Page:Poems (Crabbe).djvu/57

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.

25

By what bold lines shall we his grief express,
Or by what soothing numbers make it less?
'Tis not, I know, the chiming of a song,
Nor all the powers that to the Muse belong,
Words aptly cull'd and meanings well exprest,
Can calm the sorrows of a wounded breast;
But Virtue, soother of the fiercest pains,
Shall heal that bosom, Rutland, where she reigns.
Yet hard the task to heal the bleeding heart,
To bid the still-recurring thoughts depart;
Tame the fierce grief and stem the rising sigh.
And curb rebellious passion, with reply;—
Calmly to dwell on all that pleas'd before,
And yet to know that all shall please no more;—
Oh! glorious labour of the soul to save
Her captive powers, and bravely mourn the Brave.
To such, these thoughts will lasting comfort give-
Life is not measured by the time we live;
'Tis not an even course of threescore years,
A life of narrow views and paltry fears,
Grey-hairs and wrinkles and the cares they bring,
That take from Death, the terrors or the sting;
But 'tis the gen'rous Spirit, mounting high,
Above the world, that native of the sky;
The noble Spirit, that, in dangers brave,
Calmly looks on, or looks beyond the grave;
Such Manners was, so he resign'd his breath,
If in a glorious, then a timely, death.
Cease then that grief and let those tears subside,
If Passion rule us, be that passion Pride;