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Poems

Chapter 116: SONNET,
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About This Book

A varied collection of lyrical and occasional poems encompassing light social verse, pastoral descriptions, travel pieces gathered from earlier fugitive publication, and personal elegies. Pieces range from tranquil nature scenes and grotto meditations to expressions of romantic longing and formal dedications; a prominent elegy mourns a beloved brother and traces grief and memory. The preface frames the poems as modest divertissements written across youth and maturity, and some material derives from the author's tours. The tone alternates between playful, reflective, and mournful, favoring accessible meters and conventional poetic imagery rather than experimental forms.

SONNET,

Occasioned by reading an Inscription on the Tombstone of Captain Christensen, of Krajore, in Norway, who died in consequence of the Bite of his Dog, when it was mad.

Ah! hapless stranger! who, without a tear,
    Can this sad record of thy fate survey?
No angry tempest laid thee breathless here,
    Nor hostile sword, nor Nature’s mild decay.

The fond companion of thy pilgrim feet,
    Who watch’d thee in thy sleep, who moan’d if miss’d,
And sprung with such delight his Lord to greet,
    Imbu’d with death the hand he oft had kiss’d.

And here, remov’d from Love’s lamenting eye,
    Far from thy native cat’racts’ awful sound,
Far from thy dusky forests’ pensive sigh,
    Thy poor remains repose on alien ground;
Yet Pity oft shall sit beside thy stone,
And sigh as tho’ she mourn’d a brother gone.