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THE MINSTREL; IN TWO BOOKS
THE MINSTREL; BOOK SECOND

Оглавление

Doctrina sed vim promovet insitam,

Rectique cultus pectora roborant.


Horat.

THE MINSTREL; OR, THE PROGRESS OF GENIUS.
BOOK SECOND

I

Of chance or change, O let not man complain,

Else shall he never never cease to wail:

For, from the imperial dome, to where the swain

Rears the lone cottage in the silent dale,

All feel the assault of fortune’s fickle gale;

Art, empire, earth itself, to change are doomed;

Earthquakes have raised to heaven the humble vale;

And gulfs the mountain’s mighty mass entombed;

And where the Atlantic rolls wide continents have bloomed.


II

But sure to foreign climes we need not range,

Nor search the ancient records of our race,

To learn the dire effects of time and change,

Which in ourselves, alas! we daily trace.

Yet, at the darkened eye, the withered face,

Or hoary hair, I never will repine:

But spare, O Time, whate’er of mental grace,

Of candour, love, or sympathy divine,

Whate’er of fancy’s ray, or friendship’s flame, is mine.


III

So I, obsequious to Truth’s dread command,

Shall here, without reluctance, change my lay,

And smite the Gothic lyre with harsher hand;

Now when I leave that flowery path, for aye,


The Minstrel; or the Progress of Genius

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