Ballads | Page 3

William Hayley
with thee alone
Are all thy treasures left.
The eldest grew with manly grace,
His years yet barely seven,
A
stripling of a sweeter face,
Has never gaz'd on Heaven.
He was indeed a friend most rare,
To chear his lonely mother,
And
aid her in her constant care
His little baby-brother.
With these to Jessy much endear'd,
Whom from the world she hid,

Three nurslings more she fondly rear'd,
Two lambkins and a kid.
Most tender playmates all the five,
None stray'd the vale beyond,

They were the happiest imps alive,
All of each other fond.
And Jessy all with joy survey'd,
With joy her heart ran o'er,
When
they their little gambols play'd,
She spinning at her door.
But how mischance will intervene:
This spot of sweet delight,
One
eventide, became a scene
Of anguish and affright.
The elder boy, gay Donald, chanc'd,
Far from the door to play,
Lest,
now within the vale advanc'd,
His kid might roam away.
The mother sat to watch the vale,
Nor yet his sport forbid;
But starts
to see the Eagle sail
Above the trembling kid.
The kid began to quake and cry;
Not so the braver boy,
The
full-winged savage to defy
Was his heroic joy.
Still nearer sail'd the undaunted bird,
Its destin'd deed undone,
And
when its ravenous scream she heard
The mother join'd her son.
Their shouts united, and each arm
In bold protection spread,
Secur'd
the kid from real harm,
Tho' now with fear half dead,

Some furlongs from their cottage sill,
Now pass'd this anxious scene;

There they had left, as safe from ill,
The sleeping babe serene.
The savage bird the kid renounc'd,
But round the cottage oft
Rapid
he wheel'd, and there he pounc'd,
And bore the babe aloft.
Ah!--who can now that impulse paint,
Which fires the mother's breast?

Nor toil, nor danger, makes her faint;
She seeks this Eagle's nest.
But first with courage clear, tho' warm,
As guides the martial shock,

When British tars prepare to storm
A fortress on a rock.
She bids, to mark the Eagle's flight,
Young Donald watch below,

While she will mount the craggy height,
And to his aerie go.
With filial hope her son, who knew
Her courage and her skill,

Watch'd to parental orders true,
Magnanimously still.
And now, his mother out of sight,
He fixt his piercing eye
On crags,
that blaz'd in solar light,
Whence eagles us'd to fly.
He saw, as far as eye may ken,
A crag with blood defil'd,
And
entering this aerial den
The Eagle and the child.
The boy, tho' trusting much in God,
With generous fear was fill'd;

Aware, that, if those crags she trod,
His mother might be kill'd.
His youthful mind was not aware
How nature may sustain
Life,
guarded by maternal care
From peril, and from pain.
And now he sees, or thinks he sees
(His heart begins to pant)
A
woman crawling on her knees,
Close to the Eagle's haunt.
It is thy mother, gallant boy,
Lo! up her figure springs:
She darts,
unheard, with speechless joy
Between the Eagle's wings.

Behold! her arms its neck enchain,
And clasp her babe below:
Th'
entangled bird attempts in vain
Its burthen to o'erthrow.
Now Heaven defend thee, mother bold,
Thy peril is extreme:

Thou'rt dead, if thou let go thy hold,
Scar'd by that savage scream;
And bravely if thou keep it fast,
What yet may be thy doom!
This
very hour may be thy last,
That aerie prove thy tomb.
No! No! thank Heaven! O nobly done!
O marvellous attack!
I see
thee riding in the sun,
Upon the Eagle's back.
In vain it buffets with its wings,
In vain it wheels around;
Still
screaming, in its airy rings,
It sinks towards the ground.
Run, Donald, run! she has not stirr'd,
And she is deadly pale:
She's
dead; and with the dying bird
Descending to the vale.
Lo! Donald flies.--She touches earth:
O form'd on earth to shine!
O
mother of unrivall'd worth,
And sav'd by aid divine!
She lives unhurt--unhurt too lies
The baby in her clasp;
And her
aerial tyrant dies
Just strangled in her grasp.
What triumph swelled in Donald's breast,
And o'er his features spread.

When he his living mother prest,
And held the Eagle dead!
Angels, who left your realms of bliss.
And on this parent smil'd,

Guard every mother brave as this,
In rescuing her child!

THE STAG.
BALLAD THE FOURTH.

Blest be the boy, by virtue nurst,
Who knows not aught of fear's
controul,
And keeps, in peril's sudden burst,
The freedom of an
active soul.
Such was a lively Tuscan boy,
Who lived the youthful Tasso's friend,

Friendship and verse his early joy,
And music, form'd with love to
blend.
Love had inspir'd his tender frame,
His years but two above eleven,

The sister of his friend his flame!
A lovely little light of Heaven!
Born in the same propitious year,
Together nurst, together taught;

Each learn'd to hold the other dear,
In perfect unison of thought.
Their forms, their talents, and their talk,
Seem'd match'd by some
angelic powers,
Ne'er grew upon a rose's stalk
A sweeter pair of
social flowers.
Fortunio was the stripling's name,
Cornelia his affection's queen,

Both to all eyes, where'er they came,
Endear'd by their attractive
mien.
For like a pair of fairy sprites,
Endued with soft ætherial grace,

Enrapt in musical delights
They hardly seem'd of mortal race!
Often the youth, in early morn,
Awak'd a social sylvan flute.
To
notes
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