Poetry Explorer- Classic Contemporary Poetry, NIGHT THOUGHTS; THE COMPLAINT: 4. THE CHRISTIAN TRIUMPH, by EDWARD YOUNG (1683-1765)



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NIGHT THOUGHTS; THE COMPLAINT: 4. THE CHRISTIAN TRIUMPH, by             Poem Explanation     Poet Analysis     Poet's Biography
First Line: A much-indebted muse, o yorke! Intrudes
Last Line: Men may live fools, but fools they cannot die.'
Subject(s): Christianity; Death; Fear; God; Life; Night; Old Age; Dead, The; Bedtime


A MUCH-INDEBTED muse, O Yorke! intrudes.
Amid the smiles of fortune and of youth,
Thine ear is patient of a serious song.
How deep implanted in the breast of man
The dread of death! I sing its sov'reign cure.

CURE FOR THE FEAR OF DEATH.

Why start at death? where is he? death arrived
Is past: not come, or gone; he's never here.
Ere hope, sensation fails; black-boding man
Receives, not suffers, death's tremendous blow.
The knell, the shroud, the mattock, and the grave;
The deep damp vault, the darkness, and the worm;
These are the bugbears of a winter's eve,
The terrors of the living, not the dead.
Imagination's fool, and error's wretch,
Man makes a death which nature never made;
Then on the point of his own fancy falls,
And feels a thousand deaths in fearing one.
But were death frightful, what has age to fear
If prudent; age should meet the friendly foe,
And shelter in his hospitable gloom.
I scarce can meet a monument but holds
My younger; ev'ry date cries -- 'Come away.'
And what recalls me? Look the world around,
And tell me what: the wisest cannot tell.
Should any born of woman give his thought
Full range on just dislike's unbounded field;
Of things, the vanity: of men, the flaws;
Flaws in the best; the many, flaw all o'er;
As leopards spotted, or as Ethiops dark;
Vivacious ill; good dying immature;
(How immature, Narcissa's marble tells!)
And at its death bequeathing endless pain;
His heart, though bold, would sicken at the sight
And spend itself in sighs for future scenes.

DISADVANTAGES OF LIVING TOO LONG.

But grant to life (and just it is to grant
To lucky life) some perquisites of joy;
A time there is, when, like a thrice-told tale,
Long-rifled life of sweet can yield no more,
But from our comment on the comedy,
Pleasing reflections on parts well sustain'd,
Or purpos'd emendations where we fail'd,
Or hopes of plaudits from our candid Judge,
When, on their exit, souls are bid unrobe,
Toss Fortune back her tinsel and her plume,
And drop this mask of flesh behind the scene.
With me that time is come; my world is dead;
A new world rises, and new manners reign.
Foreign comedians, a spruce band! arrive
To push me from the scene, or hiss me there.
What a pert race starts up! the strangers gaze,
And I at them; my neighbour is unknown;
Nor that the worst. Ah me! the dire effect
Of loit'ring here, of death defrauded long;
Of old so gracious (and let that suffice)
My very master knows me not. -----
Shall I dare say, peculiar is the fate?
I've been so long remember'd, I'm forgot.
An object ever pressing dims the sight,
And hides behind its ardour to be seen.
When in his courtiers' ears I pour my plaint,
They drink it as the nectar of the great,
And squeeze my hand, and beg me come to-morrow!
Refusal! canst thou wear a smoother form?
Indulge me, nor conceive I drop my theme;
Who cheapens life, abates the fear of death.
Twice told the period spent on stubborn Troy.
Court-favour, yet untaken, I besiege;
Ambition's ill-judged effort to be rich.
Alas! ambition makes my little less,
Imbitt'ring the possess'd. Why wish for more?
Wishing, of all employments, is the worst!
Philosophy's reverse, and health's decay!
Were I as plump as stall'd Theology,
Wishing would waste me to this shade again.
Were I as wealthy as a South-sea dream,
Wishing is an expedient to be poor.
Wishing, that constant hectic of a fool,
Caught at a court, purg'd off by purer air
And simpler diet, gifts of rural life!
Blest be that hand divine, which gently laid
My heart at rest beneath this humble shed.
The world's a stately bark, on dangerous seas
With pleasure seen, but boarded at our peril:
Here, on a single plank, thrown safe ashore,
I hear the tumult of the distant throng
As that of seas remote, or dying storms,
And meditate on scenes more silent still;
Pursue my theme, and fight the fear of death.
Here, like a shepherd gazing from his hut,
Touching his reed, or leaning on his staff,
Eager ambition's fiery chase I see;
I see the circling hunt of noisy men
Burst law's enclosure, leap the mounds of right,
Pursuing, and pursued, each other's prey;
As wolves for rapine, as the fox for wiles,
Till death, that mighty hunter, earths them all.
Why all this toil for triumphs of an hour?
What though we wade in wealth or soar in fame,
Earth's highest station ends in 'Here he lies;'
And 'Dust to dust,' concludes her noblest song.
If this song lives, posterity shall know
One, though in Britain born, with courtiers bred,
Who thought e'en gold might come a day too late,
Nor on his subtle death-bed plann'd his scheme
For future vacancies in the church or state,
Some avocation deeming it -- to die;
Unbit by rage canine of dying rich;
Guilt's blunder! and the loudest laugh of Hell.

ADDRESS TO THE AGED.

O my coevals! remnants of yourselves!
Poor human ruins tottering o'er the grave!
Shall we, shall aged men, like aged trees,
Strike deeper their vile root, and closer cling,
Still more enamour'd of this wretched soil?
Shall our pale wither'd hands be still stretch'd out,
Trembling, at once, with eagerness and age?
With av'rice, and convulsions, grasping hard?
Grasping at air! for what has earth beside?
Man wants but little, nor that little long:
How soon must he resign his very dust,
Which frugal nature lent him for an hour!
Years unexperienced rush on numerous ills;
And soon as man, expert from time, has found
The key of life, it opes the gates of death.
When in this vale of years I backward look,
And miss such numbers, numbers too, of such,
Firmer in health, and greener in their age,
And stricter on their guard, and fitter far
To play life's subtle game, I scarce believe
I still survive. And am I fond of life,
Who scarce can think it possible I live?
Alive by miracle! or, what is next,
Alive by Mead! if I am still alive,
Who long have buried what gives life to live,
Firmness of nerve, and energy of thought.
Life's lee is not more shallow than impure
And vapid: sense and reason show the door,
Call for my bier, and point me to the dust.

RESIGNATION TO THE GREAT ARBITER OF LIFE AND DEATH.

O thou great Arbiter of life and death!
Nature's immortal, immaterial sun!
Whose all-prolific beam late call'd me forth
From darkness, teeming darkness, where I lay
The worm's inferior; and, in rank, beneath
The dust I tread on; high to bear my brow,
To drink the spirit of the golden day,
And triumph in existence; and couldst know
No motive but my bliss; and hast ordain'd
A rise in blessing! with the Patriarch's joy
Thy call I follow to the land unknown:
I trust in thee, and know in whom I trust:
Or life or death is equal; neither weighs;
All weight in this -- O let me live to thee.
Though Nature's terrors thus may be represt,
Still frowns grim death; guilt points the tyrant's spear.
And whence all human guilt? From death forgot.
Ah me! too long I set at nought the swarm
Of friendly warnings which around me flew,
And smiled unsmitten. Small my cause to smile;
Death's admonitions, like shafts upwards shot,
More dreadful by delay, the longer ere
They strike our hearts, the deeper is their wound.
O think how deep, Lorenzo! here it stings;
Who can appease its anguish? how it burns!
What hand the barb'd, envenom'd thought can draw?
What healing hand can pour the balm of peace,
And turn my sight undaunted on the tomb?

THE REDEEMER ON THE CROSS.

With joy, -- with grief, that healing hand I see:
Ah! too conspicuous! it is fix'd on high.
On high? -- what means my phrensy? I blaspheme;
Alas! how low! how far beneath the skies!
The skies it form'd, and now it bleeds for me --
But bleeds the balm I want -- yet still it bleeds!
Draw the dire steel -- ah no! the dreadful blessing
What heart or can sustain, or dares forego?
There hangs all human hope; that nail supports
The falling universe: that gone, we drop;
Horror receives us, and the dismal wish
Creation had been smother'd in her birth --
Darkness his curtain, and his bed the dust;
When stars and sun are dust beneath his throne!
In heav'n itself can such indulgence dwell?
O what a groan was there! a groan not his:
He seized our dreadful right, the load sustain'd,
And heaved the mountain from a guilty world.
A thousand worlds so bought, were bought too dear;
Sensations new in angels' bosoms rise,
Suspend their song, and make a pause in bliss.
O for their song to reach my lofty theme!
Inspire me, Night! with all thy tuneful spheres,
Much rather Thou who dost these spheres inspire!
Whilst I with seraphs share seraphic themes,
And show to men the dignity of man,
Lest I blaspheme my subject with my song.
Shall Pagan pages glow celestial flame,
And Christian languish? On our hearts, not heads,
Falls the foul infamy. My heart, awake:
What can awake thee, unawaked by this,
'Expended Deity on human weal?'
Feel the great truths which burst the tenfold night
Of heathen error, with a golden flood
Of endless day. To feel is to be fired;
And to believe, Lorenzo, is to feel.

THE JUSTICE AND THE LOVE OF GOD.

Thou most indulgent, most tremendous Pow'r!
Still more tremendous for thy wondrous love;
That arms with awe more awful thy commands,
And foul transgression dips in sevenfold guilt;
How our hearts tremble at thy love immense!
In love immense, inviolably just!
Thou, rather than thy justice should be stain'd,
Didst stain the cross; and, work of wonders far
The greatest, that thy dearest far might bleed.
Bold thought! shall I dare speak it or repress?
Should man more execrate or boast the guilt
Which roused such vengeance? which such love inflamed?
O'er guilt (how mountainous) with outstretch'd arms
Stern Justice, and soft-smiling Love, embrace,
Supporting, in full majesty, thy throne,
When seem'd its majesty to need support,
Or that, or man, inevitably lost:
What but the fathomless of thought divine
Could labour such expedient from despair,
And rescue both? Both rescue! both exalt!
O how are both exalted by the deed!
The wondrous deed! or shall I call it more?
A wonder in Omnipotence itself!
A mystery, no less to gods than men!

A GOD ALL MERCY IS A GOD UNJUST.

Not thus our infidels th' Eternal draw,
A God all o'er consummate, absolute,
Full orb'd, in his whole round of rays complete:
They set at odds Heav'n's jarring attributes,
And with one excellence another wound;
Maim heav'n's perfection, break its equal beams,
Bid mercy triumph over -- God himself,
Undeified by their opprobrious praise:
A God all mercy is a God unjust.
Ye brainless wits! ye baptized infidels!
Ye worse for mending! wash'd to fouler stains!
The ransom was paid down; the fund of heav'n,
Heaven's inexhaustible, exhausted fund,
Amazing and amazed, pour'd forth the price,
All price beyond: though curious to compute,
Archangels fail'd to cast the mighty sum:
Its value vast ungrasp'd by minds create,
For ever hides and glows in the Supreme.
And was the ransom paid? It was; and paid
(What can exalt the bounty more?) for you.
The sun beheld it -- No, the shocking scene
Drove back his chariot: Midnight veil'd his face,
Not such as this, not such as Nature makes:
A midnight Nature shudder'd to behold;
A midnight new! a dread eclipse (without
Opposing spheres) from her Creator's frown!
Sun! didst thou fly thy Maker's pain? or start
At that enormous load of human guilt
Which bow'd his blessed head, o'erwhelm'd his cross,
Made groan the centre, burst earth's marble womb
With pangs, strange pangs! deliver'd of her dead?
Hell howl'd; and heav'n that hour let fall a tear:
Heav'n wept, that man might smile! Heav'n bled, that man
Might never die! -----

THE TRIUMPHANT RESURRECTION AND ASCENSION.

And is devotion virtue? 'Tis compell'd.
What heart of stone but glows at thoughts like these?
Such contemplations mount us, and should mount
The mind still higher, nor e'er glance on man
Unraptured, uninflamed. Where roll my thoughts
To rest from wonders! other wonders rise,
And strike where'er they roll: my soul is caught:
Heav'n's sov'reign blessings clust'ring from the cross,
Rush on her in a throng, and close her round
The pris'ner of amaze! In his blest life
I see the path, and in his death the price,
And in his great ascent the proof supreme
Of immortality. -- And did he rise?
Hear, O ye nations! hear it, O ye dead!
He rose, he rose! he burst the bars of death.
Lift up your heads, ye everlasting gates,
And give the King of Glory to come in.
Who is the King of Glory? He who left
His throne of glory for the pangs of death.
Lift up your heads, ye everlasting gates,
And give the King of Glory to come in.
Who is the King of Glory? He who slew
The rav'nous foe that gorged all human race!
The King of Glory he, whose glory fill'd
Heav'n with amazement at his love to man;
And with divine complacency beheld
Pow'rs most illumined wilder'd in the theme.

HUMAN NATURE, THROUGH CHRIST, TRIUMPHANT.

The theme, the joy, how then shall man sustain?
O the burst gates! crush'd sting! demolish'd throne?
Last gasp! of vanquish'd death. Shout, earth and heav'n,
This sum of good to man! whose nature then
Took wing, and mounted with him from the tomb.
Then, then, I rose; then first humanity
Triumphant past the crystal ports of light,
(Stupendous guest!) and seized eternal youth,
Seized in our name. E'er since 'tis blasphemous
To call man mortal. Man's mortality
Was then transferr'd to death; and heav'n's duration
Unalienably seal'd to this frail frame,
This child of dust -- Man, all-immortal, hail!
Hail, Heav'n, all lavish of strange gifts to man!
Thine all the glory, man's the boundless bliss.
Where am I rapt by this triumphant theme,
On Christian joy's exulting wing, above
Th' Aonian mount! -- Alas! small cause of joy!
What if to pain immortal? if extent
Of being, to preclude a close of wo!
Where, then, my boast of immortality?
I boast it still, though cover'd o'er with guilt;
For guilt, not innocence, his life he pour'd;
'Tis guilt alone can justify his death;
Not that, unless his death can justify
Relenting guilt in heav'n's indulgent sight.
If, sick of folly, I relent, he writes
My name in heav'n with that inverted spear
(A spear deep dipt in blood!) which pierced his side,
And open'd there a font for all mankind,
Who strive, who combat crimes, to drink and live:
This, only this, subdues the fear of death.

THE WONDERS OF PARDONING MERCY.

And what is this? -- survey the wondrous cure,
And at each step let higher wonder rise!
'Pardon for infinite offence! and pardon
Through means that speak its value infinite!
A pardon bought with blood! with blood divine!
With blood divine of him I made my foe!
Persisted to provoke! though wooed and awed,
Blest and chastised, a flagrant rebel still:
A rebel 'midst the thunders of his throne!
Nor I alone! a rebel universe!
My species up in arms! not one exempt!
Yet for the foulest of the foul he dies!
Most joy'd for the redeem'd from deepest guilt!
As if our race were held of highest rank,
And Godhead dearer as more kind to man!'
Bound ev'ry heart; and ev'ry bosom burn!
O what a scale of miracles is here!
Its lowest round high planted on the skies:
Its tow'ring summit lost beyond the thought
Of man or angel! O that I could climb
The wonderful ascent with equal praise!
Praise! flow for ever (if astonishment
Will give thee leave) my praise; for ever flow;
Praise ardent, cordial, constant, to high heav'n
More fragrant than Arabia sacrificed,
And all her spicy mountains in a flame.

APOSTATE PRAISE CALLED BACK TO GOD.

So dear, so due to heav'n, shall praise descend
With her soft plume (from plausive angels' wing
First pluck'd by man) to tickle mortal ears,
Thus diving in the pockets of the great?
Is praise the perquisite of ev'ry paw,
Though black as hell, that grapples well for gold?
O love of gold, thou meanest of amours!
Shall praise her odours waste on virtues dead;
Enbalm the base, perfume the stench of guilt,
Earn dirty bread by washing Ethiops fair;
Removing filth, or sinking it from sight,
A scavenger in scenes, where vacant posts,
Like gibbets yet untenanted, expect
Their future ornaments? From courts and thrones
Return, apostate Praise! thou vagabond!
Thou prostitute! to thy first love return;
Thy first, thy greatest, once unrivall'd theme.
There flow redundant, like Meander flow,
Back to thy fountain, to that parent pow'r
Who gives the tongue to sound, the thought to soar,
The soul to be. Men homage pay to men:
Thoughtless beneath whose dreadful eye they bow,
In mutual awe profound, of clay to clay,
Of guilt to guilt, and turn their backs on thee,
Great Sire! whom thrones celestial ceaseless sing;
To prostrate angels an amazing scene!
O the presumption of man's awe for man! --
Man's Author, End, Restorer, Law, and Judge!
Thine all; day thine, and thine this gloom of night,
With all her wealth, with all her radiant worlds.
What night eternal but a frown from thee?
What heav'n's meridian glory but thy smile?
And shall not praise be thine, not human praise,
While heav'n's high host on hallelujahs live?

ADORATION AND PRAISE TO THE CREATOR.

O may I breathe no longer than I breathe
My soul in praise to HIM who gave my soul,
And all her infinite of prospect fair
Cut through the shades of hell, great Love! by thee,
O most adorable! most unadored!
Where shall that praise begin which ne'er shall end?
Where'er I turn, what claim on all applause!
How is Night's sable mantle labour'd o'er,
How richly wrought with attributes divine!
What wisdom shines! what love! This midnight pomp,
This gorgeous arch, with golden worlds inlaid!
Built with divine ambition! nought to thee;
For others this profusion. Thou, apart,
Above, beyond, O tell me, mighty Mind!
Where art thou? shall I dive into the deep?
Call to the sun? or ask the roaring winds
For their Creator? Shall I question loud
The thunder, if in that th' Almighty dwells?
Or holds HE furious storms in straiten'd reins,
And bids fierce whirlwinds wheel his rapid car?
What mean these questions? -- Trembling I retract;
My prostrate soul adores the present God:
Praise I a distant Deity! He tunes
My voice (if tuned:) the nerve that writes sustains:
Wrapp'd in his being I resound his praise:
But though past all diffused, without a shore
His essence, local is His throne (as meet)
To gather the dispers'd (as standards call
The listed from afar;) to fix a point,
A central point, collective of his sons,
Since finite ev'ry nature but his own.
The nameless HE, whose nod is Nature's birth:
And Nature's shield the shadow of his hand;
Her dissolution, his suspended smile!
The great First-Last! pavilion'd high he sits
In darkness from excessive splendour, borne,
By gods unseen, unless through lustre lost.
His glory, to created glory bright
As that to central horrors: he looks down
On all that soars, and spans immensity.
Though night unnumber'd worlds unfolds to view,
Boundless Creation! what art thou? A beam,
A mere effluvium of his majesty.
And shall an atom of this atom-world
Mutter, in dust and sin, the theme of heav'n?
Down to the centre should I send my thought,
Through beds of glitt'ring ore and glowing gems,
Their beggar'd blaze wants lustre for my lay;
Goes out in darkness: if, on tow'ring wing,
I send it through the boundless vault of stars,
(The stars, tho' rich, what dross their gold to Thee,
Great, good, wise, wonderful, eternal King!)
If to those conscious stars thy throne around,
Praise ever-pouring, and imbibing bliss,
And ask their strain; they want it, more they want,
Poor their abundance, humble their sublime,
Languid their energy, their ardour cold:
Indebted still, their highest rapture burns
Short of its mark, defective, though divine.

THE PRAISE OF REDEMPTION MORE APPROPRIATE TO MAN THAN TO ANGELS.

Still more -- this theme is man's, and man's alone;
Their vast appointments reach it not; they see
On earth a bounty not indulg'd on high,
And downward look for heav'n's superior praise!
First-born of Ether! high in fields of light!
View man to see the glory of your God!
Could angels envy, they had envied here:
And some did envy; and the rest, though gods,
Yet still gods unredeem'd (there triumphs man,
Tempted to weigh the dust against the skies,)
They less would feel, though more adorn my theme.
They sung creation (for in that they shared;)
How rose in melody that child of Love!
Creation's great superior, man! is thine;
Thine is Redemption; they just gave the key,
'Tis thine to raise and eternize the song,
Though human, yet divine; for should not this
Raise man o'er man, and kindle seraphs here?
Redemption! 'twas creation more sublime;
Redemption! 'twas the labour of the skies:
Far more than labour -- it was death in heav'n,
A truth so strange, 'twere bold to think it true,
If not far bolder still, to disbelieve.
Here pause and ponder. Was there death in heav'n?
What then on earth? on earth, which struck the blow?
Who struck it? Who? -- O how is man enlarged,
Seen through this medium: How the pigmy tow'rs!
How counterpoised his origin from dust!
How counterpoised to dust his sad return!
How voided his vast distance from the skies!
How near he presses on the seraph's wing!
Which is the seraph? Which the born of clay?
How this demonstrates, through the thickest cloud
Of guilt and clay condensed, the Son of Heav'n;
The double Son; the made, and the re-made!
And shall heav'n's double property be lost?
Man's double madness only can destroy.
To man the bleeding Cross has promised all;
The bleeding Cross has sworn eternal grace.
Who gave his life, what grace shall he deny?
O ye, who from this rock of ages leap,
Apostates, plunging headlong in the deep!
What cordial joy, what consolation strong,
Whatever winds arise, or billows roll,
Our int'rest in the Master of the storm!
Cling there, and in wreck'd Nature's ruin smile,
While vile apostates tremble in a clam.

THE GRANDEUR OF HUMAN NATURE.

Man, know thyself: all wisdom centres there.
To none man seems ignoble but to man.
Angels that grandeur, men o'erlook, admire:
How long shall human nature be their book,
Degen'rate mortal! and unread by thee?
The beam dim reason sheds shows wonders there:
What high contents! illustrious faculties!
But the grand comment, which displays at full
Our human height, scarce sever'd from divine,
By Heav'n compos'd, was publish'd on the Cross.
Who looks on that, and sees not in himself
An awful stranger, a terrestrial God?
A glorious partner with the Deity
In that high attribute, immortal life?
If a god bleeds, he bleeds not for a worm.
I gaze, and as I gaze my mounting soul
Catches strange fire, Eternity! at thee,
And drops the world -- or, rather, more enjoys.
How changed the face of Nature! how improved!
What seem'd a chaos, shines a glorious world,
Or, what a world, an Eden; heighten'd all!
It is another scene, another self!
And still another, as time rolls along,
And that a self far more illustrious still.
Beyond long ages, yet roll'd up in shades
Unpierced by bold conjecture's keenest ray,
What evolutions of surprising fate!
How Nature opens, and receives my soul
In boundless walks of raptured thought! where gods
Encounter and embrace me! What new births
Of strange adventure, foreign to the sun;
Where what now charms, perhaps whate'er exists,
Old Time, and fair Creation, are forgot?
Is this extravagant? of man we form
Extravagant conceptions to be just:
Conception unconfined wants wings to reach him;
Beyond its reach the Godhead only more.
He, the great Father! kindled at one flarge
The world of rationals: one spirit pour'd
From spirit's awful fountain; pour'd himself
Through all their souls, but not an equal stream;
Profuse, or frugal, of th' inspiring God,
As his wise plan demanded; and when past
Their various trials, in their various spheres,
If they continue rational, as made,
Resorbs them all into himself again,
His throne their centre, and his smile their crown.

ANGELS AND MEN COMPARED.

Why doubt we, then, the glorious truth to sing,
Though yet unsung, as deem'd, perhaps, too bold?
Angels are men of a superior kind;
Angels are men in lighter habit clad,
High o'er celestial mountains wing'd in flight;
And men are angels, loaded for an hour,
Who wade this miry vale, and climb with pain,
And slipp'ry step, the bottom of the steep.
Angels their failings, mortals have their praise;
While here, of corps ethereal, such enroll'd,
And summon'd to the glorious standard soon,
Which flames eternal crimson through the skies:
Nor are our brothers thoughtless of their kin,
Yet absent; but not absent from their love.
Michael has fought our battles; Raphael sung
Our triumphs; Gabriel on our errands flown,
Sent by the Sov'reign: and are these, O man,
Thy friends, thy warm allies? and thou (shame burn
Thy cheek to cinder!) rival to the brute?

RELIGION'S ALL.

Religion's all. Descending from the skies
To wretched man, the goddess in her left
Holds out this world, and in her right the next.
Religion! the sole voucher man is man;
Supporter sole of man above himself;
E'en in this night of frailty, change, and death,
She gives the soul a soul that acts a god.
Religion! Providence! an after-state!
Here is firm footing; here is solid rock;
This can support us; all is sea besides:
Sinks under us; bestorms, and then devours.
His hand the good man fastens on the skies,
And bids earth roll, nor feels her idle whirl.
As when a wretch, from thick polluted air,
Darkness, and stench, and suffocating damps,
And dungeon-horrors, by kind fate discharged,
Climbs some fair eminence, where ether pure
Surrounds him, and Elysian prospects rise,
His heart exults, his spirits cast their load,
As if new born he triumphs in the change!
So joys the soul, when from inglorious aims
And sordid sweets, from feculence and froth
Of ties terrestrial, set at large, she mounts
To Reason's region, her own element,
Breathes hopes immortal, and affects the skies.

DEVOUT ADDRESS TO THE REDEEMER.

Religion! thou the soul of happiness,
And, groaning Calvary, of thee, there shine
The noblest truths; there strongest motives sting;
There sacred violence assaults the soul;
There nothing but compulsion is forborne.
Can love allure us? or can terror awe?
He weeps! -- the falling drop puts out the sun.
He sighs! -- the sigh earth's deep foundation shakes.
If in his love so terrible, what then
His wrath inflamed? His tenderness on fire?
Like soft smooth oil, outblazing other fires?
Can pray'r, can praise, avert it? -- Thou, my all!
My theme! my inspiration! and my crown!
My strength in age! my rise in low estate!
My soul's ambition, pleasure, wealth! my world?
My light in darkness! and my life in death!
My boast through time! bliss through eternity!
Eternity, too short to speak thy praise,
Or fathom thy profound of love to man!
To man of men the meanest, ev'n to me;
My sacrifice! my God! -- what things are these!
What then art Thou? By what name shall I call Thee?
Knew I the name devout archangels use,
Devout archangels should the name enjoy,
By me unrivall'd; thousands more sublime,
None half so dear as that which though unspoke,
Still glows at heart. O how Omnipotence
Is lost in love! thou great Philanthropist!
Father of angels! but the friend of man!
Like Jacob, fondest of the younger born!
Thou who didst save him, snatch the smoking brand
From out the flames, and quench it in thy blood!
How art thou pleased by bounty to distress!
To make us groan beneath our gratitude,
Too big for birth! to favour and confound!
To challenge, and to distance all return!
Of lavish love stupendous heights to soar,
And leave praise panting in the distant vale!
Thy right, too great, defrauds thee of thy due;
And sacrilegious our sublimest song!
But since the naked will obtains thy smile,
Beneath this monument of praise unpaid,
And future life symphonious to my strain,
(That noblest hymn to heav'n!) for ever lie
Entomb'd my fear of death! and ev'ry fear,
The dread of ev'ry evil but Thy frown.

LUKEW ARM DEVOTION, UNDEVOUT.

Whom see I yonder so demurely smile?
Laughter a labour, and might break their rest.
Ye Quietists, in homage to the skies!
Serene! of soft address! who mildly make
An unobtrusive tender of your hearts,
Abhorring violence! who halt indeed,
But, for the blessing, wrestle not with Heav'n!
Think you my song too turbulent? too warm?
Are passions, then, the pagans of the soul?
Reason alone baptized! alone ordain'd
To touch things sacred? Oh for warmer still!
Guilt chills my zeal, and age benumbs my pow'rs:
Oh for a humbler heart and prouder song!
Thou, my much-injured theme! with that soft eye
Which melted o'er doom'd Salem, deign to look
Compassion to the coldness of my breast,
And pardon to the winter in my strain.
O ye cold-hearted frozen formalists!
On such a theme 'tis impious to be calm;
Passion is reason, transport temper, here.
Shall Heav'n, which gave us ardour, and has shown
Her own for man so strongly, not disdain
What smooth emollients in theology,
Recumbent virtue's downy doctors preach,
That prose of piety, a lukewarm praise?
Rise odours sweet from incense uninflamed?
Devotion, when lukewarm, is undevout;
But when it glows, its heat is struck to heav'n;
To human hearts her golden harps are strung;
High heav'n's orchestra chants Amen to man.

LONGING FOR DEATH.

Hear I, or dream I hear, their distant strain,
Sweet to the soul, and tasting strong of heav'n,
Soft wafted on celestial Pity's plume,
Through the vast spaces of the universe
To cheer me in this melancholy gloom?
Oh when will death (now stingless) like a friend,
Admit me of their choir! Oh when will death
This mould'ring old partition-wall throw down?
Give beings, one in nature, one abode?
O death divine! that giv'st us to the skies!
Great future! glorious patron of the past
And present, when shall I thy shrine adore?
From Nature's continent immensely wide,
Immensely blest, this little isle of life,
This dark incarcerating colony
Divides us. Happy day that breaks our chain!
That manumits; that calls from exile home;
That leads to Nature's great metropolis,
And re-admits us, through the guardian hand
Of elder brothers, to our Father's throne,
Who hears our advocate, and through his wounds
Beholding man, allows that tender name.
'Tis this makes Christian triumph a command;
'Tis this makes joy a duty to the wise.
'Tis impious in a good man to be sad.

THE TOUCH OF THE CROSS.

Seest thou, Lorenzo, where hangs all our hope?
Touch'd by the cross we live, or more than die;
That touch which touch'd not angels; more divine
Than that which touch'd confusion into form,
And darkness into glory: partial touch!
Ineffably pre-eminent regard!
Sacred to man, and sov'reign through the whole
Long golden chain of miracles, which hangs
From heav'n through all duration, and supports,
In one illustrious and amazing plan,
Thy welfare, Nature, and thy God's renown;
That touch, with charm celestial, heals the soul
Diseased, drives pain from guilt, lights life in death,
Turns earth to heav'n, to heav'nly thrones transforms
The ghastly ruins of the mould'ring tomb.

THE SECOND ADVENT.

Dost ask me when? When He who died returns;
Returns, how changed! where then the man of wo?
In glory's terrors all the Godhead burns,
And all his courts, exhausted by the tide
Of deities triumphant in his train,
Leave a stupendous solitude in heav'n;
Replenish'd soon, replenish'd with increase
Of pomp and multitude; a radiant band
Of angels new, of angels from the tomb.
Is this by fancy thrown remote? and rise
Dark doubts between the promise and event?
I send thee not to volumes for thy cure;
Read Nature; Nature is a friend to truth;
Nature is Christian; preaches to mankind,
And bids dead matter aid us in our creed.
Hast thou ne'er seen the comet's flaming flight?
Th' illustrious stranger passing, terror sheds
On gazing nations from his fiery train
Of length enormous, takes his ample round
Thro' depths of ether; coasts unnumber'd worlds,
Of more than solar glory: doubles wide
Heav'n's mighty cape; and then revisits earth,
From the long travel of a thousand years.
Thus, at the destined period, shall return
He, once on earth, who bids the comet blaze;
And, with him, all our triumph o'er the tomb.
Nature is dumb on this important point,
Or Hope precarious in low whisper breathes:
Faith speaks aloud, distinct; ev'n adders hear,
But turn, and dart into the dark again.
Faith builds a bridge across the gulf of Death,
To break the shock blind Nature cannot shun,
And lands Thought smoothly on the farther shore.
Death's terror is the mountain Faith removes,
That mountain-barrier between man and peace.
'Tis Faith disarms Destruction, and absolves
From ev'ry clam'rous charge the guiltless tomb.

THE CHRISTIAN'S FAITH IS RATIONAL.

Why disbelieve, Lorenzo? -- 'Reason bids;
All-sacred Reason.' -- Hold her sacred still;
Nor shalt thou want a rival in thy flame:
All-sacred Reason! source and soul of all
Demanding praise on earth, or earth above!
My heart is thine: deep in its inmost folds
Live thou with life; live dearer of the two.
Wear I the blessed cross, by Fortune stamp'd
On passive Nature before Thought was born?
My birth's blind bigot! fired with local zeal!
No; Reason re-baptized me when adult;
Weigh'd true and false in her impartial scale;
My heart became the convert of my head,
And made that choice which once was but my fate.
'On argument alone my faith is built:'
Reason pursued is faith; and unpursued,
Where proof invites, 'tis reason then no more;
And such our proof, that, or our faith is right,
Or reason lies, and Heav'n design'd it wrong.
Absolve we this? what then is blasphemy?
Fond as we are, and justly fond, of faith,
Reason, we grant, demands our first regard;
The mother honour'd, as the daughter dear.
Reason the root, fair Faith is but the flow'r:
The fading flow'r shall die, but Reason lives
Immortal, as her Father in the skies.
When faith is virtue, reason makes it so.
Wrong not the Christian: think not reason yours;
'Tis reason our great Master holds so dear;
'Tis reason's injur'd rights his wrath resents;
'Tis reason's voice obey'd his glories crown:
To give lost reason life, he pour'd his own.
Believe, and show the reason of a man;
Believe, and taste the pleasure of a God;
Believe, and look with triumph on the tomb.
Through reason's wounds alone thy faith can die;
Which dying, tenfold terror gives to death,
And dips in venom his twice-mortal sting.

FALSE PRETENSIONS OF PHILOSOPHIC INFIDELITY.

Learn hence what honours, what loud paeans, due,
To those who push our antidote aside;
Those boasted friends to reason and to man,
Whose fatal love stabs every joy, and leaves
Death's terror heighten'd gnawing at his heart.
These pompous sons of reason idolized,
And vilified at once; of reason dead,
Then deified as monarchs were of old;
What conduct plants proud laurels on their brow?
While love of truth thro' all their camp resounds,
They draw Pride's curtain o'er the noon-tide ray,
Spike up their inch of reason on the point
Of philosophic wit, call'd Argument,
And then exulting in their taper, cry,
'Behold the sun!' and, Indian-like, adore.
Talk they of morals? O thou bleeding Love!
Thou maker of new morals to mankind!
The grand morality is love to Thee.
As wise as Socrates, if such they were,
(Nor will they 'bate of that sublime renown)
As wise as Socrates, might justly stand
The definition of a modern fool.
A Christian is the highest style of man.
And is there who the blessed cross wipes off,
As a foul blot, from his dishonour'd brow?
If angels tremble, 'tis at such a sight:
The wretch they quit, desponding of their charge,
More struck with grief or wonder who can tell?
Ye sold to sense! ye citizens of earth!
(For such alone the Christian banner fly)
Know ye how wise your choice, how great your gain?
Behold the picture of earth's happiest man:
'He calls his wish, it comes; he sends it back,
And says he call'd another; that arrives,
Meets the same welcome; yet he stills calls on;
Till one calls him, who varies not his call,
But holds him fast, in chains of darkness bound,
Till Nature dies, and judgment sets him free;
A freedom far less welcome than his chain.'
But grant man happy; grant him happy long;
Add to life's highest prize her latest hour;
That hour, so late, is nimble in approach,
That, like a post, comes on in full career.
How swift the shuttle flies that weaves thy shroud!
Where is the fable of thy former years?
Thrown down the gulf of time; as far from thee
As they had ne'er been thine; the day in hand,
Like a bird struggling to get loose, is going;
Scarce now possess'd, so suddenly 'tis gone,
And each swift moment fled, is death advanced
By strides as swift. Eternity is all:
And whose eternity? who triumphs there?
Bathing for ever in the font of bliss!
Forever basking in the Deity!
Lorenzo, who? -- thy conscience shall reply.

THE VOICE OF CONSCIENCE MUST BE HEARD.

O give it leave to speak; 'twill speak ere long,
Thy leave unask'd: Lorenzo, hear it now,
While useful its advice, its accent mild.
By the great edict, the divine decree,
Truth is deposited with man's last hour;
An honest hour, and faithful to her trust;
Truth, eldest daughter of the Deity!
Truth of his council when he made the worlds!
Nor less, when he shall judge the worlds he made;
Though silent long, and sleeping ne'er so sound,
Smother'd with errors, and oppress'd with toys.
That heav'n commission'd hour no sooner calls,
But from her cavern in the soul's abyss,
Like him they fable under AEtna whelm'd,
The goddess bursts in thunder and in flame,
Loudly convinces, and severely pains.
Dark daemons I discharge, and hydra-stings;
The keen vibration of bright truth -- is hell;
Just definition! though by schools untaught.
Ye deaf to truth, peruse this parson'd page,
And trust, for once, a prophet and a priest;
'Men may live fools, but fools they cannot die.'





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