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THE POEMS OF BURNS.

As thy day grows warm and high,Life's meridian flaming nigh,Dost thou spurn the humble vale?Life's proud summits wouldst thou scale?Check thy climbing step, elate,Evils lurk in felon wait:Dangers, eagle-pinioned, bold,Soar around each cliffy hold,While cheerful Peace, with linnet song,Chants the lowly dells among.As the shades of ev'ning close,Beck'ning thee to long repose;As life itself becomes disease,Seek the chimney-nook of ease.There ruminate with sober thought,On all thou'st seen, and heard, and wrought;And teach the sportive younkers round,Saws of experience, sage and sound.Say, man's true, genuine estimate,The grand criterion of his fate,Is not—art thou high or low?Did thy fortune ebb or flow?Did many talents gild thy span?Or frugal Nature grudge thee one?Tell them, and press it on their mind,As thou thyself must shortly find,The smile or frown of awful Heav'nTo Virtue or to Vice is giv'n.Say, to be just, and kind, and wise,There solid self-enjoyment lies;That foolish, selfish, faithless ways,Lead to be wretched, vile, and base.Thus resign'd and quiet, creepTo the bed of lasting sleep;Sleep, whence thou shalt ne'er awake,Night, where dawn shall never break,Till future life, future no more,To light and joy the good restore,To light and joy unknown before.Stranger, go! Heaven be thy guide!Quod the Bedesman of Nith-side.
GLENRIDDEL HERMITAGE, JUNE 28TH,
1788. FROM THE MS.

Thou whom chance may hither leadBe thou clad in russet weed,Be thou deckt in silken stole,Grave these maxims on thy soul.Life is but a day at most,Sprung from night, in darkness lost;Hope not sunshine every hour,Fear not clouds will always lour,Happiness is but a name,Make content and ease thy aim.Ambition is a meteor gleam,Fame, an idle restless dream:Peace, the tenderest flower of spring.Pleasures, insects on the wing;Those that sip the dew alone,Make the butterflies thy own;Those that would the bloom devour,Crush the locusts, save the flower.For the future be prepar'd,Guard, wherever thou canst guard;But thy utmost duly done,Welcome what thou canst not shun.Follies past give thou to air,Make their consequence thy care:Keep the name of Man in mind,And dishonour not thy kind.Reverence, with lowly heart,Him whose wondrous work thou art:Keep His goodness still in view,Thy trust, and Thy example too.Stranger, go! Heaven be thy guide!Quod the Bedesman of Nithe-side.

ODE, SACRED TO THE MEMORY OF MRS. OSWALD.

Dweller in yon dungeon dark,Hangman of creation, mark!Who in widow-weeds appears,Laden with unhonoured years,Noosing with care a bursting purse,Baited with many a deadly curse!
Strophe.
View the wither'd beldam's face—Can thy keen inspection traceAught of humanity's sweet melting grace?