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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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. iuin * Voice of deep flong , ho tv fondly Jong ; , j ^ , ,,. Tijme ' s echoes keep thy pounds from i # ? ongI Glen , heath , and hill } through Scotland stilly Thy floating murmurs haunt and fill : Past hearts still speak , exult or break , Still blooms and glows the Faded cheek ; While thorns , once gay With flower and spray , Embalm dead loves at gloaming day .
Thrice welcome be to hope and me , All that gives life its poesy—All that gives youth its trust and truth , Its soaring glow , its softening ruth ! I blea . 8 the strain that fills the swain With nobler things than lust of gain , And ( oh , yet more !) sheds pure light o ' er The sacred passions of the poor .
May the time come , though o ' er my ton > b , When song shall be the hawthorn-bloom , Which south and north , o ' er wakening earth , 1 Sheds fragrancy and freshness forth ;—When all around rills of sweet sound Attune the winds and bathe the ground , — Ami , child or sire , which least shall tire Of listening to the cottage-lyre !
Creditor .
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Iris the established law of society that the poor man shall have not hill £ but that for which he gives his labour , and the rich man everything for which he gives his money . Machinery is very fast superseding human labour in general ; and monopoly is accumulating masses of exclusive wealth : thus the rich and the poor arfc advancing to a point at which a reaction must occur .
'Nature , like an indulgent mother , gave humankind vigour , which led to labour ; and ingenuity , which led to ait : for the employment of these powers she has everywhere profusely spread thB materials of which wealth is made . Kven a cursory glance at the vast hoards which she has for this purpose supplied , astowishes the mind ! The sea , the soil , the deep mine , and the l
broad mountain , the forest , and the field , all cry aloud , We teetn . ' Impelled by natural wants and inherent energies , man has made the giant oak bow beneath his arm ; he has rent the rock , and torn its costly secret from its bo » Qni ; he has traversed unfkthomed seas , 'turned desert aoife , and scattered harvest gold over the fallow fields of the wilderness . But nature , thus induigettt"t& our * 1 > hydical wants , has been less prodigal in aid of our
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34 $ Biehand Fkrtft
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RICH AND POOR .
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), May 2, 1835, page 342, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2645/page/50/
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