Oh! had he never stoop'd to shame, Nor lent a charm to vice, How had Devotion loved to name That Bird of Paradise. Peace to the dead! In Scotia's choir Of Minstrels great and small, He sprang from his spontaneous fire, The Phoenix of them all. A THEME FOR A POET. 1814. THE arrow that shall lay me low, Was shot from Death's unerring bow, The moment of my breath; And every footstep I proceed, It tracks me with increasing speed; Has given such impulse to that dart, It points for ever at my heart. And soon of me it must be said, That I have lived, that I am dead; Of all I leave behind, A few may weep a little while, Then bless my memory with a smile; What monument of mind Shall I bequeath to deathless Fame, That after-times may love my name? Let Southey sing of war's alarms, The glory and the guilt, Of nations barb'rously enslaved, Of realms by patriot valour saved, And millions sacrificed to fate, Let Scott, in wilder strains, delight To chant the Lady and the Knight, The tournament, the chace, The wizard's deed without a name, Perils by ambush, flood, and flame; Or picturesquely trace The hills that form a world on high, Let Byron, with untrembling hand, Go down and search the human heart, Then let him fling the torch away, And sun his soul in heaven's pure day. Let Wordsworth weave, in mystic rhyme, Feelings ineffably sublime, And sympathies unknown; Yet so our yielding breasts enthral, His Genius shall possess us all, His thoughts become our own, And strangely pleased, we start to find Such hidden treasures in our mind. Let Campbell's sweeter numbers flow Through every change of joy and woe, Hope's morning dreams display, The Pennsylvanian cottage wild, The frenzy of O'Connel's child, And still in each new form appear, To every Muse and Grace more dear. Transcendent Masters of the lyre! Not to your honours I aspire; Have touch'd my spirit into flame; The pomp of fiction I disclaim; Fair Truth! be thou my muse ; I sing the men who left their home, |