His searching eye explores a secret cave,</L><L REND="indent1">Whose shaggy sides the languid billows lave;</L><L
REND="indent1">"There rest secure," he cried, "the Christian's God</L><L
REND="indent1">Will hover near, will guard the lone abode."</L><L
REND="indent1">Oft to the gloomy cell his steps repair,</L><L REND="indent1">While night's chill breezes wave his silver'd hair;</L><L
REND="indent1">Oft in the tones of love, the words of peace,</L><L
REND="indent1">He bids the bitter tears of anguish cease;</L><L REND="indent1">Bids drooping hope uplift her languid eyes,</L><L
REND="indent1">And points to bliss that dwells beyond the skies.</L><L
REND="indent1">Yet ah! in vain his pious cares would save</L><L REND="indent1">The aged suff'rer from the op'ning grave;</L><L
REND="indent1">For deep the pangs of torture pierc'd his frame,</L><L
REND="indent1">And sunk his wasted life's expiring flame;</L><L REND="indent1">To his cold lip L<HI
REND="smallcaps">AS</HI> C<HI REND="smallcaps">ASAS</HI>' hand he prest,</L><L
REND="indent1">He faintly clasp'd his Z<HI REND="smallcaps">ILIA</HI> to his breast;</L><L
REND="indent1">Then cried, "the God, whom now my vows adore,</L><L
REND="indent1">My heart through life obey'd, unknowing more;</L><PB
ID="p44" N="44"><L REND="indent1">His mild forgiveness then my soul shall prove,</L><L
REND="indent1">His mercy share, L<HI REND="smallcaps">AS</HI> C<HI
REND="smallcaps">ASAS</HI>' God is love."</L><L REND="indent1">He spoke no more, his Z<HI
REND="smallcaps">ILIA'S</HI> hopeless moan</L><L REND="indent1">Was heard responsive to his dying groan.</L><L
REND="indent1">"Victim of impious zeal," L<HI REND="smallcaps">AS</HI> C<HI
REND="smallcaps">ASAS</HI> cries,</L><L REND="indent1">"Accept, departed shade, a Christian's sighs;</L><L
REND="indent1">And thou, soft mourner, tender, drooping form,</L><L
REND="indent1">What power shall guard thee from the fearful storm?"</L><L
REND="indent1">"Weep not for me," she cried, "for Z<HI REND="smallcaps">ILIA'S</HI> breast</L><L
REND="indent1">Soon in the shelt'ring earth shall find its rest;</L><L
REND="indent1">Seek not the victim of despair to save,</L><L REND="indent1">I ask but death&mdash;I only wish a grave.</L><L
REND="indent1">Witness, thou mangled form, that earth retains,</L><L
REND="indent1">Witness a murder'd lover's cold remains;</L><L REND="indent1">I liv'd my father's pangs to soothe, to share,</L><L
REND="indent1">I bore to live, though life was all despair.</L><L
REND="indent1">Ah! still my lover's dying moan I hear,</L><L REND="indent1">In every pulse I feel his parting tear&mdash;</L><L
REND="indent1">I faint&mdash;an icy coldness chills each vein,</L><L
REND="indent1">No more these feeble limbs their load sustain;</L><PB
ID="p45" N="45"><L REND="indent1">Spirit of pity! catch my fleeting breath,</L><L
REND="indent1">A moment stay&mdash;and close my eyes in death.</L><L
REND="indent1">L<HI REND="smallcaps">AS</HI> C<HI REND="smallcaps">ASAS</HI>, thee thy God in mercy gave,</L><L
REND="indent1">To soothe my pangs, to find the wretch a grave."</L><L
REND="indent1">She ceas'd, her spirit fled to purer spheres,</L><L
REND="indent1">L<HI REND="smallcaps">AS</HI> C<HI REND="smallcaps">ASAS</HI> bathes the pallid corse with tears;</L><L
REND="indent1">Fly, minister of good! nor ling'ring shed</L><L REND="indent1">Those fruitless sorrows o'er th' unconscious dead;</L><L
REND="indent1">I view the sanguine flood, the wasting flame,</L><L
REND="indent1">I hear a suff'ring world L<HI REND="smallcaps">AS</HI> C<HI
REND="smallcaps">ASAS</HI> claim.</L></LG>
<NOTE
ID="williams-note21" N="asterisk" RESP="author" PLACE="foot of page 41" TARGET="williams21">&ast; LAS CASAS, that admirable ecclesiastic, who obtained by his humanity
 the title of Protector of the Indies.</NOTE>
<NOTE
ID="williams-note22" N="asterisk" RESP="author" PLACE="foot of page 42" TARGET="williams22">&ast; "&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;on his crest<LB>
Sat horror plum'd."
<BIBL><HI REND="italics">Par. Lost</HI> xiv, 988.</BIBL>
</NOTE></DIV3><DIV3 TYPE="part of poetry"><PB ID="p46" N="[46]"><HEAD>CORA.</HEAD><HEAD
TYPE="sub">TALE IV.</HEAD><MILESTONE N="___________" UNIT="typography"><OPENER>A<EMPH
REND="smallcaps">LMAGRO'S</EMPH> expedition to Chili&mdash;His troops suffer great hardships from
 cold, in crossing the Andes&mdash;They reach Chili&mdash;The Chilians make a
 brave resistance&mdash;The revolt of the Peruvians in Cuzco&mdash;&hyphen;They are
 led on by M<EMPH REND="smallcaps">ANCO</EMPH> C<EMPH REND="smallcaps">APAC</EMPH>, the successor of A<EMPH
REND="smallcaps">TALIBA</EMPH>&mdash;Parting with
 C<EMPH REND="smallcaps">ORA</EMPH>, his wife&mdash;The Peruvians regain half their city&mdash;A<EMPH
REND="smallcaps">LMAGRO</EMPH> leaves
 Chili&mdash;To avoid the Andes, he crosses a vast desert&mdash;His troops can
 find no water&mdash;They divide into two bands&mdash;A<EMPH REND="smallcaps">LPHONSO</EMPH> leads the second  band, which soon reaches a fertile valley&mdash;The Spaniards observe that
 the natives are employed in searching the streams for gold&mdash;They resolve to attack them.</OPENER><MILESTONE
N="___________" UNIT="typography"><LG TYPE="stanza"><L REND="indent1">Now the stern partner of P<HI
REND="smallcaps">IZARRO'S</HI> toils,</L><L REND="indent1">A<HI
REND="smallcaps">LMAGRO</HI>, lur'd by hope of golden spoils,</L><L
REND="indent1">To distant Chili's ever&hyphen;verdant meads,</L><L
REND="indent1">Through paths untrod, a band of warriors leads;</L><L
REND="indent1">O'er the high Andes' frozen steeps they go,</L><L REND="indent1">And wander 'mid eternal hills of snow:</L><PB
ID="p47" N="47"><L REND="indent1">In vain the vivifying orb of day</L><L
REND="indent1">Darts on th' impervious ice his fervent ray;</L><L
REND="indent1">Cold, keen as chains the oceans of the pole,</L><L
REND="indent1">Numbs the shrunk frame, and chills the vig'rous soul;</L><L
REND="indent1">At length they reach luxuriant Chili's plain,</L><L
REND="indent1">Where ends the dreary bound of winter's reign.</L><L
REND="indent1">When first the brave Chilese, with eager glance,</L><L
REND="indent1">Beheld the hostile sons of Spain advance,</L><L REND="indent1">Their threat'ning sabres red with purple streams,</L><L
REND="indent1">Their lances quiv'ring in the solar beams,</L><L REND="indent1">With pale surprise they saw th' impending storm,</L><L
REND="indent1">Where low'ring danger wore an unknown form;</L><L REND="indent1">But soon their spirits, stung with gen'rous shame,</L><L
REND="indent1">Renounce each terror, and for vengeance flame;</L><L
REND="indent1">Pant high with sacred freedom's ardent glow,</L><L
REND="indent1">And meet intrepid the superior foe.</L><L REND="indent1">Long unsubdued by stern A<HI
REND="smallcaps">LMAGRO'S</HI> train,</L><L REND="indent1">Their valiant tribes unequal fight maintain;</L><L
REND="indent1">Long vict'ry hover'd doubtful o'er the field,</L><L
REND="indent1">And oft she forc'd I<HI REND="smallcaps">BERIA'S</HI> band to yield;</L><PB
ID="p48" N="48"><L REND="indent1">Oft love from Spain's proud head her laurel bough,</L><L
REND="indent1">And bade it blossom on P<HI REND="smallcaps">ERUVIA'S</HI> brow;</L><L
REND="indent1">When sudden tidings reach'd A<HI REND="smallcaps">LMAGRO'S</HI> ear,</L><L
REND="indent1">That shook the warrior's soul with doubt and fear.</L><L
REND="indent1">Of murder'd A<HI REND="smallcaps">TALIBA'S</HI> royal race</L><L
REND="indent1">There yet remain'd a youth of blooming grace,</L><L
REND="indent1">Who pin'd, the captive of relentless Spain,</L><L REND="indent1">And long in Cuzco dragg'd her galling chain;</L><L
REND="indent1">C<HI REND="smallcaps">APAC</HI>, whose lofty soul indignant bears</L><L
REND="indent1">The rankling fetters, and revenge prepares.</L><L REND="indent1">But since his daring spirit must forego</L><L
REND="indent1">The hope to rush upon the tyrant foe,</L><L REND="indent1">Led by his parent orb, that gives the day,</L><L
REND="indent1">And fierce as darts the keen meridian ray,</L><L REND="indent1">He vows to bend unseen his hostile course,</L><L
REND="indent1">Then on the victors rise with latent force,</L><L REND="indent1">As sudden from its cloud, the brooding storm,</L><L
REND="indent1">Bursts in the thunder's voice, the light'ning's form.</L><L
REND="indent1">For this, from stern P<HI REND="smallcaps">IZARRO </HI>he obtains</L><L
REND="indent1">The boon, enlarg'd, to seek the neighb'ring plains,</L><PB
ID="p49" N="49"><L REND="indent1">For one bless'd day, and with his friend's unite,</L><L
REND="indent1">To crown with solemn pomp an antient rite;</L><L REND="indent1">Share the dear pleasures of the social hour,</L><L
REND="indent1">And 'mid their fetters twine one festal flower.</L><L
REND="indent1">So spoke the Prince&mdash;far other thoughts possest,</L><L
REND="indent1">Far other purpose animates his breast:</L><L REND="indent1">For now P<HI
REND="smallcaps">ERUVIA'S</HI> Nobles he commands</L><L REND="indent1">To lead, with silent step, her martial bands</L><L
REND="indent1">Forth to the destin'd spot, prepared to dare</L><L
REND="indent1">The fiercest shock of dire, unequal war;</L><L REND="indent1">While every sacred human interest pleads,</L><L
REND="indent1">And urges the firm soul to lofty deeds.</L><L REND="indent1">Now C<HI
REND="smallcaps">APAC</HI> hail'd th' eventful morning's light,</L><L
REND="indent1">Rose with its dawn, and panted for the fight;</L><L
REND="indent1">But first with fondness to his heart he prest</L><L
REND="indent1">The tender C<HI REND="smallcaps">ORA</HI>, partner of his breast,</L><L
REND="indent1">Who with her lord had sought the dungeon's gloom,</L><L
REND="indent1">And wasted there in grief her early bloom.</L><L REND="indent1">"No more," he cried, "no more my love shall feel</L><L
REND="indent1">The mingled agonies I fly to heal;&mdash;</L><PB ID="p50" N="50"><L
REND="indent1">I go, but soon exulting shall return,</L><L REND="indent1">And bid my faithful C<HI
REND="smallcaps">ORA</HI> cease to mourn;</L><L REND="indent1">For O, amid each pang my bosom knows,</L><L
REND="indent1">What wastes, what wounds it most are C<HI REND="smallcaps">ORA'S</HI> woes!</L><L
REND="indent1">Sweet was the love that crown'd our happier hours,</L><L
REND="indent1">And shed new fragrance o'er a path of flowers:</L><L
REND="indent1">But sure divided sorrow more endears</L><L REND="indent1">The tie that passion seals with mutual tears!</L><L
REND="indent1">He paus'd.  Fast&hyphen;flowing drops bedew'd her eyes,</L><L
REND="indent1">While thus in mournful accents she replies:&mdash;</L><L
REND="indent1">"Still let me feel the pressure of thy chain,</L><L
REND="indent1">Still share the fetters which my love detain;</L><L
REND="indent1">The piercing iron to my soul is dear,</L><L REND="indent1">Nor will its sharpness wound while thou art near.</L><L
REND="indent1">Look on our helpless babe, in mis'ry nurst&mdash;</L><L
REND="indent1">My child! my child, thy mother's heart will burst!</L><L
REND="indent1">O, wherefore bid the raging battle rise,</L><L REND="indent1">Nor hear this harmless suff'rer's feeble cries?</L><L
REND="indent1">Look on those blades that pour a crimson flood,</L><L
REND="indent1">And plunge their cruel edge in infant blood!"</L><PB
ID="p51" N="51"><L REND="indent1">She could no more&mdash;he sees with tender pain</L><L
REND="indent1">Her grief, and leads her to a shelt'ring fane.</L><L
REND="indent1">Now high in air his feather'd standard waves,</L><L
REND="indent1">And soon from shrouding woods and hollow caves</L><L
REND="indent1">To Cuzco's gate advance increasing throngs,</L><L REND="indent1">And, such their ardour, rous'd by sense of wrongs,</L><L
REND="indent1">That vainly would P<HI REND="smallcaps">IZARRO'S</HI>  vet'ran force</L><L
REND="indent1">Arrest the torrent in its raging course;</L><L REND="indent1">Danger and death P<HI
REND="smallcaps">ERUVIA'S</HI> sons disdain,</L><L REND="indent1">And half their captive city soon regain.</L><L
REND="indent1">When stern A<HI REND="smallcaps">LMAGRO </HI>heard the voice of fame</L><L
REND="indent1">The triumphs of P<HI REND="smallcaps">ERUVIA</HI> loud proclaim,</L><L
REND="indent1">Unconquer'd Chili's vale he swift forsakes,</L><L REND="indent1">And his bold course to distant Cuzco takes.</L><L
REND="indent1">But now he shuns the Andes' frozen snows,</L><L REND="indent1">The arrowy gale that on their summit blows;</L><L
REND="indent1">A burning desert undismay'd he past,</L><L REND="indent1">And meets the ardors of the fiery blast.</L><L
REND="indent1">As o'er the sultry waste they slowly move,</L><L REND="indent1">The keenest pang of raging thirst they prove;</L><PB
ID="p52" N="52"><L REND="indent1">No cooling fruit its grateful juice distils,</L><L
REND="indent1">Nor flows one balmy drop from crystal rills;</L><L
REND="indent1">For nature sickens in the parching beam</L><L REND="indent1">That shrinks the vernal bud and dries the stream;</L><L
REND="indent1">While horror, as his giant stature grows,</L><L REND="indent1">O'er the drear void his spreading shadow throws.</L><L
REND="indent1">A<HI REND="indent1">LMAGRO'S</HI> band now pale and fainting stray,</L><L
REND="indent1">While death oft barr'd the sinking warrior's way;</L><L
REND="indent1">At length the chief divides his martial force,</L><L
REND="indent1">And bids A<HI REND="smallcaps">LPHONSO</HI> by a sep'rate course</L><L
REND="indent1">Lead o'er the hideous desert half his train&mdash;</L><L
REND="indent1">"And search," he cried, "this vast, untrodden plain,</L><L
REND="indent1">Perchance some fruitage, with'ring in the breeze,</L><L
REND="indent1">The pains of lessen'd numbers may appease;</L><L REND="indent1">Or heaven in pity from some genial shower</L><L
REND="indent1">On the parch'd lip one precious drop may pour."</L><L
REND="indent1">Not far the troops of young A<HI REND="smallcaps">LPHONSO </HI>went,</L><L
REND="indent1">When sudden from a rising hill's ascent</L><L REND="indent1">They view a valley fed by fertile springs,</L><L
REND="indent1">Which Andes from his snowy summit flings;</L><PB ID="p53" N="53"><L
REND="indent1">Where summer's flowers humected odours shed,</L><L
REND="indent1">And wildly bloom, a waste by beauty spread.</L><L REND="indent1">And now A<HI
REND="smallcaps">LPHONSO </HI>and his martial band</L><L REND="indent1">On the rich border of the valley stand;</L><L
REND="indent1">They quaff the limpid stream with eager haste,</L><L
REND="indent1">And the pure juice that swells the fruitage taste;</L><L
REND="indent1">Then give to balmy rest the night's still hours,</L><L
REND="indent1">Fann'd by the cooling gale that shuts the flowers.</L><L
REND="indent1">Soon as the purple beam of morning glows,</L><L REND="indent1">Refresh'd from all their toils, the warriors rose;</L><L
REND="indent1">And saw the gentle natives of the mead</L><L REND="indent1">Search the clear currents for the golden seed,</L><L
REND="indent1">Which from the mountain's height with headlong sweep</L><L
REND="indent1">The torrents bear in many a shining heap;</L><L REND="indent1">I<HI
REND="smallcaps">BERIA'S</HI> sons beheld with anxious brow</L><L
REND="indent1">The tempting lure, then breathe th' unpitying vow</L><L
REND="indent1">O'er those fair lawns to pour a sanguine flood,</L><L
REND="indent1">And dye those lucid streams with guiltless blood.</L><L
REND="indent1">Thus while the humming&hyphen;bird, in beauty drest,</L><L
REND="indent1">Enchanting offspring of the ardent west,</L><PB ID="p54" N="54"><L
REND="indent1">Attunes his tender song to notes of love,</L><L REND="indent1">Mild as the murmurs of the morning dove,</L><L
REND="indent1">While his rich plumage glows with brighter hues,</L><L
REND="indent1">And with soft bill he sips the scented dews,</L><L
REND="indent1">The savage condor on terrific wings,</L><L REND="indent1">From Andes' frozen steeps relentless springs;</L><L
REND="indent1">And, quiv'ring in his fangs, his helpless prey</L><L
REND="indent1">Drops his weak wing, and sighs his soul away.</L></LG></DIV3><DIV3
TYPE="part of poem"><PB ID="p55" N="[55]"><HEAD>ACILOE.</HEAD><HEAD
TYPE="sub">TALE V.</HEAD><MILESTONE N="___________" UNIT="typography"><OPENER>Character of Z<EMPH
REND="smallcaps">AMOR</EMPH>, a bard&mdash;His passion for A<EMPH
REND="smallcaps">CILOE</EMPH>, daughter of the
 Cazique who rules the valley&mdash;The Peruvian tribe prepare to defend
 themselves&mdash;A battle&mdash;The P<EMPH REND="smallcaps">ERUVIANS</EMPH> are vanquished&mdash;A<EMPH
REND="smallcaps">CILOE'S</EMPH>
 father is made a prisoner, and Z<EMPH REND="smallcaps">AMOR</EMPH> is supposed to have fallen in the
 engagement&mdash;A<EMPH REND="smallcaps">LPHONSO </EMPH>becomes enamoured of A<EMPH
REND="smallcaps">CILOE</EMPH>&mdash;Offers to
 marry her&mdash;She rejects him&mdash;In revenge he puts her father to the torture&mdash;She appears to consent, in order to save him&mdash;Meets Z<EMPH
REND="smallcaps">AMOR</EMPH> in a
 wood&mdash;L<EMPH REND="smallcaps">AS</EMPH> C<EMPH REND="smallcaps">ASAS</EMPH> joins them&mdash;Leads the two lovers to A<EMPH
REND="smallcaps">LPHONSO</EMPH>, and
 obtains their freedom&mdash;Z<EMPH REND="smallcaps">AMOR </EMPH>conducts A<EMPH
REND="smallcaps">CILOE</EMPH> and her father to
 Chili&mdash;A reflection on the influence of Poetry over the human mind.</OPENER><MILESTONE
N="___________" UNIT="typography"><LG TYPE="stanza"><L REND="indent1">I<HI
REND="smallcaps">N</HI> this sweet scene, to all the virtues kind,</L><L>Mild Z<HI
REND="smallcaps">AMOR</HI> own'd the richest gifts of mind;</L><L>For o'er his tuneful breast the heav'nly muse</L><L>Shed from her sacred spring inspiring dews;</L><L>She loves to breathe her hallow'd strain where art</L><L>Has never veil'd the soul, or warp'd the heart;</L><PB
ID="p56" N="56"><L>Where fancy glows with all her native fire,</L><L>And passion lives on the exulting lyre.</L><L>Nature, in terror rob'd or beauty dreast,</L><L>Could thrill with dear enchantment Z<HI
REND="smallcaps">AMOR'S</HI> breast;</L><L>He lov'd the languid sigh the zephyr pours,</L><L>He lov'd the placid rill that feeds the flowers&mdash;</L><L>But more the hollow sound the wild winds form,</L><L>When black upon the billow hangs the storm;</L><L>The torrent rolling from the mountain steep,</L><L>Its white foam trembling on the darken'd deep&mdash;</L><L>And oft on Andes' heights with earnest gaze</L><L>He view'd the sinking sun's reflected rays</L><L>Glow like unnumber'd stars, that seem to rest</L><L>Sublime upon his ice&hyphen;encircled breast.</L><L>Oft his wild warblings charm'd the festal hour,</L><L>Rose in the vale, and languish'd in the bower;</L><L>The heart's reponsive tones he well could move,</L><L>Whose song was nature, and whose theme was love.</L><L
REND="indent1">A<HI REND="smallcaps">CILOE'S</HI> beauties his fond soul confest,</L><L>Yet more A<HI
REND="smallcaps">CILOE'S</HI> virtues warm'd his breast.</L><PB ID="p57" N="57"><L>Ah stay, ye tender hours of young delight,</L><L>Suspend, ye moments, your impatient flight;</L><L>Prolong the charm when passion's pure controul</L><L>Unfolds the first affections of the soul!</L><L>This gentle tribe A<HI
REND="smallcaps">CILOE'S</HI> sire obey'd,</L><L>Who still in wisdom and in mercy sway'd.</L><L>From him the dear illusions long had fled</L><L>That o'er the morn of life enchantment shed;</L><L>But virtue's calm remembrance cheer'd his breast,</L><L>And life was joy serene, and death was rest:</L><L>Bright is the blushing Summer's glowing ray,</L><L>Yet not unlovely Autumn's temper'd day.</L><L
REND="indent1">Now stern I<HI REND="smallcaps">BERIA'S</HI> ruthless sons advance,</L><L>Roll the fierce eye, and shake the pointed lance.</L><L>P<HI
REND="smallcaps">ERUVIA'S</HI> tribe behold the hostile throng</L><L>With desolating fury pour along;</L><L>The hoary chief to the dire conflict leads</L><L>His death&hyphen;devoted train&mdash;the battle bleeds.</L><L>A<HI
REND="smallcaps">CILOE'S</HI> searching eye can now no more</L><L>The form of Z<HI
REND="smallcaps">AMOR</HI> or her sire explore;</L><PB ID="p58" N="58"><L>While destin'd all the bitterness to prove</L><L>Of anxious duty and of mourning love,</L><L>Each name that's dearest wakes her bursting sigh,</L><L>Throbs at her soul, and trembles in her eye.</L><L>Now pierc'd by wounds, and breathless from the fight,</L><L>Her friend, the valiant O<HI
REND="smallcaps">MAR</HI>, struck her sight:&mdash;</L><L>"O<HI
REND="smallcaps">MAR</HI>," she cried, "you bleed, unhappy youth!</L><L>And sure that look unfolds some fatal truth;</L><L>Speak, pitying speak, my frantic fears forgive,</L><L>Say, does my father, does my Z<HI
REND="smallcaps">AMOR</HI> live?"&mdash;</L><L>"All, all is lost!" the dying O<HI
REND="smallcaps">MAR</HI> said,</L><L>"And endless griefs are thine, dear, wretched maid;</L><L>I saw thy aged sire a captive bound,</L><L>I saw thy Z<HI
REND="smallcaps">AMOR </HI>press the crimson ground!"&mdash;</L><L>He could no more, he yields his fleeting breath,</L><L>While all in vain she seeks repose in death.</L><L>But O, how far each other pang above</L><L>Throbs the wild agony of hopeless love!</L><L>That woe, for which in vain would comfort shed</L><L>Her healing balm, or time in pity spread</L><PB
ID="p59" N="59"><L>The veil that throws a shade o'er other care,</L><L>For here, and here alone, profound despair</L><L>Casts o'er the suff'ring soul a lasting gloom,</L><L>And slowly leads her victim to the tomb.</L><L
REND="indent1"> Now rude tumultuous sounds assail her ear,</L><L>And soon A<HI
REND="smallcaps">LPHONSO'S</HI> victor train appear;</L><L>Then, as with ling'ring step he mov'd along,</L><L>She saw her father 'mid the captive throng;</L><L>She saw with dire dismay, she wildly flew,</L><L>Her snowy arms around his form she threw;&mdash;</L><L>"He bleeds!" she cries; "I hear his moan of pain!</L><L>My father will not bear the galling chain!</L><L>Cruel A<HI
REND="smallcaps">LPHONSO</HI>, let not helpless age</L><L>Feel thy hard yoke, and meet thy barb'rous rage;</L><L>Or, O, if ever mercy mov'd thy soul,</L><L>If ever thou hast felt her blest controul,</L><L>Grant my sad heart's desire, and let me share</L><L>The fetters which a father ill can bear."</L><L>While the young warrior, as she falt'ring spoke,</L><L>With fix'd attention and with ardent look</L><PB
ID="p60" N="60"><L>Hung on her tender glance, that love inspires,</L>