[Page [164]]
SOLILOQUY.
1 NATURE! in all correct, thy hand we trace,
2 And o'er thy carpet hail a beauteous race;
3 Each have their station, all their native home,
4 In adverse soils and climes they find a tomb:
5 Some in the open lawn, delighted seem
6 To look with vigour on the sun's full beam:
7 Whilst some retiring, hide the modest head,
8 And screen their beauties in the shelt'ring shade:
9 Some dare the summit of the mountain's brow,
10 And others humbly seek the vale below:
11 Some o'er the parched heath minutely spread,
12 Whilst some, best flourish in the wat'ry mead;
13 Deep in the soil others are firmly struck,
14 Some lightly flaunt upon the sedgy brook,
15 Others on rocks can independent thrive,
16 And in rich soil alone can others live.
17 The gard'ner marks the stations they demand:
18 Refin'd by cultivation's skilful hand,
[Page 165]19 Which marks their graces with a clearer line,
20 And draws each forth more pointedly to shine.
21 By Providence to different lots assign'd,
22 A bent so various takes the human mind,
23 And education marks the native worth,
24 And boldly calls the leading feature forth,
25 It fires the hero, or instructs the sage,
26 To save his country, or reform the age;
27 It leads th' ambitious to the public eye,
28 Or fits the humble for retirement's joy;
29 Refines the pleasures of the social scene,
30 Or teaches industry the art of gain;
31 Opens the depth of science unconfin'd,
32 Researches for the philosophic mind;
33 It gives the gay, more graceful to be seen,
34 Swim on the surface of each trifling scene;
35 It can its proper views to fancy give,
36 And by th' applause of ages bid it live.
37 Oh happy they! whose lot thro' life's design'd,
38 To suit what nature gave, and art refin'd,
39 Let glory's radiant form the soldier shield,
40 And courage lead him to the hostile field;
41 Give sensibility its social joy,
42 And for life's trials arm cold apathy.
43 Fortune and favouring friends may genius see,
44 All feel the native powers of fancy free;
[Page 166]45 Oh! were the human lot disposed so,
46 This were a world of joy, scarce mix'd with woe;
47 But ah! full oft we see the tortur'd mind,
48 Destin'd to trials of ungenial kind,
49 Where without arms t' oppose, stern foes invade,
50 And all its native virtues seem to fade;
51 The feeling shed not still the tear of joy,
52 Nor cold disdain meets careless apathy;
53 Bright genius roves not still without restraint,
54 Nor always free his favorite scenes to paint;
55 But evils check the wing he lightly spread,
56 Then warm imagination too must fade.
57 Reflection in this solitary scene,
58 Engraves for me the solemn truth within,
59 As on the moss-grown rock now seated here,
60 Pain'd memory finds the source of many a tear.
Source edition
Daye, Eliza, b. ca. 1734. Poems, on Various Subjects. Liverpool: Printed by J. M'Creery, 1798, pp. [164]-166. [2],x,[4],258p.; 8° (ESTC T132359) (Page images digitized by University of California Libraries.)
Editorial principles
Typography, spelling, capitalization, and punctuation have been cautiously modernized. The source of the text is given and all significant editorial interventions have been recorded in textual notes. This ECPA text has been edited to conform to the recommendations found in Level 5 of the Best Practices for TEI in Libraries version 4.0.0.
Other works by Eliza Day
- APPEARANCE AND REALITY. ()
- AT THE SAME PLACE. ()
- ATTENDANCE UPON RELIGIOUS INSTITUTIONS. ()
- THE BIRTH OF GENIUS. ()
- THE BIRTH-DAY ORNAMENTS. ()
- CHLOE. ()
- AN EVENING HYMN, IN SICKNESS. ()
- EVENING HYMN. ()
- EXTEMPORE LINES, To a Young Lady with an Anemone. ()
- THE FAMILY OF ADVERSITY. ()
- FOR EASTER SUNDAY. ()
- FOR SUNDAY. ()
- THE GOODNESS OF GOD. ()
- HIS IMMENSITY. ()
- A HYMN FOR NEW YEAR'S DAY. ()
- HYMN FOR SUNDAY EVENING. ()
- HYMN FOR SUNDAY. ()
- A HYMN IN SICKNESS. ()
- HYMN Sung at a Charity Sermon, in Lancaster, on the 22d of January, 1797, for the Blind Asylum, Liverpool. ()
- LANCASTER CASTLE, BY MOONLIGHT. ()
- THE LAUREL. ()
- LEGEND. ()
- LINES Occasioned by my putting a Bee out of my Window one cold Morning in February, at the request of a Child. ()
- MERCY. ()
- MORNING HYMN. ()
- MORNING HYMN. ()
- MY LAST VISIT TO W — Y C — G, ON THE SICKNESS OF MRS. W — Y. ()
- [THE MYRTLE] Upon a lady losing a sprig of Myrtle, presented to her by her husband, on the morning of their marriage. ()
- OCCASIONED BY THE DEATH OF GEORGE KENDAL, Who was drowned upon his birth-day, and the day he had been bound apprentice. ()
- OCCASIONED BY THE DEATH OF MRS. MIRIAM GILLISON. ()
- ODE TO HEALTH. ()
- ODE TO HOPE. ()
- OMNISCIENCE. ()
- ON FINDING A STRAYED CHILD. ()
- ON FRIENDSHIP. ()
- ON THE BIRTH DAY OF THREE YOUNG LADIES. ()
- ON THE DEATH OF A FRIEND. ()
- ON THE DEATH OF A YOUNG GENTLEMAN. ()
- ON THE DEATH OF MRS. ANNE GILLISON. ()
- ON THE OMNIPRESENCE OF GOD. ()
- POWER AND PROVIDENCE. ()
- THE QUESTION. ()
- RESIGNATION. ()
- SONG. ()
- SONG. ()
- SONG. ()
- SONG. ()
- SONG. ()
- SONNET TO CELIA. ()
- SONNET. ()
- SONNET. ()
- SONNET. ()
- SONNET. ()
- SONNET. ()
- SONNET. ()
- SONNET. ()
- SONNET. ()
- SONNET. ()
- SONNET. ()
- SONNET. ()
- SONNET. ()
- A SUNDAY EVENING's HYMN, IN SICKNESS. ()
- THOUGHTS BEFORE THE INTERMENT OF A FRIEND. ()
- THOUGHTS OCCASIONED BY THE DEATH OF AN AMIABLE YOUTH, WHILE HIS FRIENDS WERE MET TO CELEBRATE HIS BIRTH-DAY. ()
- THOUGHTS OCCURRING IN THE THEATRE, ON SEEING MRS. SIDDONS IN THE CHARACTER OF BELVIDERA. ()
- THE THREE LAMPS; OR, THE HERMIT OF THE WOOD. ()
- TO A SICK FRIEND. ()
- TO AMANDA, On her recovery from sickness. ()
- TO ANNA. ()
- TO BELINDA. ()
- TO DELIA. ()
- TO ELIZA S — —. ()
- TO THE MEMORY OF A LADY, Whom the Author much esteemed when very young. ()
- TO THE MEMORY OF THE LATE REV. C — — R — —. ()
- TO THE SAME. ()
- TO THE SAME. ()
- TO — — — ()
- TO — — —. ()
- UPON FINDING THE INSCRIPTION ON MY MOTHER'S MONUMENT DEFACED. ()
- WILLIAM AND ELLEN. ()
- WISDOM. ()
- WIT AND JUDGMENT. ()
- WRITTEN AT W. C. IN OCTOBER, AT SUN-SET ()