7^- FROM THE LIBRARY OF REV. LOUIS FITZGERALD BENSON, D. D. BEQUEATHED BY HIM TO THE LIBRARY OF PRINCETON THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY I ^ ^f^ *- 't^. .* ■4 i ,^ ?■' '.a .:t Q) it i ^ >i" ^' a id a i>r. a 3. 5. AcioMxb P E M SXJ OF RELIGION AND SOCIETY JOHN QUINCY ADAMS, SIXTH PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES, ETC., ETa Notices of I)i5 £ife ani (Eljatacier, JOHN DAVIS AND T. H. BENTON. AI Bl RN : DFRRV AND MILLKR. Entered according to Act of Congress, in th.e year 1848, by WILLIAM H. GRAHAM. in the Clerk'a Office of the District Court for the Southern District of New York. Stereotyped by Baner & PAl*M»a 11 Spruce Street CONTENTS. The Life of Mr. Adams, by the Hon. John Davis, The Character of Mr. Adams, by the Hon. T. H. Benton, 7 12 POEMS. The Wants of Man, . . • 15 The Plague in the Forest, 24 To a Bereaved Mother, 29 Charles the Fifth's Clocks, 32 Retrospection, . . . . . . . . .30 To the Sun-dial, under the Window of the Hall of the House of Representatives of the United States, The Thirteenth Satire of Juvenal, Version of the One Hundred Seventh Psalm, The Hour-glass, Sabbath Morning, The Death of Children, .... Written in Sickness, Hymn for the Twenty-second of December, O God, with goodness all thy own. Sing to Jehovah a new song, O, all ye people, clap your hands, . 38 39 52 54 56 58 60 62 64 65 67 IV CONTENTS. Turn to the stars of heaven thine eyes, O Lord my God ! how great art thou ! O Lord, thy all-discerning eyes. My soul, before thy Maker kneel, . For Thee in Zion waiteth praise. My Shepherd is the Lord on high. Send forth, God, thy truth and light, O judge me, Lord, for thou art just, O heal me, Lord, for I am weak, Blest is the mortal whose delight, . Why should I fear in evil days, . Come, let us sing unto the Lord, . Sing to the Lord a song of praise, Lord of all Worlds, Justice — an Ode, To Sally, ToE B: , . To a Lady, who Presented him with The Lip and the Heart, . Written in an Album, . a Pair of Knit Gloves, 69 71 73 75 77 79 81 82 83 85 87 89 90 92 94 100 103 105 107 108 PUBLISHER'S NOTICE. It is known to all the friends of the late ex-President Adams, that it was bis custom from early manhood to devote his leisure moments to literature; and the fruits of his literary studies, when collected in an appropriate form, will show that he is enti- tled to high consideration among our authors. Among his poems are a translation **' of Wieland's '* Oberon" that has never been published. His *' Dermot IMcMorrogh" failed of a just appreciation, on account of his political relations. Many of his minor pieces have wit, humor, grace, and tenderness, and they are all informed with wisdom and various learning. Some of his '' hymns" are among the finest devotional lyrics in our Ian guage. This collection of Mr. Adams' shorter poems is, of course, incomplete, having been made from the periodicals and miscel- lanies in which they were originally printed ; but the editor has made it as perfect as his opportunities allowed, and he is confi- dent that, in the absence of any other volume of the same kind, he has done an acceptable service to the reading public. New York, Sept., 1848. * See Griflwold'a "Prose writers of America," Article J. Q. Adama SKETCH OF THE LIFE OF MR. ADAMS. BY THE HON. JOHN DAVIS. John Quincy Adams was born in the then Province of INIas- sachusetts, while she was girding herself fur the great Revolu- tionary struggle which was then before her. His parentage is too well known to need even an allusion ; yet I may be pardoned if I say, that his father seemed born to aid in the establishment of our free government, and his mother was a suitable compan- ion and co-laborer of such a patriot. The cradle hymns of iho child were the songs of liberty. The power and competence of man for self-government were the topics which he most frequent- ly heard discussed by the wise men of the day, and the inspira- tion thus caught, gave form and pressure to his after life. Thus early imbued with the love of free institutions, educated by his father for the service of his country, and early led by Washing- ton to its altar, he has stood before the world as one of its emi- nent statesmen. He has occupied, in turn, almost every place of honor which the country could give him, and for more than half a century has been thus identified with its history. Under any circumstances, I should feel myself unecpial to the task of rendering justice to his memory: but, with the debilitating effect of bad health still upon me, I can only with extreme brevity touch upon some of the most prominent features of his life. While yet a young man, he was, in May, 1794, appointed Minister Resident to the States General of the United Nether- 8 LIFE OF MR. ADAMS. lauds. In May, 1796, two years after, he was appointed Minis- ter Plenipotentiary at Lisbon, in Portugal. These honors were conferred on him by George Washington, with the advice and consent of the Senate. In May, 1797, he was appointed Minister Plenipotentiary to the King of Prussia. In March, 1798, and probably while at Berlin, he was appointed a Commissioner, with full powers to negotiate a treaty of amity and commerce with Sweden. After his return to the United States he was elected by the Legislature of Massachusetts a Senator, and discharged the duties of that station in this chamber from the 4th of March, 1803, until June, 1808, when, differing from his colleague and from the State upon a great political question, he resigned his seat. In June, 1809, he was nominated and appointed Minister Plenipo- tentiary to the Court of St. Petersburgh. While at that court, in February, 1811, he was appointed an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, to fill a vacancy occasioned by the death of Judge Cushing, but never took his seat upon the bench. In May, 1813, he, with Messrs. Gallatin and Bayard, was nominated Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to negotiate a treaty of peace with Great Britain, under the media- tion of Russia, and a treaty of commerce with Russia. From causes which it is unnecessary to notice, nothing was accom- plished under this appointment. But afterward, in January, 1814, he, with Messrs. Gallatin, Bayard, Clay, and Russell, were appointed Ministers Plenipotentiary and Extraordinary to nego- tiate a treaty of peace, and a treaty of commerce with Great Britain. This mission succeeded in effecting a pacification, and the name of Mr. Adams is subscribed to the treaty of Ghent. After this eventful crisis in our public affairs, he was, in Feb- ruary, 1815, selected by Mr. Madison to represent the country, and protect its interests, at the Court of St. James ; and he re- mained there as Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotenti- ary until Mr. Monroe became President of the United States. LIFE OF MR. ADAMS. 9 On the 5th of Marcn, 1817, at the commencement of the new administration, he was appointed Secretary of State, and con- tmued in the office while that genlleman was at the head of the administration. In 18"25, he was elected his successor, and discharged the duties of President for one term, ending on the third of March, 1829. Here followed a brief period of repose from public service, and Mr. Adams retired to his family mansion at Qiiincy ; but was elected a member of the House of Representatives, from the district in which he lived, at the next election which occurred after his return to it, and took his seat in December, 1831. He retained it, by successive elections, to the day of his death. I have not ventured, on this occasion, beyond a bare enume- ration of the high places of trust and confidence which have been conferred upon the deceased. The service covers a period of more than half a century ; and what language can I employ which will portray more forcibly the great merits of the deceas- ed, the confidence reposed in him by the public, or the ability with which he discharged the duties devolved upon him, than by this simple narration of recorded facts ? An ambitious man could not desire a more emphatic eulogy. Mr. Adams, however, was not merely a statesman, but a ripe, accomplished scholar, who, during a life of remarkably well- directed industry, made those great acquirements which adorned his character, and gave to it the manly strength of wisdom and intelligence. As a statesman and patriot, he will rank among the illustrious men of an age prolific in great names, and greatly distinguished for its progress in civilization. The productions of his pen are proofs of a vigorous mind, imbued with a profound knowledge of what it investigates, and of a memory which was singularly retentive and capacious. But his character is not made up of those conspicuous qualities alone. He will be remembered for the virtues of private life 10 LIFE OF MR. ADAMS. for his elevated moral example, for his integrity, for his devotion to his duties as a Christian, as a neighbor, and as the head of a family. In all these relations, few persons have set a more steadfast or brighter example, and few have descended to the grave where the broken ties of social and domestic affection have been more sincerely lamented. Great as may be the loss to the public of one so gifted and wise, it is by the family that his death will be most deeply felt. His aged and beloved part- ner, who has so long shared the honors of his career, and to whom all who know her are bound by the ties of friendship, will believe that we share her grief, mourn her bereavement, and sympathize with her in her affliction. It is believed to have been the earnest wish of his heart to die, like Chatham, in the midst of his labors. It w^as a sublime thought, that where he had toiled in the house of the nation, in hours of the day devoted to its service, the stroke of death should reach him. and there sever the ties of love and patriot- ism which bound him to earth. He fell in his seat, attacked by paralysis, uf which he had before been a subject. To describe the scene which ensued would be impossible. It was more than the spontaneous gush of feeling which all such events call forth, so much to the honor of our nature. It was the expression of reverence for his moral worth, of admiration for his great intel- lectual endowments, and of veneration for his age and public services. All gathered round the sufferer, and the strong sym- pathy and deep feeling which were manifested, showed that the business of the House (which was instantly adjourned) was for- gotten amid the distressing anxieties of the moment. He was soon removed to the apartment of the Speaker, where he re- mained, surrounded by afflicted friends, till the weary clay re- signed its immortal spirit. '' This is the end of earth !" Brief but emphatic words. They were among the last uttered by the dying Christian. Thus has closed the life of one whose purity, patriotism, tal- ents, and learning, have seldom been seriously questioned. To LIFE OF MR. ADAMS. 11 Bay thai he bad fiiults, would only be declaring that he was hu- man. Lei him who is exempt from error, venture to point them out. In this long career of public life, it would be strange if the venerable man had not met with many who have differed from him in sentiment, or who have condemned his acts. If there be such, let the mantle of oblivion be thrown over each unkind thought. Let not the grave of the " old man eloquent" be desecrated by unfriendly remembrances, but let us yield our homage to his many virtues, and let it be our prayer that we may so perform our duties here, that, if summoned in a like sud- den and appalling manner, we may not be found unprepared or unable to utter his words, "I am composed." THE CHARACTER OF MR ADAMS BY THE HON. T. H. BENTON. The voice of his native State has been heard, through one of the Senators of Massachusetts, announcing the death of her aged and most distinguished son. It is not unfitting or unbecoming in me to second the motion which has been made, for extending the last honors of tlie Senate to him who, forty-five years ago, was a member of this body, who, at the time of his death, was among the oldest members of the House of Representatives, and who, putting the years of his service together, was the oldest of all the members of the American government. The eulogium of Mr. Adams is made in the facts of his life, which the Senator from Massachusetts has so strikingly stated, that, from early manhood to octogenarian age, he has been con stantly and mosi honorably employed in the public service. F r a period of more than fifty years, from the time of his first ap- pointment as minister abroad under Washington, to his last elec- tion to the House of Representatives by the people of his native district, he has been constantly retained in the»public service; and that, not by the favor of a sovereign, or by hereditary title, but by the elections and appointments of republican government. This fact makes the eulogy of the illustrious deceased. For what, except a union of all the qualities which command the esteem and confidence of man, could have ensured a public ser vice so long, by appointments free and popular, and from sources so various and exalted ? Minister many times abroad ; member of this body ; member of the House of Representatives ; cabi CIIAKACTEIi OF MR. ADAMS. 13 uet minister; rresiilent of the United States; siitli lias been the galaxy of his splendid appointments. And what but moral ex- cellence the most perfect ; intellectual ability the most eminent ; fidelity the ra«)st unwavering; service the most useful; could have commanded such a succession of appointments so exalted, from sources so various and so eminent 1 Nothing less could have commanded such a series of appointments ; and accordingly we see the union of all these great qualities in him who has re- ceived them. In this long career of public service, Mr. Adams was distin- guished not only by faithful attention to all the great duties of his Btitions, but to all their less and minor duties. He w^as not the Salamiuian galley, to be launched only on extraordinary occa- sions, but he was the ready vessel, always launched when the duties of his station required it, be the occasion great or small. As President, as cabinet minister, as minister abroad, he exam- ined all questions that came before him, and examined all, in all their parts, in all the minutia) of their detail, as well as in all the vastness of their comprehension. As Senator, and as a member c»f the House of Representatives, the obscure committee-room was as much the witness of his laborious application to the drudg- ery of legislation, as the halls of the two Houses were to the ever ready speech, replete with knowledge, which instnicted all hearers, enlightened all subjects, and gave dignity and ornament to debate. In the observance of all the proprieties of life, Mr. Adams was a most noble and impressive example. He cultivated the minor as well as the greater virtues. Wherever his presence could give aid and countenance to what was useful and honorable to man, there he was. In the exercises of the school and of the col- lege — in the meritorious meetings of the agricultural, mechani- cal, and commercial societies — in attendance upon divine wor- ship — he gave the punctual attendance rarely seen but in those who are free fn)m the weight of public cares. Punctual to every dufy, death found him at the post of duty ; 14 CHARACTER OF MR. ADAMS. and where else could it have found him, at any stage of his ca- reer, for the fifty years of his illostrious public life ? From the time of his first appointment by Washington to his last election by the people of his native town, where could death have found him but at the post of duty ? At that post, in the fullness of age, in the ripeness of renown, crowned with honors, surrounded by his family, his friends, and admirers, and in the very presence of the national representation, ha has been gathered to his fathers, leaving behind him the memory of public services which are the history of his country for half a century, and the example of a life, public and private, w^hich should be the study and the model of the generations of his countrymen. POEMS THE WANTS OF MAN.* ''Man wants Imt little here below, Nor wants that little long." — Goldsmith's Hermit. I. " M\N wants but little here below, Ntir wants that little long." * 'Tis not with me exactly" so, But 'tis so in the song. My wants are many, and if told Would muster many a score ; And were each wish a mint of gold, I still should long for more. * It was written under these circumstances : — General Ogle informed Mr. Adams that several young ladies in his district had requested him to procure Mr. A.'s autograph for them. In accordance with this request, Mr. Adams wrote the following bcautilul poem upon '"The Wants of Man," each attinza upon a aheet of note paper. 16 TllE WANTS OF MAN. II. What first I want is daily bread, And canvas backs and wine ; And all the realms of nature spread Before me when I dine. Four courses scarcely can provide My appetite to quell, W^ith four choice cooks from France, beside. To dress my dinner well. III. What next I want, at heavy cost, Is elegant attire ; — Black sable furs, for winter's frost. And silks for summer's fire. And Cashmere shawls, and Brussels lace My bosom's front to deck, And diamond rings my hands to grace, And rubies for my neck. IV. And then I want a mansion fair, A dwelling house, in style. Four stories high, for wholesome air — A massive marble pile; With halls for banquets and balls, All furnished ricV. and fine ; With stabled studs in fifty stalls, And cellars for my wine. THE WANTS OF MAN. 17 V. I want a garden and a park, My dwelling to surround — A thousand acres (bless the mark), With walls encompassed round — Where flocks may range and herds may low, And kids and lambkins play, And flowers and fruits commingled grow, All Eden to display. VI. I want, when summer's foliage falls, And autumn strips the trees, A house within the city's walls, For comfort and for ease. But here, as space is somewhat scant, And acres somewhat rare. My house in town I only want To occupy a square. VII. I want a steward, butler, cooks; A coachman, footman, grooms, A library of well-bound books. And picture-ganiished rooms; Corregios, Magdalen, and Night, The matron of the chair ; fiuldo's fleet coursers in their flight, And Claudes at least a [)uir. 'J* J8 THE WANTS OF MAN. VIII. I want a cabinet profuse Of medals, coins, and gems; A printing press, for private use, Of fifty thousand ems ; And plants, and minerals, and shells; Worms, insects, fishes, birds; And every beast on earth that dwells In solitude or herds. IX. I want a board of burnished plate. Of silver and of gold ; Tureens of twenty pounds in weight, With sculpture's richest mould ; Plateaus, with chandeliers and lamps, Plates, dishes — all the same ; And porcelain vases, with the stamps Of Sevres, Angouleme. X. And maples, of fair glossy stain, Must form my chamber doors. And carpets of the Wilton grain Must cover all my floors ; My walls, with tapestry bedeck'd. Must never be outdone; And damask curtains must protect Their colors from the sun. THE WANTS OF MAN. 19 xr. And mirrors of the largest pane From Venice must be brought; And sandal-wood, and bamboo cane, For chairs and tables bought ; On all the mantel-pieces, clocks Of thrice-gilt bronze must stand, And screens of ebony and box Invite the stranger's hand. XII. I want (who does not want ?) a wife, Affectionate and fair, To solace all the woes of life. And all ita joys to share ; Of temper sweet, of yielding will. Of firm, yet placid mind, With all my faults to love me still. With sentiment refiu'd. XIII. And as Time's car incessant runs, And Fortune fills my store, I want of daughters and of sods From eight to half a score. I want (alas ! can mortal dare Such bliss on earth to crave ?) That all the girls be chaste and fair — The bf)y8 all wise and brave. 20 THE WANTS OF MAN. XIV. And when my bosom's darling sings, With melody divine, A pedal harp of many strings Must with her voice combine. A piano, exquisitely wrought. Must open stand, apart. That all my daughters may be taught To win the stranger's heart. XV. My wife and daughters will desire Refreshment from perfumes, Cosmetics for the skin require, And artificial blooms. The civit fragrance shall dispense, And treasur'd sweets return ; Cologne revive the flagging sense, And smoking amber burn. XVI. And when at night my weary head Begins to droop and dose, A southern chamber holds my bed. For nature's soft repose ; With blankets, counterpanes, and sheet, Mattrass, and bed of down. And comfortables for my feet, And pillows for my crown. TUE WANTS OF MAN. 21 XVII. I want a warm and faithful friend, To cheer the adverse hour, Who ne'er to flatter will descend. Nor bend the knee to power ; A friend to chide me when I'm wrong, My inmost soul to see ; And that my friendship prove as strong For him, as his for roe. XVIII. I want a kind and tender heart, For others wants to feel ; A soul secure from Fortune's dart, And bosom arm'd with steel ; To bear di\nne chastisement's rod. And mingling in my plan, •Submission to the will of God, Willi charity to man. XIX. I want a keen, observing eye, An ever-listening ear, The truth through all disguise to spy. And wisdom's voice to hear; A tongue, to speak at virtue's need, In Heaven's sublimest strain ; And li{>s, the cause of man to plead, Anil nt'VLT pltTid in vain. 22 THE WANTS OF MAN, XX. I want uninterrupted health, Throughout my long career, And streams of never-failing wealth, To scatter far and near ; The destitute to clothe and feed, Free bounty to bestow ; Supply the helpless orphan^s need, And soothe the widow's woe, XXI. I want the genius to conceive, The talents to unfold, Designs, the vicious to retrieve, The virtuous to uphold ; Inventive power, combining skill, A persevering soul. Of human hearts to mould the will, And reach from pole to pole. XXII. I want the seals of power and place. The ensigns of command. Charged by the people's unbought grace. To rule my native land. Nor crown, nor sceptre would I ask But from my country's will, 3y day, by night, to ply the task Her cup of bliss to fill TTTK WANTS OF MAN. 23 XXIIT. T want the voice of honest praise To follow me behind, And to be thought in future days The friend of human kind ; That after ages, as they rise, Exulting may proclaim, In choral union to the skies. Their blessings on my name XXIV. These are the wants of mortal man ; I cannot want them long, For life itself is but a span. And earthly bliss a song. My last great want, absorbing all, Is, when beneath the sod, And summon'd to my final call. The mercy of my God. XXV. And oh ! while circles in my veins Of life the purple stream. And yet a fragment small remains Of nature*8 transient dream, My soul, in humble hope unscar'd, Forget not thou to pray, That this thy want may be prepared To meet llic .Judgment Day. 24 THE PLAGUE IN THE FOREST. THE PLAGUE IN THE FOREST. Time was, when round the lion's den, A peopled city raised its head ; 'Twas not inhabited by men. But by four-footed beasts instead. The lynx, the leopard, and the bear, The tiger and the wolf, were there ; The hoof-defended steed ; The bull, prepared with horns to gore, The cat with claws, the tusky boar. And all the canine breed. In social compact thus combined, Together dwelt the beasts of prey ; Their murderous weapons all resigned, And vowed each other not to slay. Among them Reynard thrust his phiz ; Not hoof, nor horn, nor tusk was his, For warfare all unfit ; He whispered to the royal dunce, And gained a settlement at once ; His weapon was, — his wit. THE PLAGUE IN THE FOREST. 25 One summer, by some fatal spell, (Plicpbiis was peevish for some scoff,) The plague upou that city fell, And swept the beasts by thousands oflT. The lion, as became his part, Loved his own people from his heart, And taking counsel sage, His peerage summoned to advise And offer up a sacrifice. To soothe Apollo's rage. Quoth lion, " We are sinners all, And even it must be confessed, If among sheep I chance to fall, — I, I am guilty as the rest. To me the sight of lamb is curst, It kindles in my throat a thirst, — I struggle to refrain, — Poor innocent ! his blood so sweet ! His flesh so delicate to eat ! I find resistance vain. " Now to be candid, I must own The sheep are weak and I am strong, But when we find ourselves alone. The sheep have never done me wrong. And, since I purpose to reveal All my (»frenre8, nor conceal 20 THE PLAGUE IN THE FOREST, One trespass from your view ; My appetite is made so keen, That with the sheep the time has been I took, — the shepherd too. '* Then let us all our sins confess. And whosesoe'er the blackest guilt, To ease my people's deep distress, Let his atoning blood be spilt. My own confession now you hear, Should none of deeper dye appear. Your sentence freely give ; And if on me should fall the lot, Make me the victim on the spot, And let my people live." The council with applauses rung. To hear the Codrus of the wood ; Though still some doubt suspended hung, If he would make his promise good, — Quoth Reynard, — " Since the world was madsi Was ever love like this displayed ? Let us like subjects true Swear, as before your feet we fall. Sooner than you should die for all, We all will die for you. *' But please your majesty, I deem, Submissive to your royal grace. THE PLAGUE IN THE FOREST. 27 You hold iu far too liigli esteem That paltry, poltroon, sheepish race ; For oft, reflecting in the shade, I ask myself why sheep were made By all-creating power ? And howsoe'er I tax my mind, This the sole reason I can find, For Hons to devour. *' And as for eating now and then, As well the shepherd as the sheep,— How can that braggart breed of men Expect with you the peace to keep ? Tis time their blustering boast to stem, That all the world was made for them, And prove creation's plan ; Teach them by evidence profiise That man was made for lion's use, Not lions made for man." . And now the noble peers begin, And, cheered with such examples bright, Disclosing each his secret sin, Some midnight murder brought to light; Reynard wais counsel for them all, No crime the assembly could appal. But he could botch with paint : Hark ! as his honeyed accents roll, Each tiger is a gentle soul : Each blood-hound is a saint. 28 THE PLAGUE IN THE FOREST. When each had told his tale in turn, The long-eared beast of burden came And meekly said, *' My bowels yearn To make confession of my shame ; But I remember on a time I passed, not thinking of a crime, A haystack on my way : His lure some tempting devil spread, I stretched across the fence my head, And cropped, — a lock of hay.*' *' Oh, monster ! villain !" Reynard cried,- *' No longer seek the victim, sire ; Nor why your subjects thus have died, To expiate Apollo's ire." The council with one voice decreed ; All joined to execrate the deed, — ** What, steal another's grass !" The blackest crime their lives could show, Was washed as white as virgin enow ; The victim was, — The Ass. TO A BEREAVED MOTHER. 29 TO A BEREAVED MOTHER* Sure, to the mansions of the blest When infant innocence ascends, Some angel, brighter than the rest, The spotless spirit's flight attends. On wings of ecstasy they rise, Beyond where worlds material roll ; Till some fair sister of the skies Receives the unpolluted soul. That inextinguishable beam, With dust united at our birth. Sheds a more dim, discolor'd gleam The more it lingers upon earth. Closed in this dark abode of clay, The stream of glory faintly bums : — Not unobserved, the lucid ray To its own native fount returns. But when the Lord of mortal breath Decrees his bounty to resume, And points the silent shaft of death Which speeds an infant to the tomb — 3' 30 TO A BEREAVED BIOTHER. No passion fierce, nor low desire, Has quenched the radiance of the flame ; Back to its God the living fire Reverts, unclouded as it came. Fond mourner ! be that solace thine ! Let hope her healing charm impart, And soothe, w^ith melodies divine, The anguish of a mother's heart. O, think ! the darlings of thy love, Divested of this earthly clod. Amid unnumber'd saints above, Bask in the bosom of their God. Of their short pilgrimage on earth Still tender images remain : Slill, still they bless thee for their birth, Still filial gratitude retain. Each anxious care, each rending sigh. That wrung for them the parent's breast. Dwells on remembrance in the sky. Amid the raptures of the blest. O'er thee, with looks of love, they bend ; For thee the Lord of life implore ; And oft, from sainted bliss descend. Thy wounded quiet to restore. TO A BEREAVED MOTHEU. •1 Oft, in the stillness of tlie ni^ht, They smooth tlie pillow of thy bed ; Oft, till the morn's returning light, "Still watchful hover o'er thy head. Hark ! in such strains as saints employ, They whisper to thy bosom peace ; Calm the perturbed heart to joy, And bid the streaming sorrow cease. Then dry, henceforth, the bitter tear : Their part and thine inverted see : — Thou wert their guardian angel here. They guardian angels now to thee. 32 CHARLES THE FIFTH's CLOCKS. CHARLES THE FIFTH'S CLOCKS. With Charles the Fifth art thou acquauited, reader ? Of Ferdinand and Isabel the grandson, In ages past of Europe's realms file leader, Among the mightiest of all ages, one. Spain, Germany, his sceptre swayed. With feet victorious over France he trod, Afric' and Italy his laws obeyed. And either India trembled at his nod. Well, reader, this same monarch miglity, Like many of his stamp before, Down to the latest of the set Whose names I leave in blank, as yet ! And with Napoleon you may fill, Or Alexander, as you will ; Charles, seated upon all his thrones, With all his crowns upon his head, Built piles on piles of human bones. As if he meant to reign the sovereign of the dead. He kept the world in uproar forty years, And waded bloody oceans through ; Feasted on widows' and on orphans' tears, And cities sacked, and millions slew. J CHARLES THE fifth's clocks. 33 And all the pranks of conquering heroes play'd, A master workman at the royal trade, The recipe approved time out of mind. To win the hearts of all mankind. But heroes, too, get weary of their trade ; Charles had a conscience, and grew old ; The gout sometimes an ugly visit paid ; A voice within unwelcome stories told, That heroes, just like common men, One day must die ; and then Of what might happen Charles was sore afraid. Of Charles's wars, need little here be said ; Their causes were ambition, avarice, pride, Despotic empire o'er the world to spread, Revenge on Francis, who proclaimed he lied, And chiefly Luther's heresies to quell ; To prove the wrong of Reformation With fire, and sword, and desolation, And save the souls of Protestants from hell. But when the humor came to save his own, Charles stripp'd oflf all his royal robes. Dismissed his double globes, Cast down his crowns, descended from his throne, And with St. Jerome's monks retired, to die alone. Charles had a maggot in the mind. Restless, that needs must be of something thinking f And now, to keep his spirits from sinking. Employment often at a loss to find, Much of his time he spent in prayer ; 1 34 CHARLES THE FIFTh's CLOCKS. In penance for his evil deeds, In saying masses, and in telling beads; In self-chastisement, till he bled A drop for every ton of others shed ; And much bis little garden claim'd his care, In planting cabbages and plucking seeds ; But these were simple occupations, And Charles, so long in empire's toils immersed, So deep in all their intricacies vers'd, Some pastime needed, full of complications. So long his study had been manj His sport, his victim, man, of flesh and blood, That now with art mechanic he began To fashion manakins of wood. Soon he became a skilful mechanician, And made his mimic men with so much art, They made St. Jerome's friars start, And think their royal master a magician, Leagued with the mother of all evil ; Like Dr. Faustus, soul-bound to the devil. At last the fancy seized his brain, Of perfect instruments for keeping time. Watches and clocks he made, but all in vain ; He never could succeed to make them chime. With choice chronometers he lin'd his cell ; No two at once would ever ring the bell. Now mark the moral of my tale. Which flash 'd in sunbeams upon Charles's aoul ; When he whose chisel could prevail CHARLKS THE FIFTH S CLOCKS. 85 Man's outward actions to control, So that his puppets seemed as good As living men, though made of wood, Yet ever baffled found his skill To mould two watches to his will. He smote his bosom with a sigh, Exclaiming, " What a dolt was I, By force constraining men to think alike. And cannot make two clocks together st H^i^^ 36 RETROSPECTION. RETROSPECTION. When life's fair dream has passed away To three score years aud ten, Before we turn again to clay The lot of mortal men, 'Tis wise a backward eye to cast On life's revolving scene, With calmness to review the past And ask what we have been. The cradle and the mother's breast Have vanish'd from the mind, Of joys the sweetest and the best, Nor left a trace behind. Maternal tenderness and care Were lavished all in vain — Of bliss, whatever was our share No vestiges remain. Far distant, like a beacon light On ocean's boundless waste, A single spot appears in sight Yet indistinctly traced. RETROSPKCTION. 37 Some mimic stage's thrilling cry, Some agony of fear, Some painted wonder to the eye, Some trumpet to the ear. These are the first events of life That fasten on the brain. And through the world's incessant strife Indelible remain. They form the link with ages past From former worlds a gleam ; With murky vapors overcast, The net-work of a dream. 4 38 TO THE SUN-DIAL. TO THE SUN-DIAL, UNDER THE WINDOW OF THE HALL OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENT- ATIVES OF THE UNITED STATES. Thou silent herald of Time's silent flight ! Say, could'st thou speak, what warning voice were thine T Shade, who canst only show how others shine ! Dark, sullen witness of resplendent light In day's broad glare, and when the moontide bright Of laughing fortune sheds the ray divine. Thy ready favors cheer us — but decline The clouds of morning and the gloom of night. Yet are thy counsels faithful, just, and wise ; They bid us seize the moments as they pass — Snatch the retrieveless sunbeam as it flies, Nor lose one sand of life's revolving glass — Aspiring still, with energy sublime, By virtuous dee ds to give eternity to Time. THE THIRTEENTH SATIRE OF JUVENAL. 39 THE THIRTEENTH SATIRE OF JUVENAL.* From Virtue's paths, when hapless men depart, The first avenger is the culprit's heart ; There sits a judge, from whose severe decree No strength can rescue, and no speed can flee ; A judge, unbiassed by the quibbling tribe ! A judge, whom India's treasures cannot bribe. Calvin, what thinkest thou the world will say, To see thy faithless friend his trust betray 1 Yet, to thy fortune, is the breach but small ; Thy purse will scarcely feel the loss at all ; Nor are examples of such baseness rare ! 'Tis what in common with thee thousands bear ; A single drop of water from the deep ! A single grain from fortune's boundless heap. Excessive sorrow let us then restrain : A man should measure by the wound his pain ! • The Aboument. — Calvinus had deposited a flum of money In the hands of a friend, who, upon being required to restore it, denied having CTcr received the trust. Calvinus appears to have been too much affected at this incident, and Juvenal addressed to him this Satire, containing topic* of consolation to Calvinus for his loss, and of reproof for the extreme •ontibility be had manifested upon th« occasioo. 40 THE THIRTEENTH SATIRE OF JUVENAL. Though keen thy sense, the smallest ill to meet, Must thy blood boil to find thy friend a cheat ? The sacred trust committed he denies — But, at thy age, can treachery surprise ? When threescore winters thou hast left behind, To long experience art thou still so blind ? Great, and prevailing is the sacred lore. Which Wisdom, Fortune's victress, has in store ; But we consider likewise those as blest. Who meet the woes of life with placid breast ; Bred in life's school, who bend beneath her sway, Nor from her yoke would draw their necks away. Is there a day so festive through the year, But frequent frauds and perfidies appear ? A single day, but sees triumphant vice With lurking dagger, or with loaded dice ? Small is the train who honor's path pursue ; The friends of virtue are a chosen few — So few, that gathering o'er the spacious earth A full collection of untainted worth, Scarce could you find a number, free from guile, To match the gates of Thebes, or mouths of Nile. Such are the horrors of our modem times, They bleach the blackness of all former crimes. The age of iron has long since been past, And four lesides, each blacker than the last ; A ninth succeeds, compared with which, of old, The age of iron was an age of gold ; An age, which nature dares not even name, THE TUIRTEENTH SATIRE OF JUVENAL. 41 Nor yields a metal to express its shame. The faith of gods and men our lips attest, Loud as a great mau's pimps applaud his jest. But hoary infant; art thou still to know With what bright charms another's treasures glow T Go ! fetch the rattle of thy childhood, go ! What peals of laughter rise on every side ! How all the town thy simpleness deride ! To see thee ask, and with a serious brow, That any mortal be not perjured now ; To see thee now, of any man require Faith in a god, and terror of hell-fire. These tenets truly our forefathers held. Ere from this throne old Saturn was expelled. Before he laid his diadem aside. And in the rustic sickle took a pride. While Ida*8 caves were yet the haunts of Jove, Nor virgin Juno, conscious of his love. No revels then were ever seen to rise Among the heavenly tenants of the skies ; No Trojan boy, no Hebe's form divine, To fill the goblets with inflaming wine ; With unwashed hands, no smutty Vulcan came To quaff the nectar, from his anvil's flame. f^ch god was then content to dine alone, Nor was our motley mob of god-heads known ; Small were the numbers of the blest abode ; Nor weighed down wretched Atlas with the load ; No gloomy Pluto ruled the realms of shade, 4* 4i THE THIRTEENTH SATIRE OF JUVENAL. Nor yet had ravished the Sicih'an maid. Hell then no wheel, no rock, no furies bore, No vulture's pounces dripped with ghostly gore But cheerful spirits ranged the valleys gay. Nor of infernal monarchs owned the sway. A fraud was held a w^onder in that age ; And in the presence of a hoary sage, Had any younger man to rise forborne, However blest with ampler stores of corn. To them a crime of dye so black it seemed, As by naught else but death could be redeemed. The like respect by beardless boys was shown To those whose faces were but just o'ergrown ; Such awe four years precedence could engage, And youth's first blossom bore the fruits of age . Now, if your friend should not betray his trust, But give you back your coins with all their rust, It seems a miracle of higher strain, Than all the Tuscan sybil books contain, And, in memorial of so strange a deed, A votive lamb should on the altar bleed. If now mine eyes a man of virtue greet, I think a double-headed child to meet Not more surprising were it to behold A plough-share dig up fish, or mules with foal ; Rain fall in pebbles, or in wildest shapes Bees, clustering on a temple's roof like grapes, Or rivers, rushing with tremendous sweep. To pour a milky torrent in the deep. THE THIRTEENTH SATIRE OF JUVENAL. 43 The loss of fifty ducats yon deplore, See your uext neighbor filched of ten limes more ; By a like fniud behold a third complain His loss of all his strong-box could contain. So prone, so ready are we to despise The ^iI)gle testimonial of the skies, Unless a mortal sanction too be given. And man confirm the evidence o{ Heaven ! Look ! with what seeming punty of breast And steady face he dares his faith attest Swears by the solar beams, the bolts of Jove, And thy full quiver, huntress of the grove ; By Mars' lance, Apollo's arrows drear, By Neptune's trident, and Minerva's spear, Alcides' bow, and whatsoe'er beside From all heaven's arsenal can be supplied ; And, if a father — sooner be my food My infant's flesh, he cries, my drink his blood ! There are who deem that Fortune governs all ; That no Supreme Disposer rules the ball ; That Nature's energies alone suffice To make successive days and seasons rise ; Hence, with intrepid brow, such men as these To sanction falsehood, any altar seize. Another trembles lest the vengeance due, Of gods offended, should his crimes pursue ; Believes in gods, yet stains with guilt his soul, Aud thus attempts his terrors to control *• Deal with my body as thou wilt," ho crie^, 44 THE THIRTEENTH SATIRE OF JUVENAL. ** Great Isis ! and with blindness strike my eyes, If peacefully, though blind, I may but hold The price of perjury, the pilfered gold. What is a palsied side, a broken leg, Compared with indigence, compelled to beg The fleetest runner would, beyond a doubt, Give all his swiftness for a wealthy gout ; Nay, should he hesitate in such a case, Send for his doctor and his waistcoat lace ; For what can all his racing talent boot ? A hungry stomach and a nimble foot. And what avails the olive round his head. While puffed with glory, he must pine for bread 7 The anger of the gods, though great, is slow ; Nor will their mercy doom to endless woe ; And if they punish every guilty soul, Before my turn comes what long years may roll! Perhaps their wrath is pacified with ease, And oft they overlook such faults as these ; For the same deed, as good or ill luck reigns, One wields a sceptre, and one hangs in chains.* Thus having lulled his conscience to repose. Before you to the sacred fane he goes ; Nay, drags you thither, with indignant ear The oath of fraud and pei-fidy to hear ; For, with the multitude, guilt's face of brass For conscious innocence will often pass. See ! how he lays his hand upon his heart, And like a finished actor plays his part ! THE THIRTEKNTH SATIRE OF JUVENAL. 45 You, pliHuler'd of your trust, with piercing cries, la vain, with voice hke Stentor, rend the skies, Or rather, hke old Ht)mer'8 Mars exclaim, " Hear'st thou all this, great Jove, in silence tame, When all thy fury, at such vows accurst, From lips of brass or marble ought to burst 7 Else, wherefore bums our incense at thy shrine ? Why, on thy altars, bleed the calves or swine ? Since no distinction, I perceive, were just. Between your statues and a dancer's bust." Yet bear what comfort an unlettered friend, Thoui:h from no school derived, can recommend ; \Vho never made the cynic rule his own, Nor that of stoics, differing but in gown; Nor yet has learned the maxims to obey Of Epicurus, in his garden gay. When dire diseases rack your feeble frame. Call fur some doctor of distinguished fame ; But in a case like yours, of trifling pain. To Philip's pupil you may trust your vein. Expressly show that since the world began A deed so base was never done by man ; Then, I object no longer, tear your hair. And beat your face and bosom in despair; At such a dread misfortune close your gates, With lamentation loud accuse the Fates, Heave deeper groan.^, tears more abundant shed For money pilfered than a father dead. No man in this cfise f«?igns of grief r\ show; 46 THE THIRTEEXTIl SATIKS OF JUVENAL. Content to wear the formal suits of woe, And fret his eyes to strain a seeming tear, No ! for lost gold our sorrows are sincere ! But if the like complaint with yours you meet, Where'er you turn your eyes in every street ; If every day shows men who boldly dare Their own hand-writing to a bond forswear ; Proved by ten witnesses their deed deny. And gravely give their solemn seal the lie, Must thou from common miseries be free ? And art thou formed of better clay than we ? Thou, favored by the gods with special grace ; We, the vile refuse of a worthless race ? Thine eyes to crimes of deeper baseness turn. And thy small loss to bear with patience learn ; See this man's slave with robber bands conspire, Behold that mansion blaze with bidden fire : See, from yon antique temple stolen away, The massive goblet, venerably gray ! Gifts from which nations once derived renown. Or some old monarch's consecrated crown. Are these not there 1 behold the villain ply To rasp the gilding from Alcides' thigh. Strike off the nose from Neptune's aged form, Or strip the bracelet from young Castor's arm ; Why should he dread of minor gods the frown. Wont the whole thunderer bravely to melt down *? The guilt of blood see other wretches share, And (.me the poison sell, and one prepare I THE THIRTr.ENTII SATIRE OF JUVENAL. 47 See, to a harmless, hapless, monkey lied, Plunged in the briny deep the parricide; Yet in this list how small a part appear Of all the crimes that meet the Prjplor's ear, And he from Hesper's dawn till closing day must hear. The manners of mankind wouldst thou be taught, With full instruction that one house is fraught ; But a few days attend the trials there, And then to call thyself unhappy, dare. Who feels astonishment affect his mind Amidst the Alps a tumid throat to find 7 Or who behold in Meroe, with surprise, A dug surpass the child it feeds in size 7 On seeing Germans, who would think to stare At azure eves and golden-colored hair, And crisped locks, with rnntments which distill? Such they were made by Nature's sovereign wiU Clap but a cloud of Tliracian cranes their wings, Lo! to his arms the pigmy warrior springs! But soon, unequal to resistance, flies, Clenched in relentless clutches through the skies. Among ourselves a sight like this w^ould make Your sides, no doubt, with ceaseless laughter shake ; But there, though common, 'tis no laughing sight. Where the whole tribe is not a foot in height, ** But shall the wretch all penalties evade, For friendship perjur'd, and for trust betrayed?'* Suppose him seized, in chains, and at your will, (What would vindirlive anger more?) to kill ; 48 THE THIRTEENTH SATIUE OF JUVENAL. Yet would your damage still the same remain, Nor could his death restore the trust again ; How poor a comfort, to relieve your woe. The blood that from his headless trunk would flow ! " But vengeance, even more than life, is sweet ;" Yes ! to those minds of heedless, headlong heat, Which blaze at every spark, however small. And often kindle without cause at all : Not Thales thus, nor thus Chrysippus speaks, Not thus the best and wisest of the Greeks — The godlike Socrates — who, galled with chains, To share the hemlock with his foe disdains. True wisdom points to virtue's path, and frees From every vice and error, by degrees ; The noble soul above revenge we find, 'Tis the poor pleasure of a puny mind : If proof you need, contemplate female spite ; In vengeance none like women take delight. But, canst thou deem from all chastisement freed Men who beneath the scourge of conscience bleed? By scorpions stung, their teeth in fury gnash, And writhe with anguish at the secret lash ? Oh ! trust me, friend, the judge in hell below Cannot on crimes inflict so deep a woe As that poor mortal feels, by guilt oppressed. Doomed day and night to bear the witness in his breast. A Spartan once to Delphi's fane repaired. And to consult the god's opinion dared. Whether he might retain entrusted gold. THE THIUTEF.NTII SA/IKR OF JfJVENAL. 49 And wilh a solemn onlli the fr.iiiJ uplioKl ! Tho priestess answereil, wilh imligimnt air, The doubt aloue its piiiiishmeut should bear ; Th' insulting doubt that in the question lies, If great Apollo would a crime advise. The frightened Spartan, by compulsion just, From fear, not virtue, straight restored the trust ; Yet soon he found, that, from the sacred fane, His doom deserved was not denounced in vain : Himself, his offspring, all his hapless race. Swept from the earth, left not behind a trace. By such hard pciinlties must men atone The fault of meditated wrong alone ; He guilt incurs who merely guilt intends — How much more he, then, who in act offends r Perpetual anguish preys upon his breast, Nor, even at his meals, allows him rest. His sickened palate, nauseating, heaves At every morsel that his mouth receives ; Loathes the fine fragrance of long-hoarded vines, The cordial drop, distilled from Alban wines ; While his knit brows, if choicer still you bring, Of sour Falernian seem to mark the sting. At night, if when his limbs have long been spread. In restless tossings, over all his bed. Short slumber comes at last to close his eyes, In dreams he sees the hallowed temple rise Before him violated altars stand, Afjd gods tjlVcMded. witli ujilified h.irid ; 50 THE THIRTEENTH SATIRE OF JUVENAL. But, what his breast with torture chiefly rends Larger than life thy sacred^form ascends, With deadly fears his dastard soul to press, And force his lips their falsehood to confess. Heaven^s earliest murmurs cause his heart to fail, And every flash of lightning turns him pale; By storms or chance impelled, no bolts can fly, He thinks, but vengeance hurls it from on high. If, yet unhurt, he sees one storm pass o'er. He only trembles at the next the more. If in his side he feels the slightest pains. Or sleepless fever riot in his veins, The weapons of a god he fancies these. Sent to afl3ict his body with disease. For health he dares not ask the powers divine, With votive ofierings at the sacred shrine ; For oh I what mercy can the guilty mind, In illness, hope from angry heaven to find 1 What bleeding victims for his crimes atone, Whose life were not more precious than his own T With what a changeful, sickliness of soul, The varying tempers of the wicked roll ! Crimes to commit how bold they are and strong ! But soon they learn to know the right from wrong. Yet stubborn nature all amendment spurns, And to her evil practices returns. For what offender ever yet was found Who to his vices could prescribe a bound ? The blush of shame, when once expelled the face, THE THIRTEENTH SATIRE OF JUVENAL. 51 Who erer saw it reassume its place 7 In all thy life's experience, hast thou known A man contented with one crime alone *? The wretch who wronged you, in the toils soon caught, Shall to some prison's gloomy cell be brought ; Or to some dreary rock of banishment, For famous exiles noted, shall bo sent ; Then shall the sufferings of your perjured foo Sweet consolation on your soul bestow ; And then, at last, shall your rejoicing mind Confess the gods are neither deaf nor blind. 52 VERSION OF THE HUNDRED SEVENTH PSALM. VERSION OF THE ONE HUNDRED SEVENTH PSALM. O THAT the race of men would raise Their voices to their heavenly King, And with the sacrifice of praise The glories of Jehovah sing ! — Ye navigators of the sea, Your course on ocean's tides who keep, And there Jehovah's wonders see, His wonders in the briny deep ! He speaks ; conflicting whirlwinds fly ; The waves in swelling torrents flow; They mount, aspire to heaven on high ; They sink, as if to hell below : Their souls with terror melt away ; They stagger as if drunk with wine Their skill is vain, — to thee they pray ; O, save them, Energy divine ! He stays the storm; the waves subside; Their hearts with rapture are inspired ; Soft breezes waft them o'er the tide, In gladness, to their port desired : VEKSroN OF THE HUNDRED SEVENTH PSALM. 63 O ihal mankiml the song would raise, Jehovah's goodness to proclaim ! Assembled nations shout his praise, Assembled elders bless his name ! 5* 3S'^M 51 THE HOUR-GLASS. THE HOUR-GLASS. Alas I how swift the moments fly ! , How flash the years along ! Scarce here, yet gone already by, The burden of a song. See childhood, youth, and manhood pass, And age, with furrowed brow ; rime was — Time shall be — drain the gli But where in Time is now 7 Time is the measure but of change ; No present hour is found ; The past, the fiiture, fill the range Of Time's unceasing round. Where, then, is now ? In realms above, With God's atoning Lamb In regions of eternal love, Where sits enthroned I AM. Then, pilgrim, let thy joys and tears On Time no longer lean ; But henceforth all thy hopes and fears From earth's affections wean : J THE HOUR-GLASS. 55 To God let votive acceiita rise; AViih truth, witn virtue, live ; So all the bliss tluit Time denies Eternity shall give. 56 SABBATH MORNING. SABBATH MORNING. 55 Hark ! 'tis the holy temple's bell ; The voice that summons me to prayer : My heart, each roving fancy quell ; Come, to the house of God repair. 44 There, w^hile, in orison sublime, Souls to the throne of God ascend, Let no unhallowed child of time Profane pollutions with them blend. 44 How for thy wants canst thou implore, Crave for thy frailties pardon free, Of praise the votive tribute pour, Or bend, in thanks, the grateful knee,— 66 If, from the awfnl King of kings. Each bauble lures thy soul astray ; If to this dust of earth it clings. And, fickle, flies from heaven away ; SABBATH MORNING. 57 Pure as iho blessed seraph's vow, O, let the sacred concert rise ; Intent with humble rapture bow, Adore the ruler of the skies. Bid earth-bora atoms all depart ; Within thyself collected, fall ; And give one day, rebellious heart, Unsullied to the Lord of all 68 THE DEATH OF CHILDREN. THE DEATH OF CHILDREN. Sure, to the mansions of the blest When infant innocence ascends, Some angel brighter than the rest The spotless spirit's flight attends. On wings of ecstasy they rise, Beyond where worlds material roll Till some fair sister of the skies Receives the unpolluted soul There, at the Almighty Father's hand, Nearest the throne of living light, The choirs of infant seraphs stand. And dazzling shine, where all are bright. That inextinguishable beam. With dust united at our birth. Sheds a more dim, discolored gleam, The more it lingers upon earth. 4 Ji^ THE DEATH OF CHILDREN. 50 CK)st'd in this dark abode of clay, Tlio stream of glory faintly burns, Nor unobscured the lucid ray To its own native fount returns. But when the Lord of mortal breath Decrees his bounty to resume. And points the silent shaft of death, Which speeds an infant to the tomb — No passion fierce, no low desire. Has quenched the radiance of the flame ; Back to its God tho living fire Beturus unsullied, as it camo f>0 WRITTEN IN SICKNESS. WRITTEN IN SICKNESS. Lord ot all worlds, let thanks and praise To thee forever fill my soul ; With blessings thou hast crowned my day*- My heart, my head, my hand control : O, let no vain presumption rise, No impious murmur in my heart, To crave the boon thy will denies, Or shrink from ill thy hands impart. Thy child am I, and not an hour, Revolving in the orbs above, But brings some token of thy power, But brings some token of thy love : And shall this bosom dare repine, In darkness dare deny the dawn, Or spurn the treasures of the mine, Because one diamond is withdrawn ? The fool denies, the fool alone, Thy being. Lord, and boundless might, Denies the firmament, thy throne, Denies the sun's meridian light ; WRITTEN IN SICKNESS. 61 Denies the fiisliiou of his frame, The voice ho hears, the breath he draws ; O idiot atheist ! to proclaim Effects unnumbered without cause. Matter and mind, mysterious one, Are man's for threescore years and ten ; Where, ere the thread of life was spun ? Where, w^hen reduced to dust again ? All-seeing God, the doubt suppress; The doubt thou only canst relieve ; My soul thy Saviour-Son shall bless, Fly \D thy gospel, and believe. 6 62 HYMN FOR THE TWENTY-SECOND OF DECEMBER. HYMN FOR THE TWENTY-SECOND OF DECEMBER. When o'er the billow-heaving deep, The fathers of our race, The precepts of their God to keep, Sought here their resting-place — That gracious God their path prepared, Preserved from every harm. And still for their protection bared His everlasting arm. His breath, inspiring every gale, Impels them o'er the main ; His guardian angels spread the sail. And tempests hov^rl in vain. For them old ocean's rocks are smoothed ; December's face grows mild ; To vernal airs her blasts are soothed, And all their rage beguiled. I HYMN FOR THE TWENTY-SECOND OF DECEMBER. ii'S When Famine rolls her haggard eyes, His ever-bounteous hand Abundance from the sea supplies, And treasures from the sand. Nor yet his tender mercies cease ; His overruling plan Inclines to gentleness and peace The heart of savage man. And can our stony bosoms be To all these wonders blind 7 Nor swell with thankfulness to thee, O Parent of mankind ? All-pracious God, inflame our zeal ; Dispense one blessing more ; Grant us thy boundless love to feol, Thy goodness to adore. JOA. 64 O GOD, WITH GOODNESS ALL THY OWN. O GOD, WITH GOODNESS ALL THY OWN. O God, with goodness all thy own, In mercy cause thy face to shine ; So shall thy ways on earth be known, Thy saving health and power divine: O, let the gladdening nations sing. And praise thy name with hallowed mirth, For thou of righteousness art King, And rulest all the subject earth. O, let the people praise the Lord ; The people all thy praise express ; And earth her plenty shall afford. And God, yea, our own God, shall bless ; Our God his blessing shall bestow ; His power, his goodness, shall appear ; And all the ends of earth shall know And worship him with holy fear. bJNG TO JEHOVAH A MEW SONG. 05 SING TO JEHOVAH A NEW SONG. Sing to Jehovah a new song. For deeds of wouder he hath done ; His arm in holiness is strong ; His hand the victory hath won : The Lord salvation hath made known ; nis goodness o'er the world extends; His truth to Israel's house is shown; His power to earth's remotest ends. Shout to Jehovah, all the earth, Break forth in joy, exult, and sing; Let voice, let clarion speak your mirth. Trumpet and harp proclaim your King : Roar, ocean, to thy lowest deep; Shout, earth, and all therein that dwell ; Floods, clap your hands as on you sweep : Mountains, the choral anthem swell. Let heaven, and earth, and sea, combine, Jehovah's holy name to bless ; Creation owns his power divine, The universe his righteouauess ; 66 SING TO JEHOVAH A NEW SONG. He comes in judgment to display- Resistless right and boundless grace The world with equity to sway, And blessings shed o'er all our race. O, ALL YE FEOPLE CLAP YOUR HANDS. 67 O, ALL YE PEOPLE, CLAP YOUR HANDS. O, ALL ye people, clap your hands, Shout unto God with holy mirth ; In fearful majesty he stands ; He is the Monarch of the earth : Before us nations he subdues, And prostrates kingdoms at our feet ; For us a portion he shall choose In favored Jacob's chosen seat. God, with a shout, to heaven ascends; Sing praises to our God and King : Hark ! the loud tempest ether rends ; Sing praises, praises, praises sing. His power Creation's orb sustains ; Sing hymns of praise to him alone : Jehovah o'er the nations reigns ; He sits upon his holy throne. See gathering princes, men of might. In crowds from earth's remotest shore, With us in worship all unite, And Abraham's God with ui* adore : 68 O, ALL YE PEOPLE, CLAP YOUR HANDS. The shields of earth are all his own, And, far o'er human ken sublime, Eternal pillars prop his throne, Beyond the bounds of space and time. TURN TO THE STARS OF HEAVEN THINE EYES. 69 TURN TO THE STARS OF HEAVEN THINE EYES. Turn to the stars of heaven thiue eyes, And God shall meet thee there ; Exalt thy vision to the skies, His glory they declare ; Day speaks to day, night teaches night. The wonders of their frame, And all in harmony unite Their Maker to proclain. Earth has no language, man no speech, But gives their voice a tongue ; Their words the world's foundations reach; Their hymn in heaven is sung ; Pavilioned there in glory bright. As from a blooming bride. The sun comes forth in floods of light, With all a bridegroom's pride. Glad, like a giant for the race. His orient flame ascends. Soars through the boundless realms of spare, AjuI in the wi'st (h'scrnds; 70 TURN TO TflE STARS OF HEAVEN THINE EYES. His heat the vital lamp bestows, The firmament pervades, In ocean^s darkest caverns glows, And earth's profoundest shades. O LORD MY GOn ! HOW GRKAT AKT THOU ! 71 O LORD MY GOD! HOW GREAT ART TIIOU ! / 55 O Lord my God ! how great art thou ! With honor and with glory crowned ; Light's dazzling splendors veil thy brow, And gird the universe around. 66 Spirits and angels thou hast made ; Thy mluisicrs a naming fire ; By thee were earth's foundations laid ; At thy rebuke the floods retire. 44 Thine are the fountains of the deep ; By thee their waters swell or fail ; Up to the mountain's summit creep, Or shrink beneath the lowly vale. 44 Thy fingers mark their utmost bound; That bound the waters may not pass; Their moisture swells the tt^eming ground, And paintij ihc valleys o'er with grass. 72 O LORD MY god! HOW GPtEAT ART THOU ! The waving harvest, Lord, is thitie ; The vineyard, and the olive's juice ; Corn, v^^ine, and oil, by thee combine, Life, gladness, beauty, to produce. The moon for seasons thou hast made, The sun for change of day and night ; Of darkness thine the deepest shade, And thine the day's meridian light. O Lord, thy works are all divine ; In wisdom hast thou made them all ; Earth's teeming multitudes are thine ; Thine — peopled ocean's great and small. All these on thee for life depend ; Thy spirit speaks, and they are born ; They gather what thy bounties send ; Thy hand of plenty fills the horn. Thy face is hidden — they turn pale, With terror quake, v^^ith anguish burn ; Their breath thou givest to the gale ; They die, and to their dust return. And thou, my soul, with pure delight. Thy voice to bless thy Maker raise ; His praise let morning sing to night, And night to morn repeat his praise. O LORD, THY AI.F. MSCKRNING EYES. 73 I O LORD, TIIY ALL-DISCERNINQ EYES. O Lord, thy all-let of renown, The laurel or the mural crown, For living Virtue's head. VIII. Here, to defend his native land. His sword the patriot draws ; Here the mock hero lifts his hand To aid a tyrant's cause. When, meeting on the field of blood They pour the sanguinary flood, Whose triumph waves unfurled 1 Alas ! let Cheronea tell ; Or plains where godlike Brutus fell, Or Caesar won the world ! IX. In arms, when hostile nations rise And blood the strife decides, Tis brutal force awards the prize, Her head while Justice hides. But short is force's triumph base: Justice unveils her awful face, And hurls him from the steep; Strips from his brow the wreath of fkme, 9 JUSTICE. And after ages load his name With curses loud and deep. X. Behold the lettered sage devote The labors of his mind, His country's welfare to promote . And benefit mankind. Lo ! from the blackest caves of hell, A phalanx fierce of monsters fell, Combine their fearful bands — His fame asperse, his toils assail ; Till Justice holds aloft her scale And shields him from their hands. XI. Of excellence, in every clime, 'Tis thus the lot is cast; Passion usm-ps the present time, But Justice rules the past : Envy, and selfishness, and pride, The passing hours of man divide With unresisted sway ; But Justice comes, with noiseless tread, O'ertakes the filmy spider's thread And sweeps the net away. XII. Eternal Spirit ! Lord supreme Of blessing and of woe ! JT'STICK. 09 Of Justice, ever living Btrenm ! Whose mercies ceaseless flow — Make me, while earth shall be my spau, Just to my fellow-mortal, man, Whate'er my lot may be. And when this transient scene is o'er, Pure let my deathless spirit soar, And Mercy find from thee. 100 TO SALLY, TO SALLY. " Integer vitse, scelerisque purua Non eget Mauris jaculis, neque arcu.** The man in righteousness array 'd, A pure and blameless liver, Needs not the keen Toledo blade, Nor venom-freighted quiver. What though he wind his toilsome way O'er regions wild and weary — Through Zara's burning desert stray ; Or Asia's jungles dreary : What though he plough the billowy deep By lunar light, or solar. Meet the resistless Simoon's sweep. Or iceberg circumpolar. In bog or quagmire deep and dank, His foot shall never settle ; He mounts the summit of Mont Blanc, Or Popocatapetl. On Chimborazo's breathless height, He treads o'er burning lava ; TO SALLY. 101 Or BnufTs the Bohan Upas blight, Tlie tleathful plant of Java. Through eveiy peril he shall pass, By Virtue's shield protected ; And still by Truth's unerring glass His path shall be directed. Else wherefore was it, Thursday last, While strolling down the valley Defenceless, musing as I pass'd A canzonet to Sally ; A wolf, with moulh protruding snout, Forth from the thicket bounded — I clapped my hands and raised a shout - He heard — and fled — confounded. Tangier nor Tunis never bred An animal more crabbed ; Nor Fez, diy nurse of lions, fed A monster half so rabid. Nor Ararat so fierce a beast Has seen, since days of Noah ; Nor strong, more eager for a feast, The fell constrictor boa. Oh ! place me where the solar beam Has scorch'd all verdure vernal ; Or on the polar verge extreme, Block'd up with ice eternal — 10-2 TO SALLY. Still shall my voice's tender lays Of love remain unbroken ; And still my charming Sally praise, Sweet smiling and sweet spoken. T(> E E . ju:j TO E B On ! wlierefure, Lady, was my lot Cast from thy own so tar ? Why, by kind Fortune, live we not Beneath one blessed star ? For, had thy thread of life and mine But side by side been spun. My heart had panted to entwine The tissue into one. And why should Time conspire To sever us in twain ? And wherefore have I run my race, And cannot start again ? Thy thread, how long ! how short is mine ! Mine spent — thine scarce begun : Alas ! we never can entwine The tissue into onk But, take my blessings on tliy name — The blessing of a sire; Not from a lover's furnace flame — 'Tis from a holier tire : 104 TO E B 4 A thread unseen beside of thine By fairy forms is spun — And holy hands shall soon entwine The tissue into one. TO A LADY. 105 TO A LADY WHO TRESENTED HIM A PAIR OF KMT GLOVES. Who shall say that public life Is nothing but discordant strife 1 And he whose heart is tuned to love, Tender and gentle as the dove, Must whet his talons, night and day, For confliclfl with the birds of prey 7 This w^orld is fashioned, Lady fair, Of Joy and Sorrow, P2ase and Care; Of sudden changes, small and great; Of upward and of downward fate : And whoso bends his mood to trace The annals of man's fallen race, May sigh to find that nature's plan Is ruthless war from man to man. But nature, cruel to be kind. Not to war only man consigned ; But gave him woman on the spot, To mingle pleasure in his lot : That if with man war cannot cease, With woman reigna eternal peace. 106 TO A LADY. Fair Lady, I have lived on earth Nigh fourscore summers from my birth ; And half the sorrows I have felt Have by my brother man been dealt ; And all the ills I have endured By man inflicted, woman cured. The glove from man to man, thou know'st. Of fierce defiance is the boast ; And cast in anger on the floor, To mortal combat shows the door : But gloves from woman's gentle hand, Of cordial Friendship bear the wand ; And in return a single glove Betokens emblematic Love. Thy gift, fair Ellen, then I take, And cherish for the giver's sake ; And while they shelter from the storm My hands, the heart alike shall warm ; And speed for thee to God above, The fervid prayer of faithful love. TIIK LIT AND THE HEART. 1U7 THE LIP AND THE HEART. One tlay between the Li[> and the Heart A wordless strife arose, Which was expertest iu the art His purpose to disclose. The Lip called forth the vassal Tongue, And made him vouch — a lie ! The slave his servile anthem sung, And brav'd the listening sky. The Heart to speak in vain essay 'd, Nor could his ])urp()se reach — His will nor voice nor tongue obeyed, His sileuce was his speech. Mark thou their difterence, cliild of earth ! While each performs his part, Not all the lip can speak is worth The silence of the heart. 108 WRITTEN IN AN ALBUM. WRITTEN IiN AN ALBUM. In days of yore, the poet's pen From wing of bird was plundered ; Perhaps of goose, but, now and then, From Jove's own eagle smidered. But now metallic pens disclose Alone the poet's numbers In iron inspiration glows, Or with the minstrel slumbers. Fair damsel ! could my pen impart, In prose or lofty rhyme, The pure emotions of my heart, To speed the flight of time ; What metal from the womb of earth Could worth intrinsic bear. To stamp with corresponding worth The blessinsrs thou shouldat share ? A VISION. 109 A VISION. Fatigued with labor, and with care opprest, At once my mind and body sought for rest. The drowsy god upon my aching head, Willi liberal hand, his friendly poppies shed, When, lo ! before me wondrous scenes appeared, Strange things I saw, and stranger things I heard ; On purple pinions borne, the god of Love, With rapid flight, descended from above. His golden quiver by a ribbon slung. In graceful ease across his shoulder hung ; The fatal how, his ensign of command. With dire intent he wielded in his hand. He saw me first, and took a feathered dart, Prepared his bow, and letelled at my heart ; I turned around, his posture I espied : *• Oh, spare me, Cupid, cruel god !" I cried, '* Behold around you swarms of youthful swaina, The blood of passion boiling in their veini ; Tis theirs from love to gather perfect bliss, On beauty's lips lo print the burning kiss. 'Tis theirs to find enjoyment in a sigh, And read their fortunes in a virgin's eye. 10 110 A VISION. But me, whom nature formed without an art To win the soul or captivate the heart — Me, whom the Graces view with stern disdain, As scarcely fit to join the Muses' train ; From me what trophies couldst thou hope to raise 1 So poor a conquest, w^ho would deign to praise 1 By Cupid's hand should I be doomed to bleed, Not even Cupid would avow the deed. While prostrate millions bow before thy shrine With willing hearts, thou canst not wish for mine." ^' Mistaken youth !" the wanton god replied, ''To think that Love will e'er submit to Pride ; Though willing thousands call upon my name, Though prostrate millions celebrate my fame, If one proud heart my empire could despise, One heart defy the power of beauty's eyes. My useless bow at once I would destroy, Nor ever more one feathered dart employ ; My mercy then in vain you would implore, Your peace of mind it never could restore. And yet some merit I will grant thy plea. And in thy favor soften the decree. Of all the fair that grace the verdant plain. Choose for thyself the object of thy pain. Shouldst thou prefer the beauties of the face. Or in the form adrau'e peculiar grace — Should sparkling eyes inspire a pleasing flame, Or rosy cheeks a fond attention claim — A VISION. Ill Whatever chiirm thy fancy can suggest, 111 some kind virgm thou mnyst still be blest; For in the search we possibly may find Some who possess the beauties of the mind." He ceased to speak, and waved his potent wand-»— The virgin tlirong an)se at his command. Uiniumbered beauties rise before my view, Bright as the sunbeam on tlje morning dev/, The short, the tall, the fair, the brown, appeared, The prude that pouted, the coquette that leered. The timid maid just blooming at fifteen, And the stale virgin, withered, pale, and lean. With all the charms of beauty richly fraught, Lucinda first my close attention caught. A faultless person and a lovely mind, I found, with wonder, were in her combined ; Deficient only in a single part, She wanted nothing but ^ feeling heart ! Calm and unruffled as a s»mimer sea, From passion's gales Lucinda's heart was free. A faithless lover she may well defy, Recall her heart, nor breathe a single sigh. And should a second prove inconstant too, She change* on till she can find one true. Belinda next advances with a stride, A compound strange of vanity and pride. Around her face no wanton Cupids play, Her tawny skin defies the god of day. i IliJ A VISION. Loud was her laugh, undaunted was her look, And folly seemed to dictate what she spoke. In vain the poef s and musician's art Combined to move the passions of her heart ; Belinda's voice like grating hinges groans, And in harsh thunder roars a lover's moans. I turned away, the fair Narcissa smiled, Her winning softness all my soul beguiled ; My heart with rapture dwelt upon her charms, And hoped to clasp her beauties to my arms ; But soon I found those ardent hopes were vain, Narcissa viewed my passion with disdain. And can the sex by nature formed for love, Each soft impression from the heart remove ? Can idle vanity betray the mind To wish, and even strive to be unkind ? Use cunning arts to raise the lover's sigh. Then view his woes with a disdainful eye ? Yes, there are such — but when avenging time Withers their chaiTns, and strips them of their prime, Their former follies they in vain lament, Of former cruelties in vain repent ; Their fate in one short line may be comprised : While young, they're hated, and when old, despised. Vanessa came, a smile adorned her face. Her words were sweetness, and her voice was grace ; No raging passions burn within her breast. Not even envy can disturb her rest. Her lovely mind a rivaVs worth can own, A VISION. 113 Nor thinks all charms confined to her alone ; And if the fair Vanessa could be taught To store her mind wiih larger funds of thought, Her volubility of tongue repress, Think somewhat more, and prattle somewhat less, The palm of excellence she well might claim, And Love himself might tune the voice of fame. But lo ! Corinna next in rank appears, And riots in the bloom of early years. With innate warmth of constitution blest, Her greatest pleasure is to be caressed ; Her lipe sip rapture from an amorous kiss, Viewed as a pledge of more endearing bliss. But frugal Nature wisely did dispense, With so much love, a slender share of sense ; For Nature grants but to a chosen few To taste the joys of mind and body too. Gigantic limbs in painful buckram cased. Assume the honors of a slender waist. But ah ! what power of buckram can restrain The wild effusions of a thoughtless brain. Nerea next advances in the throng, And affectation leads the maid along ; With studied step she steers amid tlio band, And holds a senseless novel in her hand. Fair is her face, and elegant her form, Her manners gentle, and her heart is warm. Why will Nerea spend her youthful days In wild romances and insipid plays ; 114 A VISION. Where idle tales in flimsy language told. Exhibit folly in a pleasing mould ? Fictitious evils enervate the breast, Deprave the morals, and corrupt the taste. Almira next, in dubious form is seen — Her face is female, masculine her mien ; With equal skill, no mortal can pretend The varied faults of either sex to blend. To vi^oman's weakness add the pride of man. And wield alike the dagger and the fan. In fairest forms, can evil passions dwell ? The virgin's breast can envy's venom swell ? Can malice dart her rage from beauty's eye, Or give the snow-white cheek a crimson dye Where then are all the tender virtues flown — And why was strength dispensed to man alone The lamb to vie with lions ne'er pretend — The timid dove with eagles ne'er contend. Attempt not then, ye fair, to rule by fear, The surest female weapon is a tear. To beauty, strangers destitute of grace, With varied nothing pictured in their face, A motley crowd in quick succession came, Distinguished only by a differing name. Till, breaking forth in all the pride of day, The sun of beauty drove those clouds away. vVith graceful steps the lovely Clara moved, I saic, I gazed, I listened, and I loved. The fleeting vision vanished from my mind, A VISION. 115 But love and Clara still remained behind. Ye faithful lovers, whom the Muse inspires, Who feel the rapture of poetic fires ; Whose tender strains describe with matchless art The soft emotions of a feeling heart; Come, and before the lovely Clara's shrine, The mingled tribute of your praises join. My Clara's charms, no vulgar poets claim, No servile bard that clips the wings of fame, To vile acrostic tunes, unmeaning lays, Or in a rebus centres all his praise. The partial gods presiding at her biilh Gave Clara beauty when they gave her worth. Kind Nature formed of purest white her skin, An emblem of her innocence within ; And called on cheerful Health, her aid to lend, The rose's colors on her cheeks to blend ; While Venus added, to complete the fair, The eyes blue languish and the golden hair. But far sui>erior charms exalt her mind. Adorned by nature and by art refined ; Hers are the lasting beauties of the hearty The charms which nature only can impart ; The generous purpose and the soul sincere, Meek sorrow's sigh and gentle pity's tear. Ah, lovely Clara ! can a heart like thine. Accept the tribute of a muse like mine ? Should these p^x^r lays attract thy beauteous eye, Sjy, would they raise one sympathetic sigh? 116 A VISION. For thee, my heart with vivid ardor glows, For thee, my blood with rapid impulse flows. By day thy beauties are my darling theme, By night thy image sweetens many a dream. On theCf thy ardent lover's fate depends. From thee, the evil or the boon descends ; Thy choice alone can make my anxious breast. Supremely wretched or supremely blest / 5423 x At that time John Quincy Adams was Secretary of State. In his diary, under date of July 17, 1823, he notes an inter- view between himself and Baron Tuyl, the Russian minister. "1 told him spe- cially that we should contest the ri^ht of Russia to any territorial establishment on this continent, and that we should as- sume distinctly the principle that the American continents are no longer sub- jects for any new European colonial es- tablishments." In that sentence lies the germ of one branch of the Monroe doctrine.