Essays in Rhyme on Morals and Manners.

About this Item

Title
Essays in Rhyme on Morals and Manners.
Author
Taylor, Jane,
1783-1824
Publication
London,: Houlston & Co.
1840
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Copyright © 1999, Nancy Kushigian

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Available at: http://www.lib.ucdavis.edu/English/BWRP/Works/TaylJEssay.sgm

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Cite this Item
"Essays in Rhyme on Morals and Manners." In the digital collection British Women Romantic Poets. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/TaylJEssay. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed April 27, 2025.

Pages

Page [124]

A TOWN.

A BUSY town mid Britain's isle, Behold in fancy's eye; With tower, and spire, and civic pile, Beneath a summer sky:
And orchard, garden, field, and park, And grove, and sunny wall; And ranging buildings, light and dark, As evening shadows fall.
Then listen to the ceaseless din Of hammer, saw, and crane; And traffic passing out and in, From alley, street, and lane.

Page 125

The sound, without a pause between, Of foot, and wheel, and hoof; The manufacture's loud machine From yonder lengthened roof.
And children at their evening sports, Parading to and fro; Assembled in the quiet courts Of yonder cottage row.
Gay streets display their shining wares To every roving eye, As eager in their own affairs, The busy tribes go by.
And ah! what varied forms of woe, What hope and fear are found; What passions rise, what scandals grow, Within this narrow bound!

Page 126

To pass the peaceful dwellings by, No stranger eye might guess Those scenes of joy and agony, Of discord and distress.
Pain writhes within those stately walls; Here pallid want hath been; That casement where the curtain falls Shows death has entered in.
The dwelling ranging next to this, A youthful group displays; Elate they seem with present bliss, And hope of distant days.
There at her chamber‐window high, A lonely maiden sits; Its casement fronts the western sky And balmy air admits:

Page 127

And while her thoughts have wandered far From all she hears and sees, She gazes on the evening star That twinkles through the trees.
Is it to watch the setting sun She does that seat prefer?­ Alas! the maiden thinks of one Who never thinks of her.
But lively is the street below, And ceaseless is the hum, As some intent on pleasure go, On schemes of profit some.
Now widening seems the stream to be, As evening stretches o'er; Plebeian tribes from toil set free Pour forth from every door.

Page 128

A school, arranged in order due, (Before the sun goes down) Lady and lady, two and two, Comes winding through the town.
And what drives up to yonder door The gaping crowd among? A wedding train of chaises four, And all the bells are rung.
The laden waggon tinkles by, The post is going out, The lights are lit, the coaches ply To tavern, ball, and rout.
Thus closed that merry summer's day; And would you ask me how You might the busy scene survey, And see those faces now?­

Page 129

Then hither turn­yon waving grass And mouldering stones will show; For these transactions came to pass A hundred years ago.
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