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TO THE KING,

ON THE TAKING OF NAMUR.

IRREGULAR

ODE.

"Præfenti tibi maturos largimur honores : "Nil oriturum aliàs, nil ortum tale fatentes." Hor. ad Augustum.

OF

I.

F arms and war my Muse aspires to sing, And strike the lyre upon an untry'd string: New fire informs my foul, unfelt before; And, on new wings, to heights unknowm I foar. O power unseen! by whose refistless force Compell'd, I take this flight, direct my course: For Fancy wild and pathless ways will chuse, Which Judgment rarely, or with pain, pursues: Say, facred nymph, whence this great change proceeds; Why fcorns the lowly fwain his oaten reeds, Daring aloud to strike the founding lyre,

And fing heroic deeds;

Neglecting flames of love, for martial fire?

II.

William, alone, my feeble voice can raise ;
What voice fo weak, that cannot fing his praife!
The liftening world each whisper will befriend
That breathes his name, and every ear attend.

The

The hovering winds on downy wings fhall wait around,
And catch, and waft to foreign lands, the flying found.
Ey'n I will in his praife be heard;

For by his name my verfe fhall be preferr'd.
Borne like a lark upon this eagle's wing,

High as the fpheres, I will his triumph fing;

High as the head of Fame; Fame, whofe exalted fize
From the deep vale extends up to the vaulted skies:
A thoufand talking tongues the monster bears,
A thousand waking eyes, and ever-open ears;
Hourly fhe ftalks, with huge gigantic pace,
Measuring the globe, like time, with conftant race:
Yet shall she stay, and bend to William's praise :
Of him, her thousand ears fhall hear triumphant lays,
Of him her tongue fhall talk, on him her eyes fhall gaze.
III.

But lo, a change aftonishing my eyes!

And all around, behold new objects rife !

What forms are thefe I fee? and whence?
Beings fubftantial? or does air condense,
To clothe in vifionary shape my various thought?
Are thefe by fancy wrought!

Can ftrong ideas ftrike fo deep the sense!

O facred poefy! O boundless power!

What wonders doft thou trace, what hidden worlds explore !

Through feas, earth, air, and the wide-circling fky, What is not fought and feen by thy all-piercing eye!

IV.

'Twas now, when flowery lawns the profpect made,
And flowing brooks beneath a foreft's fhade;
A lowing heifer, lovelieft of the herd,

Stood feeding by; while two fierce bulls prepar'd
Their armed heads for fight; by fate of war, to prove
The victor worthy of the fair-one's love.

Unthought prefage, of what met next my view!
For foon the fhady fcene withdrew.

And now, for woods, and fields, and fpringing flowers; Behold a town arise, bulwark'd with walls, and lofty

towers!

Two rival armies all the plain o'erspread,
Each in battalia rang'd, and shining arms array'd:
With eager eyes beholding both from far
Namur, the prize and mistress of the war.

V.

Now, thirft of conqueft, and immortal fame,
Does every chief and foldier's heart inflame.
Defenfive arms the Gallic forces bear,
While hardy Britons for the ftorm prepare:
For fortune had, with partial hand, before
Refign'd the rule to Gallia's power.
High on a rock the mighty fortress stands,

Founded by Fate, and wrought by Nature's hands. A wondrous task it is th' Afcent to gain,

Through craggy cliffs, that strike the fight with pain, And nod impending terrors o'er the plain.

To this, what dangers men can add, by force or skill, (And great is human force and wit in ill)

Are

Are join'd; on every fide, wide-gaping engines wait, Teeming with fire, and big with certain fate; Ready to hurl destruction from above,

In dreadful roar, mocking the wrath of Jove. Thus fearful does the face of adverfe power appear; But British forces are unus'd to fear:

Though thus oppos'd, they might, if William where not

there.

VI.

But hark, the voice of war! behold the storm begin! The trumpet's clangor speaks in loud alarms, Mingling fhrill notes, with dreadful din

Of cannons burft, and rattling clash of arms. Clamours from earth to heaven, from heaven to earth re

bound,

Distinction in promifcuous noise is drown'd,
And Echo loft in one continued found.

Torrents of fire from brazen mouths are fent,
Follow'd by peals, as if each pole were rent;
Such flames the gulf of Tartarus difgorge,
So vaulted Ætna roars from Vulcan's forge;
Such were the peals from thence, fuch the vaft blaze that
broke,

Reddening with horid gloom the dusky smoke, When the huge Cyclops did with moulding thunder fweat, And maffive bolts on repercuffive anvils beat.

VII.

Amidst this rage, behold, where William stands,

Undaunted, undismay'd!

With face ferene, difpenfing dread commands;

Which, heard with awe, are with delight obey'd.
A thoufand fiery deaths around him fly;
And burning balls hifs harmless by:
For ev'ry fire his facred head must spare,
Nor dares the lightning touch the laurels there.
VIII.

Now many a wounded Briton feels the rage
Of miffive fires that fefter in each limb,
Which dire revenge alone has power t' affuage;
Revenge makes danger dreadlefs feem.

And now, with defperate force, and fresh attack,
Through cbvious deaths, refistless way they make;
Raifing high piles of earth, and heap on heap they lay,
And then afcend; refembling thus (as far
As race of men inferior may)

The fam'd gigantic war.

When thofe tall fons of earth did heaven afpire;
(A brave, but impious fire!)

Uprooting hills, with moft ftupendous hale,
To form the high and dreadful fcale.

The gods, with horror and amaze, look'd down,
Beholding rocks from their firm basis rent

Mountain on mountain thrown,

With threatening hurl, that shook th' ætherial firmament Th' attempt did fear in heaven create';

Even Jove defponding fate,

Till Mars, with all his force collected, flood. And pour'd whole war on the rebellious brood; Who, tumbling headlong from th' empyreal fkies, O'erwhelm'd those hills, by which they thought to rife. C

Mars

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