University of California • Berkeley y / ^r^rr<^ // / '/^ . y// w^/^< ■M AN ODE ^is Cf)ree^f)unDretitb TBirt&nag* ^r^^K?-^^-^ I ^mm0rtal ! rifen to thy Reft, Immortal ! throned among the Bleft, Immortal ! long an heir fublime Of realms outreaching fpace and time, — How fliall we dare, or hope, to raife A fitting homage of high praife To pleafe thy Spirit, fphered on high Where planets roll and comets fly ? How may not thy pure fame be marr'd By the damp breath of earthly bard, Prefuming in his zeal too bold To gild the bright refined gold ? -M -M Or how canft Thou, fiU'd with God's love. And tranced among the faints above. Endure that men fliould feem and be Idolators in piaife of Thee ? Forgive our love, forgive our zeal, — We cannot guefs how fpirits feel ; And may our homage offered thus Pleafe HIM who made both thee, and us ! II. fimmnrtal alfo on this darker Earth As in thofe brighteft fpheres. Now will we confecrate our Shakfpeare's birth. This day three hundred years ! And fo from age to age for evermore His glory fhall extend. With men of every land the wide world o'er. Till Time itfelf fhall end ! For, he is our's ; and well with pride and joy England may blefs her fon. The Stratford fcholar and the Warwick boy That every crown hath won ! Let others boaft their wifeft and their beft, To each a prize may fall ; Genius gives one apiece to all the reft, But Shakfpeare claims them all ! m Fit \^^ |p0nUl% in majettic eloquence, ^j^f^l A Terence, for keen wit and IHnging lenfe, Brighter than Pindar in his loftieft flight, Darker than ^fchylus for deeds of night, An Ovid, in the ftory-pi6lured page, A Juvenal, to lafh the vicious age. Graceful as Horace and more fkill'd to pleafe, Tender as pity-ftirring Sophocles, Free as Anacreon, as Martial neat. Than Virgil's felf more delicately fweet, — O let thofe ancients bend before Thee now, And pile their many chaplets on one brow ! — Milton was great, and of divineft fong, Spenfer melodious, Chaucer rough and ftrong, — The vigorous Dryden, and the claflic Gray, And awful Dante, foaring far away, Schiller and Goethe, ftirring up the ftrife. And Moliere, dropping laughter into life. Burns, a full fpring of nature. Hood of wit, And Tennyfon, moft rare and exquifite. To each and all belongs the laurell'd crown, — And woe to him who drags their honours down, — Yet, Shakfpeare, Thou wert all thefe lights combined, O many-fided cryftal of mankind ! ^^P^C jealous Moor, the though ^olfe The witty rare fat knight, htful Dane, And grand old Lear half-infane. And fell lago's fplte. And Romeo's love, and Tybalt's hate. And Bolingbroke in regal ftate, And he that murdered fleep, — And ruthlefs Shylock's bloody bond. And Profper with his broken wand Long buried fathoms deep ! Frank Juliet too, — and that foft pair Helen and Hermia, lilies fair As growing on one ftem, Love-cfazed Ophelia, drown'd, ah ! drown'd. And wanton Cleopatra, crown'd With Egypt's diadem ; The young Miranda moft admired, Cordelia's filial heart, Sly Beatrice with wit infpired. And Ariel's trickfey part, Fair Rofalind, — fweet banifhed. And gentle Defdemona — dead ! — Ay, thefe — all thefe, and crowds befide. Heroes, jefters, courtiers, clowns. Girls in grief, or kings in pride. Threats and crimes, and jokes, and frowns. Witches, fairies, ghofts, and elves. All our fancies, all ourfelves, — O ! Thou haft pi6tured with thy pen All phafes of all hearts of men. And in thy various page furvives The Panorama of our lives ! I I ^lj> — — —"^ 0. rf |Jlirag0n unthought before, ^i^ O miracle of fblf^taught lore, A univerfe of wit and worth. The admirable Man of earth, There is nor thing, nor thought, nor whim, Untouch'd and unadorn'd by him ; No theme unfung, no truth untold Of Earth's mufeum, new or old : All Nature's hidden things he faw, Intuitive to every law ; Glancing with fupernal fcan At all the knowledge fpelt by man ; While, for each rule and craft of Art He grafp'd it amply, whole and part : Like travel-wife Ulyffes well he knew Peoples and cities, men and manners too ; With flirewd but ever charitable ken He read, and wrote out fair, the hearts of men ; Yet, in felf-knowledge vers'd, a fage outright. His giant foul was humble in its might ! O gentle, happy, modeft mind, O genial, cheerful, frank and kind, Not even could domeftic ftrife Sour the fweetnefs of thy life, — But, wherefoe'er thy foot might roam. Divorced from that Xantippe'd home, Friends ever found thee, — ay, and foes. Cordial to thefe, and kind to thofe ; Brave, loving, patient, generous, juft, and goody- Beloved by all, our matchlefs Shakfpeare flood ! l^"' ' % >^l|iwbttt are thy p;lorious works unknown ? 11 ^|^§^ Who hath not heard thy fame ? ^ On every fhore, in every zone, The World, with glad acclaim, Yea, from the cottage to the throne. Hath magnified thy name ! From far Auftralia to Vancouver's pines. From the High Alps to Ruilia's deepeft mines, From China, with her Englifh leffon learnt, To Chili, wailing for her daughters burnt ; There, everywhere, our Shakfpeare breathes and moves In the fweet ether of all human loves ! — Where rent America now writhes in woe. Where Nile and Danube, Thames and Ganges flow, Wherever England fails, and human kind Anywhere feels in heart, and thinks in mind. There, everywhere, our Shakfpeare's voice is heard. By him all fouls are thrill'd, and cheer'd, and ftirr'd ; Each paflion flows or ebbs, as Shakfpeare fpeaks. Hate knits the brow, or terror pales the cheeks. Love lights the eyes, or pity melts the heart, And all men bow beneath our Poet's art ! (^ M &^-^ "o t||. IbKl monument to rear. What worthy offering ? — Nought lacks thy glory here Of all thy fons can bring : Long fmce, a twin-fphered brother fpake, How vain it were to raife To fuch a Name, for Memory's fake. Its pyramid of praife : Our Shakfpeare needs no fculptured ftones, No temple for his honoured bones ! But haply, in his native ftreet Befide the refcued home Hallowed by his infant feet Whereto all pilgrims roam, A College well might rear its head, That Townfman's name to bear. And broth er-a6lors' fons be bred To light and learning there ! And, for great London and its throngs, — To Shakfpeare of old right belongs The Shakfpeare Bridge, with Shakfpeare fcenes Sculptured upon its pannell'd fcreens, ColofTus-like the Thames to fpan, And telling every paffing man Where a poor player in his youth Served Heaven and Earth by mimic truth, And wrapped in Art's and Nature^s robe. Leafed, — 'twas his Heritage — the Globe ! — m ^ ^^ti^llt Magician for all time, ^.^^ Denizen of every clime, Darling poet of mankind, Mafter of the human mind, Nature's very prieft and king, — Take the gifts thy children bring ! Let thy Spirit, hovering o'er Thine earthly home and haunts of yore, In its wifdom, v^ealth, and worth. Shine upon us from above, While thy kinfmen here on earth Thus v^ith pious care and love Celebrate our Shakfpeare's birth. March 1864. London: Hatch ard i£ Co., 187 Piccadilly ^ Bookfellers to H.R.H. the Prlncefs of Wales. ,_ ^, , ^Bm Strangeways 8; Walden, Printeret London^ W.C. wW