Greenfield Hill: a poem, in seven parts. I. The prospect. II. The flourishing village. III. The burning of Fairfield. IV. The destruction of the Pequods. V. The clergyman's advice to the villagers. VI. The farmer's advice to the villagers. VII. The vision, or prospect of the future happiness of America. / By Timothy Dwight. D.D.

About this Item

Title
Greenfield Hill: a poem, in seven parts. I. The prospect. II. The flourishing village. III. The burning of Fairfield. IV. The destruction of the Pequods. V. The clergyman's advice to the villagers. VI. The farmer's advice to the villagers. VII. The vision, or prospect of the future happiness of America. / By Timothy Dwight. D.D.
Author
Dwight, Timothy, 1752-1817.
Publication
New York: :: --Printed by Childs and Swaine.,
1794.
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Subject terms
Pequot War, 1636-1638.
Greenfield (Conn.).
Fairfield (Conn.) -- Burning by the British, 1779.
Poems -- 1794.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/n20525.0001.001
Cite this Item
"Greenfield Hill: a poem, in seven parts. I. The prospect. II. The flourishing village. III. The burning of Fairfield. IV. The destruction of the Pequods. V. The clergyman's advice to the villagers. VI. The farmer's advice to the villagers. VII. The vision, or prospect of the future happiness of America. / By Timothy Dwight. D.D." In the digital collection Evans Early American Imprint Collection. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/n20525.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 4, 2025.

Pages

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GREENFIELD HILL: A POEM.

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THE ARGUMENT.

INTRODUCTION. Vision. Scene the margin of the Sound. Genius of the Sound appears, and declares the future Glory of America. Splendour of Europe excelled by the Hap|piness of America. Happy local Situation of U. S. secure from the political evils of Europe. Magnificence of the works of nature, on this Continent. Healthfulness, and fruitfulness of the Seasons. Country divided into small Farms, equally de|scending to Children. Unhappy effects of an unequal Division of Property, and of Entailments. Stanislaus. Polish No|bility. State of Property in this Country resumed. Its Effects on Industry, Government, and Policy. U. S. contrasted to ancient Empires. Happiness of U. S. contrasted to Eastern Despotism. Universal Prevalence of Freedom. Unfortified, and therefore safe, state of U. S. Influence of our state of Society on the Mind. Public Property employed for the Public Benefit. Penal Administrations improved by Benevolence. Po|licy enlarges its scope. Knowledge promoted. Improvements in Astronomical and other Instruments of Science. Improve|ments of the Americans, in Natural Philosophy—Poetry—Music—and Moral Science. State of the American Clergy. Man|ners refined. Artificial Manners condemned. American Women. Cultivation advanced. Other Nations visit this Country, and learn the nature, and causes, of our happiness. Conclusion.

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GREENFIELD HILL. PART VII. THE VISION.

FROM these fair scenes, to wonders more refin'd, Instinctive turns the every busy Mind: The present prospect but expands her sight; The present joy to others tempts her flight; Allur'd by each new good, she loves to roam,Line 5 And spreads her wings, through ages long to come; Where Time, with hand prophetic, points her way, And heavenly visions heavenly scenes display.
As late, when Spring awak'd the slumbering plains, The soul, extatic, burst her earthy chains,Line 10 Approaching Morn assum'd her magic power, And bade her visions bless the fairy hour, In quick review, Columbia's glories spread; The past roll on; the present swift succeed; Behind, rank after rank, the future rise,Line 15 As clouds, successive, paint the changing skies.
I stood, methought, beside you azure plain; Still hung the concave; peaceful slept the main; In heaven suspended, lingering Hesper shin'd, And purple evening breath'd her gentlest wind.Line 20

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At once I heard a solemn murmur rise, As thunders slowly swell, in distant skies; The waves, disturb'd, in deep convulsion lay; The world was hush'd; the airs forgot to play.
At that still moment, from his sapphire bed,Line 25 The Genius of the Sound uprear'd his head: Slow round his form a cloud of amber roll'd, Now hid, now splendent, through it's skirts of gold. Gemm'd with new stars, his seagreen mitre shin'd; His scaly mantle rustled in the wind;Line 30 A pictur'd shield his hand, uplifted, bore, Grav'd with the semblance of his double shore: Unnumber'd sails propitious breezes swell'd, And his strip'd flag disclos'd th' unfinish'd field. Here Longa's bays, and whitening coast, were seen,Line 35 Small isles, around her, wrought in living green; The loftier Mainland there allur'd the eye, It's margin winding toward the southern sky; The tall hill heav'd; expansive spread the plain; And groves, and gardens, streak'd the subject main:Line 40 New Haven's spires, in sculptur'd silver, rose, And York's proud domes, escap'd the waste of foes. Here a new Thames an infant London laves; Through a new Tempe, roll Connecta's waves; With foamy stream, another Avon glides,Line 45 And Hudson triumphs in his freighted tides.
He stood, and thus the solemn silence broke, And brightening nature listen'd as he spoke.
"Rise, genial years! and haste, auspicious times! Ascend, and bless the true, Hesperian climes;Line 50 O'er happy isles, and garden'd realms, display Th' advancing splendours of prophetic day."
"Her themes of pride let savage Europe boast, Her bloody enginry, and marshall'd host, Line 55

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Her haughty flags, with purple stain'd, display,Line 55 The car of triumph, and the pomp of sway; Or, wrought with Grecian skill, her columns raise, Bend the tall arch, and teach the dome to blaze; In art's wide regions bid her laurels grow, And place the crown of science on her brow.Line 60 Round the mild year, let Albion's verdure run; Let Gallia's opening vines allure the sun; O'er brighter realms, the Turkish crescent rise, Wash'd by fair seas, and warm'd by vernal skies; Let richer Ind, and prouder Persia, tellLine 65 The diamond cavern, and the pearly shell; Peruvia vaunt her streams, in silver roll'd, And sunny Darien lift her hills of gold. Here the best blessings of those far-fam'd climes, Pure of their woes, and whiten'd from their crimes,Line 70 Shall blend with nobler blessings, all my own; Here first th' enduring reign of Peace be known: The voice of scepter'd Law wide realms obey, And choice erect, and freemen hail, the sway: The sun of knowledge light the general mind,Line 75 And cheer, through every class, oppress'd mankind; Here Truth, and Virtue, doom'd no more to roam, Pilgrims in eastern climes, shall find their home; Age after age, exalt their glory higher, That light the soul, and this the life inspire;Line 80 And Man once more, self ruin'd Phoenix, rise, On wings of Eden, to his native skies."
"To build the finish'd bliss, see all things given, The goods of nature, and the smiles of Heaven, A site sequester'd, policy sublime,Line 85 The noblest manners, and the happiest time."
"See this glad world remote from every foe, From Europe's mischiefs, and from Europe's woe!

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Th' Atlantic's guardian tide repelling far The jealous terror, and the vengeful war,Line 90 The native malice, envy, pride, and strife, The plagues of rank, the rust of useless life, The cumbrous pomp, of general want the spring, The clashing commerce, and the rival king. See, far remote, the crimes of balanc'd sway!Line 95 Where courts contract the debt, and subjects pay; The black intrigue, the crush of self-defence, Th' enlistment dire, foul press, and tax immense, Navies, and hosts, that gorge Potosi whole; Bribes, places, pensions, and the auction'd soul:Line 100 Ills, that, each hour, invoke the wrath of GOD, And bid the world's wide surface smoke with blood, Waste human good, in slavery nations bind, And speed untimely death to half mankind."
"Profusely scatter'd o'er these regions, lo!Line 105 What scenes of grandeur, and of beauty, glow▪ It's noblest wonders here Creation spreads; Hills, where skies rest, and Danubes pour cascades; Forests, that stretch from Cancer, to the Pole; Lakes, where seas lie, and rivers, where they roll;Line 110 Landschapes, where Edens gild anew the ball, And plains, and meads, where suns arise, and fall:"
"To these bright wonders, Nature's hand sublime Has join'd the varied joys of circling clime▪ Winds purest breathe; benignest seasons smile;Line 115 And double harvests gild the bounteous soil; The choicest sweets, unnumber'd fruits inhale, And Flora wantons, on the fragrant gale: Gains of true gold pursue th' exploring plough, Wealth, that endures, and good unbought with woe;Line 120 With richest ere, the useful mountains shine, And luscious treasures fill the teeming brine:

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Fell Famine sickens, at th' o'erflowing good, And, hissing, flies the native land of food."
"See the wide realm in equal shares possess'd!Line 125 How few the rich, or poor! how many bless'd! O happy state! the state, by HEAVEN design'd To rein, protect, employ, and bless mankind; Where Competence, in full enjoyment, flows; Where man least vice, and highest virtue, knows;Line 130 Where the mind thrives; strong nerves th' invention string; And daring Enterprize uplifts his wing; Where Splendour spreads, in vain, his peacock-hues; Where vagrant Sloth, the general hiss pursues; Where Business reigns, the universal queen;Line 135 Where none are slaves, or lords; but all are men: No puisant drones purloin the earner's food; But each man's labour swells the common good."
"O state, to my lov'd sons most kindly given; Of all their bliss, the basic laid by HEAVEN!Line 140 Curs'd be the heart, that wishes to destroy, Curs'd be the hand, that mines this ground-work joy; Hung be his name, in infamy's foul den; And let the wide world rise, and say Amen!"
"Thrice wretched lands! where, thousands slaves to one.Line 145 Sires know no child, beside the eldest son; Men know no rights; no justice nobles know; And kings no pleasure, but from subjects' woe. There, wealth from plunder'd throngs by few engross'd, To rich, and poor, alike is virtue lost.Line 150 The rich, to foul oppression born, and bred, To reason blinded, and to feeling dead, From childhood, train'd to wield the iron rod, Alike regard not man, and fear not GOD. Science they scorn, the public bar deride;Line 155 And every feud by vengeful force decide;

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Honour their deity, and will their law, In private war, the sword of passion draw, O'er wretched vassals, death and ruin drive, Whose only hope, or comfort, was to live;Line 160 Unbless'd, forbid all others bliss to find, Fools, atheists, bigots, curses to mankind."
"Mean, base, deceitful, dead to hope, and shame, At war with that hard world, which wars with them, Like trees, adhesive to their native plain,Line 165 And given, or sold, as pleasure prompts, or gain, Dower of a daughter, purchase of a hound, Alike remov'd from worth, the poor are found. Mere tools of fraud, oppression, whim, or rage, No law t' avenge their wrongs, nor friend t' assuage,Line 170 By passion tempested, by instinct sped, To' obedience whipp'd, to action hunger-led, In knowledge brutes, in comfort brutes below, Forbid to taste the little good, they know, They envy the sleek dog, that passes by,Line 175 They starve, and steal, blaspheme their GOD, and die."
"Thrice wretched lands! where wealth and splendour glow, And want, and misery, in dire contrast, show; On sheds, and pens, where palac'd pride looks down; A god the noble, and a beast the clown;Line 180 Where tissue glares, and rags indecent yawn; Feet step in blood, and kingly cars are drawn; Where Luxury sickens, at Vitellius' feast, And wretches starve, beneath the hedge, to rest; Furs guard the silky form from winter's breath,Line 185 And the bare crose defiles the frozen heath; Idolatry fans off the vernal breeze, And sun-struck Labour, phrenzied, sinks to peace. Such, Poland! long have mourn'd thy realms of woe; Such, Russia, such, Bohemia! thine are now."Line 190
"Hail, Prince of princes! first of modern thrones, Hail, Stanislaus! thou king, from nature's sons!

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Hail, Child of HEAVEN! whose large, etherial mind Look'd into woe, and felt for poor mankind. Let fame eternal crown thy glorious brows,Line 195 And ills glance from thee to thy savage foes. Be thine the peace, the bliss, of doing good, Delightful earnest of the blest abode! Sweet be thy day; thine eve supremely sweet; Death, fear, and sorrow, laid beneath thy feet:Line 200 And oh! may HE, for ruin'd man who died, Approve, accept, and hail thee to his side, Who, wielding earthly power, for heavenly ends, Had'st pity on the least, among his friends."
"And ye exalted Poles! whose generous mind,Line 205 Offering august! your pomp, and power, resign'd, Pleas'd, with divine benignity to see Slaves chang'd to men, and wretches bless'd, and free; From the far evening of th' Atlantic shore, If some soft gale should waft this whisper o'er,Line 210 Know, for your weal, all Virtue's children glow, Joy in your joy, and weep your every woe; Upward, each day, their prayers with fervour rise, And wrestle down the promise of the SKIES,"
"In these contrasted climes, how chang'd the scene,Line 215 Where happiness expands, in living green! Through the whole realm, behold convenient farms Fed by small herds, and gay with cultur'd charms; To sons, in equal portions, handed down, The fire's bold spirit kindling in the son;Line 220 No tyrant riding o'er th' indignant plain; A prince, a king, each independent swain; No servile thought, no vile submission, known; No rent to lords, nor homage to a throne; But sense to know, and virtue to extend,Line 225 And nerves to feel the bliss, and bravery to defend!"
"As o'er the lawns the humming nations play, Feel the soft sun, and bless reviving May,

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From field to field, the fragrant wax explore, And round each fountain, visit every flower,Line 230 Approaching frost, with steady murmur, sing, Wake with the morn, and husband all the spring: Thus warm'd with industry, behold my swains! Guide the smooth plough, and dress the grateful plains; From earth's rich bosom, bid all products rise,Line 235 The bless'd creation of indulgent skies; The grass-grown hills with herds unnumber'd crown, And bid the fleecy nations fill the down; O'er countless fields, the flaxen treasure spread, And call the canvas, from it's hempen bed:Line 240 Or bid the loom with all earth's fabric shine, The useful strengthen, and the gay refine, Or ocean's chambers, with bold hand, explore, And waft his endless treasures to the shore!"
"Here first shall man, with full conviction, knowLine 245 Well-system'd rule the source of bliss below; Invent, refine, arrange, the sacred plan, Check pride, rein power, and save the rights of man! Here first, his savage independence bow, And, at the public shrine, spontaneous vow;Line 250 The triumph, here, of Reason first display, A nation yielding to elective sway."
"See the charm'd States the glorious Rule complete, Each hastening to be wise, and good, and great; Power, nicely balanc'd, all the parts adjust,Line 255 The source of union, and the seat of trust; Whence, men forgotten, Law supremely reigns, And justice flows, a river, o'er the plains!"
"Her sky-crown'd pyramids let Egypt show, The tomb of folly, and the work of woe;Line 260 Her walls, her gardens, Babylon display, The pomp of spoils, and pageant of a day;

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Greece, with fierce mobs, and rival fury, toss'd, Her baseless sway, and tottering freedom, boast; Her pride of empire haughty Rome unfold,Line 265 A world despoil'd, for luxury, and gold: Here nobler wonders of the world shall rise; Far other empire here mankind surprize: Of orders pure, that ask no Grecian name, A new born structure here ascend to fame.Line 270 The base, shall knowledge, choice, and freedom, form, Sapp'd by no flood, and shaken by no storm; Unpattern'd columns, union'd States ascend; Combining arches, virtuous manners bend; Of balanc'd powers, proportion'd stories rise,Line 275 Like Babel's dome, intended for the skies; One speech, one soul, to every builder given, And the tall summit shrouded high in heaven."
"In this bright mansion, all my sons shall find Whatever rights their GOD has given mankind;Line 280 To rich, and poor, alike, th' avenues clear; Its gates, like Salem's, open round the year; Hence justice, freedom, peace, and bounty, flow, Redress for injuries, and relief for woe."
"O blissful visions of the happy West!Line 285 O how unlike the miseries of the East! There, in sad realms of desolating war, Fell Despotism ascends his iron car; Printed in blood, o'er all the moving throne, The motto glows, of—MILLIONS MADE FOR ONE.Line 290 Above, on either side, the Furies glare, Their scorpions brandish, and their snakes uprear; His breath their being, and his scourge their law, Unnumber'd haggard slaves the chariot draw; A villain, black as hell, his master guides,Line 295 A guard of blacker villains round him rides.

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As rolls the pomp the wasted kingdom o'er, With corpses causey'd, and wet deep with gore, One wide Aceldama the region lies, And whitening Golgothas immingled rise:Line 300 While nobles, pamper'd on the spoils of woe, Resound—"The knee to Heaven's Vicegerent bow.""
"Yet there, even there, Columbia's bliss shall spring, Rous'd from dull sleep, astonish'd Europe sing, O'er Asia burst the renovating morn,Line 305 And startled Afric in a day be born; As, from the tomb, when great MESSIAH rose, Heaven bloom'd with joy, and Earth forgot her woes, His saints, thro' nature, truth and virtue spread, And light, and life, the SACRED SPIRIT shed;Line 310 Thus, thro' all climes, shall Freedom's bliss extend, The world renew, and death, and bondage, end; All nations quicken with th' ecstatic power, And one redemption reach to every shore."
"Unlike the East, whose castles rivet sway,Line 315 Shield the fell guard, and force the realm t' obey, A nations voice, with pointed cannon, brave, Meant to defend, but useful to enslave; Where foes victorious in dire safety stand, And fix oppression on a hapless land,Line 320 Here, without walls, the fields of safety spread, And, free as winds, ascends the peaceful shade; Invasion fierce, interfluent oceans bar; Streams hedge the foe, and mountains mock the war. In each dread pass, with naked side, he stands,Line 325 To sudden terrors, and to unseen hands; On the broad plain, ten thousand ills invade, The day's hard toils, the night's ill-boding shade; Surrounding wilds, incessant, breathe alarms, And moors, and forests, pour harrassing swarms:Line 330

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Pain'd, at each step, he fears himself undone, And each new movement loses all he won. Thus shall my sons their shelter'd regions save, Firm as their hills, and as their fathers brave, On freedom's force, with generous trust, rely,Line 335 And ask no fortress, but the favouring SKY."
"Warm'd by that living fire, which HEAVEN bestows; Which Freedom lights, and Independence blows; By that bright pomp, which moral scenes display, The unrivall'd grandeur of elective sway;Line 340 And manners, where effulgent nature shines, Nor tinsel glares, nor fashion false refines, At this best aera, when, with glory bright, Full-rising Science casts unclouded light, Up wisdom's heights the soul shall wing her way,Line 345 And climb thro' realms of still improving day."
"Here wealth, from private misery wrench'd no more, To grace proud pomp, and swell a monarch's store, Aid venal hosts to blast man's little joy, And bid fell navies towns and realms destroy,Line 350 For public bliss, from public hands, shall flow, And patriot works from patriot feelings grow. See Appian ways across the New World run! Here hail the rising, there the setting, sun: See long canals on earth's great convex bend!Line 355 Join unknown realms, and distant oceans blend; In the Calm Main, Atlantic tides arise, And Hudson wanton under torrid skies. O'er all my climes, see palac'd Science smile! And schools unnumber'd gem the golden soil;Line 360 For want, for woe, the neat asylum rise, And countless temples call propitious skies. By locks immense see broken rivers join'd; And the vast bridge my Rhines, and Danubes, bind; Line 365

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For useful fabrics, spacious domes ascend;Line 365 Huge engines roll, and streams their currents bend."
"Here too, each heart, alive to pity's cause, Shall curse still-savage Europe's reeking laws; That gibbets plant, as erst the forest stood; With house-leach thirst, cry, "Give us daily blood;"Line 370 Void, not of mercy, but of common sense, Commute a human life for thirteen pence; Poor debtors chain, to glut revenge and pride, And one man hang, that other men may ride."
"Here first, since earth beneath the deluge stood,Line 375 Bloodshed alone shall be aton'd by blood: All other crimes, unfit with man to dwell, The wretch shall expiate, in the lonely cell: There awful Conscience, and an anguish'd heart, Shall stretch the rack, and wing the flaming dart;Line 380 Approaching fiends with lowering vengeance glow, And gulphs yawn downward to the world of woe. Half seen, at times, and trembling faint, from far, Shall dawn sweet Mercy's bright and beamy star; Hope enter, smite his chains, and set him free,Line 385 And spread her wings, and whisper, "Follow me." In this dread mansion, shall the culprit find His country's laws, not just alone, but kind; And fed, and clad, and lodg'd, with comfort, feel Whatever good destroys not public weal."Line 390
"Here too, her scope shall Policy extend, Nor to check crimes be still her single end. Her hand shall aid the poor, the sad console, And lift up merit from it's lowly stool, Reach to th' industrious youth the means to thrive,Line 395 The orphan shelter, bid the widow live, Nurse, with a fostering care, each art resin'd, That mends the manners, or that lights the mind,

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The choking damps of foul despair expel, And help aspiring genius to excel."Line 400
"See, in each village, treasur'd volumes stand! And spread pure knowledge through th' enlighten'd land; Knowledge, the wise Republic's standing force, Subjecting all things, with resistless course; That bids the ruler hold a righteous sway,Line 405 And bends persuaded freemen to obey. Frequent, behold the rich Museum yield The wonders dread of Nature's fruitful field! See strong invention engines strange devise, And ope the mysteries of earth, seas, and skies;Line 410 Aid curious art to finish works refin'd, And teach abstrusest science to mankind."
"Up the dread vault, where stars immensely roll, To heaven, Herschelian tubes conduct the soul; Where proud Orion heads th' immortal train,Line 415 And opes his lucid window through the main; Where, far beyond this limitary sky, Superior worlds of liquid splendour lie; Far other suns diffuse th' unsetting ray, And other planets roll, in living day.Line 420 Truth, bliss, the virtue, age by age, refine, And unknown nations bask in life divine,"
"Even now fair beams around my concave burn, The golden Phosphor of th' expanding morn. See raptur'd Franklin, when fierce tempests ride,Line 425 Down the safe dome innoxious lightnings guide! The nice machine see self-taught Kingsley frame, That, unexampled, pours th' electric flame! See Rittenhouse, and Pope, with art their own, Roll the small system round the mimic sun!Line 430 See Bushnell's strong, creative genius, fraught With all th' assembled powers of skilful thought,

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His mystic vessel plunge beneath the waves, And glide thro' dark retreats, and coral caves! While crowds, around them, join the glorious strife,Line 435 And ease the load, that lies on human life."
"Nor less their strength shall private efforts blend, My sons t' illume, refine, exalt, amend. Thro' Nature's field shall bold Inquiry stray, Where Europe's Genius leads the splendid way;Line 440 Tell why the winds with fickle wanderings blow, Thin vapours spring, and clouds condensing flow; From what strange cause th' etherial phases rise, And gloom, and glory, change so soon the skies; How heat through nature spreads its chemic power;Line 445 Wakes the soft spring, dissolves the icy shower, In fluid splendour bids the metal glow, Commands the stream to roll, the flower to blow, With golden beauty lights the starry choir, And warms th' exhaustless sun with living fire.Line 450 Or pierce the mist of elemental strife, See lazy matter rousing into life; It's parts meet, mix, repel, attract, combine, And mould the plant with infinite design; Or through the grades of nobler life ascend,Line 455 And the strange, acting, suffering Being blend; Or cease their hold, to bring new forms to light, And bid the fairy structure melt from sight; Or round the globe it's wondrous strata spread, Fashion the hills, and vault the ocean's bed;Line 460 Imblaze the ore, th' enticing gem unfold, And with pure sunbeams tinge the lasting gold. Here too shall Genius learn, by what controul, Th' instinctive magnet trembles to the pole; With curious eye, it's system'd errors trace,Line 465 And teach the mystic longitude of place: Or through the bright, Columbian science rove, Pursue the lightning's path, in realms above,

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Or o'er earth's bowels, mark it's silent course, And see all nature own it's magic force:Line 470 Or ope more awful wonders to mankind, Evolve the terrors of the Indian wind, Tell whence volcanic fires the mount inform, Whence heave the plains, or bursts the raging storm; Whence the wide concave angry meteors rend,Line 475 And shuddering earth quakes to it's distant end: Or, in dark paths, where health's fair streamlets stray, Thro' plants, and mines, explore their chemic way, Redress the ravage of encroaching clime, Change the sad curse, rebuild the waste of time,Line 480 Protract man's date, bid age with verdure bloom, And sstrew with flowers the journey to the tomb."
"See rising bards ascend the steep of fame! Where truth commends, and virtue gives a name, With Homer's life, with Milton's strength, aspire,Line 485 Or catch divine Isaiah's hallow'd fire. No sickly spot shall soil the page refin'd; Lend vice a charm, or taint the artless mind; Another Pope inchanting themes rehearse, Nor the meek virgin blush to hear the verse;Line 490 Improv'd, and clouded with no courtly stain, A whiter page than Addison's remain."
"On the bright canvas, see the pencil trace Unrivall'd forms of glory, and of grace! In the fair field, no traits of vileness spring,Line 495 No wanton lordling, and no bloody king, No strumpet, handed to perpetual fame, No scenes of lewdness, and no deeds of shame: But men, that counsell'd, fought, and bled, for men, And held, to death, the world-renewing pen;Line 500 Scenes, that would Envy of her snakes beguile, Deeds, where fond Virtue loves to gaze, and smile:

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Such forms, such deeds, on Raphael's tablets shine, And such, O Trumbull! glow alike on thine."
"No more shall Music trill, with raptures, o'erLine 505 The swinish revel, and the lewd amour, The phrenzied ravage of the blood-stain'd car, Or the low triumphs of the Sylvan war. But Sorrow's silent sadness sweetly charm, With love inspire, with real glory warm,Line 510 Wake, in Religion's cause, diviner lays, And fill the bosom with MESSIAH's praise."
"But chief, my sons shall Moral science trace, Man's nature, duties, dignity, and place; How, in each class, the nice relation springs,Line 515 To GOD, to man, to subjects, and to kings; How taste, mysterious, in the Heavenly plan, Improves, adorns, and elevates, the man; How balanc'd powers, in just gradation, prove The means of order, freedom, peace, and love,Line 520 Of bliss, at home, of homage fair, abroad, Justice to man, and piety to GOD."
"For soon, no more to philosophic whims, To cloud-built theories, and lunar dreams, But to firm facts, shall human faith be given,Line 525 The proofs of Reason, and the voice of HEAVEN. No more by light Voltaire with bubbles fed, With Hume's vile husks no longer mock'd for bread, No more by St. John's lantern lur'd astray, Through moors, and mazes, from the broad highway,Line 530 Transported men the path of life shall know, And Angels' food shower round them, as they go."
"The Word of life, a world of stores refin'd, The dress, the feast, the riches, of the mind, The bold Divine, commercing, shall explore,Line 535 Search every realm, and visit every shore,

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Thence wines, and fruits, of every taste, and clime, Matur'd, and beauteous, in immortal prime, Thence gems collect, and gold from wisdom's mine, Robes of pure white, and ornaments divine,Line 540 (Whate'er can bid the famish'd wretch respire, Or clothe the naked in unstain'd attire) To HEAVEN's high altar bring the offering bless'd, And all mankind, his Levites, share the feast."
For here, alike to want, and wealth, allied,Line 545 Plac'd in the mean, 'twixt poverty and pride, The goal, where faithful virtue most is found, The goal, where strong temptations least abound, Nor sloth benumbs, nor luxury betrays, Nor splendour awes, nor lures to dangerous ways,Line 550 Where the poor boldly tell their woes severe, Fear no neglect, and find the mingling tear, From civil toils, cabals, and party-heat, My sacred clerks spontaneous shall retreat; To others leave to others what is given,Line 555 And shine, the mere ambassadors of HEAVEN; Spread truth, build virtue, sorrow soothe, and pain, And rear primaeval piety again."
"The noblest Manners too my realms shall cheer, With prudence, frank; obliging, yet sincere;Line 560 Great, without pride; familiar, yet refin'd; The honest face disclosing all the mind; Stanhope abjur'd; the Gospel own'd alone; And all, from other's claim'd, to others done. Here nature's sweet simplicity shall reign,Line 565 And art's foul tincture meet a just disdain; The waxen mien of Europe's courtly lords; Love spent in looks, and honour lost in words; Where sad ambition, sickening, toils for show, And smiles, invented, mask the face of woe;Line 570

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Where life drags on, a disappointing round, Where hope's a cheat, and happiness a sound."
"What though, like Europe's titled train to live, Even in these climes, the splendid trifler strive; Pine, with a sickly appetite, for shew,Line 575 And, every year, the income spend of two; With aukward folly, mimic toilsome sin, Parade without, and wretchedness within; Yet faint, and few, shall these corruptions spread, Seen but to be despis'd, and hiss'd, and fled.Line 580 Strong sense shall here the life of reason yield, Each whim exploded, and each vice expell'd; From sweet affections actions sweet shall flow, All that makes joy, and all that quiets woe, Where nature, friendship, love, unrivall'd reign,Line 585 And form anew the dignity of men."
"And O what beams shall light the Fair-one's mind! How the soft eye-ball glisten truth refin'd! What featur'd harmony mild virtue form! With what sweet sympathy, the bosom warm!Line 590 To wisdom pure, by useful science train'd, From fashions, cards, and plays, to reason gain'd, To show, to flattery, victims now no more, Vile forms extinct, and idle follies o'er, Anew to duty shall the heart be given,Line 595 Love to mankind, and piety to HEAVEN. Grac'd with each beauty of th' etherial form, Led by a heart, with rich affections warm, Each lovely daughter, sister, friend, and wife, Shall call forth roses, from the thorns of life;Line 600 With soothing tenderness, rough man refine, Wake gentler thoughts, and prompt to deeds divine; Through wisdom's paths, their tender offspring charm, And bear them upward, with supporting arm; Line 605

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Plant truth's fair seeds; the budding virtues tend;Line 605 And bid the nursling saint a cherub end. Like vernal dews, their kindness shall distil, Cheer the sad soul, and lighten every ill; Breathe balmy comfort round the wretches shed, And lay the outcast in a peaceful bed;Line 610 Bid, round their mansions, bliss domestic rise, And fix a bright resemblance of the skies."
"Through this wide world, outspread from sky to sky, Thus envied scenes of rapture meet the eye. Then, on the borders of this sapphire plain,Line 615 Shall growing beauties grace my fair domain. O'er these green hills, and in each smiling dell, Where elves might haunt, and fays delighted dwell, From Thames's walks, to Hudson's verdant isles, See, with fair seats, my lovely margin smiles!Line 620 No domes of pomp insult the smiling plain; Nor lords, nor princes, trample freeborn man. Man, the first title known beneath the skies; A prince, when virtuous, and a lord, when wise. See, circling each, with simple lustre, spreadLine 625 The neat inclosure, and the happy shade; Meads green with spring; with Autumn orchards fair; And fields, where culture bids all climes appear, Gay groves exult; Chinesian gardens glow, And bright reflections paint the wave below!"Line 630
"On this blue plain, my eye shall then behold Earth's distant realms immingled fails unfold; Proud Europe's towers, her thunders laid asleep, Float, in calm silence, o'er th' astonish'd deep; Peru unfetter'd lift her golden sails,Line 635 And silken India waft on spicy gales; From death's dull shade, awaken'd Afric rise, And roll the products of her sunny skies.

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Here shall they learn what manners bliss assure; What sway creates it, and what laws secure,Line 640 See pride abas'd; the wolfish heart refin'd; Th' unfetter'd conscience, and th' unpinion'd mind; To human good all human efforts given; Nor war insult, nor bondage anger, HEAVEN; No savage course of Eastern glory run;Line 645 Atchiev'd no conquest, and no realm undone."
"Here shall they see an aera new of Fame, Where science wreathes, and worth confers a name; No more her temple stand in human gore; Of human bones, her columns rise no more:Line 650 The life, by poets sung, the heavens approve, Wisdom commend, and future ages love."
"From you blue wave, to that far distant shore, Where suns decline, and evening oceans roar, Their eyes shall view one free elective sway;Line 655 One blood, one kindred, reach from sea to sea; One language spread; one tide of manners run; One scheme of science, and of morals one; And, GOD's own Word the structure, and the base, One faith extend, one worship, and one praise."Line 660
"These shall they see, amaz'd; and these convey, On rapture's pinions, o'er the distant sea; New light, new glory, fire the general mind, And peace, and freedom, re-illume mankind."
END OF THE SEVENTH PART.
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