Page:The works of Anna Laetitia Barbauld volume 1.djvu/339

Rh The grave by his ingratitude prepared ; Ah then, where'er he rests his head, On roses pillowed or the softest down, Though festal wreaths his temples crown, He well might envy Guatimozin's bed, With burning coals and sulphur spread, And with less agony his torturing hour have shared. For Thou art by to point the keen reproach ; Thou draw'st the curtains of his nightly couch, Bring'st back the reverend face with tears bedewed, That o'er his follies yearned ; The warnings oft in vain renewed, The looks of anguish and of love, His stubborn breast that failed to move, When in the scorner's chair he sat, and wholesome counsel spurned. Lives there a man whose labouring breast Is with some dark and guilty secret prest,