图书图片
PDF
ePub

Vain is the tree of knowledge without fruits! Sometimes in hand the spade or plow he caught, Forth calling all with which boon earth is fraught; Sometimes he plied the strong mechanic tool, Or rear'd the fabric from the finest draught; And oft he put himself to Neptune's 1 school, Fighting with winds and waves on the vex'd ocean pool.

To solace then these rougher toils, he tried
To touch the kindling canvas into life;
With nature his creating pencil vied,
With nature joyous at the mimic strife:

Or, to such shapes as graced Pygmalion's wife 2
He hewed the marble; or with varied fire,
He roused the trumpet, and the martial fife,
Or bade the lute sweet tenderness inspire,

Or verses framed that well might wake Apollo's lyre.

Accomplish'd thus, he from the woods issued,
Full of great aims, and bent on bold emprise; 3
The work, which long he in his breast had brew'd,
Now to perform he ardent did devise;

To wit a barbarous world to civilize.

Earth was still then a boundless forest wild;
Naught to be seen but savage wood and skies;
No cities nourish'd arts, no culture smiled,

No government, no laws, no gentle manners mild.

1 The school of the sea.

2 Pygmalion was a sculptor of Cypress, who fell in love with his own marble statue of Venus. At his earnest prayer the statue was endowed with life, and he married it.

8 undertakings.

A rugged wight, the worst of brute, was man ;
On his own wretched kind he, ruthless, prey'd;
The strongest still the weakest overran ;
In every country mighty robbers sway'd,
And guile and ruffian force were all their trade.
Life was a scene of rapine, want, and woe;
Which this brave knight, in noble anger, made
To swear he would the rascal rout o'erthrow,
For, by the powers divine, it should no more be so!

It would exceed the purport of my song
To say how this best sun from orient climes,
Came beaming life and beauty all along,
Before him chasing indolence and crimes.
Still as he pass'd, the nations he sublimes,
And calls forth arts and virtues with his ray:
Then Egypt, Greece, and Rome their golden times,
Successive had; but now in ruins gray

They lie, to slavish sloth and tyranny a prey.

To crown his toils, Sir Industry then spread
The swelling sail, and made for Britain's coast.
A sylvan life till then the natives led,

In the brown shades and greenwood forest lost,
All careless rambling where it liked them most;
Their wealth the wild deer bouncing through the
glade;

They lodged at large, and lived at native's cost,

Save spear and bow, withouten other aid

Yet not the Roman steel their naked breast dismay'd.

He liked the soil, he liked the clement skies, He liked the verdant hills and flowery plains: "Be this my great, my chosen isle," he cries,

"This, whilst my labor Liberty sustains,
This queen of oceans all assault disdains."
Nor liked he less the genius of the land,
To freedom apt and persevering pains,
Mild to obey, and generous to command,

Temper'd by forming Heaven with kindest firmest

hand.

Here, by degrees, his master-work arose,
Whatever arts and industry can frame;

Whatever finish'd agriculture knows,

Fair queen of arts! from heaven itself who came,
When Eden flourish'd in unspotted fame;
And still with her sweet innocence we find,
And tender peace, and joys without a name,
That, while they ravish, tranquillize the mind:
Nature and art at once, delight and use combined.

Then towns he quicken'd by mechanic arts,
And bade the fervent city glow with toil;
Bade social commerce raise renowned marts,
Join land to land, and marry soil to soil;
Unite the poles, and without bloody spoil
Bring home of either Ind1 the gorgeous stores;
Or, should despotic rage the world embroil,

Bade tyrants tremble on remotest shores,
While o'er the encircling deep Britannia's thunder roars.

The drooping muses then he westward called,
From the famed city by Propontic sea,.

What time the Turk the enfeebled Grecian thralled;
Thence from their cloister'd walks he set them free,

1 Either the East Indies or the West Indies.

And brought them to another Castalie,1
Where Isis 2 many a famous nursling breeds;
Or where old Cam3 soft-paces o'er the lea
In pensive mood, and tunes his Doric reeds,
The whilst his flocks at large the lonely shepherd feeds.

Yet the fine arts were what he finished least.
For why? They are the quintessence of all,
The growth of laboring time, and slow increased;
Unless, as seldom chances, it should fall
That mighty patrons the coy sisters 5 call

Up to the sunshine of encumbered ease

Where no rude care the mounting thought may thrall, And where they nothing have to do but please: Ah! gracious God! thou knowest they ask no other fees.

But now, alas! we live too late in time:

Our patrons now e'en grudge that little claim,
Except to such as sleek the soothing rhyme;
And yet, forsooth, they wear Mæcenas' name,
Poor sons of puft-up vanity, not fame.
Unbroken spirits, cheer! still, still remains
The eternal patron, Liberty; whose flame,
While she protects, inspires the noblest strains:
The best and sweetest, far, are toil-created gains.

1 Castalian fountain, whose waters had the power of inspiring with the

gift of poetry.

2 Oxford University, situated on the Isis.

8 Cambridge University, on the Cam River.

4 Pastoral poetry.

5 The useful and the fine arts.

A patron of letters. From C. Clinius Mæcenas, a special friend and patron of Horace and Virgil. The name has been applied to the Earl of Halifax and to the poet-banker, Samuel Rogers.

When as the knight had framed in Britain-land
A matchless form of glorious government,
In which the sovereign laws alone command,
Laws, 'stablished by the public free consent,
Whose majesty is to the scepter lent;
When this great plan, with each dependent art,
Was settled firm, and to his heart's content,

Then sought he from the toilsome scene to part,
And let life's vacant eve breathe quiet through the heart.

For this he chose a farm in Deva's vale,1
Where his long alleys peeped upon the main :
In this calm seat he drew the healthful gale,
Here mixed the chief, the patriot, and the swain.
The happy monarch of his sylvan train,

Here, sided by the guardians of the fold,

He walked his rounds, and cheered his blest domain : His days, the days of unstained nature, rolled Replete with peace and joy, like patriarchs, of old.

[ocr errors]

NOTES.

JAMES THOMSON, distinguished chiefly as the author of "The Seasons," was born in Ednam, in Roxburghshire, in 1700. His first published work was that portion of "The Seasons" entitled "Winter," which appeared in 1726. "Summer was published in 1727, "Spring" in 1728, and “Autumn" in 1730. "The Castle of Indolence," his last work, was published in 1748, two years before his death. "Making allowance for the time over which his influence has extended," says George Saintsbury, "no poet has given the special pleasure which poetry is capable of giving to so large a number of persons in so large a measure as Thomson." Of Thomson's indolent habits, it is related that much of his best poetry was composed while lying in bed; and an anecdote is told of his having been seen in Lord Burlington's garden, with his hands in his waistcoat pockets, biting off the riper sides of the peaches that hung in his way.

1 The valley of the river Dee, in Cheshire, noted for its pastures and dairy products.

« 上一页继续 »