There are to whom yon rich expanse of air Still poring on the earth, with leaden stare, Madly they mock, dull slaves! by impious Mammon caught. Though no vile hoards my iron coffers fill, Can I not commune with the heirs of fame? From the pure current of whose fluent quill, Unfading praise and kingly honours came. Can I not wooe the laughter-loving dame, With him illustrious from Lepanto's fray ;* Illume my lamp at Jonson's learned flame; Or weave with thee, dear bard, the wizard lay, That whilom wildly sung by Desmond's turrets gray? Fell waves who rudely robb'd my Spenser's song Of half its worth, and griev'd the elfin queen !+ For this so great, irreparable wrong, Ne'er on your brim be blue-ey'd sea-nymph seen, Cervantes, who lost his hand in that battle. + The concluding cantos of the Faery Queene were lost in the Irish Seas. Sleeking her humid locks of glossy green, With him who sung the Seasons,* I may rove, The hour with him whom each melodious maid Mark'd for her own,-ah! dead to every joy, Mysterious, but unmatch'd, Invention's wondrous boy!‡ Rail as ye list, ye minions of decay, And ban the wight for other ages born; Or chase gay evening down the many-colour'd sky. Thomson. + Shenstone's seat. Chatterton. Nor may you of their gorgeous garb deprive The flowery tribe that gem the woodland waste; Nor mar the murmurs of the honey'd hive; Nor will, by your vain menace, be effac'd The various tints, in bright embroidery plac'd By Fancy's touch, that fringe the purple cloud; Though little by your vaunted presence grac'd, The thrush will twitter from his leafy shroud, And tell the babbling brook his amorous pain aloud. Free o'er the furze-clad heath, of yellow bloom, I to great Nature pour the homage of my heart. Witness ye hills with many a vapoury wreath Entwin'd, whose green brows court the sunny ray ; Witness ye spicy gales whose odours breathe The glowing blush of health where'er you stray; Ye silvery streams that warbling wind away, Whose tiny naiads are with amber shod; When, awfully sequester'd, I have trod Lone Nature's paths recluse, to Nature's bounteous God. To airy regions may my spirit roam, Wafted on wild Imagination's wing: There can I find and fix my viewless home, And reign o'er magic realms creative king; And while soft breezes sweep th' Eolian string, Or the loud tempest swells the bolder base, Bid my slight servants nectar'd banquets bring, And laughing at the little pomp of place, Triumphant raise my throne o'er time and bounded space. Hark! mighty Milton, leaning from his sphere, Hark! gently steals upon my trembling ear, But listed in their everlasting train, Wheel my swift journey from this globe aside, Light as the buoyant blast that fans the plume of pride. Such raptur'd vision can an empire buy ? Are infinitely poor; nor would I choose Th' exuberance of the mine before the deathless muse. Then wail not, Genius, thy unworthy lot, Where'er thou sadly shrink'st from sight profane: Thy patient labours shall not be f rgot, Nor lost the influence of thy lofty strain ; Vagrant, and scoff'd, and houseless as thou art, |