ANTISTROPHE. Beyond the measure vast of thought, Saw Britain link'd to his now adverse strand, 1 Where Orcas howls, his wolfish mountains rounding; 64 70 A wide wild storm even Nature's self confounding, Withering her giant sons with strange uncouth surprise. This pillar'd earth so firm and wide, By winds and inward labours torn, In thunders dread was push'd aside, And down the shouldering billows borne. And see, like gems, her laughing train, The little isles on every side, Mona, 2 once hid from those who search the main, And Wight, who checks the westering tide, For thee consenting Heaven has each bestow'd, 80 'Strand:' this tradition is mentioned by several of our old historians. Some naturalists, too, have endeavoured to support the probability of the fact, by arguments drawn from the correspondent disposition of the two opposite coasts. I don't remember that any poetical use has been hitherto made of it.-' Mona: ' There is a tradition in the Isle of Man, that a mermaid, becoming enamoured of a young man of extraordinary beauty, took an opportunity of meeting him one day as he walked on the shore, and opened her passion to him, but was received with a coldness, occasioned by his horror and surprise at her appearance. This, however, was so misconstrued by the sea-lady, that, in revenge for his treatment of her, she punished the whole island, by covering it with a mist, so that all who attempted to carry on any commerce with it, either never arrived at it, but wandered up and down the sea, or were on a sudden wrecked upon its cliffs. A fair attendant on her sovereign pride: To thee this blest divorce she owed, 86 For thou hast made her vales thy loved, thy last abode ! SECOND EPODE. Then too, 'tis said, an hoary pile, How may the poet now unfold, What hands unknown that fabric raised ? 90 100 110 Even now, before his favour'd eyes, Ye forms divine, ye laureate band, Rage drops his steel, and storms grow calm: Welcome to Britain's ravaged shore ; 117 130 140 ODE TO A LADY, ON THE DEATH OF COLONEL CHARLES ROSS IN THE ACTION AT FONTENOY. Written, May 1745. 1 WHILE, lost to all his former mirth, Britannia's genius bends to earth, And mourns the fatal day: While stain'd with blood he strives to tear 2 The thoughts which musing pity pays, Still Fancy, to herself unkind, 3 By rapid Scheld's descending wave That sacred spot the village hind 4 O'er him, whose doom thy virtues grieve, And bend the pensive head; Shall point his lonely bed! 5 The warlike dead of every age, Shall leave their sainted rest; 6 Old Edward's sons, unknown to yield, Shall crowd from Cressy's laurell'd field, And gaze with fix'd delight: Again for Britain's wrongs they feel, 7 But lo! where, sunk in deep despair, Her matted tresses madly spread, 8 Ne'er shall she leave that lowly ground, Till notes of triumph bursting round Proclaim her reign restored : Till William seek the sad retreat, 9 If, weak to soothe so soft a heart, These pictured glories nought impart, To dry thy constant tear: If yet, in Sorrow's distant eye, H |