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House of Mourning, The; Or the Peasant's Death - Verses 51ÔÇô60

LI.

No; robbery legalized, and smooth deceit,
May gather much, and after more aspire;
On lazy couch may loll in silken state,
Sooth'd with the idle chaunting of the lyre.
But surely God will in the end require
The cruel grinding of the helpless poor;
Will judge the smooth deceiver, and in ire,
Even while he laughs beneath the vernal shower,

House of Mourning, The; Or the Peasant's Death - Verses 41ÔÇô50

XLI.

E'en he, who with the just hath come and gone,
Sabbaths and solemn times his chief delight,
Brought into deeps, where standing there is none,
Gropes, darkling, through temptation's dismal night —
Where ever rises on the doubtful sight,
Shadows more vast, and clouds of deeper dye —
Thought overturning thought in mournful plight,

House of Mourning, The; Or the Peasant's Death - Verses 31ÔÇô40

XXXI.

What though, he cries, to rottenness be turn'd
My strength, within me though my reins consume,
And under pains derided, wailings spurn'd,
My weary flesh longs for the peaceful tomb —
My Saviour lives. I know He yet shall come
In flesh, Heaven's matchless mercy to display —
His voice of power in death's cold ear shall boom

House of Mourning, The; Or the Peasant's Death - Verses 21ÔÇô30

XXI.

Oft was he wont, on such a cheerless night,
With Israel's royal Bard, in rapture high,
To traverse wide the fields of dewy light,
Beholding vast the treasures of the sky, —
The hail, the snow, the lurid clouds that fly
Around the footsteps of th' Eternal King,
When to the troubled earth approaching nigh,
Envelop'd in the whirlwind's withering wing,

House of Mourning, The; Or the Peasant's Death - Verses 11ÔÇô20

XI.

Clos'd is the door whence, eager peeping forth,
The youngsters watch'd the darger's blyth return;
Foxy, supine, lies stretch'd before the hearth,
That, smouldering, dim and sickly seems to burn.
The well darn'd hose at last day's labour worn,
The strong gramashins, stiff with miry clay,
Beneath the sautfat, hung upon the horn,

House of Mourning, The; Or the Peasant's Death - Verses 1ÔÇô10

INSCRIBED TO THE MEMORY OF MY MOST RESPECTED FRIEND, THE LATE MR THOMAS HART

I.

I, WHO erewhile in artless numbers sung
The Sabbath service of the simple swain,
Whence peace, content, delight for ever young,
And heavenly Hope, rose smiling in his train;
Now to the tremulous, sorrow-breathing strain,
With faltering hand attune the plaintive lyre: