The Poetry Corner

To The Honourable Admiral Lord Radstock.

By John Clare

'Tis sweet to recollect life's past controls, And turn to days of sorrow when they're bye, And think of gentle friends and feeling souls That offered shelter when the storm was high,-- It thrills one's heart:--As mariners have turn'd, When 'scap'd from shipwreck 'mid the billows' roar, To look on fragments that the tempest spurn'd, On which they clung, and struggled to the shore, So sweet it is to turn.--And, hour by hour, Reflection muses on the good and great, That lent a portion of their wealthy power, And sav'd a wormling from destruction's fate. Oft to the patron of her first essays The rural muse, O Radstock, turns her eye, Not with the fulsome noise of fawning praise, But soul's deep gushings in a silent sigh; As drooping blossoms, dwindling deep in shade, Should e'er a sunbeam to their lot be given, Perk up in hopeful bloom their feeble head, And seemly offer silent thanks to heaven.