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Or has the cruel hand of fate

Bereft thee of thy darling young?
Alas, for BOTH, I weep

In all the pride of youthful charms,

A beauteous bride torn from my circling arms!
A lovely babe that should have lived to bless,
And fill my doating eyes with frequent tears,
At once the source of rapture and distress,
The flattering prop of my declining years!
In vain from death to rescue I essay'd,

By every art that science could devise;
Alas! it languish'd for a mother's aid,

And wing'd its flight to seek her in the skiesThen our comforts be the same,

Afevering's peaceful hour,

Foshan the noisy paths of wealth and fame, And breathe our sorrows in this lonely bower.

But why, alas! to thee complain!
To thee-unconscious of my pain!

Soon shalt THOU cease to mourn thy lot severe,
And hail the dawning of a happier year :
The genial warmth of joy-renewing spring
Again shall plume thy shatter'd wing;
Again thy little heart shall transport prove,
Again shall flow thy notes responsive to thy love

But O for ME in vain may seasons roll,
Nought can dry up the fountain of my tears,
Deploring still the COMFORT OF MY SOUL,
I count my sorrows by increasing years.

Tell me, thou syren Hope, deceiver, say,
Where is the promised period of my woes?
Full three long, lingering years have roll'd away,
And yet I weep, a stranger to repose:

O what delusion did thy tongue employ ! "That EMMA's fatal pledge of love,

"Her last bequest-with all a mother's care, "The bitterness of sorrow should remove, "Soften the horrors of despair,

"And chear a heart long lost to joy?" How oft, when fondling in mine arms, Gazing enraptured on its angel-face,

My soul the maze of Fate would vainly trace,
And burn with all a father's fond alarms!
And O what flattering scenes had Fancy feign'd,
How did I rave of blessings yet in store!

Till every aching sense was sweetly pain'd,
And my full heart could bear, nor tongue could

utter more.

"Just Heaven," I cry'd-with recent hopes elate, "Yet I will live-will live, thoug EhмMA'S

dead

"So long bow'd down beneath the storms of Fate, "Yet will I raise my woe-dejected head!

66 My little EMMA, now my ALL,

"Will want a father's care,

"Her looks, her wants my rash resolves recall,
"And for her sake the ills of life I'll bear:
"And oft together we'll complain,

"Complaint, the only bliss my soul can know, "From me my child shall learn the mournful strain, "And prattle tales of woe;

"And O in that auspicious hour,

"When Fate resigns her persecuting power, "With duteous zeal her hand shall close,

"No more to weep-my sorrow streaming eyes, "When death gives misery repose,

"And opes a glorious passage to the skies."

Vain thought! it must not be-She too is dead-
The flattering scene is o'er-
My hopes for ever-ever fled-

And vengeance can no more.—

Crush'd by misfortune-blasted by disease-
And none none left to bear a friendly part!
To ineditate my welfare, health, or ease,
Or soothe the anguish of an aching heart!
Now all one gloomy scene, till welcome death,
With len ent hand (O falsly deem'd severe)

Shall kindly stop my grief-exhausted breath,

And dry up every tear:
Perhaps, obsequious to my will,

But ah from my affections far removed!
The last sad office strangers may fulfil,
As if I ne'er had been beloved;
As if, unconscious of poetick fire,
I ne'er had touch'd the trembling lyre,
As if my niggard hand ne'er dealt relief,
Nor my heart melted at another's grief.

Yet while this weary life shall last,

While yet my tongue can form the impassion'd strain,

In piteous accents shall the Muse complain,
And dwell with fond delay on blessings past:
For O how grateful to a wounded leart,

The tale of misery to impart ;

From other's eyes bid artless sorrows flow,
And raise esteem upon the base of woe!
the noblest of the tuneful throng,

Even HE,

Shall deign my love-lorn tale to hear,

Shall catch the soft contagion of my song,

And pay the pensive Muse the tribute of a tear.

* Lord Lyttleton.

B 3

GEORGE CANNING.

1771.

An Irish Gentleman, father to the Right Honourable George Canning.

Lord Epistle from Lord William Russel to William
Cavendish, supposed to have been written by
Lord Russel, on Friday night, July 20, 1806, in
Newgate.

LOST to the world, to-morrow doom'd to die,
Still for my country's weal my heart beats high.
Though rattling chains ring peals of horror round,
While Night's black shades augment the savage

sound,

Midst bolts and bars the active soul is free,

And flies, unfetter'd, CAVENDISH, to thee.

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