Page:Landon in Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Book 1832.pdf/66

Rh

Rh

The magnificent basaltic formation on the northern coast of Ireland, called the "Giants' Causeway," presents so artificial an appearance, that some writers have asserted that it is not a natural production, and it is traditionally said to have been the work of those mighty men of old, after whom it is named. Sir Joshua Reynolds, in his discourses, observes, that "Travellers into the East tell us, that when the ignorant inhabitants of these countries are interrogated concerning the ruins of stately edifices yet remaining among them, the melancholy monuments of their former grandeur and long-lost science, they always answer, that they were built by magicians. The untaught mind finds a vast gulf between its own powers and those works of complicated art which it is utterly unable to fathom, and it supposes that such a void can only be passed by supernatural means."

met beside the stormy sea, those giant kings of old, And on each awful brow was set, a crown of burning gold. No ray the yet unrisen stars, or the wan moonbeams, gave, But far and bright, the meteor light shone over cloud and wave.

"I have been over earth to-day," exclaimed one mighty king, "The toil of half the human race, it is a foolish thing; For I have seen on Egypt's land, an abject million slave, To build a lofty pyramid above their monarch's grave.

"Now let us put their works to scorn, and in a single night Rear what would take them centuries, and nations' banded might," Then up arose each giant king, and took a mighty stone, They laid the quay; they piled the rocks—ere morn the work was done.

Vain fable this! yet not so vain as it may seem to be, Methinks that now too much we live to cold reality; The selfish and the trading world clips man so closely round, No bold or fair imaginings within our hearts are found.

So vortex-like doth wealth now draw, all other feelings in, Too much we calculate, and wealth, becomes almost a sin; We look upon the lovely earth, and think what it may yield; We only ask for crops, not flowers, from every summer field.

The mind grows coarse, the soul confined, while thus from day to day We let the merely common-place eat phantasie away: Aye, better to believe, I trow, the legends framed of old— Aught—anything to snatch one thought, from selfishness and gold.