THE PROGRESS AND PROSPECTS
ROBERT SOUTHEY, Esq. LL.D.
POET LAUREATE,
HONORARY MEMBER OF THE ROYAL SPANISH ACADEMY, OF THE ROYAL SPANISH ACADEMY OF HISTORY, OF THE ROYAL INSTITUTE OF THE NETHERLANDS, OF THE CYMMRODORION, OF THE MASSA-
CHUSETTS HISTURICAL SOCIETY, OF THE AMERICAN ANTIQUARIAN SOCIETY, OF THE ROYAL IRISH ACADEMY, OF THE BRISTOL PHILOSOPHICAL
AND LITERARY SOCIETY, OP THE METROPOLITAN INSTITUTION, OF THE PHILOMATHIC
INSTITUTION, &c.
RESPICE, ASPICE, PROSPICE.-St. Bernard,
LONDON: JOHN MURRAY, ALBEMARLE-STREET.
MDCCCXXIX.
*Η ζητώ ανθρώπους αρέσκειν ;-GALATIANS, I. 10. “Ωστε εχθρός υμών γέγονα αληθεύων υμίν;-GALATIANS, 1V. 16.
PRINTED BY C. ROWORTH, BELL YARD,
TEMPLE BAR.
FORMERLY STUDENT OF CHRIST CHURCH, OXFORD: SUCCESSIVELY CHAPLAIN TO THE BRITISH FACTORIES AT PORTO AND AT LISBON; AND LATE RECTOR OF STREATHAM; WHO WAS RELEASED FROM THIS LIFE, SEPT. 19, 1828,
IN THE 80TH YEAR OF HIS AGE.
Not upon marble or sepulchral brass Have I the record of thy worth inscribed, Dear Uncle! nor from Chantrey's chisel ask'd A monumental statue, which might wear Thro' many an age thy venerable form. Such tribute, were I rich in this world's wealth, Should rightfully be rendered, in discharge Of grateful duty, to the world evinced When testifying so by outward sign Its deep and inmost sense.
But what I can Is rendered piously, prefixing here Thy perfect lineaments, two centuries Before thy birth by Holbein's happy hand Prefigured thus. It is the portraiture
Of More the mild, the learned and the good; Traced in that better stage of human life, When vain imaginations, troublous thoughts, And hopes and fears have had their course, and left The intellect composed, the heart at rest, Nor yet decay hath touch'd our mortal frame. Such was the man whom Henry, of desert Appreciant alway, chose for highest trust; Whom England in that eminence approved ; Whom Europe honoured, and Erasmus loved. Such he was ere heart-hardening bigotry Obscured his spirit, made him with himself Discordant, and, contracting then his brow, With sour defeature marr'd his countenance. What he was, in his best and happiest time, Even such wert thou, dear Uncle! such thy look Benign and thoughtful; such thy placid mien; Thine eye serene, significant and strong, Bright in its quietness, yet brightening oft With quick emotion of benevolence, Or flash of active fancy, and that mirth Which aye with sober wisdom well accords. Nor ever did true Nature, with more nice Exactitude, fit to the inner man The fleshly mould, than when she stampt on thine Her best credentials, and bestowed on thee
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