Of Liberty; the high conception blast; The noble fentiment, th' impatient scorn Of base subjection, and the fwelling with For general good, erazing from the mind: While nought fave narrow selfishness fucceeds, And low defign, the fneaking paffions all Let loose, and reigning in the rankled breast. Induc'd at laft, by fcarce-perceiv'd degrees, Sapping the very frame of government, And life, a total diffolution comes; Sloth, ignorance, dejection, flattery, fear. Oppreffion raging o'er the waste he makes; The human being almoft quite extinct; And the whole fstate in broad corruption finks. Oh, fhun that gulph: that gaping ruin fhun! And countless ages roll it far away From you, ye heaven-belov'd! may Liberty, The light of life, the fun of human-kind! Whence heroes, bards, and patriots borrow flame, Ev'n where the keen depreffive north descends, Still spread, exalt, and actuate your powers! While flavish southern climates beam in vain ! And may a public fpirit from the throne, Where every virtue fits, go copious forth Live o'er the land, the finer arts infpire,
Make thoughtful Science raise his penfive head, Blow the fresh bay, bid Industry rejoice, And the rough fons of lowest Labour smile. As when, profuse of spring, the loosen'd west up
the pining year, and balmy breathes
Youth, life, and love, and beauty o'er the world. But hafte we from these melancholy fhores, Nor to deaf winds and waves our fruitless plaint Pour weak; the country claims our active aid; That let us roam; and where we find a spark Of public virtue, blow it into flame.
Lol now my fons, the fons of freedom! meet In aweful fenate; thither let us fly;
Burn in the patriot's thought, flow from his tongue In fearless truth; myfelf, transform'd, prefide, And shed the spirit of Britannia round.
This faid; her fleeting form, and airy train, Sunk in the gale; and nought but ragged rocks Rush'd on the broken eye; and nought was heard But the rough cadence of the dashing wave.
The following Poem is thrown into the form of a Poeti- cal Vifion. Its fcene the ruins of ancient Rome. The Goddess of Liberty, who is fuppofed to speak through the whole, appears, characterized as British Liberty; to ver. 44. Gives a view of ancient Italy, and par- ticularly of republican Rome, in all her magnificence and glory; to ver. 112. This contrafted by modern Italy; its vallies, mountains, culture, cities, people: the difference appearing strongest in the capital city Rome; to ver. 234. The ruins of the great works of Liberty more magnificent than the borrowed pomp of Oppreffion; and from them revived Sculpture, Painting, and Architecture; to ver. 256. The old Romans apoftrophized, with regard to the feveral melancholy changes in Italy: Horace, Tully, and Virgil, with regard to their Tibur, Tufculum, and Naples; to ver. 287. That once finest and most or- namented part of Italy, all along the coaft of Baix, how changed; to ver. 321. This defolation of Italy applied to Britain; to ver. 344. Addrefs to the Goddess of Liberty, that she would deduce from the firft ages, her chief establishments, the defcription of which constitute the fubject of the following parts of this Poem. She affents, and commands what she says to be fung in Britain; whofe happiness, arifing from freedom, and a limited monarchy, she marks; to ver. 391. An immediate Vision attends, and paints her words. Invocation.
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