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Poems

Chapter 40: FAREWELL LINES
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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.

FAREWELL LINES

TO
BRISTOL HOT WELLS.

Bristol! in vain thy rocks attempt the sky,
    The wild woods waving on their giddy brow;
And vainly, devious Avon! vainly sigh
    Thy waters, winding thro’ the vales below;—

In vain, upon thy glassy bosom borne,
    Th’ expected vessel proudly glides along,
While, ’mid thy echoes, at the break of morn
    Is heard the homeward ship-boy’s happy song;—

For, ah! amid thy sweet romantic shade,
    By Friendship led, fair drooping Beauty moves;
Thy hallow’d cup of health affords no aid,
    Nor charm thy birds, that chant their woodland loves.

Each morn I view her thro’ thy wave-girt grove,
    Her white robe flutt’ring round her sinking form;
O’er the sweet ruin shine those eyes of love,
    As bright stars beaming thro’ a midnight storm.

Here sorrowing Love seeks a sequester’d bow’r.
    Calls on thy spring to calm his troubled breast;
Bright Hope alights not on his pensive hour,
    Nor can thy favour’d fountains yield him rest.

Despair across his joys now intervenes,
    And sternly bids the little cherub fly;
While his eyes close amid thy beauteous scenes.
    His last sighs bless the form that bids him die.

Farewell, then, Bristol! thou canst yield no joy,
    Thy woods look darken’d with funereal gloom,
Sickness and Sorrow on thy green banks sigh,
    And all thy form is but a beauteous tomb.

Ah! may each future suff’rer, hov’ring near,
    Rais’d by thy genial wave, delighted view
Returning joy and health, supremely dear,
    Long lost to him who sadly sighs adieu!