On the sudden Death of a CLERGYMAN. ODE IV. IF, like th' Orphean lyre, my song could charm, And light to life the ashes in the urn, Fate of his iron dart I would disarm, Sudden as thy decease should'st thou return, Recall'd with mandates of despotic sounds, And arbitrary grief, that will not hear of bounds. But, ah! such wishes, artless muse, forbear; 'Tis impotence of frantic love, Th' enthusiastic flight of wild despair, To hope the Thracian's magic power to prove. Alas! thy slender vein, Nor mighty is to move, nor forgetive to feign, Impatient of a rein, Thou canst not in due bounds the struggling measures keep, — But thou, alas! canst weep — Thou canst — and o'er the melancholy bier Canst lend the sad solemnity a tear. Hail! to that wretched corse, untenanted and cold, And hail the peaceful shade loos'd from its irksome hold. Now let me say thou'rt free, For sure thou paid'st an heavy tax for life, While combating for thee, Nature and mortality Maintain'd a daily strife. High, on a slender thread thy vital lamp was plac'd, Upon the mountain's bleakest brow, To give a nobler light superior was it rais'd, But more expos'd by eminence it blaz'd; For not a whistling wind that blew, Nor the drop-descending dew, Nor a bat that idly flew, But half extinguish'd its fair flame — but now See — hear the storms tempestuous sweep — Precipitate it falls — it falls — falls lifeless in the deep. Cease, cease, ye weeping youth, Sincerity's soft sighs, and all the tears of truth. And you, his kindred throng, forbear Marble memorials to prepare, And sculptur'd in your breasts his busto wear. 'Twas thus when Israel's legislator dy'd, No fragile mortal honours were supply'd, But even a grave denied. Better than what the pencil's daub can give, Better than all that Phidias ever wrought, Is this — that what he taught shall live, And what he liv'd for ever shall be taught.