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INSCRIPTION FOR A MONUMENT

TO THE

MEMORY OF COWPER.

READER! if with no vulgar sympathy

Thou view'st the wreck of genius and of worth,
Stay thou thy footsteps near this hallow'd spot-
Here Cowper rests. Although renown has made
His name familiar to thine ear, this stone
May tell thee that his virtues were above
The common portion:-that the voice, now hush'd
In death, was once serenely querulous
With pity's tones, and in the ear of woe
Spake music. Now forgetful at thy feet
His tired head presses on its last long rest,
Still tenant of the tomb ;-and on the cheek,
Once warm with animation's lambent flush,
Sits the pale image of unmark'd decay.
Yet mourn not. He had chosen the better part:
And these sad garments of mortality

Put off, we trust, that to a happier land

He went a light and gladsome passenger.

Sigh'st thou for honours, reader? Call to mind
That glory's voice is impotent to pierce
The silence of the tomb! but virtue blooms
Even on the wreck of life, and mounts the skies!
So gird thy loins with lowliness, and walk
With Cowper on the pilgrimage of Christ.

This inscription is faulty from its length, but if a painter cannot get the requisite effect at one stroke, he must do it by many. The laconic style of epitapha is the most difficult to be managed of any, inasmuch as most is expected from it. A sentence standing alone on a tomb or a monument, is expected to contain something particularly striking and when this expectation is disappointed, the reader feels like a

man who, having been promised an excellent joke, is treated with a stale conceit, or a vapid pun. The cest specimen of this kind, which I am acquainted with, is that on a French general :

Siste, Viator; Heroem calcas!'

Stop, traveller; thou treadest on a hero.

W.

MELANCHOLY HOURS.

(No. IX.

Scires è sanguine natos.-Ovid.

Ir is common for busy and active men to behold the occupations of the retired and contemplative person with contempt. They consider his speculations as idle and unproductive; as they participate in none of his feelings, they are strangers to his motives, his views, and his delights; they behold him elaborately employed on what they conceive forwards none of the interests of life, contributes to none of its gratifications, removes none of its inconveniences: they conclude, therefore, that he is led away by the delusions of futile philosophy, that he labours for no good, and lives to no end. Of the various frames of mind which they observe in him, no one seems to predominate more, and none appears to them more absurd, than sadness, which seems, in some degree, to pervade all his views, and shed a solemn tinge over all his houghts. Sadness, arising from no personal grief, nd connected with no individual concern, they reard as moonstruck melancholy, the effect of a mind vercast with constitutional gloom, and diseased with abits of vain and fanciful speculation. We can hare with the sorrows of the unfortunate,' say they, but this monastic spleen merits only our derision: it ends to no beneficial purpose, it benefits neither its ossessor nor society." Those who have thought a

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little more on this subject than the gay and busy crowd, will draw conclusions of a different nature. That there is a sadness, springing from the noblest and purest sources, a sadness friendly to the human heart, and, by direct consequence, to human nature in general, is a truth which a little illustration will render tolerably clear, and which, when understood in its full force, may probably convert contempt and ridicule into respect.

I set out, then, with the proposition, that the man who thinks deeply, especially if his reading be exten sive, will, unless his heart be very cold and very light, become habituated to a pensive, or, with more propriety, a mournful cost of thought. This will arise from two more particular sources-from the view of human nature in general, as demonstrated by the experience both of past and present times, and from the contemplation of individual instances of human depravity and of human suffering. The first of these is, indeed, the last in the order of time, for his genera views of humanity are in a manner consequential, or resulting from a special; but I have inverted that order for the sake of perspicuity.

Of those who have occasionally thought on thes subjects, I may, with perfect assurance of their reply, inquire what have been their sensations when they have, for a moment, attained a more enlarged and capacious notion of the state of man in all its bearings and dependencies. They have found, and the profoundest philosophers have done no more, that they are enveloped in mystery, and that the mystery man's situation is not without alarming and fearful circumstances. They have discovered that all they know of themselves is that they live, but that from whence they came, or whither they are going, is by Nature altogether hidden; that impenetrable gloom surrounds them on every side, and that they even hold their morrow on the credit of to-day, when it is in fact, buried in the vague and indistinct gulf of the ages to come!-These are reflections deeply interest ing, and lead to others so awful, that many gladly

shut their eyes on the giddy and unfathomable depths which seem to stretch before them. The meditative man, however, endeavours to pursue them to the farthest stretch of the reasoning powers, and to enlarge his conceptions of the mysteries of his own existence; and the more he learns, and the deeper he penetrates, the more cause does he find for being serious, and the more inducements to be continually thoughtful.

If, again, we turn from the condition of mortal existence, considered in the abstract, to the qualities and characters of man, and his condition in a state of society, we see things perhaps equally strange and infinitely more affecting.-In the economy of creation, we perceive nothing inconsistent with the power of an all-wise and all-merciful God. A perfect harmony runs through all the parts of the universe. Plato's syrens sing not only from the planetary octave, but through all the minutest divisions of the stupendous whole; order, beauty, and perfection, the traces of the great Architect, glow through every particle of his work. At man, however, we stop: there is one exception. The harmony of order ceases, and vice and misery disturb the beautiful consistency of creation, and bring us first acquainted with positive evil. We behold men carried irresistibly away by corrupt principles and vicious inclinations, indulging in propensities, destructive as well to themselves as to those around them; the stronger oppressing the weaker, and the bad persecuting the good! We see the depraved in prosperity, the virtuous in adversity, the guilty unpunished, the deserving overwhelmed with unprovoked misfortunes. From hence we are tempted to think, that He, whose arm holds the planets in their course, and directs the comets along the eccentric orbits, ceases to exercise his providence over the affairs of mankind, and leaves them to be governed and directed by the impulses of a corrupt heart, or the blind workings of chance alone. Yet this is inconsistent both with the wisdom and goodness of the Deity. If God permit evil, he causes it:

the difference is casuistical. We are led, therefore, to conclude, that it was not always thus: that man was created in a far different and far happier condition; but that, by some means or other, he has forfeited the protection of his Maker. Here, then, is a mystery. The ancients, led by reasonings alone, perceived it with amazement, but did not solve the problem. They attempted some explanation of it by the lame fiction of a golden age and its cession, where, by a circular mode of reasoning, they attribute the introduction of vice to their gods having deserted the earth, and the desertion of the gods to the introduction of vice.* This, however, was the logic of the poets; the philosophers disregarded the fable, but did not dispute the fact it was intended to account for. They often hint at human degeneracy, and some unknown curse hanging over our being, and even coming into the world along with us. Pliny, in the preface to his seventh book, has this remarkable passage: The animal about to rule over the rest of the created animals lies weeping, bound hand and foot, making his first entrance upon life with sharp pangs, and this, for no other crime than that he is born man.'-Cicero, in a passage, for the preservation of which we are indebted to St. Augustine, gives a yet stronger idea of an existing degeneracy in human nature: Man,' says he,' comes into

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Και τότε δη προς ολυμπον απο χθονος ευρυοδείης,
Λευκοισιν φαρέεσσι καλυψαμένω χρόα καλόν,
Αθανατων μετα φύλον στον, προλιποντ' ανθρώπους
Αιδώς και Νεμεσις' τα δε λείψεται ἀλγεα λυγρα
Θνητοις ανθρώποισι, κακου δ' ουκ έσσεται αλκη.

Hesiod. Opera et Dies. Lib. 1. 195.

Victa jacet Pietas: et Virgo cæde madentes,
Ultima cœlestum terras Astræa reliquit.

Ovid. Metamor. L. 1. Fab. 4.

Paulatim deinde ad Superos Astræa recessit,
Hac comite atque duæ pariter fugere sorores.
Juvenal. Sat. vi. 1. 10

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