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29

The Tree

AIR Tree! for thy delightful Shade

Sure, some Return is due from me
To thy cool Shadows, and to thee.
When thou to Birds do'st Shelter give,
Thou Musick do'st from them receive;
If Travellers beneath thee stay,
"Till Storms have worn themselves away,
That Time in praising thee they spend,
And thy protecting Pow'r commend:
The Shepherd here, from Scorching freed,
Tunes to thy dancing Leaves his Reed;
Whilst his lov'd Nymph, in Thanks, bestows
Her flow'ry Chaplets on thy Boughs.
Shall I then only Silent be,

And no Return be made by me?
No; let this Wish upon thee wait,
And still to flourish be thy Fate,
To future Ages may'st thou stand
Untouch'd by the rash Workman's hand;
"Till that large Stock of Sap is spent,
Which gives thy Summer's Ornament;
"Till the fierce Winds, that vainly strive
To shock thy Greatness whilst alive,
Shall on thy lifeless Hour attend,
Prevent the Axe, and grace thy End;
Their scatter'd Strength together call,
And to the Clouds proclaim thy Fall;

Who then their Ev'ning-Dews may spare,
When thou no longer art their Care;
But shalt, like ancient Heroes, burn,

And some bright Hearth be made thy Urn.

Miscellany Poems, 1713

30

A Nocturnal Reverie

'N such a Night, when every louder Wind

IN a

And only gentle Zephyr fans his Wings,
And lonely Philomel, still waking, sings;

Or from some Tree, fam'd for the Owl's delight,
She, hollowing clear, directs the Wand'rer right:
In such a Night, when passing Clouds give place,
Or thinly vail the Heav'ns mysterious Face;
When in some River, overhung with Green,
The waving Moon and trembling Leaves are seen;
When freshen'd Grass now bears it self upright,
And makes cool Banks to pleasing Rest invite,
Whence springs the Woodbind, and the Bramble-Rose,
And where the sleepy Cowslip shelter'd grows;
Whilst now a paler Hue the Foxglove takes,
Yet checquers still with Red the dusky brakes:
When scatter'd Glow-worms, but in Twilight fine,
Shew trivial Beauties, watch their Hour to shine;
Whilst Salisb'ry stands the Test of every Light,
In perfect Charms, and perfect Virtue bright:
When Odours, which declin'd repelling Day,
Thro' temp'rate Air uninterrupted stray;
When darken'd Groves their softest Shadows wear,
And falling Waters we distinctly hear;

When thro' the Gloom more venerable shows
Some ancient Fabrick, awful in Repose,

While Sunburnt Hills their swarthy Looks conceal,
And swelling Haycocks thicken up the Vale:
When the loos'd Horse now, as his Pasture leads,
Comes slowly grazing thro' th' adjoining Meads,
Whose stealing Pace, and lengthen'd Shade we fear,
Till torn up Forage in his Teeth we hear:
When nibbling Sheep at large pursue their Food,
And unmolested Kine rechew the Cud;
When Curlews cry beneath the Village-walls,
And to her straggling Brood the Partridge calls;
Their shortliv'd Jubilee the Creatures keep,
Which but endures, whilst Tyrant-Man do's sleep;
When a sedate Content the Spirit feels,

And no fierce Light disturbs, whilst it reveals;
But silent Musings urge the Mind to seek
Something, too high for Syllables to speak;
Till the free Soul to a compos'dness charm'd,
Finding the Elements of Rage disarm'd,
O'er all below a solemn Quiet grown,

Joys in th' inferiour World, and thinks it like her Own:
In such a Night let Me abroad remain,

Till Morning breaks, and All's confus'd again;

Our Cares, our Toils, our Clamours are renew'd,
Or Pleasures, seldom reach'd, again pursu❜d.

Miscellany Poems, 1713

31

ISAAC WATTS

The Day of Judgment

An Ode

Attempted in English Sapphick

1674-1748

WHEN the fierce Northwind with his airy Forces.
Rears up the Baltick to a foaming Fury;
And the red Lightning with a Storm of Hail comes

Rushing amain down,

How the poor Sailors stand amaz'd and tremble!
While the hoarse Thunder like a bloody Trumpet
Roars a loud Onset to the gaping Waters

Quick to devour them.

Such shall the Noise be, and the wild Disorder, (If things Eternal may be like these Earthly) Such the dire Terror when the great Archangel

Shakes the Creation;

Tears the strong Pillars of the Vault of Heaven,
Breaks up old Marble the Repose of Princes;
See the Graves open, and the Bones arising,

Flames all around 'em.

Hark the shrill Outcries of the guilty Wretches!
Lively bright Horror and amazing Anguish

Stare thro' their Eye-lids, while the living Worm lies

Gnawing within them.

Thoughts like old Vultures prey upon their Heartstrings, And the Smart twinges, when their Eye beholds the Lofty Judge frowning, and a Flood of Vengeance

Rolling afore him

Hopeless Immortals! how they scream and shiver
While Devils push them to the Pit wide yawning
Hideous and gloomy, to receive them headlong

Down to the Centre.

Stop here my Fancy: (all away ye horrid
Doleful Ideas) come arise to Jesus,

How he sits God-like! and the Saints around him

Thron'd, yet adoring!

may I sit there when he comes Triumphant Dooming the Nations: then ascend to Glory, While our Hosannahs all along the Passage

Shout the Redeemer.
Hora Lyrica, 1706

32

K

God's Dominion and Decrees

EEP Silence, all created Things,

And wait your Maker's Nod:

The Muse stands trembling while she sings
The Honours of her God.

Life, Death, and Hell, and Worlds unknown
Hang on his firm Decree:

He sits on no precarious Throne,

Nor borrows Leave to Be.

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