ON A SIMILAR OCCASION. FOR THE YEAR 1790. Ne commonentem recta sperne.-BUCHANAN. He who sits from day to day Hardly knows that he has sung. Where the watchman in his round So your verse-man I, and clerk, Duly at my time I come, But the monitory strain, Oft repeated in your ears, Can a truth, by all confess'd Of such magnitude and weight, Grow, by being oft impress'd, Trivial as a parrot's prate. Pleasure's call attention wins, New as ever seem our sins, Death and judgment, heaven and hell- O then, ere the turf or tomb ON A SIMILAR OCCASION. FOR THE YEAR 1792. Felix, qui potuit rerum cognoscere causas, Happy the mortal who has traced effects THANKLESS for favors from on high, Would he improve the boon. But he, not wise enough to scan To ages in a world of pain, Strange fondness of the human heart, Strange world, that costs it so much smart, Whence has the world her magic power? Recoil from weary life's best hour, And covet longer woe? The cause is Conscience-Conscience oft Then anxious to be longer spared Man mourns his fleeting breath: All evils then seem light, compared With the approach of death. 'Tis judgment shakes him: there's the fear That promps the wish to stay: He has incurr'd a long arrear, Pay! follow Christ, and all is paid; ON A SIMILAR OCCASION. FOR THE YEAR 1793. De sacris autem hæc sit una sententia, ut conserventur, CIC. DE LEG. But let us all concur in this one sentiment, that things sacred be inviolate. He lives who lives to God alone, And all are dead beside; For other source than God is none To live to God is to requite His love as best we may: But life, within a narrow ring Can life in them deserve the name, For what poor toys they can disclaim Who, much diseased, yet nothing feel; Who deem his house a useless place, Faith, want of common sense; And ardor in the Christian race, A hypocrite's pretence? Who trample order; and the day If scorn of God's commands, impress'd Such want it, and that want uncured Speaks him a criminal, assured Sad period to a pleasant course! ON A GOLDFINCH, STARVED TO DEATH IN HIS CAGE. TIME was when I was free as air, My drink the morning dew;. My strains forever new. But gaudy plumage, sprightly strain, For, caught and caged, and starved to death, In dying sighs my little breath Soon pass'd the wiry grate. Thanks, gentle swain, for all my woes, More cruelty could none express; THE PINE-APPLE AND THE BEE. THE pine-apples, in triple row, |