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exercise a trembling, if not an unshaken confidence in the Almighty. It was undoubtedly on one of these occasions that he penned the following lines

"I see, or think I see,

A glimmering from afar

A beam of day that shines for me
To save me from despair.
Forerunner of the sun,

It marks the pilgrim's way:
I'll gaze upon it while I run,
And watch the rising day."

Had it not been for Cowper's depressive malady, he would certainly have been, on all occasions, the most lively and agreeable companion. Even as it was, it must not be imagined that in his conversation he was never sprightly and cheerful. Frequently, when his own heart was suffused with grief, arising from the severity and peculiarity of his malady, such an air of innocent pleasantry and humor, delicate and perfectly natural, ran through his conversation and correspondence, as could not fail to delight all who happened to be in his company, or who were occasionally favored with the productions of his pen. It would be easy to produce proofs of this, both from his poetic and prose productions. His rhyming letter, to Mr. Newton, in which there is such a happy mixture of the grave and the gay, as no other writer could produce, evinces the occasional sprightliness of his mind. "My very dear friend, I am going to send, what, when you have read, you may scratch your head, and say, I suppose there's nobody knows, whether what I have got, be verse or not; by the tune and the time, it ought to be rhyme, but if it be, did ever you see, of late or yore, such a ditty before?

"If I have writ charity, not for popularity, but as well as I could, in hopes to do good; and if the reviewer, should say, to be sure, the gentleman's muse, wears Methodist shoes, you may know by her pace, and talk about grace, that she and her bard, have little regard for taste and fashions, and ruling passions, and hoydening play, of the modern day; and though she assume a borrowed plume, and now and then wear a tittering air, 'tis only her plan, to catch if she can, the giddy and gay, as they go that way, by a production on a new construction; she has baited her trap, in hopes to snap, all that may come, with a sugar-plum. His opinion in this will not be amiss; 'tis what I intend, my principal end, and if I succeed, and folks should read till a few are brought to a serious thought, I shall think I am paid, for all I have said, and all I have done, though I have run, many a time, after a rhyme, as far from hence, to the end of my sense, and by hook or by crook, write another book, if I live and am here another

year.

"I have heard before, of a room with a floor, laid upon springs, and such like things, with so much art, in every part, that when you went in, you were forced to begin a minute pace, with an air and a grace, swimming about, now in and now out, with a deal of state, in a figure of eight, without pipe or string, or any such thing; and now I have writ, in a rhyming fit, what will make you dance, and as you advance, will keep you still, though against your will, dancing away, alert and gay, till you come to the end, of what I have penned, which that you may do, ere madam and you, are quite worn out, with jigling about, I take my leave, and here receive, a bow profound, down to the ground, from your humble me, W. C."

you

The following jeu d'esprit, written by the poet, as descriptive of one of his rural excursions, through the whole of which runs a strain of pleasantry, innocent, and perfectly natural, shows that his life was not one unbroken series of despair, but that he enjoyed, occasionally, at least, some lucid intervals, when, to gratify his friends, he would trifle in rhyme with an affectionate and endearing gaiety. As it has never been published in any of his works, the reader will not regret its having a place here.

I sing of a journey to Clifton,*

We would have performed if we could;
Without cart or barrow to lift on
Poor Mary or me through the mud.
Sle, sla, slud,

Stuck in the mud,
Oh, it is pretty to wade through a flood.

* A village near Olney.

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Now it is plain,

That struggling and striving is labor in vain."
HE.-"Stick fast there, while I go and look."
SHE.-"Don't go away, for fear I should fall."
HE.-"I have examined it every nook,

And what you have here is a sample of all:
Come wheel around,

The dirt we have found,
Would buy an estate at a farthing a pound."

Now sister Ann, the guitar you must take,
Set it and sing it, and make it a song;

I have varied the verse for variety's sake, And cut it off short because it was long. 'Tis hobbling and lame, Which critics won't blame, For the sense and the sound they say should be the same. As a writer, Cowper's powers of description, both in poetry and prose, were of the highest order; equalled by few, and excelled by none. His richly cultivated mind, enabled him to paint the visible beauties of the material, united to an imagination as brilliant as it was chaste, as well as the ideal charms of the moral world, with an cribe the feelings of the heart with more vivid force, or ease and felicity equally delightful. No one could deknew better how to levy contributions on the rich and varied scenes of nature. He possessed all the requisite qualifications for a poet of the highest class;-a familiar acquaintance with the ancient classics; a comprehensive mind, well stored with accurate information on almost every subject; a fertile genius; a rich fancy; an excursive but chaste imagination; to all which were added an extensive knowledge of the varied feelings of the human heart, and a most devout regard to the solemn claims of religion.

* Lady Austin.

To take a comprehensive review of the poet's origi- | The reader rises from its perusal, not only filled with nal productions, in the order in which they appeared, astonishment at the mighty powers of its author, but would require a much greater space than it would be what is of equal, and perhaps of greater importance, prudent to devote to it here. TABLE TALK is a dialogue, with feelings of the most unfeigned esteem for the poet, carried on with uncommon spirit and vivacity, in which and with sentiments of benevolence towards all mana variety of most interesting topics are happily intro- kind. duced and descanted on with great force and beauty. The letters of Cowper are unquestionably among the The PROGRESS OF ERROR is much more serious than its best productions of this interesting class of writings predecessor; and though it contains passages of unri- that are to be found in the English language. Easy and valled excellence, it exhibits occasional marks of weak-natural, and every where simple and elegant, without ness, and is less beautiful than any other in the volume. the slightest affectation of formality, or the most disTRUTH exhibits a wonderful combination of different tau approach to that studied and artificial style, which powers; in which passages, humorous and affecting, are scattered with delightful profusion.

EXPOSTULATION, founded on a sermon by Mr. Newton, is an impassioned appeal to men, in almost all conditions, on behalf of religion; it abounds with imagery, grand, impressive, and awful, exhibiting proofs of the poet's deep acquaintance with the inspired prophetic records. HOPE is less impassioned than its predecessor, but not less beautiful. It is written throughout with great elegance, beauty, and force, and the sentiments it breathes are purely evangelical. CHARITY is a poem of Jess vigor, but equally instructive, admonitory, and delightful.

In CONVERSATION, the poet appears in the character of a teacher of manners, as well as of morals, and delineates with exquisite and unerring skill, many of the follies and frailties of life. The loquacious-the incommunicative the noisy and tumultuous-the disputatious -the scrupulous and irresolute-the furious and intracable-the ludicrous-the censorious-the peevish--the bashful-with others of similar kind, may here find their character drawn by the pen of master, in the liveliest colors, and with striking accuracy. Many excellent and judicious remarks are to be found in this admirable poem, on the manner in which conversation, to make it really edifying, must be carried on; and the certain benefits resulting from it, where it is so conducted, are forcibly and clearly pointed out. RETIREMENT, will be read with delight by all, but especially by those who are looking forward to that season when

"Hackney'd in business, wearied at that oar,

Which thousands, once fast chain'd to, quit no more, But which, when life at ebb runs weak and low, All wish, or seem to wish, they could forego." The poet happily ridicules the fallacy of supposing it impossible to be pious while following the active pursuits of life

"Truth is not local, God alike pervades

And fills the world of traffic and the shades,
And may be fear'd amidst the busiest scenes,
Or scorn'd where business never intervenes.'

in ably destroys the beauty of such productions, they ne fail to interest and delight the reader; and will ever be regarded as perfect models of epistolary correspondence. Their peculiar charm is, perhaps, to be attributed chiefly, if not entirely, to that affectionate glow of pure friendship, by which they are so pre-eminently distinguished. Fascinating as they are to every reader of taste, for the chaste, yet unornamented style in which they are composed; for their easy and natural transitions; and for their concise, yet sufficiently copions descriptions, it is to that sprightly and genuine affection which runs through the whole of them, causing the reader to peruse them with almost as much interest as if they were addressed to him personally, that they are principally indebted for their claim to superiority.

To the above remarks on Cowper's letters, we have great pleasure in adding the following testimony of the late distinguished scholar and writer, the Rev. Robert Hall, of Bristol, whose eloquence was unrivalled, and whose powers being all consecrated to the cause of religion, rendered him an ornament to the age in which he lived. In a letter to Rev. J. Johnson, Cowper's justly esteemed relative, he thus writes:-"It is quite unnecessary to say that I perused the letters with great admiration and delight. I have always considered the letters of Mr. Cowper as the finest specimens of the epistolary style in our language. To an air of inimitable ease and carelessness, they unite a high degree of correctness, such as could result only from the clearest intellect, combined with the most finished taste. I have scarcely found a single word which is capable of being exchanged for a better. Literary errors I can discern none. The selection of the words, and the structure of the periods, are inimitable; they present as striking a contrast as can well be conceived, to the turgid verbosity which passes at present for fine writing, and which bears a great resemblance to the degeneracy compared to that of Cicero or Livy. A perpetual effort which marks the style of Ammianus Marcellinus, as and struggle is made to supply the place of vigor; garish and dazzling colors are substituted for chaste ornament; and the hideous distortions of weakness, for native strength. In my humble opinion, the study of Cowper's prose may, on this account, be as useful in

In the same happy strain he exposes the absurdity of forming the taste of young people as his poetry." seeking retirement as an excuse for indolence.

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Absence of occupation is not rest;

A mind quite vacant is a mind distrest."

The TASK, however, is by far the poet's greatest production, and had he written nothing else, would have Immortalized his name, and given him a place among the nighest class of poets. Here his muse kindled into its happiest inspirations, and burst forth into its sublimest strains. Commencing with objects the most familiar, and in a manner inimitably playful, the poet touches on a vast variety of subjects, many of them unsung, and unattempted before, scattering, wherever he goes,

Poets have almost invariably been charged with adu-
lation, whenever they have ventured to eulogize an in-
dividual, however much he may have been distinguish-
ed by his virtues and his talents. In many cases, they
have undoubtedly richly merited this censure; but there
are some honorable exceptions, and amongst this class
Cowper is pre-eminently distinguished. Of this wicked
and foolish practice he had the utmost abhorrence; and
carry his aversion to flattery, almost to an opposite ex-
in some instances it may be doubted whether he did not
treme; withholding praise where he knew it was due.
The following lines occur almost at the commencement
of his Table Talk. After painting the portrait of that
as just as it is beautiful, he abruptly exclaims-
most virtuous monarch, George the Third, in language
"Guard what you say; the patriotic tribe

Will sneer, and charge you with a bribe-a bribe!
The worth of his three kingdoms I defy
To lure me to the baseness of a lie:
And of all lies, (be that one poet's boast,)
The lie that flatters, I abhor the most."

"From grave to gay, from lively to severe." an exuberance of beauty and elegance, that enchains the reader, carrying him through the muse's adventurous track, without the least restraint, and without feeling a moment's uneasiness. The transitions are the happiest imaginable; after delineating one object with matchless felicity and force, presenting it in shapes almost endlessly diversified, ere he is aware of it, another and another starts up before the reader, with magical effect, but without the slightest confusion, or the least violation of perspicuity. This admirable poem may be repeatedly read with increasing delight. It yields an almost inexhaustible source of pleasure and instruction.lity and ignorance.

In the character of Cowper there was not the slightest particle of ostentation; on no occasion did he assume any airs of consequence; he never aimed, or wished to be what he was not. Every thing in the shape of affectation was the object of his disgust. He loved simplicity without rudeness, and detested that squeamish mimicry of fine feeling which not unfrequently, either under the assumed garb of superior sanctity, or of ardent friendship, conceals the most pitiable imbeci

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ous.

It must be acknowledged that Cowper sometimes dipped his pen in gall. Some expressions the most bitterly sarcastic are to be found in his poems. Of his first volume it was said, by one of his friends, "There are many passages delicate, many sublime, many beautiful, many tender, many sweet, and many acrimoniCowper's satire, however, though keen and powerful as a whip of scorpions, was employed only to expose and punish the openly profligate, and the hypocritical professors of religion. Every thing in the shape of deception he ever held in perfect detestation. The castigation of vice, of ignorance, or of dissimulation, was his object, when he became a satirist. If he held up philosophy to ridicule, it was that glare of false philosophy, which, instead of being beneficial to men, only led them from the plain and beaten track of truth, into paths of error and misery. He never wantonly, for the sake only of his own gratification, inflicted his satiric lash on a single individual. He became a satirist, not to give vent to a waspish, revengeful, and malicious disposition, (to feelings of this kind he was an entire stranger,) but for the same purpose as the holy prophets of old were satirists, to expose, in mercy to mankind, the hideous deformity of those vices, which have ever been the fruitful parents of misery to mankind.

The exquisite sensibility of Cowper, and the real goodness of his disposition, with his entire abhorrence of cruelty, whether practised by man towards his own species, or towards any part of the Creator's works, are evinced by the following striking lines

"I would not enter on my list of friends,

Though graced with polished manners and fine sense,
Yet wanting sensibility, the man
Who needlessly sets foot upon a worm.
An inadvertent step may crush the snail
That crawls at evening in the public path;
But he that has humanity, forewarned,
Will tread aside, and let the reptile live.

Ye, therefore, who love mercy, teach your sons
To love it too. The spring-time of our years
Is soon dishonored and defiled in most
By budding ills, that ask a prudent hand
To check them. But, alas! none sooner shoots,
If unrestrained, into luxuriant growth
Than cruelty, most devilish of them all!
Mercy, to him that shows it, is the rule
And righteous limitation of its art,

By which Heaven moves in pardoning guilty man;
And he that shows none, being ripe in years,
And conscious of the outrage he commits,
Shall seek it, and not find it, in his turn.
Distinguished much by reason, and still more
By our capacity of grace divine,

From creatures that exist but for our sake,
Which, having served us, perish, we are held
Accountable: and God, some future day,
Will reckon with us roundly for the abuse
Of what he deems no mean or trivial trust!"

Liberty has always been the soul-inspiring theme of poets. On no subject has the muse sung in sweeter strains, or towered to more sublime heights. Cowper has given ample proofs that his muse felt all the fire of this ennobling theme. In his Table Talk, some beautiful lines will be found on this interesting subject, so dear to the heart of every Englishman; but in his most masterly production, the Task, he thus sings

""Tis liberty alone that gives the flower
Of fleeting life its lustre and perfume;
And we are weeds without it. All constraint
Except what wisdom lays on evil men,
Is evil: hurts the faculties, impedes
Their progress in the road of science; blinds
The eyesight of discovery; and begets
In those that suffer it a sordid mind,-
Bestial-a meagre intellect, unfit

To be the tenant of man's noble form.
Thee, therefore, still, blameworthy as thou art,
Thee I account still happy, and the chief
Among the nations, seeing thou art free,
My native nook of earth! Thy clime is rude,
Replete with vapors, and disposes much
All hearts to sadness, and none more than mine;
Yet, being free, I love thee for the sake
Of that one feature, can be well content,
Disgraced as thou hast been, poor as thou art,
To seek no sublunary rest beside.

But once enslaved, farewell. I could endure

Chains nowhere patiently; and chains at home,
Where I am free by birthright, not at all!"
The liberty of Cowper was not, however, that lawless
restraint which, under the sacred name of liberty, would
burst asunder all those bands that hold society together,
and introduce confusion infinitely more to be dreaded
than the most absolute despotism. It was not the wild
and unrestrained liberty of the ferocious mob; it was
the liberty that is compatible with wholesome restraint,
and with the due administration of law. It was the
liberty not of disorder but of discipline, as will be seen
by the following beautiful lines-

"Let discipline employ her wholesome arts;
Let magistrates alert perform their parts,
Not skulk, or put on a prudential mask,
As if their duty was a desperate task.
Let active laws apply the needful curb,
To guard the peace that riot would disturb;
And liberty, preserved from wild excess,
Shall raise no feuds for armies to suppress.
When Tumult lately burst his prison door,
And set plebeian thousands in a roar,
When he usurped Authority's just place,
And dared to look his master in the face;
When the rude rabble's watch-word was 'Destroy!'
And blazing London seemed a second Troy!
Liberty blushed, and hung her drooping head-
Beheld their progress with the deepest dread;
Blushed that effects like these she could produce,
Worse than the deeds of galley-slaves let loose:
She loses in such storms her very name,

And fierce Licentiousness should bear the blame!"

Powerful as were the charms of subjects like these to Cowper, there were others of a different character which he held as more dear, and ever regarded as more important. Like his great predecessor, Milton, he had made the sacred Scriptures his constant study; not so much because he admired the sublime imagery of the holy penman (alive as he was to their beauties in this respect,) as because he felt the full force of divine truth upon his heart; which, notwithstanding the severe pressure of his malady, would sometimes yield him an interval of pleasure. It was undoubtedly on one of these happy occasions that he penned the following lines, so strikingly descriptive of the refined pleasure with which the Christian can view the works of Nature

"He looks abroad into the varied field

Of Nature; and though poor, perhaps, compared
With those whose mansions glitter in his sight,
Calls the delightful scenery all his own:

His are the mountains, and the valleys his,
And the resplendent rivers: his to enjoy
With a propriety that none can feel,
But who, with filial confidence inspired,
Can lift to heaven an unpresumptuous eye,
And smiling say-My father made them all!
Are they not his by a peculiar right?
And by an emphasis of interest his
Whose eyes they fill with tears of holy joy;
Whose heart with praise, and whose exalted mind
With worthy thoughts of that unwearied love
That planned, and built, and still upholds a world
So clothed with beauty, for rebellious man?
Yes! Ye may fill your garners, ye that reap
The loaded soil; and ye may waste much good
In senseless riot; but ye will not find
In feast, or in the chase, in song or dance,
A liberty like his, who, unimpeached
Of usurpation, and to no man's wrong
Appropriates nature as his Father's work,
And has a richer use of yours than you."

Although Cowper, towards the close of his life, before he received his Majesty's pension, owing to the heavy expenses occasioned by his own and Mrs. Unwin's illness, was scarcely able to keep his expenditure within the limits of his income, yet he was never once heard to complain, nor even to indulge the slightest disposition to be otherwise than contented in the station where Providence had placed him. Writing to his intimate friend, Mr. Hill, on one occasion, whom he appears to have made his treasurer, he remarks:-"Your tidings respecting the slender pittance yet to come, are, as you observe, of a melancholy cast. Not being gifted. however, by nature with the means of acquiring much,

it is well that she has given me a disposition to be con- | did certainly not lead him to emulate the songs of the tented with little. I have now been so many years ha- Seraphim. But though he pursues a lower walk of bituated to small matters, that I should probably find poetry than his great master, he appears no less the enmyself incommoded by greater, and, may I but be en-raptured votary of pure unmixed goodness. Nay, perabled to shift, as I have been hitherto, unsatisfied wishes haps he may in this one respect possess some peculiar will not trouble me much." excellences which may make him seem more the bard of Christianity. That divine religion infinitely exalts but it also deeply humbles the mind it inspires. It gives majesty to the thoughts, but it impresses meekness on the manners, and diffuses tenderness through the feelings. It combines sensibility and fortitude, the lowli ness of the child, and the magnanimity of the hero."

On another occasion, to the same individual he writes: -"I suppose you are sometimes troubled on my account, but you need not. I have no doubt that it will be seen, when my days are closed, that I served a Master who would not suffer me to want any thing that was good for me. He said of Jacob, 'I will surely do thee good;' and this he said not for his sake only, but for ours also, if we trust in him. This thought relieves me from the greatest part of the distress I should else suffer in my present circumstances, and enables me to sit down peacefully upon the wreck of my fortune." The same sentiment is still more forcibly expressed in the following lines:

"Fair is the lot that's cast for me:
I have an Advocate in Thee:
They whom the world caressés most,
Have no such privilege to boast.
Poor though I am, despised, forgot,
Yet God, my God, forgets me not,
And he is safe, and must succeed,

The grandest features of the Christian character were never more gloriously exemplified than in that spirit which animates the whole of Milton's poetry. His own Michael does not impress us with the idea of a purer, or more awful virtue than that which we feel in every portion of his majestic verse; and he no less happily indicates the source from which his excellence was derived, by the bright beams which he ever and anon reflects upon us from the sacred Scriptures. But the milder graces of the gospel are certainly less apparent. What we behold is so awful, it might also have inspired a wish, that a spirit, equally pure and heavenly, might be raised to illustate, with like felicity, the more attractive and gentler influences of our divine religion. In Cowper, above any poet that ever lived, would such a wish seem to be fulfilled. In his charming effusions we have the same spotless purity, the same elevated devotion, the same vital exercise of every noble and exalted quality of the mind, the same devotedness to the sacred Scriptures, and to the peculiar doctrines of the gospel. The difference is, that instead of an almost reprehensive dignity, we have the sweetest familiarity; instead of the majestic grandeur of the Old Testament, we have the winning graces of the New; instead of those thunders by which angels were discomfited, we have, as it were, the still small voice of Him who was meek and lowly of heart. May we not then venture to assert, that from that spirit of devoted piety, which has rendered both these great men liable to the charge of religious enthusiasm, but which, in truth, raised the minds of both to a kind of happy residence

'In regions mild, of calm and serene air,

Above the smoke and stir of this dim spot,
Which men call earth-'

For whom the Lord vouchsafes to plead." Perhaps no individual ever felt more fully the power of religion in his heart, or embodied it more completely in his life, than Cowper. The apprehensions, for his ultimate safety, by which he was so continually harassed, depressive as was their influence on his mind, never relaxed, in any degree, that severe watchfulness which religion had taught him to exercise over his thoughts and conduct. On the contrary, they seemed rather to have operated as a continual check upon those corrupt inclinations which are common to our fallen nature; and to which, even Cowper, was not a stranger. It would be ridiculous to say he had no imperfections; he felt them; he often mourned over them, and the vivia perception he had of them, associated, as it invariably was, with a powerful constitutional tendency to melancholy, often filled him with the greatest anxiety and dread. His conceptions of the purity of that sublime religion taught us in the gospel, and of the paramount importance of a holy life in its professors, were such as led him to regard the least deviation from the strict line of Christian duty, in his own case at least, as an entire a peculiar character has been derived to the poetry of disqualification for the reception of spiritual comfort, them both, which distinguishes their compositions from No individual's conscience was ever more tremblingly those of almost all the world besides. I have already alive to the importance of habitual watchfulness and enumerated some of the superior advantages of a truly uniform consistency of conduct. He could make amvirtuous poet, and presumed to state, that these are ple allowances for the imperfections of others, but norealized, in an unexampled degree, in Milton and Cowthing could prevail upon him to make any for his own. per. That they both owed this eminence to their ririd The notice we have already taken of Cowper's prosense of religion, will, I conceive, need no demonstraductions, renders it unnecessary that we should view feeling on examining their works. It will here, I think, tion, except what will arise to every reader of taste and them any further in detail. We cannot, however, sup-be seen at once, that that sublimity of conception, that press the following admirable observations of an anony-delicacy of virtuous feeling, that majestic independence mous critic, subjoined to Mr. Hayley's Life of Cowper: "The noblest benefits and delights of poetry can be of mind, that quick relish for all the beauties of nature, but rarely produced, because all the requisites for pro-occurring in them both, could not have existed in the at once so pure and so exquisite, which we find ever ducing them so seldom meet. A vivid mind and happy imitative power, may enable a poet to form glowing pictures of virtue, and almost produce in himself a short-lived enthusiasm of goodness. But although

even these transient and factitious movements of mind may serve to produce grand and delightful effusions of poetry, yet when the best of these are compared with the poetic productions of a genuine lover of virtue, a discerning judgment will scarcely fail to mark the difference. A simplicity of conception and expression; a conscious and therefore unaffected dignity; an instinctive adherence to sober reason, even amid the highest flights; an uniform justness and consistency of thought; a glowing, yet temperate ardor of feeling; a peculiar felicity, both in the choice and combination of terms, by which even the plainest words acquire the truest character of eloquence, and which is rarely to be found except where a subject is not only intimately known, but cordially loved; these, I conceive, are the features peculiar to a real votary of virtue, and which must of course give to his strains a perfection of effect never to be attained by the poet of inferior moral endowments. I believe it will be granted that all these qualities were never more perfectly combined than in the poetry of Milton. And I think, too, there will be little doubt that the next to him, in every one of these instances, beyond all comparison, is Cowper. The genius of the latter

same unrivalled degree, if their devotion had been less intense, and of course their minds more dissipated amongst low and distracting objects."

To the above remarks on the poet's character, we cannot forbear subjoining the following exquisite picture of him, drawn by the Rev. Dr. Randolph, of Bath, on seeing his portrait by Lawrence:

"Sweet Bard, whose mind, thus pictured in thy face
O'er every feature spreads a nobler grace;
Whose keen but softened eye appears to dart
A look of pity through the human heart:
To search the secrets of man's inward frame,
To weep with sorrow o'er his guilt and shame,
Sweet Bard, with whom in sympathy of choice,
I've oft-times left the world, at Nature's voice,
To join the song that all the creatures raise
To carrol forth their great Creator's praise;
Or, wrapt in visions of immortal day,
Have gazed on Truth in Zion's heavenly way.
Sweet Bard, may this, thine image, all I know,
Or ever may of Cowper's form below,
Teach one who views it with a Christian's love
To seek and find thee in the realms above."
REV. DR. RANDOLPH.

THE END.

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