Hope gives them wings while she's spurr'd on by And each clean courser's speed. We scour along fear. In pleasing hurry and confusion tost; The welkin rings, men, dogs, hills, rocks, and woods Oblivion to be wish'd. The patient pack In the full concert join. Now, my brave youths, Hang on the scent unwearied, up they climb, Stripp'd for the chase, give all your souls to joy! And ardent we pursue ; our laboring steeds See how their coursers, than the mountain roe We press, we gore; till once the summit gain’d, More fleet, the verdant carpet skim, thick clouds Painfully panting, there we breathe awhile; Snorting they breathe, their shining hoofs scarce Then, like a foaming torrent, pouring down print Precipitant, we smoke along the vale. The grass unbruis'd; with emulation fir'd Happy the man who with unrivall'd speed They strain to lead the field, top the barr'd gate, Can pass his fellows, and with pleasure view O'er the deep ditch exulting hound, and brush The struggling pack; how in the rapid course The thorny-twining hedge: the riders bend Alternate they preside, and jostling push O'er their arch'd necks; with steady hands, by turns To guide the dubious scent; how giddy youth Indulge their speed, or moderate their rage. Oft babbling errs, by wiser age reprov'd; Where are their sorrows, disappointments, wrongs, How, niggard of his strength, the wise old hound , Vexations, sickness, cares? All, all are gone, Hangs in the rear, till some important point And with the panting winds lag far behind. Rouse all his diligence, or till the chase Huntsman! her gait observe; if in wide rings Sinking he finds: then to the head he springs She wheel her mazy way, in the same round With thirst of glory fir'd, and wins the prize. Persisting still, she'll foil the beaten track. Huntsman, take heed; they stop in full career. But if she fly, and with the favoring wind Yon crowding flocks, that al a distance gaze, Urge her bold course ; less intricate thy task: Have haply foil'd the turf. See! that old hound, Push on thy pack. Like some poor exil'd wretch, How busily he works, but dares not trust The frighted Chase leaves her late dear abodes, His doubtful sense ; draw yet a wider ring. O'er plains remote she stretches far away, Hark! now again the chorus fills. As bells Ah! never to return! For greedy Death Sallied awhile, at once their peal renew, Hovering exults, secure to seize his prey. And high in air the tuneful thunder rolls. Ilark! from yon covert, where those towering oaks See, how they toss, with animated rage Above the humble copse aspiring rise, Recovering all they lost !—That eager haste What glorious triumphs burst in every gale Some doubling wile foreshows.--Ah! yet once more Upon our ravish'd ears! The hunters shout, They're checkd,-hold back with speed-on either The clanging horns swell their sweet-winding notes, hand The pack wide opening load the trembling air They flourish round-ev'n yet persisi—'Tis right, With various melody; from tree to tree Away they spring; the rustling stubbles bend The propagated cry redoubling bounds, Beneath the driving storm. Now the poor Chase And winged zephyrs waft the floating joy Begins to fag, to her last shisis reducid. Through all the regions near: afflictive birch From brake to brake she flies, and visits all No more the school-boy dreads ; his prison broke, Her well-known haunts, where once she rang'd Scampering he flies, nor heeds his master's call; secure, The weary traveller forgets his road, With love and plenty blest. See! there she goes, And climbs th' adjacent hill; the plowman leaves She reels along, and by her gait betrays Th’unfinish'd furrow; nor his bleating flocks Her inward weakness. See, how black she looks! Are now the shepherd's joy! men, boys, and girls The sweat, that clogs th' obstructed pores, scarce Desert th' unpeopled village ; and wild crowds leaves How quick she turns! their gaping jaws eludes, She yields her breath, and there reluctant dies. Threïcian Orpheus, poor ill-fated bard! By noisy multitudes o'er power'd, he siuks Intent she listens with one ear erect, To the relentless crowd a bleeding prey. Pondering, and doubtful what new course to take, The huntsman now, a deep incision made, And how t'escape the fierce blood-thirsty crew, Shakes out with hands impure, and dashes down That still urge on, and still in volleys loud Her reeking entrails and yet quivering heart. Insult her woes, and mock her sore distress. These claim the pack, the bloody perquisite As now in louder peals the loaded winds For all their toils. Stretch'd on the ground she lies Bring on the gathering storm, her fears prevail, A mangled corse ; in her dim glaring eyes And o'er the plain, and o'er the mountain's ridge, Cold Death exulis, and stiffens every limb. Away she flies; nor ships with wind and tide, Aw'd by the threatening whip, the furious hounds And all their canvas wings, scud half so fast. Around her hay; or at their master's foot, Once more, ye jovial train, your courage try, Each happy favorite courts his kind applause. 334 SOMERVILE. With humble adulation cowering low. In compass round; woods, rivers, hills, and plains He from the throne high-eminent presides, From ancient records drawn. With reverence low, Why on the banks of Gemna, Indian stream, Each to his station leads; encamping round, That flies on wings through all th' encircling line, Nor the great Sophy, with his numerous host, Each motion steers, and animates the whole. Lays waste the provinces; nor glory fires So by the Sun's attractive power controllid, To rob and to destroy, beneath the name The planets in their spheres roll round his orb: Ere yet the morn dispels the fleeting mists; Now high in air th' imperial standard waves, With mutual clamor, and united din, Onward they march embattled, to the sound A faithful guard. No haunt unsearch'd, they drive Incessant shouts Gleam from the mountain tops; the forest seems One mingling blaze : like flocks of sheep they fly Were less severe. The vulgar close the march, Before the flaming brand : fierce lions, pards, Slaves and artificers; and Delhi mourns Boars, tigers, bears and wolves; a dreadful crew of grim blood-thirsty foes; growling along, The circling camp. The guards are plac'd, and fires And paint th' horizon with their ruddy light. That glads the night had cheer'd the listening groves With sweet complainings. Through the silent glooin On they the guards assail ; as oft repellid A strange promiscuous carnage, drench'd in blood, They tly reluctant, with hot boiling rage And heaps on heaps amass d. What yet remain Stung to the quick, and mad with wild despair. Alive, with vain assault contend to break Thus day by day they still the chase renew, Th' impenetrable line. Others, whom fear At night encamp; till now in straiter bounds Inspires with self-preserving wiles, beneath The circle lessens, and the beasts perceive The bodies of the slain for shelter creep. The wall that hems them in on every side. Aghasi they fly, or hide their heads dispers'd. And now their fury bursts, and knows no mean; And now perchance (had Heaven but pleas'd) the From man they turn, and point their ill-judg'd rage work Against their fellow-brutes. With teeth and claws of death bad been complete; and Aurengzebe The civil war begins; grappling they tear. By one dread frown extinguish'd half their race. Lions on tigers prey, and bears on wolves : When lo! the bright sultanas of his court Horrible discord! till the crowd behind Appear, and to his ravish'd eyes display Leave a large void for their retreating foes. Ye proud oppressors, whose vain hearts exult Than ancient Rome could boast, they crowd in heaps, In wantonness of power 'gainst the brute race, Dismay'd, and quite appall’d. In meet array, Fierce robbers like yourselves, a guiltless war Sheath'd in refulgent arms, a noble band Wage uncontrollid: here quench your thirst of Advance ; great lords of high imperial blood, blood : Early resolv'd t'assert their royal race, But learn from Aurengzebe to spare mankind. Book III. Argument. Of king Edgar, and his imposing a tribute of wolves' Panting behind. On foot their faithful slaves heads upon the kings of Wales: from hence a With javelins arm'd attend; each watchful eye transition to fox-hunting, which is described in Fix'd on his youthful care, for him alone all its parts. Censure of an over-numerous pack. He fears, and, to redeem his life, unmov'd of the several engines to destroy foxes, and Would lose his own. The mighty Aurengzebe, other wild beasts. The steel-irap described, and From his high-elevated throne, beholds the manner of using it. Description of the pitHis blooming race; revolving in his mind fall for the lion ; and another for the elephant. What once he was, in his gay spring of life, The ancient way of hunting the tiger with a When vigor strung his nerves. Parental joy mirror. The Arabian manner of hunting the Melis in his eye, and flushes in his cheek. wild boar. Description of the royal stag-chase Now the loud trumpet sounds a charge. The shouts at Windsor Forest. Concludes with an address Of eager hosts, through all the circling line, to his Majesty, and an eulogy upon mercy. And the wild howlings of the beasts within, Rend wide the welkin; fights of arrows, wing'd In Albion's isle, when glorious Edgar reign'd, With death, and javelins lanch'd from every arm, He, wisely provident, from her white cliffs Gall sore the brutal band, with many a wound Launch'd half her forests, and with numerous fleets Gor'd through and through. Despair at last prevails, Cover'd his wide domain: there proudly rode When fainting Nature shrinks, and rouses all Lord of the deep, the great prerogative Their drooping courage. Swell'd with furious rage, of British monarchs. Each invader bold, Their eyes dart fire; and on the youthful band Dane and Norwegian, at a distance gaz'd, They rush implacable. They their broad shields And, disappointed, gnash'd his teeth in vain Quick interpose ; on each devoted head He scour'd the seas, and to remotest shores Their flaming falchions, as the bolts of Jove, With swelling sails the trembling corsair fied. Descend unerring. Prostrate on the ground Rich commerce flourish'd ; and with busy oars The grinning monsters lie, and their foul gore Dash'd the resounding surge. Nor less at land Defiles the verdant plain. Nor idle stand His royal cares; wise, potent, gracious prince! The trusty slaves; with pointed spears they pierce His subjects from their cruel foes he sav'd, Through their tough hides; or at their gaping mouths And from rapacious savages their flocks : An easier passage find. The king of brutes Cambria's proud kings (though with reluctance) paid In broken roarings breathes his last; the bear Their tributary wolves; head after head, Grumbles in death ; nor can his spotted skin, In full account, till the woods yield no more, Though sleek it shine, with varied beauties gay, And all the ravenous race extinct is lost. Save the proud pard froin unrelenting fate. In fertile pastures, more securely graz'd The battle bleeds, grim Slaughter strides along, The social troops; and soon their large increase Glutting her greedy jaws, grins o'er her prey: With curling fleeces whiten'd all the plains. Men, horses, dogs, fierce beasts of every kind, But yet, alas! the wily fox remain d, A subtle, pilfering foe, prowling around Wide-gaping threatens death. The craggy steep, In midnight shades, and wakeful to destroy. Where the poor dizzy shepherd crawls with care, In the full fold, the poor defenceless lamb, And clings to every twig, gives us no pain ; Seiz'd by his guileful arts, with sweet warm blood But down we sweep, as stoops the falcon buld Supplies a rich repast. The mournful ewe, To pounce his prey. Then up th' opponent hill, Her dearest treasure lost, through the dun night By the swist motion slung, we mount aloft: Wanders perplex'd, and darkling bleats in vain : So ships in winter-seas now sliding sink While in th' adjacent bush, poor Philomel Adown the steepy wave, then toss'd on high (Herself a parent once, till wanton churls Ride on the billows, and defy the storm. (Chase Despoil'd her nest) joins in her loud laments, What lengths we pass! where will the wandering With sweeter notes, and more melodious woe. Lead us bewilder'd! smooth as swallows skim For these nocturnal thieves, huntsman, prepare The new-shorn mead, and far more swisi, we fly. Thy sharpest vengeance. Oh! how glorious 'tis See my brave pack; how to the head they press, To right th' oppress'd, and bring the felon vile Jostling in close array then more diffuse To just disgrace! Ere yet the morning peep, Obliquely wheel, while from their opening mouths Or stars retire from the first blush of day, The vollied thunder breaks. So when the cranes With thy far-echoing voice alarm thy pack, Their annual voyage steer, with wanton wing And rouse thy bold compeers. Then to the copse, Their figure oft they change, and their loud clang Thick with entangling grass, or prickly furze, From cloud to cloud rebounds. How far behind With silence lead thy many-color'd hounds, The hunter-crew, wide-straggling o'er the plain! In all their beauty's pride. See! how they range The panting courser now with trembling nerves Dispers'd, how busily this way, and that, Begins to reel; urg'd by the goring spur, They cross, examining with curious nose Makes many a faint effort: he snorts, he foams, Each likely haunt. Hark! on the drag I hear The big round drops run trickling down his sides, Their doubtful notes, preluding to a cry With sweat and blood distain'd. Look back and view More nobly full, and swell’d with every mouth. The strange confusion of the vale below, As straggling armies, at the trumpet's voice, Where sour vexation reigns; see yon poor jade! Press to their standard ; hither all repair, In vain th’impatient rider frets and swears ; And hurry through the woods ; with hasty step With galling spurs harrows his mangled sides : Rustling, and full of hope ; now driven on heaps He can no more: his stiff unpliant limbs They push, they strive; while from his kennel Rooted in earth, unmoved and fix'd he stands, sneaks For every cruel curse returns a groan, The conscious villain. See! he skulks along, And sobs, and faints, and dies. Who without grief Sleek at the shepherd's cost, and plump with meals Can view that pamper'd steed, his master's joy Purloin'd. So thrive the wicked here below. His minion, and his daily care, well cloth'd, Though high his brush he ar, though tipt with Well fed with every nicer cate; no cost, white No labor spar'd; who, when the flying Chase It gaily shine; yet ere the Sun declin'd Broke from the copse, without a rival led Recall the shades of night, the pamper'd rogue The numerous train : now a sad spectacle Shall rue his fate revers'd, and at his heels Of pride brought low, and humbled insulence, Behold the just avenger, swift to seize Drove like a pannier'd ass, and scourg'd along. His forfeit head, and thirsting for his blood. [hearts While these, with loosen'd reins and la.gling heels Heavens! what melodious strains ! how beat our Hang on their reeling palfreys, that scarce bear Big with tumultuous joy! the loaded gales Their weights: another in the treacherous bog Breathe harmony; and as the tempest drives Lies foundering, half ingulf’d. What biting thoughts From wood to wood, through every dark recess | Torment th' abandou'd crew! Old age laments The forest thunders, and the mountains shake. His vigor spent : the tall, plump, brawny you:h The chorus swells ; less various, and less sweet, Curses his cumbrous bulk; and envies now The trilling notes, when in those very groves, The short pygmean race he whilom kenn'd The feather'd choristers salute the Spring, With proud insulting leer. A chosen few And every bush in concert join; or when Alone the sport enjoy, nor droop beneath The master's hand in modulated air, Their pleasing toils. Here, huntsman, from this Bids the loud organ breathe, and all the powers heigh Of music in one instrument combine, Observe yon birds of prey; if I can judge, An universal minstrelsy. And now "Tis there the villain lurks: they hover round, In vain each earth he tries, the doors are barr'd And claim him as their own. Was I not right? Impregnable, nor is the covert safe; See! there he creeps along; his brush he drags, Ile pants for purer air. Hark! what loud shouts And sweeps the mire impure ; from his wide jaws Re-echo through the groves! he breaks away. His tongue unmoisten'd hangs; symptoms too sure Shrill horns proclaim his flight. Each straggling Of sudden death. Ha! yet he flies, nor yields hound To black despair. But one loose more, and all Strains o'er the lawn to reach the distant pack. His wiles are vain. Hark! through yon village now "Tis triumph all and joy. Now, my brave youths, The rattling clamor rings. The barns, the cols, Now give a loose to the clean generous steed; And leafless elms, return the joyous sounds. Flourish the whip, nor spare the galling spur; Through every homestall, and through every yard But, in the madness of delight, forget His midnight walks, panting, forlorn, he flies; Your fears. Far o'er the rocky bills we range, Through every hole he sneaks, through every jakes And dangerous our course ; but in the brave Plunging he wades besmeard, and fondly hopes True courage never fails. In vain the stream in a superior stench to lose his own. In foaming eddies whirls; in vain the ditch But, faithful to the track, th' unerring hounds With peals of echoing vengeance close pursue. And avenue to Death. Hither he calls A lamb is plac'd, just ravish'd from his dam. And hunger keen, and pungent thirst of blood, Stretch'd at his feet, applauds the glorious deed, Rouse up the slothful beast, he shakes his sides, And grateful calls us to a short repast : Slow-rising from his lair, and stretches wide In the full glass the liquid amber smiles, His ravenous paws, with recent gore distain'd. Our native product; and his good old mate The forests tremble, as he roars aloud, With choicest viands heaps the liberal board, Impatient to destroy. O'erjoyed he hears To crown our triumphs, and reward our wils. The bleating innocent, that claims in vain Here must th' instructive Muse (but with respect) The shepherd's care, and seeks with piteous moan Censure that numerous pack, that crowd of state, The foodful teat; himself, alas! design'd With which the vain profusion of the great Another's meal. For now the greedy brute Covers the lawn, and shakes the trembling copse. Winds him from far; and leaping o'er the mound Pompous encumbrance! A magnificence To seize his trembling prey, headlong is plung'd Useless, vexatious! For the wily fox, Into the deep ahyss. Prostrate he lies Safe in th' increasing number of his foes, Astunn'd and impotent. Ah! what avail Kens well the great advantage ; slinks behind, Thine eyeballs flashing fire, thy length of tail, And slily creeps through the same beaten track, That lashes ihy broad sides, thy jaws besmear'd And hunts them step by step: then views, escap'd, With blood and offals crude, thy shaggy mane With inward ecstacy, the panting throng The terror of the woods, thy stately port, In their own footsteps puzzled, foil'd, and lost. And bulk enormous, since by stratagem So when proud eastern kings summon to arms Thy strength is foil'd ? Unequal is the strife, Their gaudy legions, from far distant climes When sovereign reason combats brutal rage. They flock in crowds, unpeopling half a world : On distant Ethiopia's sun-burnt coasts, But when the day of battle calls them forth The black inhabitants a pitfall frame, To charge the well-train'd foe, a band compact But of a different kind, and different use. Of chosen veterans; they press blindly on, With slender poles the wide capacious mouth, In heaps confus'd by their own weapons fall, And hurdles slight, they close; o'er these is spread A smoking carnage scatter'd o'er the plain. A floor of verdant turf, with all its flowers Nor hounds alone this noxious brood destroy : Smiling delusive, and from striciest search The plunder'd warrener full many a wile Concealing the deep grave that yawns below. Devises to entrap his greedy foe, Then boughs of trees they cut, with tempting fruit Fat with nocturnal spoils. At close of day, Of various kinds surcharg'd; the downy peach, With silence drags his trail; then from the ground The clustering vine, and of bright golden rind Pares thin the close-graz'd turf, there with nice hand The fragrant orange. Soon as evening grey Covers the latent death, with curious springs Advances slow, besprinkling all around Prepar’d to fly at once, whene'er the tread With kind refreshing dews the thirsty glebe, Of man or beast unwarily shall press The stately elephant from the close shade The yielding surface. By th’indented steel With step majestic strides, eager to taste With gripe tenacious held, the felon grins, The cooler breeze, that from the sea-beat shore And struggles, but in vain: yet oft 'tis known, Delightful breathes, or in the limpid stream When every art has fail'd, the captive fox To lave his panting sides ; joyous he scents Has shar'd the wounded joint, and with a limb The rich repast, unweeting of the death Compounded for his life. But, if perchance That lurks within. And soon he sporting breaks In the deep pitfall plung'd, there's no escape; The brittle boughs, and greedily devours But unrepriev'd he dies, and bleach'd in air, The fruit delicious. Ah! too dearly bought; The jest of clowns, his reeking carcass hangs. The price is life. For now the treacherous turf Of these are various kinds; not even the king Trembling gives way; and the unwieldy beast, of brutes evades this deep devouring grave : Self-sinking, drops into the dark profound. But, by the wily African betray'd, So when dilated vapors, struggling, heave Heedless of fate, within its gaping jaws Th’incumbent earth; if chance the cavern'd ground Expires indignant. When the orient beam Shrinking subside, and the thin surface yield, With blushes paints the dawn; and all the race Down sinks at once the ponderous dome, ingulr'd Carnivorous, with blood full gorg'd, retire With all its towers. Subtle, delusive man! Into their darksome cells, there satiate snore, How various are thy wiles! artful to kill O'er dripping offals, and the mangled limbs Thy savage foes, a dull unthinking race! Of men and beasts; the painful forester Fierce from his lair, springs forth the speckled pard Climbs the high hills, whose proud aspiring tops Thirsting for blood, and eager to destroy ; With the tall cedar crown'd, and taper fir, The huntsman flies, but to his flight alone Assail the ciouds. There 'mong the craggy rocks, Confides not: al convenient distance fixd, And thickets intricate, trembling he views A polish'd mirror stops in full career His footsteps in the sand; the dismal road The furious brute: he there his image views : |