And Massachuset, happy in those arts, That join the politics of trade and war, Bearing the palm in either; they appear Better exemplars; and that hardy crew, Who, on the frozen beach of Newfoundland, Hang their white fish amid the parching winds: The kindly fleece, in webs of Duffield woof, Their limbs benumbed enfolds with cheerly warmth, And frieze of Cambria, worn by those who seek, 561 Through gulfs and dales of Hudson's winding bay, The beaver's fur, though oft they seek in vain, While winter's frosty rigour checks approach, Even in the fiftieth latitude. Say why
(If ye, the travelled sons of commerce, know) Wherefore lie bound their rivers, lakes, and dales, Half the sun's annual course, in chains of ice? While the Rhine's fertile shore, and Gallic realms, By the same zone encircled, long enjoy Warm beams of Phoebus, and, supine, behold The plains and hillocks blush with clustering vines. Must it be ever thus? or may the hand Of mighty labour drain their gusty lakes, Enlarge the brightening sky, and, peopling, warm The opening valleys, and the yellowing plains? Or rather shall we burst strong Darien's chain, Steer our bold fleets between the cloven rocks, And through the great Pacific every joy Of civil life diffuse? Are not her isles
Numerous and large? Have they not harbours calm, Inhabitants, and manners? haply, too,
Peculiar sciences, and other forms
Of trade, and useful products, to exchange For woolly vestures? "Tis a tedious course By the Antarctic circle: nor beyond
Those sea-wrapt gardens of the dulcet reed, Bahama and the Caribbee, may be found Safe mole or harbour, till on Falkland's isle The standard of Britannia shall arise.
Proud Buenos Ayres, low-couched Paraguay, And rough Corrientes, mark with hostile eye The labouring vessel: neither may we trust The dreary naked Patagonian land,
Which darkens in the wind. No traffic there, No barter for the fleece. There angry storms Bend their black brows, and, raging, hurl around Their thunders. Ye adventurous mariners,
Be firm; take courage from the brave. 'Twas there Perils and conflicts inexpresssible
Anson, with steady undespairing breast,
Endured, when o'er the various globe he chased
His country's foes. Fast-gathering tempests roused Huge Ocean, and involved him: all around Whirlwind, and snow, and hail, and horror: now, Rapidly, with the world of waters, down Descending to the channels of the deep, He viewed the uncovered bottom of th' abyss; And now the stars, upon the loftiest point Tossed of the sky-mixed surges. Oft the burst Of loudest thunder, with the dash of seas Tore the wild-flying sails and tumbling masts; While flames, thick-flashing, in the gloom revealed Ruins of decks and shrouds, and sights of death. Yet on he fared, with fortitude his cheer, Gaining, at intervals, slow way beneath Del Fuego's rugged cliffs, and the white ridge, Above all height, by opening clouds revealed, Of Montegorda, and inaccessible
Wreck-threatening Staten-land's o'erhanging shore, 620
Enormous rocks on rocks, in ever-wild Posture of falling; as when Pelion, reared On Ossa, and on Ossa's tottering head Woody Olympus, by the angry gods Precipitate on earth were doomed to fall.
At length, through every tempest, as some branch, Which from a poplar falls into a loud Impetuous cataract, though deep immersed,
Yet reascends, and glides, on lake or stream, Smooth through the valleys: so his way he won 630
To the serene Pacific, flood immense,
And reared his lofty masts, and spread his sails. Then Paita's walls, in wasting flames involved,
His vengeance felt, and fair occasion gave To show humanity and continence,
To Scipio's not inferior. Then was left No corner of the globe secure to pride
And violence: although the far-stretched coast Of Chili, and Peru, and Mexico,
Armed in their evil cause; though fell disease, Un'bating labour, tedious time, conspired,
And heat inclement, to unnerve his force;
Though that wide sea, which spreads o'er half the world,
Denied all hospitable land or port;
Where, seasons voyaging, no road he found
To moor, no bottom in the abyss, whereon To drop the fastening anchor; though his brave Companions ceased, subdued by toil extreme; Though solitary left in Tinian's seas,
Where never was before the dreaded sound Of Britain's thunder heard; his wave-worn bark
Met, fought, the proud Iberian, and o'ercame.
So fare it ever with our country's foes.
Rejoice, ye nations, vindicate the sway Ordained for common happiness. Wide o'er The globe terraqueous let Britannia pour The fruits of plenty from her copious horn. What can avail to her, whose fertile earth By ocean's briny waves are circumscribed, The armed host, and murdering sword of war,
And conquest o'er her neighbours? She ne'er breaks Her solemn compacts, in the lust of rule: Studious of arts and trade, she ne'er disturbs The holy peace of states. 'Tis her delight To fold the world with harmony, and spread Among the habitations of mankind
The various wealth of toil, and what her fleece, To clothe the naked, and her skilful looms, Peculiar give. Ye too rejoice, ye swains; Increasing commerce shall reward your cares. A day will come, if not too deep we drink The cup which luxury on careless wealth, Pernicious gift, bestows; a day will come, When, through new channels sailing, we shall clothe The Californian coast, and all the realms That stretch from Anian's straits to proud Japan; And the green isles, which on the left arise Upon the glassy brine, whose various capes Not yet are figured on the sailor's chart: Then every variation shall be told
Of the magnetic steel; and currents marked, Which drive the heedless vessel from her course.
That portion too of land, a tract immense,
Beneath the Antarctic spread, shall then be known, And new plantations on its coast arise. Then rigid winter's ice no more shall wound The only naked animal; but man
With the soft fleece shall everywhere be clothed. 688 Th' exulting Muse shall then, in vigour fresh, Her flight renew. Meanwhile, with weary wing, O'er ocean's wave returning, she explores Siluria's flowery vales, her old delight,
The shepherd's haunts, where the first springs arise Of Britain's happy trade, now spreading wide, Wide as the Atlantic and Pacific seas, Or as air's vital fluid o'er the globe.
GRONGAR HILL.1
SILENT nymph, with curious eye! Who, the purple evening, lie On the mountain's lonely van, Beyond the noise of busy man, Painting fair the form of things, While the yellow linnet sings; Or the tuneful nightingale Charms the forest with her tale; Come with all thy various hues, Come, and aid thy sister Muse; Now while Phoebus riding high Gives lustre to the land and sky! Grongar Hill invites my song, Draw the landscape bright and strong; Grongar, in whose mossy cells Sweetly-musing Quiet dwells; Grongar, in whose silent shade, For the modest Muses made, So oft I have, the even still, At the fountain of a rill,
'Grongar hill:' in South Wales.
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