Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Task. Book III. The Garden. by William Cowper
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The Task. Book III. The Garden.

    By William Cowper



    As one who, long in thickets and in brakes
    Entangled, winds now this way and now that
    His devious course uncertain, seeking home;
    Or, having long in miry ways been foiled
    And sore discomfited, from slough to slough
    Plunging, and half despairing of escape,
    If chance at length he find a greensward smooth
    And faithful to the foot, his spirits rise,
    He chirrups brisk his ear-erecting steed,
    And winds his way with pleasure and with ease;
    So I, designing other themes, and called
    To adorn the Sofa with eulogium due,
    To tell its slumbers and to paint its dreams,
    Have rambled wide. In country, city, seat
    Of academic fame, howe'er deserved,
    Long held, and scarcely disengaged at last.
    But now with pleasant pace, a cleanlier road
    I mean to tread. I feel myself at large,
    Courageous, and refreshed for future toil,
    If toil await me, or if dangers new.

    Since pulpits fail, and sounding-boards reflect
    Most part an empty ineffectual sound,
    What chance that I, to fame so little known,
    Nor conversant with men or manners much,
    Should speak to purpose, or with better hope
    Crack the satiric thong? 'Twere wiser far
    For me, enamoured of sequestered scenes,
    And charmed with rural beauty, to repose,
    Where chance may throw me, beneath elm or vine
    My languid limbs, when summer sears the plains;
    Or when rough winter rages, on the soft
    And sheltered Sofa, while the nitrous air
    Feeds a blue flame and makes a cheerful hearth;
    There, undisturbed by folly, and apprised
    How great the danger of disturbing her,
    To muse in silence, or at least confine
    Remarks that gall so many to the few,
    My partners in retreat. Disgust concealed
    Is ofttimes proof of wisdom, when the fault
    Is obstinate, and cure beyond our reach.

    Domestic happiness, thou only bliss
    Of Paradise that has survived the fall!
    Though few now taste thee unimpaired and pure,
    Or, tasting, long enjoy thee, too infirm
    Or too incautious to preserve thy sweets
    Unmixed with drops of bitter, which neglect
    Or temper sheds into thy crystal cup.
    Thou art the nurse of virtue. In thine arms
    She smiles, appearing, as in truth she is,
    Heaven-born, and destined to the skies again.
    Thou art not known where Pleasure is adored,
    That reeling goddess with the zoneless waist
    And wandering eyes, still leaning on the arm
    Of Novelty, her fickle frail support;
    For thou art meek and constant, hating change,
    And finding in the calm of truth-tried love
    Joys that her stormy raptures never yield.
    Forsaking thee, what shipwreck have we made
    Of honour, dignity, and fair renown,
    Till prostitution elbows us aside
    In all our crowded streets, and senates seem
    Convened for purposes of empire less,
    Than to release the adult'ress from her bond.
    The adult'ress! what a theme for angry verse,
    What provocation to the indignant heart
    That feels for injured love! but I disdain
    The nauseous task to paint her as she is,
    Cruel, abandoned, glorying in her shame.
    No; let her pass, and charioted along
    In guilty splendour shake the public ways;
    The frequency of crimes has washed them white,
    And verse of mine shall never brand the wretch
    Whom matrons now of character unsmirched
    And chaste themselves, are not ashamed to own.
    Virtue and vice had boundaries in old time
    Not to be passed; and she that had renounced
    Her sex's honour, was renounced herself
    By all that prized it; not for prudery's sake,
    But dignity's, resentful of the wrong.
    'Twas hard, perhaps, on here and there a waif
    Desirous to return, and not received;
    But was a wholesome rigour in the main,
    And taught the unblemished to preserve with care
    That purity, whose loss was loss of all.
    Men, too, were nice in honour in those days,
    And judged offenders well. Then he that sharped,
    And pocketed a prize by fraud obtained,
    Was marked and shunned as odious. He that sold
    His country, or was slack when she required
    His every nerve in action and at stretch,
    Paid with the blood that he had basely spared
    The price of his default. But now,--yes, now,
    We are become so candid and so fair,
    So liberal in construction, and so rich
    In Christian charity (good-natured age!)
    That they are safe, sinners of either sex,
    Transgress what laws they may. Well dressed, well bred,
    Well equipaged, is ticket good enough
    To pass us readily through every door.
    Hypocrisy, detest her as we may
    (And no man's hatred ever wronged her yet),
    May claim this merit still--that she admits
    The worth of what she mimics with such care,
    And thus gives virtue indirect applause;
    But she has burnt her mask, not needed here,
    Where vice has such allowance, that her shifts
    And specious semblances have lost their use.

    I was a stricken deer that left the herd
    Long since; with many an arrow deep infixt
    My panting side was charged, when I withdrew
    To seek a tranquil death in distant shades.
    There was I found by one who had himself
    Been hurt by the archers. In his side he bore,
    And in his hands and feet, the cruel scars.
    With gentle force soliciting the darts
    He drew them forth, and healed and bade me live.
    Since then, with few associates, in remote
    And silent woods I wander, far from those
    My former partners of the peopled scene,
    With few associates, and not wishing more.
    Here much I ruminate, as much I may,
    With other views of men and manners now
    Than once, and others of a life to come.
    I see that all are wanderers, gone astray
    Each in his own delusions; they are lost
    In chase of fancied happiness, still woo'd
    And never won. Dream after dream ensues,
    And still they dream that they shall still succeed,
    And still are disappointed: rings the world
    With the vain stir. I sum up half mankind,
    And add two-thirds of the remaining half,
    And find the total of their hopes and fears
    Dreams, empty dreams. The million flit as gay
    As if created only, like the fly
    That spreads his motley wings in the eye of noon,
    To sport their season and be seen no more.
    The rest are sober dreamers, grave and wise,
    And pregnant with discoveries new and rare.
    Some write a narrative of wars, and feats
    Of heroes little known, and call the rant
    A history; describe the man, of whom
    His own coevals took but little note,
    And paint his person, character, and views,
    As they had known him from his mother's womb;
    They disentangle from the puzzled skein,
    In which obscurity has wrapped them up,
    The threads of politic and shrewd design
    That ran through all his purposes, and charge
    His mind with meanings that he never had,
    Or, having, kept concealed. Some drill and bore
    The solid earth, and from the strata there
    Extract a register, by which we learn
    That He who made it and revealed its date
    To Moses, was mistaken in its age.
    Some, more acute and more industrious still,
    Contrive creation; travel nature up
    To the sharp peak of her sublimest height,
    And tell us whence the stars; why some are fixt,
    And planetary some; what gave them first
    Rotation, from what fountain flowed their light.
    Great contest follows, and much learned dust
    Involves the combatants, each claiming truth,
    And truth disclaiming both. And thus they spend
    The little wick of life's poor shallow lamp
    In playing tricks with nature, giving laws
    To distant worlds, and trifling in their own.
    Is't not a pity now, that tickling rheums
    Should ever tease the lungs and blear the sight
    Of oracles like these? Great pity, too,
    That having wielded the elements, and built
    A thousand systems, each in his own way,
    They should go out in fume and be forgot?
    Ah, what is life thus spent? and what are they
    But frantic who thus spend it? all for smoke--
    Eternity for bubbles proves at last
    A senseless bargain. When I see such games
    Played by the creatures of a Power who swears
    That He will judge the earth, and call the fool
    To a sharp reckoning that has lived in vain,
    And when I weigh this seeming wisdom well,
    And prove it in the infallible result
    So hollow and so false--I feel my heart
    Dissolve in pity, and account the learned,
    If this be learning, most of all deceived.
    Great crimes alarm the conscience, but it sleeps
    While thoughtful man is plausibly amused.
    Defend me, therefore, common sense, say I,
    From reveries so airy, from the toil
    Of dropping buckets into empty wells,
    And growing old in drawing nothing up!

    'Twere well, says one sage erudite, profound,
    Terribly arched and aquiline his nose,
    And overbuilt with most impending brows,
    'Twere well could you permit the world to live
    As the world pleases. What's the world to you?--
    Much. I was born of woman, and drew milk
    As sweet as charity from human breasts.
    I think, articulate, I laugh and weep,
    And exercise all functions of a man.
    How then should I and any man that lives
    Be strangers to each other? Pierce my vein,
    Take of the crimson stream meandering there,
    And catechise it well. Apply your glass,
    Search it, and prove now if it be not blood
    Congenial with thine own; and if it be,
    What edge of subtlety canst thou suppose
    Keen enough, wise and skilful as thou art,
    To cut the link of brotherhood, by which
    One common Maker bound me to the kind?
    True; I am no proficient, I confess,
    In arts like yours. I cannot call the swift
    And perilous lightnings from the angry clouds,
    And bid them hide themselves in the earth beneath;
    I cannot analyse the air, nor catch
    The parallax of yonder luminous point
    That seems half quenched in the immense abyss:
    Such powers I boast not--neither can I rest
    A silent witness of the headlong rage,
    Or heedless folly, by which thousands die,
    Bone of my bone, and kindred souls to mine.

    God never meant that man should scale the heavens
    By strides of human wisdom. In His works,
    Though wondrous, He commands us in His Word
    To seek Him rather where His mercy shines.
    The mind indeed, enlightened from above,
    Views Him in all; ascribes to the grand cause
    The grand effect; acknowledges with joy
    His manner, and with rapture tastes His style.
    But never yet did philosophic tube,
    That brings the planets home into the eye
    Of observation, and discovers, else
    Not visible, His family of worlds,
    Discover Him that rules them; such a veil
    Hangs over mortal eyes, blind from the birth,
    And dark in things divine. Full often too
    Our wayward intellect, the more we learn
    Of nature, overlooks her Author more;
    From instrumental causes proud to draw
    Conclusions retrograde, and mad mistake:
    But if His Word once teach us, shoot a ray
    Through all the heart's dark chambers, and reveal
    Truths undiscerned but by that holy light,
    Then all is plain. Philosophy, baptised
    In the pure fountain of eternal love,
    Has eyes indeed; and, viewing all she sees
    As meant to indicate a God to man,
    Gives HIM His praise, and forfeits not her own.
    Learning has borne such fruit in other days
    On all her branches. Piety has found
    Friends in the friends of science, and true prayer
    Has flowed from lips wet with Castalian dews.
    Such was thy wisdom, Newton, childlike sage!
    Sagacious reader of the works of God,
    And in His Word sagacious. Such too thine,
    Milton, whose genius had angelic wings,
    And fed on manna. And such thine, in whom
    Our British Themis gloried with just cause,
    Immortal Hale! for deep discernment praised,
    And sound integrity not more, than famed
    For sanctity of manners undefiled.

    All flesh is grass, and all its glory fades
    Like the fair flower dishevelled in the wind;
    Riches have wings, and grandeur is a dream;
    The man we celebrate must find a tomb,
    And we that worship him, ignoble graves.
    Nothing is proof against the general curse
    Of vanity, that seizes all below.
    The only amaranthine flower on earth
    Is virtue; the only lasting treasure, truth.
    But what is truth? 'twas Pilate's question put
    To truth itself, that deigned him no reply.
    And wherefore? will not God impart His light
    To them that ask it?--Freely--'tis His joy,
    His glory, and His nature to impart.
    But to the proud, uncandid, insincere,
    Or negligent inquirer, not a spark.
    What's that which brings contempt upon a book
    And him that writes it, though the style be neat,
    The method clear, and argument exact?
    That makes a minister in holy things
    The joy of many, and the dread of more,
    His name a theme for praise and for reproach?--
    That, while it gives us worth in God's account,
    Depreciates and undoes us in our own?
    What pearl is it that rich men cannot buy,
    That learning is too proud to gather up,
    But which the poor and the despised of all
    Seek and obtain, and often find unsought?
    Tell me, and I will tell thee what is truth.

    Oh, friendly to the best pursuits of man,
    Friendly to thought, to virtue, and to peace,
    Domestic life in rural leisure passed!
    Few know thy value, and few taste thy sweets,
    Though many boast thy favours, and affect
    To understand and choose thee for their own.
    But foolish man foregoes his proper bliss,
    Even as his first progenitor, and quits,
    Though placed in paradise, for earth has still
    Some traces of her youthful beauty left,
    Substantial happiness for transient joy.
    Scenes formed for contemplation, and to nurse
    The growing seeds of wisdom; that suggest,
    By every pleasing image they present,
    Reflections such as meliorate the heart,
    Compose the passions, and exalt the mind;
    Scenes such as these, 'tis his supreme delight
    To fill with riot and defile with blood.
    Should some contagion, kind to the poor brutes
    We persecute, annihilate the tribes
    That draw the sportsman over hill and dale
    Fearless, and rapt away from all his cares;
    Should never game-fowl hatch her eggs again,
    Nor baited hook deceive the fish's eye;
    Could pageantry, and dance, and feast, and song
    Be quelled in all our summer months' retreats;
    How many self-deluded nymphs and swains,
    Who dream they have a taste for fields and groves,
    Would find them hideous nurseries of the spleen,
    And crowd the roads, impatient for the town!
    They love the country, and none else, who seek
    For their own sake its silence and its shade;
    Delights which who would leave, that has a heart
    Susceptible of pity, or a mind
    Cultured and capable of sober thought,
    For all the savage din of the swift pack,
    And clamours of the field? Detested sport,
    That owes its pleasures to another's pain,
    That feeds upon the sobs and dying shrieks
    Of harmless nature, dumb, but yet endued
    With eloquence, that agonies inspire,
    Of silent tears and heart-distending sighs!
    Vain tears, alas! and sighs that never find
    A corresponding tone in jovial souls.
    Well--one at least is safe. One sheltered hare
    Has never heard the sanguinary yell
    Of cruel man, exulting in her woes.
    Innocent partner of my peaceful home,
    Whom ten long years' experience of my care
    Has made at last familiar, she has lost
    Much of her vigilant instinctive dread,
    Not needful here, beneath a roof like mine.
    Yes--thou mayst eat thy bread, and lick the hand
    That feeds thee; thou mayst frolic on the floor
    At evening, and at night retire secure
    To thy straw-couch, and slumber unalarmed;
    For I have gained thy confidence, have pledged
    All that is human in me to protect
    Thine unsuspecting gratitude and love.
    If I survive thee I will dig thy grave,
    And when I place thee in it, sighing say,
    I knew at least one hare that had a friend.

    How various his employments, whom the world
    Calls idle, and who justly in return
    Esteems that busy world an idler, too!
    Friends, books, a garden, and perhaps his pen,
    Delightful industry enjoyed at home,
    And nature in her cultivated trim
    Dressed to his taste, inviting him abroad--
    Can he want occupation who has these?
    Will he be idle who has much to enjoy?
    Me, therefore, studious of laborious ease,
    Not slothful; happy to deceive the time,
    Not waste it; and aware that human life
    Is but a loan to be repaid with use,
    When He shall call His debtors to account,
    From whom are all our blessings; business finds
    Even here: while sedulous I seek to improve,
    At least neglect not, or leave unemployed,
    The mind He gave me; driving it, though slack
    Too oft, and much impeded in its work
    By causes not to be divulged in vain,
    To its just point--the service of mankind.
    He that attends to his interior self,
    That has a heart and keeps it; has a mind
    That hungers and supplies it; and who seeks
    A social, not a dissipated life,
    Has business; feels himself engaged to achieve
    No unimportant, though a silent task.
    A life all turbulence and noise may seem,
    To him that leads it, wise and to be praised;
    But wisdom is a pearl with most success
    Sought in still water, and beneath clear skies.
    He that is ever occupied in storms,
    Or dives not for it or brings up instead,
    Vainly industrious, a disgraceful prize.

    The morning finds the self-sequestered man
    Fresh for his task, intend what task he may.
    Whether inclement seasons recommend
    His warm but simple home, where he enjoys,
    With her who shares his pleasures and his heart,
    Sweet converse, sipping calm the fragrant lymph
    Which neatly she prepares; then to his book
    Well chosen, and not sullenly perused
    In selfish silence, but imparted oft
    As aught occurs that she may smile to hear,
    Or turn to nourishment digested well.
    Or if the garden with its many cares,
    All well repaid, demand him, he attends
    The welcome call, conscious how much the hand
    Of lubbard labour needs his watchful eye,
    Oft loitering lazily if not o'erseen,
    Or misapplying his unskilful strength.
    Nor does he govern only or direct,
    But much performs himself; no works indeed
    That ask robust tough sinews, bred to toil,
    Servile employ--but such as may amuse,
    Not tire, demanding rather skill than force.
    Proud of his well-spread walls, he views his trees
    That meet, no barren interval between,
    With pleasure more than even their fruits afford,
    Which, save himself who trains them, none can feel.
    These, therefore, are his own peculiar charge,
    No meaner hand may discipline the shoots,
    None but his steel approach them. What is weak,
    Distempered, or has lost prolific powers,
    Impaired by age, his unrelenting hand
    Dooms to the knife. Nor does he spare the soft
    And succulent that feeds its giant growth,
    But barren, at the expense of neighbouring twigs
    Less ostentatious, and yet studded thick
    With hopeful gems. The rest, no portion left
    That may disgrace his art, or disappoint
    Large expectation, he disposes neat
    At measured distances, that air and sun
    Admitted freely may afford their aid,
    And ventilate and warm the swelling buds.
    Hence Summer has her riches, Autumn hence,
    And hence even Winter fills his withered hand
    With blushing fruits, and plenty not his own,
    Fair recompense of labour well bestowed
    And wise precaution, which a clime so rude
    Makes needful still, whose Spring is but the child
    Of churlish Winter, in her froward moods
    Discovering much the temper of her sire.
    For oft, as if in her the stream of mild
    Maternal nature had reversed its course,
    She brings her infants forth with many smiles,
    But, once delivered, kills them with a frown.
    He therefore, timely warned, himself supplies
    Her want of care, screening and keeping warm
    The plenteous bloom, that no rough blast may sweep
    His garlands from the boughs. Again, as oft
    As the sun peeps and vernal airs breathe mild,
    The fence withdrawn, he gives them ev'ry beam,
    And spreads his hopes before the blaze of day.

    To raise the prickly and green-coated gourd,
    So grateful to the palate, and when rare
    So coveted, else base and disesteemed--
    Food for the vulgar merely--is an art
    That toiling ages have but just matured,
    And at this moment unessayed in song.
    Yet gnats have had, and frogs and mice long since,
    Their eulogy; those sang the Mantuan bard,
    And these the Grecian in ennobling strains;
    And in thy numbers, Philips, shines for aye
    The solitary Shilling. Pardon then,
    Ye sage dispensers of poetic fame!
    The ambition of one meaner far, whose powers
    Presuming an attempt not less sublime,
    Pant for the praise of dressing to the taste
    Of critic appetite, no sordid fare,
    A cucumber, while costly yet and scarce.

    The stable yields a stercoraceous heap
    Impregnated with quick fermenting salts,
    And potent to resist the freezing blast.
    For ere the beech and elm have cast their leaf
    Deciduous, and when now November dark
    Checks vegetation in the torpid plant
    Exposed to his cold breath, the task begins.
    Warily therefore, and with prudent heed
    He seeks a favoured spot, that where he builds
    The agglomerated pile, his frame may front
    The sun's meridian disk, and at the back
    Enjoy close shelter, wall, or reeds, or hedge
    Impervious to the wind. First he bids spread
    Dry fern or littered hay, that may imbibe
    The ascending damps; then leisurely impose,
    And lightly, shaking it with agile hand
    From the full fork, the saturated straw.
    What longest binds the closest, forms secure
    The shapely side, that as it rises takes
    By just degrees an overhanging breadth,
    Sheltering the base with its projected eaves.
    The uplifted frame compact at every joint,
    And overlaid with clear translucent glass,
    He settles next upon the sloping mount,
    Whose sharp declivity shoots off secure
    From the dashed pane the deluge as it falls.
    He shuts it close, and the first labour ends.
    Thrice must the voluble and restless earth
    Spin round upon her axle, ere the warmth
    Slow gathering in the midst, through the square mass
    Diffused, attain the surface. When, behold!
    A pestilent and most corrosive steam,
    Like a gross fog Boeotian, rising fast,
    And fast condensed upon the dewy sash,
    Asks egress; which obtained, the overcharged
    And drenched conservatory breathes abroad,
    In volumes wheeling slow, the vapour dank,
    And purified, rejoices to have lost
    Its foul inhabitant. But to assuage
    The impatient fervour which it first conceives
    Within its reeking bosom, threatening death
    To his young hopes, requires discreet delay.
    Experience, slow preceptress, teaching oft
    The way to glory by miscarriage foul,
    Must prompt him, and admonish how to catch
    The auspicious moment, when the tempered heat,
    Friendly to vital motion, may afford
    Soft fermentation, and invite the seed.
    The seed selected wisely, plump and smooth
    And glossy, he commits to pots of size
    Diminutive, well filled with well-prepared
    And fruitful soil, that has been treasured long,
    And drunk no moisture from the dripping clouds:
    These on the warm and genial earth that hides
    The smoking manure, and o'erspreads it all,
    He places lightly, and, as time subdues
    The rage of fermentation, plunges deep
    In the soft medium, till they stand immersed.
    Then rise the tender germs upstarting quick
    And spreading wide their spongy lobes; at first
    Pale, wan, and livid; but assuming soon,
    If fanned by balmy and nutritious air
    Strained through the friendly mats, a vivid green.
    Two leaves produced, two rough indented leaves,
    Cautious he pinches from the second stalk
    A pimple, that portends a future sprout,
    And interdicts its growth. Thence straight succeed
    The branches, sturdy to his utmost wish,
    Prolific all, and harbingers of more.
    The crowded roots demand enlargement now
    And transplantation in an ampler space.
    Indulged in what they wish, they soon supply
    Large foliage, overshadowing golden flowers,
    Blown on the summit of the apparent fruit.
    These have their sexes, and when summer shines
    The bee transports the fertilising meal
    From flower to flower, and even the breathing air
    Wafts the rich prize to its appointed use.
    Not so when winter scowls. Assistant art
    Then acts in nature's office, brings to pass
    The glad espousals and insures the crop.

    Grudge not, ye rich (since luxury must have
    His dainties, and the world's more numerous half
    Lives by contriving delicates for you),
    Grudge not the cost. Ye little know the cares,
    The vigilance, the labour, and the skill
    That day and night are exercised, and hang
    Upon the ticklish balance of suspense,
    That ye may garnish your profuse regales
    With summer fruits, brought forth by wintry suns.
    Ten thousand dangers lie in wait to thwart
    The process. Heat and cold, and wind and steam,
    Moisture and drought, mice, worms, and swarming flies
    Minute as dust and numberless, oft work
    Dire disappointment that admits no cure,
    And which no care can obviate. It were long,
    Too long to tell the expedients and the shifts
    Which he, that fights a season so severe,
    Devises, while he guards his tender trust,
    And oft, at last, in vain. The learned and wise
    Sarcastic would exclaim, and judge the song
    Cold as its theme, and, like its theme, the fruit
    Of too much labour, worthless when produced.

    Who loves a garden, loves a greenhouse too.
    Unconscious of a less propitious clime
    There blooms exotic beauty, warm and snug,
    While the winds whistle and the snows descend.
    The spiry myrtle with unwithering leaf
    Shines there and flourishes. The golden boast
    Of Portugal and Western India there,
    The ruddier orange and the paler lime,
    Peep through their polished foliage at the storm,
    And seem to smile at what they need not fear.
    The amomum there with intermingling flowers
    And cherries hangs her twigs. Geranium boasts
    Her crimson honours, and the spangled beau,
    Ficoides, glitters bright the winter long,
    All plants, of every leaf, that can endure
    The winter's frown if screened from his shrewd bite,
    Live there and prosper. Those Ausonia claims,
    Levantine regions these; the Azores send
    Their jessamine; her jessamine remote
    Caffraria: foreigners from many lands,
    They form one social shade, as if convened
    By magic summons of the Orphean lyre.
    Yet such arrangement, rarely brought to pass
    But by a master's hand, disposing well
    The gay diversities of leaf and flower,
    Must lend its aid to illustrate all their charms,
    And dress the regular yet various scene.
    Plant behind plant aspiring, in the van
    The dwarfish, in the rear retired, but still
    Sublime above the rest, the statelier stand.
    So once were ranged the sons of ancient Rome,
    A noble show, while Roscius trod the stage;
    And so, while Garrick, as renowned as he,
    The sons of Albion, fearing each to lose
    Some note of Nature's music from his lips,
    And covetous of Shakespeare's beauty, seen
    In every flash of his far-beaming eye.
    Nor taste alone and well-contrived display
    Suffice to give the marshalled ranks the grace
    Of their complete effect. Much yet remains
    Unsung, and many cares are yet behind
    And more laborious; cares on which depends
    Their vigour, injured soon, not soon restored.
    The soil must be renewed, which often washed
    Loses its treasure of salubrious salts,
    And disappoints the roots; the slender roots,
    Close interwoven where they meet the vase,
    Must smooth be shorn away; the sapless branch
    Must fly before the knife; the withered leaf
    Must be detached, and where it strews the floor
    Swept with a woman's neatness, breeding else
    Contagion, and disseminating death.
    Discharge but these kind offices (and who
    Would spare, that loves them, offices like these?)
    Well they reward the toil. The sight is pleased,
    The scent regaled, each odoriferous leaf,
    Each opening blossom, freely breathes abroad
    Its gratitude, and thanks him with its sweets.

    So manifold, all pleasing in their kind,
    All healthful, are the employs of rural life,
    Reiterated as the wheel of time
    Runs round, still ending, and beginning still.
    Nor are these all. To deck the shapely knoll
    That, softly swelled and gaily dressed, appears
    A flowery island from the dark green lawn
    Emerging, must be deemed a labour due
    To no mean hand, and asks the touch of taste.
    Here also grateful mixture of well-matched
    And sorted hues (each giving each relief,
    And by contrasted beauty shining more)
    Is needful. Strength may wield the ponderous spade,
    May turn the clod, and wheel the compost home,
    But elegance, chief grace the garden shows
    And most attractive, is the fair result
    Of thought, the creature of a polished mind.
    Without it, all is Gothic as the scene
    To which the insipid citizen resorts,
    Near yonder heath; where industry misspent,
    But proud of his uncouth, ill-chosen task,
    Has made a heaven on earth; with suns and moons
    Of close-rammed stones has charged the encumbered soil,
    And fairly laid the zodiac in the dust.
    He, therefore, who would see his flowers disposed
    Sightly and in just order, ere he gives
    The beds the trusted treasure of their seeds,
    Forecasts the future whole; that when the scene
    Shall break into its preconceived display,
    Each for itself, and all as with one voice
    Conspiring, may attest his bright design.
    Nor even then, dismissing as performed
    His pleasant work, may he suppose it done.
    Few self-supported flowers endure the wind
    Uninjured, but expect the upholding aid
    Of the smooth-shaven prop, and neatly tied
    Are wedded thus, like beauty to old age,
    For interest sake, the living to the dead.
    Some clothe the soil that feeds them, far diffused
    And lowly creeping, modest and yet fair;
    Like virtue, thriving most where little seen.
    Some, more aspiring, catch the neighbour shrub
    With clasping tendrils, and invest his branch,
    Else unadorned, with many a gay festoon
    And fragrant chaplet, recompensing well
    The strength they borrow with the grace they lend.
    All hate the rank society of weeds,
    Noisome, and very greedy to exhaust
    The impoverished earth; an overbearing race,
    That, like the multitude made faction-mad,
    Disturb good order, and degrade true worth.

    Oh blest seclusion from a jarring world,
    Which he, thus occupied, enjoys! Retreat
    Cannot, indeed, to guilty man restore
    Lost innocence, or cancel follies past;
    But it has peace, and much secures the mind
    From all assaults of evil; proving still
    A faithful barrier, not o'erleaped with ease
    By vicious custom raging uncontrolled
    Abroad and desolating public life.
    When fierce temptation, seconded within
    By traitor appetite, and armed with darts
    Tempered in hell, invades the throbbing breast,
    To combat may be glorious, and success
    Perhaps may crown us, but to fly is safe.
    Had I the choice of sublunary good,
    What could I wish that I possess not here?
    Health, leisure; means to improve it, friendship, peace,
    No loose or wanton though a wandering muse,
    And constant occupation without care.
    Thus blest, I draw a picture of that bliss;
    Hopeless, indeed, that dissipated minds
    And profligate abusers of a world
    Created fair so much in vain for them,
    Should seek the guiltless joys that I describe,
    Allured by my report; but sure no less
    That self-condemned they must neglect the prize,
    And what they will not taste, must yet approve.
    What we admire we praise; and when we praise
    Advance it into notice, that, its worth
    Acknowledged, others may admire it too.
    I therefore recommend, though at the risk
    Of popular disgust, yet boldly still,
    The cause of piety and sacred truth
    And virtue, and those scenes which God ordained
    Should best secure them and promote them most;
    Scenes that I love, and with regret perceive
    Forsaken, or through folly not enjoyed.
    Pure is the nymph, though liberal of her smiles,
    And chaste, though unconfined, whom I extol.
    Not as the prince in Shushan, when he called,
    Vain-glorious of her charms, his Vashti forth,
    To grace the full pavilion. His design
    Was but to boast his own peculiar good,
    Which all might view with envy, none partake.
    My charmer is not mine alone; my sweets,
    And she that sweetens all my bitters, too,
    Nature, enchanting Nature, in whose form
    And lineaments divine I trace a hand
    That errs not, and find raptures still renewed,
    Is free to all men--universal prize.
    Strange that so fair a creature should yet want
    Admirers, and be destined to divide
    With meaner objects even the few she finds.
    Stript of her ornaments, her leaves and flowers,
    She loses all her influence. Cities then
    Attract us, and neglected Nature pines,
    Abandoned, as unworthy of our love.
    But are not wholesome airs, though unperfumed
    By roses, and clear suns, though scarcely felt,
    And groves, if unharmonious yet secure
    From clamour and whose very silence charms,
    To be preferred to smoke--to the eclipse
    That Metropolitan volcanoes make,
    Whose Stygian throats breathe darkness all day long,
    And to the stir of commerce, driving slow,
    And thundering loud with his ten thousand wheels?
    They would be, were not madness in the head
    And folly in the heart; were England now
    What England was, plain, hospitable, kind,
    And undebauched. But we have bid farewell
    To all the virtues of those better days,
    And all their honest pleasures. Mansions once
    Knew their own masters, and laborious hands
    That had survived the father, served the son.
    Now the legitimate and rightful lord
    Is but a transient guest, newly arrived
    And soon to be supplanted. He that saw
    His patrimonial timber cast its leaf,
    Sells the last scantling, and transfers the price
    To some shrewd sharper, ere it buds again.
    Estates are landscapes, gazed upon awhile,
    Then advertised, and auctioneered away.
    The country starves, and they that feed the o'er-charged
    And surfeited lewd town with her fair dues,
    By a just judgment strip and starve themselves.
    The wings that waft our riches out of sight
    Grow on the gamester's elbows, and the alert
    And nimble motion of those restless joints,
    That never tire, soon fans them all away.
    Improvement too, the idol of the age,
    Is fed with many a victim. Lo! he comes--
    The omnipotent magician, Brown, appears.
    Down falls the venerable pile, the abode
    Of our forefathers, a grave whiskered race,
    But tasteless. Springs a palace in its stead,
    But in a distant spot; where more exposed
    It may enjoy the advantage of the North
    And aguish East, till time shall have transformed
    Those naked acres to a sheltering grove.
    He speaks. The lake in front becomes a lawn,
    Woods vanish, hills subside, and valleys rise,
    And streams, as if created for his use,
    Pursue the track of his directed wand
    Sinuous or straight, now rapid and now slow,
    Now murmuring soft, now roaring in cascades,
    Even as he bids. The enraptured owner smiles.
    'Tis finished. And yet, finished as it seems,
    Still wants a grace, the loveliest it could show,
    A mine to satisfy the enormous cost.
    Drained to the last poor item of his wealth,
    He sighs, departs, and leaves the accomplished plan
    That he has touched and retouched, many a day
    Laboured, and many a night pursued in dreams,
    Just when it meets his hopes, and proves the heaven
    He wanted, for a wealthier to enjoy.
    And now perhaps the glorious hour is come,
    When having no stake left, no pledge to endear
    Her interests, or that gives her sacred cause
    A moment's operation on his love,
    He burns with most intense and flagrant zeal
    To serve his country. Ministerial grace
    Deals him out money from the public chest,
    Or, if that mine be shut, some private purse
    Supplies his need with an usurious loan,
    To be refunded duly, when his vote,
    Well-managed, shall have earned its worthy price.
    Oh, innocent compared with arts like these,
    Crape and cocked pistol and the whistling ball
    Sent through the traveller's temples! He that finds
    One drop of heaven's sweet mercy in his cup,
    Can dig, beg, rot, and perish well-content,
    So he may wrap himself in honest rags
    At his last gasp; but could not for a world
    Fish up his dirty and dependent bread
    From pools and ditches of the commonwealth,
    Sordid and sickening at his own success.

    Ambition, avarice, penury incurred
    By endless riot, vanity, the lust
    Of pleasure and variety, despatch,
    As duly as the swallows disappear,
    The world of wandering knights and squires to town;
    London engulfs them all. The shark is there,
    And the shark's prey; the spendthrift, and the leech
    That sucks him. There the sycophant, and he
    That with bare-headed and obsequious bows
    Begs a warm office, doomed to a cold jail
    And groat per diem if his patron frown.
    The levee swarms, as if in golden pomp
    Were charactered on every statesman's door,
    'BATTERED AND BANKRUPT FORTUNES MENDED HERE.'
    These are the charms that sully and eclipse
    The charms of nature. 'Tis the cruel gripe
    That lean hard-handed poverty inflicts,
    The hope of better things, the chance to win,
    The wish to shine, the thirst to be amused,
    That, at the sound of Winter's hoary wing,
    Unpeople all our counties of such herds
    Of fluttering, loitering, cringing, begging, loose
    And wanton vagrants, as make London, vast
    And boundless as it is, a crowded coop.

    Oh thou resort and mart of all the earth,
    Chequered with all complexions of mankind,
    And spotted with all crimes; in whom I see
    Much that I love, and more that I admire,
    And all that I abhor; thou freckled fair
    That pleases and yet shocks me, I can laugh
    And I can weep, can hope, and can despond,
    Feel wrath and pity when I think on thee!
    Ten righteous would have saved a city once,
    And thou hast many righteous.--Well for thee--
    That salt preserves thee; more corrupted else,
    And therefore more obnoxious at this hour
    Than Sodom in her day had power to be,
    For whom God heard his Abram plead in vain.



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