V::'..--x<\> . :; ■•IV. ?.vu. >-< ss;^^r> i,W^.-,-,.'Hj:.:, r-'s^^nx^; 1>^^'--r^ CM V M/ i .SI L^ h i r CORNELL UNIVERSITY LIBRARY THE WORDSWORTH COLLECTION FOUNDED BY CYNTHIA MORGAN ST. JOHN THE GIFT OF VICTOR EMANUEL OF THE CLASS OF 1919 y .-*«' .►. ^"-^^.a.*- i i y V .,«< ^«w^^ yv'V£J Ot //v- / ^. iJ .^"^ s» -4^,*^ /hK ^ ^^iiSjg OTi ;e ggw i agsg (^ ^ \ ^-. V >r^'^,'^^ JJ^ ^^AT^,. ''■^^- /% ^. ^ 6 ^tK^U "-^ ^. -.-v,/^-' VWV-iI^ ^ «■ ■^% ivt-'^i- -«" ? if f « ■ 1^ 'D r<#»i '< Cornell University Library B Ih The original ortiiis book is in the Cornell University Library. ->j \ There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924105502029 ^^^x^'-^^-'^ . THE HURRICAN -j ^ a .i THEOSOPHICAL AND WESTERN ECLOGUE. TO WHICH IS SUBJOINED, SOLITARY EFFUSIOJV I N A SUMMER'S EVENING e^^i Q 0-: BY WILLIAM GILBERT. Odi profanum vulgus et arceo. Favete linguis : Carmina non prius Audita, Musarum Sacerdos VlRGINIBUS PUERIS^UE CailtO. HoR. Lib, III. Od. i. PRINTED AND SOLD FOR THE AUTHOR, BY R. EDWARDS SOLD ALSO BY MARTIN AND BAIN5 AND B. CROSBY^ LONDON ; EDDOWES5 SALOP ; AND HAZARD AND BARRATTj BATH» 179^. (■ n HllZ PREFACE. JL H E following Poem requires some previous elu- cidation, as it comprehends a scope of design far be* yond vulgar research. The history of it's progress is, at present, of little importance. Here it is, A whole: arrived at maturity ; and wishes not to recolleft the blandish- ments, nor retrace the imperfeftions, of childhood. It gives, and is grounded on, a Theosophical view of the relation between America and Europe 5 but concatenated, because necessary for illustrationj^ with the two old Quarters of the Globe. Of each of all these the chara61:eristics are enlarged upan in the Notes : But some general resolution of the fa£l, that Countries have charaBeristics^ is the necessity^ which causes this Preface. A 2 iv I^REFACE. I KNOW it to be a fact, that the elaboration of my own mind assigned to Africa, Asia and Eu- ROPE, the precise charafters which were respectively attributed to them by the Antients, and have been since by Swedcnborg; though each, used his own language; which is a proof, that each was original, and aftually travelled the road himself and saw ob- jefls in his own light. For these I refer to my NoTE^. Suffice it to say here, that the machinery of my Eclogue thus proceeds on this Doftrine ; namely. Firsts That all Countries have a specific Mznd\ or determinable piTUciple. This charafter may be traced with as much satisfaftion in the vegetable as in the animal produ6lions. Thus, Strength with its at- tributes, viz. Asperity^ 8cc. is the charafter or mind of England. Her leading produftions are the Oak, Peppermint, Sloes, Crabs, sour Cherries. All elecrance all polish, is superinduced ; and primarily from France, of which they are Natives, Secondly, That a Country is subdued, when it's mind ox life t it's /n7?C(? according to Daniel or it's PREFACE, V genius according to the modern Easterns, or it's priri'* ciple according to Europeans, is either supprest, de- stroyed or chemically combined with that of a foreign country in a form, that leaves the foreign property predominant ; and not till then. And this cannot en- sue but upon Suicide, upon a previous abandon- ment on the part of a nation, of its own principle. For when the Creator made eveiy thing very good, he also made it tenable, on the one hand ; and on the other complete ; consequently without the necessity, without the desire, of encroaching, and also without the capability, except under the penalty of surrendering with its own complete roundness, its own tenability. Thus I arrive at a primary Law of Nature, that every ONE MUST FALL INTO THE PIT THAT HE DIGS FOR OTHERS; either before or after success, or with- out success. Thirdly^ That in the European subjugation of America, the American Mind or Life only suffered under a powerful affusion of the European ; and, that as the solution proceeds it acquires a stron- ger and stronger tinfture of the Subjeft, till at length that^ which was first subdued^, assumes an absolute, in^ VI PREB^ACE. expugnable predominancy, and a FINAL — ^inasmuch as the contest is between the two last parts of the world, and there is no prospe&ive umpire to refer to ; but it must be decided by the possession of first princi- ples, or the highest Mind in the Hierarchy of Minds ; and the European possession of mind having previously arrived at perfeftion from her long intercourse with AFRICA and Asia, and not being able to rescue her from the present grasp and predominancy of American Mind, the question is now settled for ever, and Europe yields to the Influence, Mind and Power of AMERICA, linked in essential principle with AFRICA and Asia, for ever. Besides Europe had full success in her encroachments ; she succeeded in throwing America into the pit, and of course, it MUST be her own turn to go in, now: She depopu- lated America, and now AMERICA MUST depopu- late her. This survival of American principle^ I re. present by asserting the survival of her spirits^ under the name of the Children of the Sun, according to the Yncas ; or The Sons of Virgin Light ; while their bodies, or their appearance m the world sank to ocean ; PREFACE. %U1 that is, were destroyed by Europe, who had the power of the ocean and corresponds thereto. The Resur- reftion of their Bodies is the Reappearance in the world of persons enlivened by their Life or Spirit^ a£luated by their principles. What these principles are, will be fully seen in the Notes at the End. I HAVE said enough to explain my Machinery^ and enable the Reader to keep me company as he reads ; though I by no means suppose, that this Pre- face is more than a flash of lightning in a dark night. However^ the System yields a strong, steady light with me ; and I would be liberal of it to my Rea- der, if he will permit rae. awteH ftL i i t mn m v!Stjs «s&im B s a Rffiaf»JBQ^»if:^sii^h/^s^aj0 C%S^C ADVERTISEMENT. *?#ffAo»o> x\. FRIEND is the occasion of this Advertisement; who^ having printed some lines of this Poem in a Pvliscellany that could not fail to introduce it rcspeftably, in the best sense of the word, has thereby acquired a right to have his feelings at- tended to, in things that may affeft the credit of the Poem. He once passed to me a very strong opinion against the Metre of some verses. What is Metre ? It is the focus of Union betvv^cen the Sense and the Sound ; in the best English Poets, at least : It is a contrivance to throw the accent, not where a common reader or speaker would throw it . but where an IMPASSIONED ORATOPv or JUDICIOUS ACTOR would throw it. One instance of disapproved accent in The Hur« RiCANE I suppose w^ill be given in these three lines; > Heap. I not some Female shriek, now faintly sighing on the Wings of Night? Straightly appeared a gleam of White before us. The action here is Dramatic. And a person who supposes himself speaking in the situation there described, and running on with volubihty, or capable of constantly finishing his periods, supposes an impossible combination of irregular hesita- tion of step, v^'ith regulated volubility of tongue. I have ended the line, and thrown the pause before the leading words^ In other instances, where I have not the same reason, I have an equipollent. If, after all, the ear is fastidiously offended with a short syl- lable at the end of a line, or with dividing by a line two words, which are joined in construftion, let it feed upon my Motto> attack Horace, and let me go free — •Carmina non prius Audita- With innumerable other instances in Latin and Ens^lish, THE HURRICAJSfE. ^i%-^ JT RESH from the roaring of the darksome wind. Peace for a moment, draw thy mantle round, ffM)) Hushing disordered Nature ; while rapid Humanity and Love disperse their beams. To light the houseless exile to my home, Before the Hurricane confirm his waste. Brothers in Vengeance ! For one moment's pause I yield you Nature till the golden morn, And claim from none, to stay your shivering hand ! While yet o'er all the solemn stillness reigned. Instant relief, in all direftions sent. The nearest wanderers found, and safely housed. 25 The moral viftims whom the gale destroyed And her preserved with life to Bliss I sing— If not with metral pomp on harp sublime, Yet to the youthful heart and virgin's ear. 'TwAS where the sound of guns had marked a wreck, My own sele6led path I took, in search Of objefts breathing from the Eastern storm. Wild and tremendous was the nightly sky : The clouds involved in vast confusion, deep And ripening still for aClion, ascended Swiftly from the South and West. Exhausted To the East they thinned, and nearly oped there The lowering sky ; where, dimly seen, one star Glimmered on night's dull brow, and then was hid. Pale twilight from the shrouded moon discovered Shattered Nature ; and, as we neared the dreadful Sounding ocean, large torches held aloft D 26 ) Gleamed fearful on the loud tempestuous waste. Ocean, why in darkness hid, sounds so deep Your midnight roar ? Clouds, enclosing warring Winds, why so solemn flit ye o'er? Tell me All your mighty ravage ! Hear I not some Female shriek now faintly sighing on the Wings of night ? Straightly appeared a gleam of White before us. Advancing quickly forward. We saw, on near approach, the tattered sail Of a ship driven by billows over shelves Of rocks, high up the creek, and lodged on shore^ Around, no form of life was seen. 'Twas ravage. No hand remained. The Tempest was her pilot, And the mighty arm, that winged the ruin. Hung o'er the side, female attire we found In shreds ; it's owner sought in vain, was lost. Within with speed through every hold we search. And cabin. The first were empty. The last Repaid my zeal ; for here I found, softly 27 Reclining on a leeward couch a form Divine, Waked by the noise and lights, her eyes, As on I came, returned the beams of mine. With hurried speed she said Elmira. Where is my mother? And the captain? How glad I. am, that they Dire6led you to me ! I 'TwAS no direflion But our own. Come quick thou mildly-beaming Angel-form with me — The moments stay not — And I'll lead thee into peace and safetyo D 2 28 Elmira. Where is my mother gone? And are we yet In England ? No : with truest Friends you are. I PLACED Her in an idle hammaque near. Which, held by Negroes, bore her gently on« And as we went, I aimed, with tenderest talk To cheer the droopy maid ; who, not reluftant Seemed, to solace: for to Sea unused, young And innocent, she knew not the dangers She had passed ; but hearing English spoke, and Dreaming nought of strangers, having sunk to sleep Among accustomed friends, supposed herself Still known. Simply eloquent, she told me, 29 How they disturbed her with their noise on board; \ How, being still at length, she hugged her couch, Rocked by the winds and seas to dead repose. Till thence awoke by me. So infant spirits. Who wing their animating flight of Death In pleasing slumbers from their mother's arms. Alight unknowing on celestial ground : Then press with firmy step the flowery path. Nor dream of serpents they have never known ; Embrace with smiles their first angelic Friend, And ope the little treasure of their hearts : Thus sweet Elmira told her gentle tale, And lit each generous ardour in my breast. At home arrived and entering at the East — For now all entrance from the West was barred- She looked and asked-= 30 Elmira. Where is my mother's room? Or where is she ? I want to sleep again : For you removed me when but half awake. What is this country ? I. A country tis, where— Daughters and mothers seldom live together. Elmira. Why not ? I. They cannot. Young with young, and With old together dwell, where you are now 31 Your mother fully welcomed just is gone Where you can never follow. The distance Is but small ; yet bad the road, and water Lies between you. She begs you here to rest, Till, with a few days use, you like the place^ You will command whatever you may see. And all this hoifse is your's. All varied pleasure Shall attend the varied day. The morning JBreeze luxuriant shall be your's in this saloon. Or in the Orange and Acacia shade ; Where flower or fruit alike regale your taste* For you shall noon pour tranquil splendour wide, Not unaired, nor void of rich aroma; For shrubs that love to drink his ray and live, Will skreen it from Elmira. The purple Sorrel -Neftar high, or milk of Cocoa Nut You then shall drain ; and in its sportive shade Hearken the breeze race on it's rising stem* Evening shall bear us to the Thicket Shade ; 32 Or else, at large, we'll catch the rambling air; And when we see the peaceful breast of ocean Just rippled over with the wildring breeze, We'll then descend the beach; and, pleased, inhale The freshest breath of genial air that blows ; Or snufF the showers coHeQing in the East To cool the atmosphere and green tlie earths Elmira But, will my mother never come? I long To tell her of those pleasant things. I. Better Enjoy them first and know them true yourself. Then, sweet companions of your sex and age Will join your walk and mix their joys with your's With equal transport catch the lively glow From Nature's face, and beam it in their eyes; While with extatic smiles you hail the scene. And eager tell, what various pleasures swell. Elmira Will none else be with us? I WHEN you please, ill join my sweet Elmira and her Friends* Elmira^ I shall always please> E 34 Safely lodged at home, And all secured against the wind stern rising, I pressed refreshment on my travelled guest, Who well enjoyed the delicate repast Of viands flavoured new and cooling drinks. Full easily she believed herself brought By design to this so happy spot : and sure She deemed aright — It was her God's design : Only she thought from God and not from man* Think still, sweet maid, the same ! No reasoner Shall e'er disturb thy God's domain in thee! Still from the same pure fountain thou shalt drink ! Still, in the Light Divine shalt thou see light. Meanwhile the Tempest turned has rouzed his ragCj And blows on Europe unrelenting fury : The rain, in spreading sheets, comes whelmino- down And forms a flood. Nor man, nor beast, nor house Unfounded on a rock, sustained the assault 35 Of winds and rain : The lightnings flamed, and roared The thunder in tremendous vollies deep : Now all the soul of Hurricane was poured, Infuriate raging with the waste of sea. Through earth or ocean God's own hand upreared Quickly destroyed all the destruftible : \ Well sheltered on the West, we felt it less, But heard it more. The hard rain loud battering The shingled roof surprized my lovely guest ; Who doubted if she were not still afloat : But soon assured and soon resigned to Peace^ For her's was bliss innate and incorrupt, And eager on her novel hopes of life^ She softly sank to beatific sleep « With rising morn the wind subsides; The clouds Fly lighter and to higher air sublime, E 2 36 Discharged of all their weight. The Eastern breeze Resumed is balmy; and Creation lives. The Wreck we next examine : There, nor man Nor boat is found : A mile to leeward shews The wreck of both : A Female washed on shore Proclaims Elmira's mother. But from her The tragic hEk is hid. She broods no tempest Who conceals no ^uilt. No mean lust of ffain Propelled Elmira; nor giiilt-infefted hopes Taught her the fear of ill, or yet, to fly To man for safety, which Deity would not Grant, nor her own breast could claim. The Sailors hoped To fetch the quiet creek in boats ; and haste Could not await ELMIRA: nor would fear 37 Surcharge their yawl; nor their trust in human Aids permit to take a poor helpless hand : — • Yet, alone, would Innocence have saved them! The female age matured and wise, her child's Guardian, hung for life on men I While she prayed That they would save her daughter's life and her's, A sweeping billow bore her to the deep. Shortly awake Elmira joined me soon. Treading with cheerful step and unrestrained The stately portico. 'Twas all enchantment To her soul. The sun burst brilliant forth and Welcomed her : All the Isle, the conquered ocean. Lay before her: Smaller Isles attraft her: Unknown Diversities of Landscape strike : The distant Hills cite curiosity : Her God is in her heart in Love and Bliss; And through the Isle and air she lives.* w * A SOLITARY EFFUSIOJV 1 N A SUMMER'S EVENING. SOLITARY EFFUSION. HAVING SPENT A VERY FINE DAY IN THE HOUSE, IN THE MIDST OF A VERY FINE COUNTRY^ FROM WANT OF COMPANY TO ENJOY IT WITH ME; I WROTE THESE LINES AT FIVE IN THE AFTERNOON ON THE TWENTIETH OF JULY LAST* ^V HAT is the cloudless sky to me ? Nature's Devellopt radiance and her thousand charms ? No heart joins mine : no kindred step with me Winds the lone dingle, or pursues the track Slow opening through the mazy thicket's shade : None rests with me upon the verdant slope, And runs his eye enraptured o'er the glade, F 42 On to the distant sleeping stream, that walks With slow and measured lapse, his round of ages In the circling mead ; saw the woad-painted Briton; beheld, or bore, his sharp-scythed chariot; Was oft dasht by the fierce 3rm that ruled it; Yielded indignant to the new Roman ; Echoed with languid joy and presage sad The desperate shouts of fainting Freedom, As they rang from loud Caer-CaradoC"^ amain, And with their last rude crash shook every dale, Rouzed each cot in vain ; and has lived to hear That song again from centuries of Death, On Mason's lyre revived. Hark ! Here are groves That hold, or held, some Druid. Dark mantlincr Round they throw impenetrable shade ; and hide * The hill, Mhcre Caractacus made his last stand, and visible from many parts of the County of Salop, where this was v/ritten. 43 And have for ever hid, aye unprofaned By Roman, or by Savage conqueror's step, Some Temple sacred by the Mystic Sage. Here, loo, are haunts of Love, as well as grand And rudest Wisdom's darkest, drear domains. Groves were sacred once to Love : once were heard^ Low murmuring through the many-lurtled shades Of Peace, respondent sighs, or liveliest notes Of placid and accordant Love, that mixed Airs with the Zephvr, whispers with the sacred grovel Long husht to sullen silence, Groves no more Echo to human Loves : the Loves refinedy Or antient minstrels sung, of Dryad or Of Naiad, or perchance of human Maid From cottage or from palace ; or of Gods, From halls of light descending to the plain. Unconscious of a change ; nor so immixt, F 2 44 Can learned retrospeftion trace distinft, The Nymph, the Goddess or terrestrial Maid Lonely their solitary haunts I view: And welcome solitude where they are not: Wherie such are not companions of the walk ! Tell me, ye Gentle and ye Graceful, tell- Tell me, ye Chaste, yet not averse from Love — Tell me, ye Great, who guarded all these Fair^ And make the lofty Groves of Love, that tower In Zenith Air, terrific to the vain ; As all within was mild, serene and pure — ■ Tell me, who most have ravaged your retreats ; Who worst your secret delicacies wound. And boldest all your hidden depths profane ? bich age is vile, the Gothic, or Refined ? .•1 45 *'Th AT, which the Heart lays waste!'' I hear exclahned In choral harmony of Fair and Great. '^^ Ah ! What avails to us, pure Nature's Spirits ! *' The managed body and the managed tongue, *^ Which chaunts no concord to soft Nature's notes? *' The managed foot, that dreads our shady brakes, *' And shuns our holiest, wildest, deepest walks ? «• We give no music to the high-trained ear: ^' Our concert loved is NATURE'S voice Divine, *' And GOD's and LOVE's ; One unison, that sounds *^ Through every branch, and trembles^ in each leaf, '* Here oft, when man awakes not, hear w^e sweet '* The voice of GOD conversing in the Calm, " And preaching of his inmost \vorks Himself; ** Till all the Seraph glow in all his fires, ^' And melts the high Society in one *^ Enraptured Diapason's holy sound. 46 *' 'TwAS not the Warrior's gleam, that thinned our shades *' And harshly grated human Discords there i I *' He passed unheeded when the storm was o'er, '' And left no measured ravage : Not the man " Of boisterous Nature was our foe; that man '^^ Was Nature still, and her behests obeyed. V' The Man of Art, Is NATURE'S foe and man's *' And God's. His desolathig axe wastes all, \ { *• That speaks a GOD C^-eator of the Land ; '^ And marks it for his own. The ground not then *' Yields an impartial feast to man, to fowl, I *' And all the Family of GOD ; but trained 1 " To furnish famine, mocks at GOD and all. 'i I •^ No shades are holy, nor are rural scenes. ^ '' The Man of Art proscribes all Nature ; marks '• For dread the embo wring thicket formed for Love '' And Love's delights of Peace ; and wise in this *' Career of Ruin, he ; for LOVE itself •' Is the first dread — LOVE the first great terror 47 *' Of the Man of Art — commutual Foe^ '' And yet is LOVE the Universal Friend : ♦ '' And, (hear the choir of NATURE, MAN and GOD 1) '' The Man of Art, the U?iiversal Foe! '' He dreads himself- — hates LOVE he can't subdue — - '' His GOD arraigns— all NATURE desolates ! *' But hence, let NATURE rise and reign in Man ! ^' And him destroy who has destroyed the Earth ; '' While GOD inspires, and LOVE unites the World !" I HAIL the blest alternative! Content To live dissociate of the Man of Art And his dissociate earth, usurpt and curst! Shortly his ruin whelms ; the Dam is broke ! The Founts of Fire are broken up, as erst Of the Great Deep, and FIRE now streams along, Innocuous round , my Rest! See! It comes! And claims the SPRINGS of NATURE for it's own ! i^ >ie '<^t^^ ian B V nu i-naaajaa mammea wm ^OCMHCKW. -W-- !.-*;«*•-.• NOTES. ''/iimw^' ©oooo* '^v/iuv;v^^' CANTO I. NOTE ((A)) Broke the mild concords of the Mermaid's shelL ^V^OLUMBUS asserts his having seen Mermaids « about the time he first made land, who sank at his approach. The existence of the Mermaid is nov/ cer- tain ; as one was exhibited a long while in Oxford- Street, which I saw two years ago nearly, together with a young one taken in her arms. The length of the mother may have been four feet, and that of the child nine or ten inches. From the loins up- ward appeared f^ have been covered with flesh; and G 2 52 thence downward, with scales. They were dried, having been caught five years before on the coasts of Italy or of Sicily. The hands were webbed ; and the fingers terminated sharp, like a monkey's. The owner says, he refused One Hundred Guineas for them, from the British Museum. Why not Mermen and Mermaids as well as Ourang-Outangs ? Why not Sea men and maids (im- perfeft animals though they are) as well as Sea lions, calves and horses ? NOTE ((b)) Not less than Memnon whom Aurora bore To Eastern mornings HIS statue near Thebes in Egypt, emitted musical soands, when impinged on by the first rays of the sun, at rising; and did not lose this faculty when half demolisht. Some ingenious stri6lures on it may be found in Dr. Darzoin's Botannic Garden, among his many other valua- / 53 ble notes. The mechanism, which produced this singu- lar, but well avouched, efFeft, is not my business : What I shall argue from it will be equally conclusive, if the mechanism be a fable. The Celestial Philosophy of the Idea is that — Light and Sound are corelates* Creation pro- ceeded in darkness^ while it proceeded in silence. At * length GOD spake — Let there ^(f Light ! And there was Light — ipsofa&o. GOD does not speak dark- ly : and here our common phraseology, as I shall more fully remark presently, betrays a consciousness of this co-relation. But to go on with Scripture : TheMVoKD was the Light of men. The Stars, which in Genesis i. 17, \^Q.vt to give Light upon the earthy are speaking in Psalm xix. 3. There is no speech nor language where their voice is not heard — or ASTROLOGY ; which is compounded of two Greek words, signifying, the Word or Voice of the Stars, Perhaps it will be suspefted, that had David possessed as much Science in futurity as confidence in Astrology, he would in this assertion, have excepted the sumjjiits of Wisdom to which modern Europe has attained, so far beyond the loftiest ken of his capacity. In some degree to avert this 54 censure, I must endeavour to supply what was wanting in David with the fulness of the Son of David. ' He has given as a diagnostic of the last times ^ that the Stars shall withdraw their SHINING, and the POWERS OF HEAVEN shall be shaken. What shining is with- drawn ? The European will first tell you that their ex-^ ternal shining is meant, and also their external droping, from th€ heaven as a fig-tree shaken by the wind casts her untirnely figs; and having inexpugnably fortified himself there, because he has too much reverence for holy writ to let it countenance superstition — proceeds'im- mediately to laugh at the profound ignorance in all phy- sical sciences or real' learning, of Him, who pretended, that the worlds were made by the word of his power, for asserting, that such immense bodies would fall to the earth* This is one instance of the generous support given by learning to Christianity. Therefore I. say to you all, whether College Petit-maitres, Priests, Moralists, Ency- clopaedia Writers, Swedenborgians, or Philosophers, Non tali auxllio nee defensoribus istis Christus egett Christ xnants not such hdp^ nor such defenders. 55 Man by Wisdom knew not GOD — much less by idiocy or a national state of insanity. But how tlien ? By the Light, and by the speech and action of a Star. There shall come a Star out ^ Jacob, a?id a Sceptre shall arise out ^ Israel^ combined in significatioH with it, and shall smite the corners ^/^Moab and de- stroy all the children ^Seth. And after many years there came wise men from the East, not from the North, to Jerusalem, searching for the Sceptre in consequence pf having ^^tn the Star, and asking, Where is He who is bor?i King of the Jews :, for we have seen his Star in the Ecist^ and are come to worship Him. How did 4^hey read all this in the Star? For read it or hear it, they unquestionably did. Was it the extraordinary raagn. nitude of the Star^ that admonished them ? How came it, that the Jev/s over whom it was vertical did not see it ? For Herod called the Wise men and diligently enquired of them, at what time the 5^i^r appeared. But perhaps, it is a satisfaflory answer, that they always looked upon the ground like Europeans, surrendering the charaBeristic of Man ^ who with a lofty countenance, is made to be- hold the Stars. If this be allowed, Isaiah has something upon it chap. viii. 22. They shall look unto the earth ; (ind behold trouble and darkness, dimness of anguish ; 56 a7id be driven to darkness ! However ready the men were, who could not read the Star, to murder the KING, and till they could atchieve the murder of Inno- cence impersonified, to regale themselves with the but- chery of a multitude of comparative Innocents, the wise men followed the Star and worshiped the King and the GOD ; watching its place of stoping and there, themselves, resting : till, warned by a Dreain^ they re- turned into their country another way, than through the Jews, or by the King^ whom these so religiously obeyed —for, no doubt, they did so, because David had shewn them not to lift their hand against the Lord's Anoin- , TED : The natural or external man has no rule to know the Devil's from the Lord's. Christ was manifested to the Gentiles by a Star: Jesus to the Jews by Visions of Angels and by Dreams. Till I exaftly know, which of these two Or three modes of manifestation the Europeans most confide in, I cannot be clear, whether they are Gentiles or Jews, or even Turks, Infidels or Heretics. I rather think they are a mixture, and if I may judge from the serenity with wliich they see the heavens and the earth shaken round them, I should say, a happy mixture of all five. But • 57 I the word five reminds me, that the five foolish virgins, (and surely there is virgin folly in this compound) as well as the five wise, slept and slumbered till the Bridegroom came. The Speech of the orbs of Light is not ah acci- dental figure, taken up for partial illustration and then abandoned; but a Doctrine, which pervades all re- ligions and applies to every perception.^ In Job, chap*, xxxviii. 7, it is said, The Morning Stars sang toge-^ ther ; and this brings us to Memnon ; who seems an impersonation of this sentiment ; and designed to repre- sent in stone the immediate' correspondential consequences of light, in a recipient or-ganized for sound. MEMNONf is a solitary instance of this in human produftions or works of art ; but the Crowing of Cocks, and Singing of Birds, are among instances of it, where moral powers predominate rather than physical — that is, in the works of the Father of Lights. « If Light and Sound are corelates, the proposi- tions by which this is affirmed are equally true in the ' ' ' ' . '^ I do not speak of Europe, here, H 58 converse ; as Psalm cxix. 105. Thy Word is a Lamp unto fny feet and ^ Light unto my Path. Psalm xix. 3. There is no speech nor language, zvhere their voice zs not heard. With the Greeks, Phoebus and Apollo were the same person ; or Light and Sound were twin streami from one spring. With a less philosophical people, a blind man has been thought ridiculous, for conceiving the colour Red to be like the sound of a Trumpet : yet to common perception they both are splendid and spirited* Even the creeping of mechanic philosophy has arrived at discovering the same divisions and proportions in the Diah)nic Scale and the Piism^ It is well observed by Dr. Darzuin, that we apply words expressive of Light and Sound indifferently to each other ; as Harmony of colours ; a splendid composi- tion or Rne painting in Poetry y. Oratory or Music; equi" poise of sounds. Perhaps the word equipoise aftually unites Sounds and Light. I have not scrupled to say, a few lines farther on, that ** fired with radiance they poured Music" without thinking it any breach of meta- phor ; though Apollo's arrows and the lyre of Phoebus 59 have been by some critics, held such. Even this, I think, amounted to no more than a solecism, supposing it to have been an error at all ; language having prescribed the JVord to Apollo and the Light to Phoebus* Scripture, we have just seen^ as well as common language, slights the Distin6lion. »4»»*»««*»ft****«*»*>»ft»»»9 •»• NOTE Ic} Then tke Mermaid to her deeps sJiot rapid : Trembling she lay ; hut safe^ and long concealed From haunts of War, I HAVE anticipated in the Preface, that tbe ma- chinery of this Poem turns on the thought, that while the inhabitants of America were subdued, the Europeans were gradually tinfturing themselves with the feelingSj manners and habits, of that new Quarter of the Globe. In other words, while American bodies were destroyed by European bodies, American Spirits were subduing the Europeans — and much more effeflually and really » though latently. It was latent to Europeans, only be- H s 6o cause they and their philosophy contemplate forms or externals, alone ; and hence, they conclude, when a body is put out of the way, the whole work is done ; little considering, that the Spirit or Principle, which solely gave that body existence, is itself, so far from be- ing extinguisht, that it has burst the crucible which confined it, and enflamed to vengeance all those, who are in a similar principle, whether ten, a thousand, a myriad, or in the case of a common Saviour, all Crea- tion — and the murderer himself among the number. And the subjugation efFefted by America is more effeftual ^nd real, because Spirit moves body^ but body does not move Spirit. It may remove Spirit from it ; but the good it gains is, that it dies, and the expelled Spirit flourishes more exalted, pure and free. By Sea I always mean the external, the body or crust, of the world ; I mean also Europe, or still more specifically, England ; as having understandings calcu- lated for the Sea or for Physics ; and excelling alike in the sciences and the arts by which these two are jointly contemplated. 01 A PROPOSITION. But though the inhabitants of America were destroyed, yet, as the Spirit or Genius, or Princi-> PLE of America infused itself into Europeans, and still goes on rapidly perfusing itself there, it could never be said, in the abstract or in the highest sense, that American Z'^^i^/^y were destroyed — or, wliich is the same thing, that there was no trace oi the aclivity of their prin- ciples in the world. When I speak of Mermaids, I wish to be un- derstood as expressing by them, the most intelligent in- habitants of the merely natural world ; because the Sea Is that world, and among its animals the Mermaid near- est approaches to the human form, and consequently to the image and similitude of GOD. And by American Mermaids specifically, I mean the intelligence and love of natural or sensual Life among and appro- priate to, the Americans, Hence By the passage, which is the Subje^'l of this Note, I mean, that the above Intelligence and Lo v e zl ere i)2 not extingmsht^ hut ''sunk in the sea/' or transfused into European bodies* Why is the Sea the ultimate of Creation ? Fire is visibly the Primary, or rather the Esse of Being; because Fi RE alone has Motion in itself, or can impart motion, that is^ inherent motion to any body a This is testified universally by expansion ; and in the case of magnetic bars^ by attra£lion. For, unde. eiably. where there is attraftion, these is motion^ a fer- mentation of parts ; and this is produced by imparted heat. If Fire be the Primary, the opposite of Fire is the idtimate> ••••»>9O«J»»(>ta9«»>»»-t»e*0| 0O9» NOTE ^dv if^hoyfarjrom Europe and its bodied forms. THAT is, far from the perception of their under- standing : and, as the European lives in his understanding alone ; that is, places no confidence in any things which 63 is not mathematically visible, not even in Logic, far less in internal feelings and the experiences of mind — I have said far from him ; though they were working so power- fully IN him, as to repeopU from Europe, many immense trafts of America, on ont side of the Atlantic ; and on the other, combined with a beverage from the East, and the manual cultivation of a still more spiritual country, to establish themselves in every parlour, from the palace to the mud cottage ; and most universally in the mo^t physical kingdom of the most physical Q\X2iii^\' of the Globe, in the form of the most universal, deep-rooted and medicinal luxury ever known. With every lump of Sugar, a certain portion of Essence of America and of Africa is swallowed ; and if refined with the blood of bulls, a proportion of England too ; but the first are wholly predominant. Strange it would be, that Mathematicians give no reality to Spirit, v/hile they lay the basis of form in Id^li — if they were any thing but Mathematicians. What makes a surface ? What makes a line ? What makes a point ? Here Metaphysics begin* — after Physics end^ or have attained their grovelling apex. It stands, or has^ * That Mctaphpics owe their name to the mark of a book-kinder is aa accoi*nt worthv of MathcHJaticians; v^ho are trulv vqk ct prfxtcrea nihil,^ t)4 stood confest by the Mathematicians that alJ Jorm rises out of Idea ; and justly ; only it is a pity that, after know- ing their place, they would not keep it. The fly, though he feels himself carried by the wheel, fancies he turns it ; but because he is a fly, he cannot be instrufted ; yet he may be killed : Notwithstanding he is capable of survi- ving a passage from America to England in a pipe of Madeira wine — an experiment I am fully informed of, while I write — yet he may be trodden down and thoroughly crusht. Impertinence not. corrigible by failure and repulse, nor to be awed by example, may be destroyed. The importance of a man or of a nation absorbed in one thing, must be decided by V^.^ practical importance of the thing absorbing. The highest practical use of # Mathesis is Architefture, Land or Naval, and Astrono- mical Navigation : This last serves to convey comforts home ; the second is the medium of the third ; and the first is, at once, the primary and ultimate of sensual en._ joyment — a sine qua non ; and of course the most invalu- able atchievement. And this may, in a moment^ be de- molisht by either a human Invention, or by Nature ; and must inevitably yield to Time. 65 NOTE ((E)) hi subterrariean vaults^ where cceaii roai^s^ &c. A ROARING of the Sea in certain caverns^ is one prognostic of an Hurricane, in Antigua. By holding consultations with Genii of the Deep, I mean superadding to themselves the first and highest principles of Physical Sciences, and thereby excelling or vanquishing Europe on her own Element. Whence I have said farther on, ** They are viBors ON Europe — » Witherers of htr mights See the next Note. NOTE ((F)) For their^s are Nature's Powers : Elemental strength Springs in their nerves ; to artijicial or Cold Europe s man unknown ; and at the Fount Divine they drink ^pursuant oj the stream. They hence are keenly sentient of all Truth ; 66 Familiar, hencc^ is bold Emprize ; easy, Hence, Afxhievement, that to Europe s upward Navigation is impraBical and mad. THOSE, who feel internally, think or judge froj^ that feeling, and a61: from that judgment, are in order ; They are bannered in Nature's Cavalry : Their course of Aftion is a fine Synthesis ; and wherever they proceed, they meet no objeft but what is below them. I'hey are always on the higher ground. The man of physical feel- ings, science and a6tion, is always climbing, but neve^ ascendirrj.- Hi But why this distribution of parts to America and Europe ? For Europe I have accounted, in a great measure, already. As to America, first and foremost I shall give thepraftical reason, because that is the Ame- rican — and it is this — I AM AN American, and Qid sENTii Ille EST. I say — Such is the ground ; I de- scribe it ; and did any European teach me ? No. Then it is MY OWN ground. Next^ the speculative reason. <37 Fire is the Esse of Being, or Being itself; Earth is tlie Essence ; or that which gives Distinc- tion, Solidity or exterior Perinamncy ; Water is the Ultimate, the Exanimate, the Weak of Creation : Air is the Result of the Elements ; con-tinent of them in vari-^ ous proportions and recipient of every different quality from them. The Hebrews always knew it to be no Ele- ment ; for of their tweniy-two letters, they gave twelve to the Signs of the Zodiac, seven to the planets, and three to Fire, Earth and Water. As is the Continent or Countrv, so is the Man of it. AFRICA is evidently the least ^ratered part of the Globe ; or, wliat is still more to the point, the least ac- cessible by water. She is poised on ihe Equator ; and certainly is the fiery region ot the world. Asia is an Earth to Africa ; a vehicle, which was contrived to prevent Europe from extinguishing Africa, or Africa from burning Euiope, while heating it. With Asia I liave no farther business, than to add she was represented among the Antients by a Slup^ as Europe was by ]Vater. But on Africa I shall treat in a separate Note. The African is, however, the most internal man in the world, as his country is the most fiery. /2 6s If Europe have not more water than America, h, yet, her chief strength, superiority and energy, He in that element. America is AIR. nor so muc As Air she possesses the powers and advantages combined (and consequently sublimed and in a fulness of perfeaion which only the combination can give) of all other Quarters of the Globe. The altitude of her Moun- tains, the depth and immensity of her Rivers, the quan- tity of her Metals, her possession of the most noble of them in Platin A, the number of her Islands, her two- fold Continent and its vast extent — join unequivocally to support this fa6l. Her inhabitants, therefore, contem- plating alike Heat and Cold, Mountains and Plains, Woods and Lakes, Rivers and Oceans, each on an im- perial throne — may, very well, for a vioment be lost in body, but cannot be defe61:ive in Mind. A MAN is supposed to Improve by going out into the world,, by visiting London. Artificial man does ; he extends with his sphere ; but alas ! that sphere is micro- scopic : It is formed of minutiae, and he surrenders his genuine vision to the artist, in order to embrace it in his ken. His bodily senses grow acute, even to barren and 69 inhuman pruriency ; while his mental become propor- tionally obtuse. The reverse is the Man of Mind : He who is placed in the sphere of Nature and of GOD^ might be a mock at TattersalTs and Brookes's, and a sneer at St. James's : He would certainly be swallowed alive by the first Pizarro^ that crossed him : — -But, when he walks along the River of Amazons ; when he rests his eye on the unrivalled Andes ; when he measures the long and watered Savannah ; or contemplates from a sudden Pro- montary, the distant, Vast Pacific — and feels himself a Freeman in this vast Theatre, and commanding each ready produced fruit of this wilderness, and each progeny of this stream — His exaltation is not less than Imperial. He is as gentle too as he is great : His emotions of tender- ness keep pace with his elevation of sentiment ; for he says, ** These were made by a good Being, who unsought bv ft me, placed me here to enjoy them/' He becomes at once, ■I ■ a Child and a King. His mind is in himself ; from hence I he argues and from hence he afts ; and he argues uiierr- ■ ino^ly and a6ls magisterially : His Mind in himself is also in his GOD ; and therefore he loves, and therefore he soars. He knows where he is ; his speculations do not outfly his praQice ; for he thinks he knows nothing but what he proves. The vast pride of discovering Experimental 70 Philosophy cannot, indeed, be his; for Discovery is precluded by incessant Knowledge^ Tpie European is always climbing, because heal- w^ys begins with Water, whose property it is, always to sink to a level. He cannot make any progress, because Water originates nothing. He never ascends, because he never quits Water. Hence, for ever, like Sisyphus, struggling up a toilsome, vain Analysis, he judges all things, which are above the height to Avhich Water may be forced by known engines, to be imprafli cable ; and the Science OF Mind to be impraftical and a mad speculation, instead of what it is — the only and BRILLIANT REALITY. He always thinks out of himself: hence he never meets GOD, and leaves the PRIME Work of Deity, as the least considerable part of creation : but this, he alleges, is because he is not able to consider him at alL He knovrs not where to be- I gin; he has not one datuvi in Mrnd: and the science of \all that is rcaL stands under the term Aletanhysics, as a cant name for all that is speculative. If, when arrived here, he could draw a syllogism, and acknowledge his inferiority, he would, at this moment, be an objetl: of my friendship, not of my indignation and inveftive. But he 71 IS not content to htjalse ; he is bad : he is not content to be ignorant of Mind, but the villain must murder it, if he can — but he cannot. We have just seen him, from the attempt, as bad^s he h false ; We see him in the conducl of his attempt, as foolish as he is wicked. He tlirows Water on* our seeds, and makes us vegetate. With his ignorance of Mind, he knows not the laws of Vi61ory. He knows not, though he sees it, that the visible body is moved by only the invisible Mind, and that the energies, which impel an imperious course of conduft, He not in muscles, nor in bones of ei'en six inches dia- meter : We know it and vanquish hira on his own around j moving body to any thing by spirit. He sees it, did I say ? I beg his pardon ; I forgot, that eyes can look only outward, and that of course, he cannot see this: But I have an infallible recipe for this blindness; or if not a- recipe, an antidote for those, whom its malignant atrocity would poison — it is this;, he can feel ; that is, when he is run through the body. Instru6lLon must be written ,/ for an European, with ink of blood and a pen of steel. / 4li If the first Motive of Creation, the Crea. TOR, the first Life, be connefted with each detacht part of Creation, with each subordinate Life, and each subordinate mover, at all ; it must be in the most active, tbe most vital, and the most plastic, which are also the most recondite, parts of his frame. Who ever found Majesty in a bone, or illumination in the eye of a corpse ? But the organization continues, or to what purpose is Anatomy ? Therefore the first motive inheres not mbody, nor in its organization. The percipient is vanisht, and the motive is gone. Suppose them to be annihilated, if you will ; I am SURE your body is* Yet, in this body you fix demonstration ; from this you argue : It is a reasoning worthy of it, that in the principle of its identity and motion, you disdain to seek that of its Creation, even GOD. Spirit without spirituality ; Chfistians without Christ or Power ; Asserters of, nay, brawlers for Jesus^ without Salvation, you Englishmen diV^-— Mathematicians : all purer charafters are superstitious. The Science of Mind, to be sure, is Superstition: but it is the Superstition which Archimedes wanted to raise the World ; but which, I tell you, mean men of physics, I HAVE ;~and The FRENCH HAVE ! And will KEEP and PERFECT, whether you see, ani whether you approve, or not. Adieu ! 73 NOTE[{G)] A song replete with all that Egypt knew : Or close Eleusis taught her pious youth : THAT is, replete with the knowledge and Philosophy of the whole world. I assert this of the Setting Sun, because he has seen, and been st^n^ through all the World ; as of the Rising Sun, because he was to see and be seen throughout. Egypt and Eleusis stand for the Rising Sun, with me; Egypt for the Knowledge, and Eleusis for the Philosophy ; because, laying aside the vulgar presumption in favor of Asia for the Spring of human Being, I have not a penumbra of hesitation in affirming it to be Abyssinia ; nor do I doubt, that the first forma- tion of Man into Societies and apparent order, was in Egypt. This I first conclude from its being a country lying just below Abyssinia, at the mouth of her River, watered by it without the inconvenience oi rains, and the only part of Africa, that presented the easy means ot Ex- tension to other parts of the World ; which it did by the K 74 Isthmus of Suc2, and also by two small and smooth In- land Seas, where they might pass their infancy of Navi- gation ; exclusive of a fine River. Secondly, I conclude so, from the corresponding yiz^?, that every revela- tion of Science or Instruction to Man, pagan or evangelical, has been from Egypt ; and this evidently must be the case, and can be the case only, on the sup. position, that here was the original ORFiciNA gen- tium, or work-shop or faftory of nations. For where organization first began, they could certainly give the best account of it* . The Birth of Theogony among the Greeks, the remission of Israel to a s^^rvitude in Egypt, and, after- wards of the Universal Saviour to the same place for proteSlion in infancy, coupled with the Prophecy, '^Out of Egypt have I called my Son,'' at once point it out as the Birth-place of the DoElrinals of all Religions. Per- sons read in Emanuel Swedenborg's Manifestations, will see, how justly I confine it to DoBrinals or Science, in the last instance as well as the two first ; because a SoN signifies Doftrine ; as Males excel by the cultivation of their Understanding ; but Women .or Females by retain- ing the purity of their JVilL 1^ Look up to Abyssinia with an eye of natj-- R AL Science^ that is, on the principles and with the views of Science, that belong to a Heathen Philosopher ; and tell me what you see. Chaos: do you not? Look aip ahstraEledly to the origin of man, with the same eye, not enlightened by Divine Revelation : What do you see ? Chaos* Then two things equal to one and the :game thing, are equal to one another^ In short, every Religion but the PRESENT, ha^ begun in Egypt; and every Religion but the PRE- SENT has been speculative* MEN are now summoned by a Divine Afflatus, to contend for the GOOD OF ENJOYMENT and will no longer trust it to futu. rity, or be content with speculation, that talks about it and about it. Hence the present origjinates in Abyssinia. The French are embarked and are near Janding on this spot of pra6lical, sensual, or corporeal Good. It is historically true, that on the confines of Abyssinia, namely at Sennaar, was the only kingdom in the World, which allowed the king to be regularly tried and put to death ; that is^ it was the only country^ that, finding a principle of political life and aBion to be dcstruflive to happiness^ instead of benejicial^ abandoa- K 2 76 ed and destroyed it. How could they venture on this ? Because they lived in a superior Principle ; and, of course FELT and knew their whole political struBure to be subordinate. With the English, it is paramount ; for, though they posses a loose belief of a state superior in stability, they feel they have no hold of it ; and so praBically depend on nothing but Wealth and Policy; and deem him, forsooth, an enemy to mankind, who shdJics these ! It is also true, that as the king ot France w.r; sending an ambassador to the emperor of Abyssinia, wlience a queen came to hear the wisdom of Solomon iand where his Progeny by her still reign, that Enibassa- d \ With all his suite were cut to pieces before the door of the kings palace \^ owing to certain Friars, who, through jealousy, represented (though, most probably, with justice) the embassador to be a spy and secret Jlnemy* In fi future Note, I shall state some specific reasons for my Egotism in this Poem; but I must round this head with something like Anticipation. I am the only Being in the World, who go through every inch and every league of the French Revolution ; which, in- * See Foncct and Brucf. deed, is no wonder, as I had embarked, without sail or oar^ in the Revohition to practical Good, Public and Pri- vate, as an individual, before they started. / also have strong symptoms of a neighbourhood to Abyssinia. I have such a strong predileftion for Africa, as, when a youth, to have wished, in crossing the Atlantic without a Mediterranean Pass, to be taken by a Corsair and carried in ; and while I was in the latitudes, I looked out impatiently for every sail, in hopes of finding an African Cruizer. There is certainly a Nation of Gibberti, who inhabit East and South of Abyssinia, and have had a Dynasty on its Throne. As the Abyssinians never leave their country (and I strenuously maintain, that a total aversion from travelling can only consist with being at the ulti^ matcoi Enjoyment ^nd, the Primary of Being) the Gib- berti have been ever their Merchants and their Embas- sadors^ to Europe. The inference designed may seem almost an infantine speculation to the European, who knows of no relations but what are guaranteed by a par- son and clerk, and archived in a register, according to Statute ; and therefore I have published enough; but with * If these be not meant in Isaiah xviii. i, 2, who are ? And if the hari^ roughs toiling^ KaK^TtOV^ country, (See my lafl Note) to which they arc fentj be not Europe^ what region is it ? 7Q the aid of two or three other Correspondences, I can infallibly PROVE my Relation yr\^hole market of the Gentiles, ^ndi^for a long time that of Israel. — The reason of this reserve I shall now give. The Israelites stand contradistinguisht from other na- tions, in their subsistence ; for, at length, kd by GOD^ THEY wholly relinquished their Egyptian food ; and in- stead of it are fed with that of ancjels ; to instruB them beyond the Science of Eleusis and beyond Egypt, that man liveth not by Bread alone, but by every Word that proceedeth out of the mouth of GOD* Hence, too, they were informed, that though Egypt was to mankind xht Ne plus ultra of Scienci>^ it was not so of Exis- tence; and they were reminded, that though Egypt regulated with the nicest ad'cijracy the floods of the Nile, and knew when to expeft, yet it conid not command them ; that it received ?20 SJiowtrsfrom Heaven^ but was subordinate to a Country, which did^ and where both springs^ and is replenisht to a capacity of Inimdation, the TViiY-LY. founttd River, for so at length it is now ascertained to be, which irrigates its lands, and fertilizes its womb : a country, which is ex vi termini the Chaos of the Pagan, Egyptian-derived^ Mythology ; is also the Metaphysical region o{\.ht Naturalist — but the Eden oi GOD and of the Man oe GOD, L 2 84 NOTE in)] Here loo I sat, with them enwrapt, though open, ENWRAPT in the Principles, and ever forcing them into Aftion, though I wrought wholly ALONE, of equal Liberty, equal Justice and equal Honor, to all Mankind ; regulated alone by Individual desert. Thus aQing, I afted against all Europe till France joined me. " Though open," is, though in, and aclitig in, the Body or Europe, or on European Ground. The Principle of America is this Eoui- LIBRIUM, and agrees with the Sign attributed by Astrology to the West, namely. Libra or the Balance; where Saturn having, by the same Science, his Exaltation, or greatest public Strength, we must also refer Saturn i a Regna, or the Reign of Saturn, so much extolled; and which is thus, in other terms, the Reign of just Equality ; where the empty scales are alzuays even, and, of the full, that consequently always preponderates, which ought to preponderate. I have said this to clear Equality from tJie obloquy of the English. 85 It will be curious to one not accustomed to attend to the prevalence of ^n/za/^/^j- in human aftions, to ob- serve, how cpnstantly the whole warfare of Europe and America have turned on Command and Equality; from the Seditions and Rivalships against Columbus, the detraftions he suffered from Nobles in Spain, and the jealousy entertained of him at Court; and similar events to subsequent Viceroys — through the System on which America was settled by every nation in Europe, of Slavery — up to the year 1776, when America de- clared Independence: and intermingled her genius with that of France ; whose capital, Paris, is assigned by Astrologers to the Sign Virgo, as is also Jerusa- LEM» In 1775 and 1776, Saturn was in Libra. And thus too we sccVirgil's Lrne in Pollio, illustrated ; Jam redit et Virgo, redeunt Saturnia Regna ; Returns the Virgin, and Saturnian Reign. Europe is t\\t fountain oi Slavery ^^ America the Field of Freedom : The Fountain of it is GOD m Man, and Fire in Nature. 86 NOTE ((i| And ply the terrible Antistrophe. THE antient Singers in the Temples of Greece, sang the Strophe from the East, and then turned and sang the Antistrophe from the West. Such is the usual process of a Hurricane; particularly that at Antigua in August 1772 : for, after blowing from North East, or from Europe for some hours, it lulled I for half an hour, and then returned with increast violence from South West. This is also frequently the case with seasons of Rain. When fully past to the West, they return with an increast load ; so that a Western Season is always a good one, and gladly welcomed. Harmony is an Equipoise of Discords. Europe by the first discords, destroyed, or rather, suspended Har- mony ; America strikes the second, equivalent; and restores it. In short, down to every ramification, Eoui* LI BR at I ON will be found throughout the Western World, in nature and in Man. Those families, which .^-» *jj.'^' Instead of Acroamatic^ I have used Achromatic, from a privative, and ^^cvfj.OLhxo^j colore imbutus — fignifying CLEAR Truth. I have thought it well to spell with a t the participles wherein d final is pronounced as t ; and any errata of this kind Vv'ill be correfted by the Reader. ■aaBBanHOBBie ERRATA. P. 11 1. 1 read Memnon. P. 66 1. 4 from thebottom, read sent it. P. ^77. In the Note for>c read '^ P. 80. Transpose the period and comma in the fifteenth and sixteenth lines after GOD, # -^ ^ *. . -:*'•* 1