Complete Poetical Works of Charlotte Smith

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Complete Poetical Works of Charlotte Smith Page 28

by Charlotte Smith


  By softer passions mov’d, to nature true,

  His lovely heroine he describes from you, 30

  Women of England! — Lo a bard unknown

  Covets your favour — yet in abject tone

  He scorns to plead — more general this appeal

  Shall be, to all who think, to all who feel.

  Of party guiltless, shunning all offense, 35

  Trusting alone to nature, truth and sense,

  To this whole audience he his cause confides,

  Where British Candour hears, & British taste decides.

  The Poems

  Smith spent her childhood at Bignor Park, Pullborough, West Sussex

  List of Poems in Chronological Order

  SONNET I. THE PARTIAL MUSE, HAS FROM MY EARLIEST HOURS

  SONNET II. WRITTEN AT THE CLOSE OF SPRING.

  SONNET III. TO A NIGHTINGALE.

  SONNET IV. TO THE MOON.

  SONNET V. TO THE SOUTH DOWNS.

  SONNET VI. TO HOPE.

  SONNET VII. ON THE DEPARTURE OF THE NIGHTINGALE.

  SONNET VIII. TO SPRING.

  SONNET IX. BLEST IS YON SHEPHERD, ON THE TURF RECLINED

  SONNET X. TO MRS. G.

  SONNET XI. TO SLEEP.

  SONNET XII. WRITTEN ON THE SEA SHORE, OCT. 1784.

  SONNET XIII. FROM PETRARCH.

  SONNET XIV. FROM PETRARCH.

  SONNET XV. FROM PETRARCH.

  SONNET XVI. FROM PETRARCH.

  SONNET XVII. FROM THE THIRTEENTH CANTATA OF METASTASIO.

  SONNET XVIII. TO THE EARL OF EGREMONT.

  SONNET XIX. TO MR. HAYLEY

  SONNET XX. TO THE COUNTESS OF A ——

  SONNET XXI. SUPPOSED TO BE WRITTEN BY WERTER.

  SONNET XXII. BY THE SAME. TO SOLITUDE.

  SONNET XXIII. BY THE SAME. TO THE NORTH STAR.

  SONNET XXIV. BY THE SAME.

  SONNET XXV. BY THE SAME. Just before his Death.

  SONNET XXVI. TO THE RIVER ARUN.

  SONNET XXVII. SIGHING I SEE YON LITTLE TROOP AT PLAY

  SONNET XXVIII. TO FRIENDSHIP.

  SONNET XXIX. TO MISS C —— .

  SONNET XXX. TO THE RIVER ARUN.

  SONNET XXXI. WRITTEN ON FARM WOOD, SOUTH DOWNS, MAY 1784.

  SONNET XXXII. TO MELANCHOLY.

  SONNET XXXIII. TO THE NAIAD OF THE ARUN.

  SONNET XXXIV. TO A FRIEND.

  SONNET XXXV. TO FORTITUDE.

  SONNET XXXVI. SHOULD THE LONE WANDERER, FAINTING ON HIS WAY

  SONNET XXXVII. SENT TO THE HON. MRS. O’NEILL, WITH PAINTED FLOWERS.

  SONNET XXXVIII. FROM THE NOVEL OF EMMELINE.

  SONNET XXXIX. TO NIGHT. FROM THE SAME.

  SONNET XL. FROM THE SAME.

  SONNET XLI. TO TRANQUILLITY.

  SONNET XLII. COMPOSED DURING A WALK ON THE DOWNS, NOV. 1787.

  SONNET XLIII. THE UNHAPPY EXILE, WHOM HIS FATES CONFINE

  SONNET XLIV. WRITTEN IN THE CHURCH-YARD AT MIDDLETON, IN SUSSEX.

  SONNET XLV. ON LEAVING A PART OF SUSSEX.

  SONNET XLVI. WRITTEN AT PENHURST, IN AUTUMN 1788.

  SONNET XLVII. TO FANCY.

  SONNET XLVIII. TO MRS ––

  SONNET XLIX. FROM THE NOVEL OF CELESTINA.

  SONNET L. FROM THE NOVEL OF CELESTINA.

  SONNET LI. FROM THE NOVEL OF CELESTINA.

  SONNET LII. FROM THE NOVEL OF CELESTINA. THE PILGRIM.

  SONNET LIII. FROM THE NOVEL OF CELESTINA. THE LAPLANDER.

  SONNET LIV. THE SLEEPING WOODMAN.

  SONNET LV. RETURN OF THE NIGHTINGALE.

  SONNET LVI. THE CAPTIVE ESCAPED

  SONNET LVII. TO DEPENDENCE.

  SONNET LVIII. THE GLOW-WORM.

  SONNET LIX. WRITTEN SEPT. 1791, DURING A REMARKABLE THUNDERSTORM.

  SONNET LX. TO AN AMIABLE GIRL.

  SONNET LXI.

  SONNET LXII.

  SONNET LXIII. THE GOSSAMER.

  SONNET LXIV. WRITTEN AT BRISTOL IN THE SUMMER OF 1794.

  SONNET LXV. TO DR PARRY OF BATH.

  SONNET LXVI. WRITTEN IN A TEMPESTUOUS NIGHT ON THE COAST OF SUSSEX.

  SONNET LXVII. ON PASSING OVER A DREARY TRACT OF COUNTRY

  SONNET LXVIII. WRITTEN AT EXMOUTH, MIDSUMMER, 1795.

  SONNET LXIX. WRITTEN AT THE SAME PLACE, ON SEEING A SEAMAN RETURN WHO HAD BEEN IMPRISONED AT ROCHFORT.

  SONNET LXX. ON BEING CAUTIONED AGAINST WALKING OVER A HEADLAND OVERLOOKING THE SEA, BECAUSE IT WAS FREQUENTED BY A LUNATIC.

  SONNET LXXI. WRITTEN AT WEYMOUTH IN WINTER.

  SONNET LXXII. TO THE MORNING STAR.

  SONNET LXXIII. TO A QUERULOUS ACQUAINTANCE.

  SONNET LXXIV. THE WINTER NIGHT.

  SONNET LXXV.

  SONNET LXXVI. TO A YOUNG MAN ENTERING THE WORLD.

  SONNET LXXVII. TO THE INSECT OF THE GOSSAMER.

  SONNET LXXVIII. SNOWDROPS.

  SONNET LXXIX. TO THE GODDESS OF BOTANY.

  SONNET LXXX. TO THE INVISIBLE MOON.

  SONNET LXXXI. HE MAY BE ENVIED, WHO WITH TRANQUIL BREAST

  SONNET LXXXII. TO THE SHADE OF BURNS.

  SONNET LXXXIII. THE SEA VIEW.

  SONNET LXXXIV. TO THE MUSE.

  SONNET: THE FAIREST FLOWERS ARE GONE! FOR TEMPESTS FELL

  SONNET WRITTEN NEAR A PORT ON A DARK EVENING

  SONNET WRITTEN IN OCTOBER

  NEPENTHE

  TO THE SUN

  TO OBLIVION

  REFLECTIONS ON SOME DRAWINGS OF PLANTS

  SONNET WRITTEN AT BIGNOR PARK IN SUSSEX, IN AUGUST, 1799

  ODE TO DESPAIR

  ELEGY

  SONG FROM THE FRENCH OF CARDINAL BERNIS

  THE ORIGIN OF FLATTERY

  THE PEASANT OF THE ALPS

  SONG FROM THE FRENCH

  SONG: DOES PITY GIVE, THO’ FATE DENIES

  THIRTY-EIGHT ADDRESSED TO MRS. H —— Y

  VERSES INTENDED TO HAVE BEEN PREFIXED TO THE NOVEL OF EMMELINE, BUT THEN SUPPRESSED

  THE DEAD BEGGAR

  THE FEMALE EXILE.

  WRITTEN FOR THE BENEFIT OF A DISTRESSED PLAYER, DETAINED AT BRIGHTHELMSTONE FOR DEBT, NOVEMBER 1792

  INSCRIPTION ON A STONE, IN THE CHURCH-YARD AT BOREHAM, IN ESSEX

  A DESCRIPTIVE ODE, SUPPOSED TO HAVE BEEN WRITTEN UNDER THE RUINS OF RUFUS’S CASTLE

  VERSES SUPPOSED TO HAVE BEEN WRITTEN IN THE NEW FOREST, IN EARLY SPRING

  APOSTROPHE TO AN OLD TREE

  THE FOREST BOY

  VERSES, ON THE DEATH OF HENRIETTA O’NEILL, WRITTEN IN SEPTEMBER, 1794

  APRIL

  ODE TO DEATH

  STANZAS: AH! THINK’ST THOU, LAURA, THEN, THAT WEALTH

  TO THE WINDS

  TO VESPER

  LYDIA

  THE EMIGRANTS. BOOK I.

  THE EMIGRANTS. BOOK II.

  NOTES TO THE FIRST BOOK.

  NOTES TO THE SECOND BOOK.

  TO A GREEN-CHAFER, ON A WHITE ROSE

  A WALK BY THE WATER

  INVITATION TO THE BEE

  THE HEDGE-HOG SEEN IN A FREQUENTED PATH

  THE EARLY BUTTERFLY

  THE MOTH

  TO THE SNOW-DROP

  VIOLETS

  TO A BUTTERFLY IN A WINDOW

  WILD FLOWERS

  THE CLOSE OF SUMMER

  THE WHEAT-EAR

  AN EVENING WALK BY THE SEA-SIDE

  THE HEATH

  ODE TO THE MISSEL THRUSH

  ODE TO THE OLIVE TREE

  TO THE FIRE-FLY OF JAMAICA, SEEN IN A COLLECTION

  LINES COMPOSED IN PASSING THROUGH A FOREST IN GERMANY

  TO A GERANIUM WHICH FLOWERED DURING THE WINTER

  TO THE MULBERRY-TREE

  BEACHY HEAD.

  THE DICTATORIAL OWL.

  THE JAY IN MASQUERADE.

  THE TRUANT DOVE, FROM PILPAY.

  THE LARK’S NEST.

  THE SWALLOW.

  FLORA.

  STUDIES BY THE SEA.

  THE HOROLOGE OF THE FIELDS.

  SAINT MONICA.

  A W
ALK IN THE SHRUBBERY.

  HOPE. A RONDEAU.

  EVENING.

  LOVE AND FOLLY, FROM THE FABLES OF LA FONTAINE.

  ON THE APHORISM, “L’AMITIÉ EST L’AMOUR SANS AILES.”

  TO MY LYRE.

  HYMN TO LOVE AND LIFE

  SONNET TO THE FOREST YTENE

  PROLOGUE TO THE PLAY ‘WHAT IS SHE?’

  EPILOGUE TO ‘WHAT IS SHE?’ I.

  EPILOGUE TO ‘WHAT IS SHE?’ II.

  EPILOGUE TO ‘WHAT IS SHE?’ III.

  PROLOGUE TO WILLIAM GODWIN, ANTONIO; OR, THE SOLDIER’S RETURN

  List of Poems in Alphabetical Order

  A-D E-H I-L M-O P-S T-V W-Z

  A DESCRIPTIVE ODE, SUPPOSED TO HAVE BEEN WRITTEN UNDER THE RUINS OF RUFUS’S CASTLE

  A WALK BY THE WATER

  A WALK IN THE SHRUBBERY.

  AN EVENING WALK BY THE SEA-SIDE

  APOSTROPHE TO AN OLD TREE

  APRIL

  BEACHY HEAD.

  ELEGY

  EPILOGUE TO ‘WHAT IS SHE?’ I.

  EPILOGUE TO ‘WHAT IS SHE?’ II.

  EPILOGUE TO ‘WHAT IS SHE?’ III.

  EVENING.

  FLORA.

  HOPE. A RONDEAU.

  HYMN TO LOVE AND LIFE

  INSCRIPTION ON A STONE, IN THE CHURCH-YARD AT BOREHAM, IN ESSEX

  INVITATION TO THE BEE

  LINES COMPOSED IN PASSING THROUGH A FOREST IN GERMANY

  LOVE AND FOLLY, FROM THE FABLES OF LA FONTAINE.

  LYDIA

  NEPENTHE

  NOTES TO THE FIRST BOOK.

  NOTES TO THE SECOND BOOK.

  ODE TO DEATH

  ODE TO DESPAIR

  ODE TO THE MISSEL THRUSH

  ODE TO THE OLIVE TREE

  ON THE APHORISM, “L’AMITIÉ EST L’AMOUR SANS AILES.”

  PROLOGUE TO THE PLAY ‘WHAT IS SHE?’

  PROLOGUE TO WILLIAM GODWIN, ANTONIO; OR, THE SOLDIER’S RETURN

  REFLECTIONS ON SOME DRAWINGS OF PLANTS

  SAINT MONICA.

  SONG FROM THE FRENCH

  SONG FROM THE FRENCH OF CARDINAL BERNIS

  SONG: DOES PITY GIVE, THO’ FATE DENIES

  SONNET I. THE PARTIAL MUSE, HAS FROM MY EARLIEST HOURS

  SONNET II. WRITTEN AT THE CLOSE OF SPRING.

  SONNET III. TO A NIGHTINGALE.

  SONNET IV. TO THE MOON.

  SONNET IX. BLEST IS YON SHEPHERD, ON THE TURF RECLINED

  SONNET L. FROM THE NOVEL OF CELESTINA.

  SONNET LI. FROM THE NOVEL OF CELESTINA.

  SONNET LII. FROM THE NOVEL OF CELESTINA. THE PILGRIM.

  SONNET LIII. FROM THE NOVEL OF CELESTINA. THE LAPLANDER.

  SONNET LIV. THE SLEEPING WOODMAN.

  SONNET LIX. WRITTEN SEPT. 1791, DURING A REMARKABLE THUNDERSTORM.

  SONNET LV. RETURN OF THE NIGHTINGALE.

  SONNET LVI. THE CAPTIVE ESCAPED

  SONNET LVII. TO DEPENDENCE.

  SONNET LVIII. THE GLOW-WORM.

  SONNET LX. TO AN AMIABLE GIRL.

  SONNET LXI.

  SONNET LXII.

  SONNET LXIII. THE GOSSAMER.

  SONNET LXIV. WRITTEN AT BRISTOL IN THE SUMMER OF 1794.

  SONNET LXIX. WRITTEN AT THE SAME PLACE, ON SEEING A SEAMAN RETURN WHO HAD BEEN IMPRISONED AT ROCHFORT.

  SONNET LXV. TO DR PARRY OF BATH.

  SONNET LXVI. WRITTEN IN A TEMPESTUOUS NIGHT ON THE COAST OF SUSSEX.

  SONNET LXVII. ON PASSING OVER A DREARY TRACT OF COUNTRY

  SONNET LXVIII. WRITTEN AT EXMOUTH, MIDSUMMER, 1795.

  SONNET LXX. ON BEING CAUTIONED AGAINST WALKING OVER A HEADLAND OVERLOOKING THE SEA, BECAUSE IT WAS FREQUENTED BY A LUNATIC.

  SONNET LXXI. WRITTEN AT WEYMOUTH IN WINTER.

  SONNET LXXII. TO THE MORNING STAR.

  SONNET LXXIII. TO A QUERULOUS ACQUAINTANCE.

  SONNET LXXIV. THE WINTER NIGHT.

  SONNET LXXIX. TO THE GODDESS OF BOTANY.

  SONNET LXXV.

  SONNET LXXVI. TO A YOUNG MAN ENTERING THE WORLD.

  SONNET LXXVII. TO THE INSECT OF THE GOSSAMER.

  SONNET LXXVIII. SNOWDROPS.

  SONNET LXXX. TO THE INVISIBLE MOON.

  SONNET LXXXI. HE MAY BE ENVIED, WHO WITH TRANQUIL BREAST

  SONNET LXXXII. TO THE SHADE OF BURNS.

  SONNET LXXXIII. THE SEA VIEW.

  SONNET LXXXIV. TO THE MUSE.

  SONNET TO THE FOREST YTENE

  SONNET V. TO THE SOUTH DOWNS.

  SONNET VI. TO HOPE.

  SONNET VII. ON THE DEPARTURE OF THE NIGHTINGALE.

  SONNET VIII. TO SPRING.

  SONNET WRITTEN AT BIGNOR PARK IN SUSSEX, IN AUGUST, 1799

  SONNET WRITTEN IN OCTOBER

  SONNET WRITTEN NEAR A PORT ON A DARK EVENING

  SONNET X. TO MRS. G.

  SONNET XI. TO SLEEP.

  SONNET XII. WRITTEN ON THE SEA SHORE, OCT. 1784.

  SONNET XIII. FROM PETRARCH.

  SONNET XIV. FROM PETRARCH.

  SONNET XIX. TO MR. HAYLEY

  SONNET XL. FROM THE SAME.

  SONNET XLI. TO TRANQUILLITY.

  SONNET XLII. COMPOSED DURING A WALK ON THE DOWNS, NOV. 1787.

  SONNET XLIII. THE UNHAPPY EXILE, WHOM HIS FATES CONFINE

  SONNET XLIV. WRITTEN IN THE CHURCH-YARD AT MIDDLETON, IN SUSSEX.

  SONNET XLIX. FROM THE NOVEL OF CELESTINA.

  SONNET XLV. ON LEAVING A PART OF SUSSEX.

  SONNET XLVI. WRITTEN AT PENHURST, IN AUTUMN 1788.

  SONNET XLVII. TO FANCY.

  SONNET XLVIII. TO MRS ––

  SONNET XV. FROM PETRARCH.

  SONNET XVI. FROM PETRARCH.

  SONNET XVII. FROM THE THIRTEENTH CANTATA OF METASTASIO.

  SONNET XVIII. TO THE EARL OF EGREMONT.

  SONNET XX. TO THE COUNTESS OF A ——

  SONNET XXI. SUPPOSED TO BE WRITTEN BY WERTER.

  SONNET XXII. BY THE SAME. TO SOLITUDE.

  SONNET XXIII. BY THE SAME. TO THE NORTH STAR.

  SONNET XXIV. BY THE SAME.

  SONNET XXIX. TO MISS C —— .

  SONNET XXV. BY THE SAME. Just before his Death.

  SONNET XXVI. TO THE RIVER ARUN.

  SONNET XXVII. SIGHING I SEE YON LITTLE TROOP AT PLAY

  SONNET XXVIII. TO FRIENDSHIP.

  SONNET XXX. TO THE RIVER ARUN.

  SONNET XXXI. WRITTEN ON FARM WOOD, SOUTH DOWNS, MAY 1784.

  SONNET XXXII. TO MELANCHOLY.

  SONNET XXXIII. TO THE NAIAD OF THE ARUN.

  SONNET XXXIV. TO A FRIEND.

  SONNET XXXIX. TO NIGHT. FROM THE SAME.

  SONNET XXXV. TO FORTITUDE.

  SONNET XXXVI. SHOULD THE LONE WANDERER, FAINTING ON HIS WAY

  SONNET XXXVII. SENT TO THE HON. MRS. O’NEILL, WITH PAINTED FLOWERS.

  SONNET XXXVIII. FROM THE NOVEL OF EMMELINE.

  SONNET: THE FAIREST FLOWERS ARE GONE! FOR TEMPESTS FELL

  STANZAS: AH! THINK’ST THOU, LAURA, THEN, THAT WEALTH

  STUDIES BY THE SEA.

  THE CLOSE OF SUMMER

  THE DEAD BEGGAR

  THE DICTATORIAL OWL.

  THE EARLY BUTTERFLY

  THE EMIGRANTS. BOOK I.

  THE EMIGRANTS. BOOK II.

  THE FEMALE EXILE.

  THE FOREST BOY

  THE HEATH

  THE HEDGE-HOG SEEN IN A FREQUENTED PATH

  THE HOROLOGE OF THE FIELDS.

  THE JAY IN MASQUERADE.

  THE LARK’S NEST.

  THE MOTH

  THE ORIGIN OF FLATTERY

  THE PEASANT OF THE ALPS

  THE SWALLOW.

  THE TRUANT DOVE, FROM PILPAY.

  THE WHEAT-EAR

  THIRTY-EIGHT ADDRESSED TO MRS. H —— Y

  TO A BUTTERFLY IN A WINDOW

  TO A GERANIUM WHICH FLOWERED DURING THE WINTER

  TO A GREEN-CHAFER, ON A WHITE ROSE

  TO MY LYRE.

  TO OBLIVION

  TO THE FIRE-FLY OF JAMAICA, SEEN IN A COLLECTION

  TO THE MULBER
RY-TREE

  TO THE SNOW-DROP

  TO THE SUN

  TO THE WINDS

  TO VESPER

  VERSES INTENDED TO HAVE BEEN PREFIXED TO THE NOVEL OF EMMELINE, BUT THEN SUPPRESSED

  VERSES SUPPOSED TO HAVE BEEN WRITTEN IN THE NEW FOREST, IN EARLY SPRING

  VERSES, ON THE DEATH OF HENRIETTA O’NEILL, WRITTEN IN SEPTEMBER, 1794

  VIOLETS

  WILD FLOWERS

  WRITTEN FOR THE BENEFIT OF A DISTRESSED PLAYER, DETAINED AT BRIGHTHELMSTONE FOR DEBT, NOVEMBER 1792

  Selected Novels

  Woolbeding House, Chichester, West Sussex — Smith’s last home with her husband from 1785 till 1787. On 15 April 1787, after twenty-two years of marriage, she left Benjamin, writing that she might “have been contented to reside in the same house with him”, had not “his temper been so capricious and often so cruel” that her “life was not safe”.

  Emmeline

  OR, THE ORPHAN OF THE CASTLE

  CONTENTS

  VOLUME I

  CHAPTER I

  CHAPTER II

  CHAPTER III

  CHAPTER IV

  CHAPTER V

  CHAPTER VI

  CHAPTER VII

  CHAPTER VIII

  CHAPTER IX

  CHAPTER X

  CHAPTER XI

  CHAPTER XII

  CHAPTER XIII

  CHAPTER XIV

  CHAPTER XV

  CHAPTER XVI

  VOLUME II

  CHAPTER I

  CHAPTER II

  CHAPTER III

  CHAPTER IV

  CHAPTER V

  CHAPTER VI

  CHAPTER VII

  CHAPTER VIII

  CHAPTER IX

  CHAPTER X

  CHAPTER XI

  CHAPTER XII

  VOLUME III

  CHAPTER I

  CHAPTER II

  CHAPTER III

  CHAPTER IV

  CHAPTER V

  CHAPTER VI

  CHAPTER VII

  CHAPTER VIII

  CHAPTER IX

  CHAPTER X

  CHAPTER XI

  CHAPTER XII

  CHAPTER XIII

  CHAPTER XIV

  VOLUME IV

  CHAPTER I

  CHAPTER II

  CHAPTER III

  CHAPTER IV

  CHAPTER V

  CHAPTER VI

  CHAPTER VII

  CHAPTER VIII

  CHAPTER IX

  CHAPTER X

  CHAPTER XI

  CHAPTER XII

  CHAPTER XIII

  CHAPTER XIV

  CHAPTER XV

  CHAPTER XVI

  VOLUME I

  TO MY CHILDREN

  O’erwhelm’d with sorrow — and sustaining long ‘The proud man’s contumely, the oppressor’s wrong,’ Languid despondency, and vain regret, Must my exhausted spirit struggle yet? Yes! robb’d myself of all that Fortune gave, Of every hope — but shelter in the grave; Still shall the plaintive lyre essay it’s powers, And dress the cave of Care, with Fancy’s flowers; Maternal love, the fiend Despair withstand, Still animate the heart and guide the hand. May you, dear objects of my tender care! Escape the evils, I was born to bear: Round my devoted head, while tempests roll, Yet there— ‘where I have treasured up my soul,’ May the soft rays of dawning hope impart Reviving patience to my fainting heart; And, when it’s sharp anxieties shall cease, May I be conscious, in the realms of peace, That every tear which swells my children’s eyes, From evils past, not present sorrows, rise. Then, with some friend who loves to share your pain, (For ’tis my boast, that still such friends remain,) By filial grief, and fond remembrance prest, You’ll seek the spot where all my miseries rest, Recall my hapless days in sad review, The long calamities I bore for you, And, with an happier fate, resolve to prove How well ye merited your mother’s love!

 

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