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lint was pour'd: But Heav'n had now his finish'd labours seal'd; His angel guards withdraw the etherial shield; A Brahmin's javelin tears his holy breast---- Ah Heav'n, what woes the widow'd land express'd! Thee, Thomas, thee, the plaintive Ganges mourn'd,[650] And Indus' banks the murm'ring moan return'd; O'er ev'ry valley where thy footsteps stray'd, The hollow winds the gliding sighs convey'd. What woes the mournful face of India wore, These woes in living pangs his people bore. His sons, to whose illumin'd minds he gave To view the ray that shines beyond the grave, His pastoral sons bedew'd his corse with tears, While high triumphant through the heav'nly spheres, With songs of joy, the smiling angels wing His raptur'd spirit to the eternal King. O you, the followers of the holy seer, Foredoom'd the shrines of Heav'n's own lore to rear, You, sent by Heav'n his labours to renew, Like him, ye Lusians, simplest Truth pursue.[651] Vain is the impious toil, with borrow'd grace, To deck one feature of her angel face; Behind the veil's broad glare she glides away, And leaves a rotten form, of lifeless, painted clay. "Much have you view'd of future Lusian reign; Broad empires yet, and kingdoms wide, remain, Scenes of your future toils and glorious sway-- And lo, how wide expands the Gangic bay! Narsinga here in num'rous legions bold, And here Oryxa boasts her cloth of gold. The Ganges here in many a stream divides, } Diffusing plenty from his fatt'ning tides, } As through Bengala's rip'ning vales he glides; } Nor may the fleetest hawk, untir'd, explore Where end the ricy groves that crown the shore. There view what woes demand your pious aid! On beds and litters, o'er the margin laid, The dying[652] lift their hollow eyes, and crave Some pitying hand to hurl them in the wave. Thus Heav'n (they deem), though vilest guilt they bore Unwept, unchanged, will view that guilt no more. There, eastward, Arracan her line extends; And Pegu's mighty empire southward bends: Pegu, whose sons (so held old faith) confess'd A dog their sire;[653] their deeds the tale attest. A pious queen their horrid rage restrain'd;[654] Yet, still their fury Nature's God arraign'd. Ah, mark the thunders rolling o'er the sky;
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