Ballads | Page 6

William Hayley
his arm,?She begged her husband to convey?The fondling serpent far away,?For fear of casual harm.
The happy father of the child,?Himself a being bravely mild,?To her request attends;?Conscious such comrades could not part?Without great anguish of the heart,?He fear'd to wound the friends.
They both were young, and both had shewn?Affection into habit grown,?With feelings most acute;?Yet to a parent's duty just,?Tho' griev'd to part them, part he must,?The point bears no dispute.
But with a tenderness of mind?That prov'd him truly not inclined,?Their friendship to destroy;?He form'd a plan, and held it good;?To hurt as little as he could,?The Serpent, or the boy.
To sleep he both with opiates lur'd,?Then, in their slumber's bond secur'd,?See in his arms they go!?To woody scenes, where for the snake,?(There left entranc'd) when he shall wake,?Both food and shelter grow.
The slumbering boy awak'd at home,?And miss'd his friend, and wish'd to roam,?And seek the friend he miss'd:?But hearing all his sire had done,?Soon pacified, the grateful son,?Could not such love resist.
He promis'd, for his mother's sake,?Not to recall his exil'd snake,?Nor wander to his wood;?He was a boy of manly soul,?And true to honour's just controul,?He made his promise good.
Nature, to these divided friends?Now in their separate lot attends;?Time decks them as he flies;?The child, a graceful stripling grows,?And freedom on the snake bestows,?A formidable size.
And now it chanc'd the Arcadian youth,?Renown'd for courage, love and truth!?Had sought a favourite maid;?Led by her tender charms to roam,?Forgetting distance from his home,?Abroad too late he stay'd.
Sooner indeed he meant to start,?To save a watchful parent's heart,?And not one fear excite:?But oft, as nature's records tell,?Ere love can utter his farewell,?Day melts into the night.
Eager to take the shortest road,?That led to his remote abode,?He thro' a forest sped;?There, by the moon's slow rising beam,?He saw a robber's faulchion gleam,?High brandish'd o'er his head.
A hunter's javelin in his hand,?He scorn'd the ruffian's base demand,?And made the wretch recoil;?But numbers from a thicket spring,?The youth they hem within a ring,?And threaten to despoil.
He, then alarm'd, calls loud for aid,?And sudden from the rustling shade,?A wond'rous sound they hear.?The startled ruffians turned in dread;?Some shriek'd, some shouted, and some fled,?Their foe approaches near.
Against one wretch, of form uncouth,?Who basely struck the encircled youth,?And gave his foot a wound;?This shadowy foe, of silent tongue,?Had from his secret ambush sprung,?And beat him to the ground,
Another, as he fled in haste,?The youth's defender then embrac'd?With such a deadly clasp;?The villain fell, and in the strife?Groan'd out his miserable life,?In horror's speechless gasp.
Who can describe the youth's surprise,?When by the moon-beam he descries?The source of his escape!?That aid, who crush'd his murd'rous foes,?To meet his gratitude now rose.?And in a serpent's shape.
"My Zoe!" (hear him now exclaim)?The child had by that fondling name,?Been used his snake to call:?The reptile heard, and at the sound?Began, with pitying care, around?His wounded foot to crawl.
The blood she staunch'd, with tender tongue,?Then higher to his hand she sprung,?And lick'd with fond caress!?Her gestures all this truth declare,?"Thy Zoe makes thy life her care,?And joys in her success!"
The wasting night now wears away;?The youth's fond mother at his stay,?To fear maternal yields;?And doubting of some dire mischance,?She hurries, ere the morn's advance,?To seek him in the fields.
With what delight, with what amaze,?Her eye her smiling son surveys,?And rolling by his side,?A serpent of triumphant air,?Who seems his fond regard to share,?And serve him as a guide!
For faithful Zoe would attend?The footsteps of her wounded friend,?'Till he at home may rest;?His mother learnt her wond'rous truth,?And clasping the dear rescued youth,?His brave confederate blest!
Zoe no more condemn'd to roam,?Now grew an inmate of their home:?The snake at Athens rear'd,?The symbol of Minerva's power,?Lodg'd as her servant in her tower,?Was never more rever'd.
Zoe was the delight of all,?Obedient to each friendly call,?From all she honour won;?But her the mother most caresst,?And fondly shew'd to every guest,?The guardian of her son!

THE FATAL HORSE.
BALLAD THE EIGHTH.
Of creatures that to man attend,?His pastime, or his wealth;?The Horse we cherish as a friend,?To sickness and to health.
Bless them, who shield a steed from woe.?By age from toil releas'd!?And hated be the proud, who shew?No mercy to their beast!
A wretch once doom'd, tho' rich and strong,?His faithful horse to bleed,?But tell his fate, my moral song,?For that atrocious deed!
An antient knight, of Kentish race;?Of his athletic frame?Prone to indulge the passions base,?Sir Geoffrin his name,
Against a priest indulg'd his rage,?Who charitably good,?To shield a widow's helpless age,?His avarice withstood.
With abject choler fierce and hot,?The knight perforce would gain,?And blend her little garden plot,?With his superb domain.
The priest, who, on that very ground,?To soothe his wrath would strive,?In frantic passion's fit he bound,?And buried him alive!
The wretch was seiz'd with shame and fear,?Tho' he his crime would boast:?When suddenly he chanc'd to hear,?His king lay off the coast!
'Twas
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