"Not dreaming then of Britain's brighter fame. 70 "She rears to Freedom an undaunted race; "Compatriot zealous, hofpitable, kind, " Her's the warm Cambrian: her's the lofty Scot, " To hardship tam'd, active in arts and arms, "Fir'd with a restless an impatient flame, 75 "That leads him raptur'd where Ambition calls : "And English Merit her's, where meet, combin'd, "Whate'er high fancy, found judicious thought, " An ample generous heart, undrooping foul, "And firm tenacious valour, can bestow. 80 "Great nurse of fruits, of flocks, of commerce, she! "Great nurse of men; By Thee, O Goddess! taught, "Her old renown I trace, disclose her fource "Of wealth, of grandeur, and to Britons fing "A ftrain the Muses never touch'd before." 85 90 "But how shall this Thy mighty Kingdom stand? "On what unyeilding base? how finish'd shine?" At this her eye, collecting all its fire, Beam'd more than human; and her awful voice Majestic thus she rais'd.-" To. Britons bear " This clofing strain, and with intenfer note "Loud let it found in their awaken'd ear." On Virtue can alone My Kingdom stand, On Public Virtue, every Virtue join'd, For loft this focial cement of mankind, The greatest empires, by scarce-felt degrees, Will moulder foft away, till, tottering loose, 95 They prone at last to total ruin rush, 100 Of confultation deep and reason free, 105 Of flaves felf-barter'd? Virtue! without thee There is no ruling eye, no nerve, in states; 110 Even justice warps to party, laws oppress, Wide thro' the land their weak protection fails, First broke the balance, and then scorn'd the sword. Thus nations sink, society dissolves; 115 By those three virtues be the frame sustain'd 120 Of British Freedom; Independent Life; Integrity in Office; and, o'er all Supreme, A Passion for the Common-weal. Hail, Independence! hail! Heaven's next best gift, To that of life and an immortal foul! 125 The life of life! that to the banquet high Fair-dream'd repose, and to the cottage charms. Of public Freedom, hail, thou secret Source! Whose streams, from every quarter confluent, form My better Nile, that nurses human life. 131 By rills from thee deduc'd, irriguous fed, When into action call'd, his busy hours. 145 Whom Fortune heaps, without these Virtues, reach That truce with pain, that animated ease, 150 And drain'd by wants to Nature all unknown, Lo! damn'd to wealth, at what a grofs expense 160 Mark those disgraceful piles of wood and stone, Those parksand gardens, where, hishauntsbetrimm'd, And Nature by presumptuous Art oppress'd, 165 The woodland Genius mourns. See the full board That steams disgust, and bowls that give no joy: No Truth invited there to feed the mind, Nor Wit the wine-rejoicing reason quaffs. With those retain'd by Vanity to scare Repose and friends. To tyrant Fashion mark Led an eternal round of lying hope, 175 See, felf-abandon'd, how they roam adrift, Of Masquerade unblushing; or, to show 180 Their scorn of Nature, at the Tragic scene They mirthful fit, or prove the Comic true. 185 As fierce for plunder as all-licens'd troops Without one generous luxury dissolv'd, Or quarter'd on it many a needless want, At the throng'd levee bends the venal tribe; 190 Each smooth as those that mutually deceive, And for their falsehood each despising each, Till shook their patron by the wintry winds, 196 O far fuperior Afric's fable fons, By merchant pilfer'd, to these willing slaves! Britons! be firm, -nor let Corruption fly Forbid it, Heaven! that ever I need urge 200 205 |