The Library eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 30 pages of information about The Library.

The Library eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 30 pages of information about The Library.
his peace of mind
On the precarious mercy of mankind;
Who hopes for wild and visionary things,
And mounts o’er unknown seas with vent’rous wings;
But as, of various evils that befall
The human race, some portion goes to all;
To him perhaps the milder lot’s assigned
Who feels his consolation in his mind,
And, lock’d within his bosom, bears about
A mental charm for every care without. 
E’en in the pangs of each domestic grief,
Or health or vigorous hope affords relief;
And every wound the tortured bosom feels,
Or virtue bears, or some preserver heals;
Some generous friend of ample power possess’d;
Some feeling heart, that bleeds for the distress’d;
Some breast that glows with virtues all divine;
Some noble Rutland, misery’s friend and thine. 
   “Nor say, the Muse’s song, the Poet’s pen,
Merit the scorn they meet from little men. 
With cautious freedom if the numbers flow,
Not wildly high, nor pitifully low;
If vice alone their honest aims oppose,
Why so ashamed their friends, so loud their foes? 
Happy for men in every age and clime,
If all the sons of vision dealt in rhyme. 
Go on, then, Son of Vision! still pursue
Thy airy dreams; the world is dreaming too. 
Ambition’s lofty views, the pomp of state,
The pride of wealth, the splendour of the great,
Stripp’d of their mask, their cares and troubles known,
Are visions far less happy than thy own: 
Go on! and, while the sons of care complain,
Be wisely gay and innocently vain;
While serious souls are by their fears undone,
Blow sportive bladders in the beamy sun,
And call them worlds! and bid the greatest show
More radiant colours in their worlds below: 
Then, as they break, the slaves of care reprove,
And tell them, Such are all the toys they love.”

Footnotes: 

{1} Indentation and punctuation as original.

{2} In ancient libraries, works of value and importance were fastened to their places by a length of chain; and might so be perused, but not taken away.

{3} See Blackstone’s Commentaries, i. 131, 359; iv. 432.

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The Library from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.