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AMYNTOR AND THEODORA.

En Three Cantos.

PREFACE.

THE following Poem was originally intended for the stage, and planned out, several years ago, into a regular tragedy: but the Author found it necessary to change his first design, and to give his work the form it now appears in, for reasons with which it might be impertinent to trouble the public; though, to a man who thinks and feels in a certain manner, those reasons were invincibly strong.

As the scene of the piece is laid in the most remote and unfrequented of all the Hebrides, or Western Isles, that surround one part of Great Britain; it may not be improper to inform the reader, that he will find a particular account of it in a little treatise, published near half a century ago, under the title of A Voyage to St. Kilda.' The Author, who had himself been upon the spot, describes, at length, the situation, extent, and produce of that solitary island; sketches out the natural history of the birds of season that transmigrate thither annually, and relates the singular customs that still prevailed among the inhabitants; a race of people then the most uncorrupted in their

manners, and therefore the least unhappy in their lives, of any perhaps on the face of the whole earth to whom might have been applied what an ancient historian says of certain barbarous nations, when he compares them with their more civilized neighbours, Plus valuit apud hos ignorantia vitiorum, quam apud Græcos omnia philosophorum præcepta.

They live together, as in the greatest simplicity of heart, so in the most inviolable harmony and union of sentiments. They have neither silver nor gold, but barter among themselves for the few necessaries they may reciprocally want. Tọ strangers they are extremely hospitable, and no less charitable to their own poor; for whose relief each family in the island contributes its share monthly, and at every festival sends them besides a portion of mutton or beef. Both sexes have a genius to poetry, and compose not only songs but pieces of a more elevated turn in their own language, which is very emphatical. One of those islanders having been prevailed with to visit the greatest trading town in North Britain, was infinitely astonished at the length of the voyage, and at the mighty kingdoms, for such he reckoned the larger isles, by which they sailed. He would not venture himself into the streets of that city without being led by the hand. At sight of the great church, he owned that it was indeed a lofty rock, but insisted that, in his native country of St. Kilda, there were others still higher; however the caverns formed in it, (so he named the pillars and arches on which it is raised) were hollowed, he said, more commodiously than

any he had ever seen there. At the shake occasioned in the steeple, and the horrible din that sounded in his ears upon tolling out the great bells, he appeared under the utmost consternation, believing the frame of nature was falling to pieces about him. He thought the persons who wore masks, not distinguishing whether they were men or women, had been guilty of some ill thing, for which they did not dare to show their faces. The beauty and stateliness of the trees which he saw then for the first time, (as in his own island there grows not a shrub) equally surprised and delighted him; but he observed, with a kind of terror, that as he passed among their branches, they pulled him back again. He had been persuaded to drink a pretty large dose of strong waters, and upon finding himself drowsy after it, and ready to fall into a slumber, which he fancied was to be his last, he expressed to his companions the great satisfaction he felt in so easy a passage out of this world; for, said he, it is attended with no kind of pain.'

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Among such sort of men it was that Aurelius sought refuge from the violence and cruelty of his enemies.

The time appears to have been towards the latter part of the reign of King Charles II. when those who governed Scotland under him, with no less cruelty than impolicy, made the people of that country desperate; and then plundered, imprisoned, or butchered them, for the natural effects of such despair. The best and worthiest men were often the objects of their most unrelenting fury. Under the title of fanatics, or seditious,

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they affected to herd, and of course persecuted, whoever wished well to his country, or ventured to stand up in defence of the laws and a legal government. I have now in hands the copy of a warrant, signed by King Charles himself, for military execution upon them, without process or conviction; and I know that the original is still kept in the Secretary's office for that part of the united kingdom. Thus much I thought it necessary to say, that the reader may not be misled to look upon the relation given by Aurelius in the second Canto, as drawn from the wantonness of imagination, when it hardly arises to strict historical truth.

What reception this Poem may meet with, the Author cannot foresee; and in his humble, but happy retirement, he needs not be over anxious to know. He has endeavoured to make it one regular and consistent whole, to be true to nature in his thoughts, and to the genius of the language in his manner of expressing them. If he has succeeded in these points, but above all in effectually touching the passions; which, as it is the genuine province, so is it the great triumph of poetry; the candour of his more discerning readers will readily overlook mistakes, or failures, in things of less importance.

AMYNTOR AND THEODORA:

OR,

THE HERMIT.

Addressed to the Earl of Chesterfield.

To Mrs. Mallet.

THOU faithful partner of a heart thy own,
Whose pain or pleasure springs from thine alone;
Thou, true as Honour, as Compassion kind,
That in sweet union harmonize thy mind;
Here, while thy eyes for sad Amyntor's woe
And Theodora's wreck, with tears o'erflow,
O may thy friend's warm wish, to Heaven preferr'd
For thee, for him, by gracious Heaven be heard!
So her fair hour of fortune shall be thine
Unmix'd, and all Amyntor's fondness mine:
So through long vernal life, with blended ray,
Shall Love light up and Friendship close our day;
Till, summon'd late this lower heaven to leave,
One sigh shall end us, and one earth receive,

CANTO I.

FAR in the watery waste, where his broad wave
From world to world the vast Atlantic rolls

On from the piny shores of Labrador
To frozen Thulé east, her airy height
Aloft to Heaven remotest Kilda lifts,

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