The fall of Congress prove the world's relief; And deathless glory crown the godlike Chief! Joy to great Congress, joy an hundred fold: The grand cajolers are themselves cajol'd! What now is left of Continental brags? Taxes unpaid, tho' payable in rags. What now remains of Continental force? Battalions mould'ring: Waste without re source. 150 What rests there yet of Continental Sway? Such is your fate, ye Monsters of the Yet must on every face a smile be worn, While every breast with agony is torn. Hopeless yourselves, yet hope you must impart, And comfort others with an aching heart. Ill fated they who, lost at home, must boast Of help expected from a foreign coast: How wretched is their lot, to France and Spain, Who look for succor, but who look in vain. 160 THE AMERICAN TIMES IN THREE PARTS Facit indignatis versum-JUVENAL. BY CAMILLO QUERNO (DR. JONATHAN ODELL) Chaplain to the Congress. FROM PART I When Faction, pois'nous as the scorpion's sting, Infects the people, and insults the King; When foul Sedition skulks no more conceal'd, But grasps the sword and rushes to the field; When Justice, Law and Truth are in disgrace And Treason, Fraud and Murder fill their place: Smarting beneath accumulated woes, Shall we not dare the tyrants to expose? We will, we must-though mighty Laurens frown, Or Hancock with his rabble hunt us down; 10 Champions of virtue, we'll alike disdain. The guards of Washington, the lies of Paine, And greatly bear, without one anxious throb, The wrath of Congress, or its lords the mob. Bad are the Times, almost too bad to paint; The whole head sickens, the whole heart is faint: The State is rotten, rotten to the core 'Tis all one bruize, one putrefying sore. Here Anarchy before the gaping crowd Proclaims the people's majesty aloud; 20 There Folly runs with eagerness about, And prompt the cheated populace to shout; Here paper-dollars meager Famine holds, There votes of Congress Tyranny unfolds; With doctrines strange in matter and in dress, The doctor's glister-pipe, the lawyer's quill, Transform'd to guns, retain their pow'r to kill; From garrets, cellars, rushing thro' the street, This high and holy strain how true But ah! what frenzy breaks a band Thus blind, alas, when all is well, By thee controul'd for ages past, See now half Europe in array: For wild ambition hopes at last To fix her long projected sway. Rise, Britannia, rise again 40 50 The scourge of haughty France and Spain! The howling tempest fiercely blows, 'Tis then the fearless pilot shows 60 |