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Did those, thy benefits had placed on high, Who revell'd still in wealth's meridian ray; Did those impatient to thy succour fly, Anxious the debt of gratitude to pay? Or, thy fall'n fortunes coldly whispering round, Scowl'd they aloof in that disastrous hour? On keen Misfortune's agonizing wound Did foul Ingratitude her poisons pour? If thy distress such aggravation knew, Thy first reverse could such perdition wait; Well might Despair thy generous heart subdue, And Desperation close the scene of fate. Yet while Distraction urged her purpose dire, Rose not, at Nature's interposed command, The sacred claims of Brother, Husband, Sire, To win the weapon from thy lifted hand? Ah, yes! and ere that agony was o'er, Ere yet thy soul its last resolve embraced, What pangs could equal those thy breast that tore, Thy breast with Nature's tenderest feelings graced? Those only which, at thy accomplish'd fate, That home display'd, thy smiles were wont to bless; That dreadful scene what language can relate, What words describe that exquisite distress. The Muse recedes--in Grief's domestic scene Th' intrusive gaze prophanes the tears that flow: Drop, Pity! there thy hallowed veil between; Guard, Silence! there the sacredness of woe. Nor let the sectarist, whose faith austere Pretends alone to point th' eternal road; Proud of his creed, pronounce with voice severe, All else excluded from the blest abode. If error thine, not GOLDSMID! thine the fault, Since first thy infant years instruction drew; From youth's gradations up to manhood taught That faith to reverence which thy fathers knew. In Retribution's last tremendous hour, When its pale captives, long in dust declined, The grave shall yield, and time shall death devour, When He who saved, shall come to judge mankind. While Christian-infidels shall tremble round, Who call'd HIM Master! whom their acts denied: Imputed faith may in _thy_ deeds be found, And thy eternal doom those deeds decide. SONNET. ON THE DEATH OF MRS. CHARLOTTE SMITH. Sweet songstress! whom the melancholy Muse With more than fondness loved, for thee she strung The lyre, on which herself enraptured hung, And bade thee through the world its sweets diffuse. Oft hath my childhood's tributary tear Paid homage to the sad harmonious strain, That told, alas! too true, the grief and pain Which thy afflicted mind was doom'd to b
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