Dr. Johnson's Works: Life, Poems, and Tales, Volume 1 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 532 pages of information about Dr. Johnson's Works.

Dr. Johnson's Works: Life, Poems, and Tales, Volume 1 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 532 pages of information about Dr. Johnson's Works.

IRENE. 
To me my lover’s fondness will restore
Whate’er man’s pride has ravish’d from our sex.

ASPASIA. 
When soft security shall prompt the sultan,
Freed from the tumults of unsettled conquest,
To fix his court, and regulate his pleasures,
Soon shall the dire seraglio’s horrid gates
Close, like th’ eternal bars of death, upon thee. 
Immur’d, and buried in perpetual sloth,
That gloomy slumber of the stagnant soul,
There shalt thou view, from far, the quiet cottage,
And sigh for cheerful poverty in vain;
There wear the tedious hours of life away,
Beneath each curse of unrelenting heav’n,
Despair and slav’ry, solitude and guilt.

IRENE. 
There shall we find the yet untasted bliss
Of grandeur and tranquillity combin’d.

ASPASIA. 
Tranquillity and guilt, disjoin’d by heaven,
Still stretch in vain their longing arms afar;
Nor dare to pass th’ insuperable bound. 
Ah! let me rather seek the convent’s cell;
There, when my thoughts, at interval of prayer,
Descend to range these mansions of misfortune,
Oft shall I dwell on our disastrous friendship,
And shed the pitying tear for lost Irene.

IRENE. 
Go, languish on in dull obscurity;
Thy dazzled soul, with all its boasted greatness,
Shrinks at th’ o’erpow’ring gleams of regal state,
Stoops from the blaze, like a degen’rate eagle,
And flies for shelter to the shades of life.

ASPASIA. 
On me should providence, without a crime,
The weighty charge of royalty confer;
Call me to civilize the Russian wilds,
Or bid soft science polish Britain’s heroes;
Soon should’st thou see, how false thy weak reproach,
My bosom feels, enkindled from the sky,
The lambent flames of mild benevolence,
Untouch’d by fierce ambition’s raging fires.

IRENE. 
Ambition is the stamp, impress’d by heav’n
To mark the noblest minds; with active heat
Inform’d, they mount the precipice of pow’r,
Grasp at command, and tow’r in quest of empire;
While vulgar souls compassionate their cares,
Gaze at their height, and tremble at their danger: 
Thus meaner spirits, with amazement, mark
The varying seasons, and revolving skies,
And ask, what guilty pow’r’s rebellious hand
Rolls with eternal toil the pond’rous orbs;
While some archangel, nearer to perfection,
In easy state, presides o’er all their motions,
Directs the planets, with a careless nod,
Conducts the sun, and regulates the spheres.

ASPASIA. 
Well may’st thou hide in labyrinths of sound
The cause that shrinks from reason’s pow’rful voice. 
Stoop from thy flight, trace back th’ entangled thought,
And set the glitt’ring fallacy to view. 
Not pow’r I blame, but pow’r obtain’d by crime;
Angelick greatness is angelick virtue. 
Amidst the glare of courts, the shout of armies,
Will not th’ apostate feel the pangs of guilt,
And wish, too late, for innocence and peace,
Curst, as the tyrant of th’ infernal realms,
With gloomy state and agonizing pomp?

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Dr. Johnson's Works: Life, Poems, and Tales, Volume 1 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.