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Thy sweetness might have mov'd the harshest mind;

Thy kindness taught th' ungentlest to be kind;
And yet a fiend enshrin'd in female mould
Could thy heart-rending agonies behold;
When by her cruel wiles thy wedded heart
Was basely sever'd from its dearest part.
The lov'd Alphonso's breathless corpse she
view'd,

And yet her harden'd heart was unsubdu'd.
Perhaps, she saw thee sink beside his bed,
Or lean in speechless sorrow o'er the dead;
Or heard thee faintly cry-The knot's unti’d
Come, gentle death, thou cans't no more divide :
But spare our children, our lov'd offspring spare;
They still are young, and life is worth their care.
To me the charm that sweeten'd life is gone;
Weep not, my friends, I cannot die too soon.
Fast through her reins the subtle poison spread,
And join'd with grief, to bow her aged head.
Her children strive her drooping head to stay;
The monster works to rend those props away;
But triumphs not: a greater power sustains
And bears them through excruciating pains.

Oft did Maria, in serener days,

With tender transport on her offspring gaze;
Maternal love was pictur'd in her face,

The happy parent of a blooming race;

Now the fond mother feels at every pore;
Worse than her own, the pangs her children bore.
Yet still herself, sweet, affable, and mild,
The patient sufferer on her murd❜rer smil'd;
Who by her bed officiously attends,
Concern and kind solicitude pretends,
Yet still pursues her own infernal ends.
Hence aid medicinal is render'd vain,
By frequent potions of the deadly bane;
While cruel torture rack Maria's frame,
And by degrees puts out the vital flame.

Now pause, my muse, and seriously enquire,
What could this hellish cruelty inspire!
Why strike at those who no offence had given?
It seems like stabbing at the face of heaven!
In her dark mind what ugly passions breed!
Like gnawing worms, they on her vitals feed.
Without an object, what could malice do?
Alvina's near, she's often in her view;
In her polluted soul foul envy's rais'd;
Because perhaps she hears Alvina prais'd;

A groundless jealousy her breast inflames;
'Gainst thee, Alvina, she the mischief aims.
The wicked miscreant working in the dark,
Spreads ruin round, but cannot hit the mark:
A power divine restrains the falling blow-
Thus far thou may'st, but shalt no farther go.
What deadly venom rankled in that breast!
What worse than poison must the soul infest,
Which still its fatal purpose could pursue,
Tho' general destruction might ensue!
Oh! sin, prolific source of human woe!
To thee mankind their various sorrows owe;
Thro' thee our world a gloomy aspect wears,
And is too justly stil'd a vale of tears.
Man was first form'd upon a social plan;
And ties unnumber'd fasten man to man:
None are, howe'er debas'd, in form or mind,
Cut off from all communion with their kind.
Witness the wretched subject of these lines.
Alas! how many suffer'd by her crimes!
Who more detach'd, of less import, than she?
Yet mark her influence on society.
But there are crimes of a less shocking kind,
That find an easy pass from mind to mind:

As fire spreads from one building to another,
The vicious man contaminates his brother;
Why wonder, then, that Adam could deface
His maker's image in an unborn race?
When his own hand the sacred stamp had torn,
Could he transmit it whole to sons unborn?
In him the foul contagion first began;
From sire to son the deadly venom ran ;
Thus poisoning all the mighty mass of man.
The sad effect is dreadful to endure;
But human wisdom could not find a cure:
Thus, Scripture, reason, and experience, tend
Το prove, the power that made alone can mend.
Oh! Christ, thou sum and source of every good,
Thou that for sinners shed'st thy precious blood,
In thee our various wants are all suppli'd;
Thy death our ransom, and thy life our guide.
In thee thy followers second life attain;
And man reflects his maker's face again.
Is sin progressive, spreading every hour?
Has heaven-born virtue no diffusive power?
Our blessed Saviour is a living head;

The streams that issue from him can't be dead,
But scatter life and fragrance, as they spread.

I

DELIA.

YOUNG DELIA cries, where shall I find
A residence, to please my mind?

A place that's free from care and pain,
Where perfect ease and pleasure reign?

First to the city Delia flies;

And there sees human butterflies,
Who to all gay amusements go,
In silk and silver make a show.

Sure these are happy, Delia cries;
Their thoughtless air excites surprise ;
Gayly they flutter to and fro,

Nor seem to have one thought of woe.

Soon she joins the gaudy train,
Paints and dresses; but in vain :
Altho' in sparkling gems she shin'd,
Still discontent prey'd on her mind.
At length with high disdain she cri'd;
I'll bid adieu to pomp and pride;
Unto the country I'll repair,
And try th' effect of rural air.

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