George Moses Horton

Here you will find the Long Poem On The Pleasures Of College Life of poet George Moses Horton

On The Pleasures Of College Life

With tears I leave these academic bowers, 
And cease to cull the scientific flowers; 
With tears I hail the fair succeeding train, 
And take my exit with a breast of pain. 
The Fresh may trace these wonders as they smile; 
The stream of science like the river Nile, 
Reflecting mental beauties as it flows, 
Which all the charms of College life disclose; 
This sacred current as it runs refines, 
Whilst Byron sings and Shakspeare's mirror shines.
First like a garden flower did I rise, 
When on the college bloom I cast my eyes; 
I strove to emulate each smiling gem, 
Resolved to wear the classic diadem; 
But when the Freshman's garden breeze was gone; 
Around me spread a vast extensive lawn; 
'Twas there the muse of college life begun, 
Beneath the rays of erudition's sun, 

Where study drew the mystic focus down, 
And lit the lamp of nature with renown; 
There first I heard the epic thunders roll, 
And Homer's light'ning darted through my soul. 
Hard was the task to trace each devious line, 
Though Locke and Newton bade me soar and shine; 
I sunk beneath the heat of Franklin's blaze, 
And struck the notes of philosophic praise; 
With timid thought I strove the test to stand, 
Reclining on a cultivated land, 
Which often spread beneath a college bower, 
And thus invoked the intellectual shower; 
E'en that fond sire on whose depilous crown, 
The smile of courts and states shall shed renown; 
Now far above the noise of country strife, 
I frown upon the gloom of rustic life, 
Where no pure stream of bright distinction flows, 
No mark between the thistle and the rose; 
One's like a bird encaged and bare of food, 
Borne by the fowler from his native wood, 
Where sprightly oft he sprung from spray to spray, 
And cheer'd the forest with his artless lay, 

Or fluttered o'er the purling brook at will, 
Sung in the dale or soar'd above the hill. 
Such are the liberal charms of college life, 
Where pleasure flows without a breeze of strife; 
And such would be my pain if cast away, 
Without the blooms of study to display. 
Beware, ye college birds, again beware, 
And shun the fowler with his subtile snare; 
Nor fall as one from Eden, stript of all 
The life and beauty of your native hall; 
Nor from the garden of your honor go, 
Whence all the streams of fame and wisdom flow; 
Where brooding Milton's theme purls sweet along 
With Pope upon the gales of epic song; 
Where you may trace a bland Demosthenes, 
Whose oratoric pen ne'er fails to please; 
And Plato, with immortal Cicero, 
And with the eloquence of Horace glow; 
There cull the dainties of a great Ainsworth, 
Who sets the feast of ancient language forth; 
Or glide with Ovid on his simple stream, 
And catch the heat from Virgil's rural beam; 
Through Addison you trace creation's fire, 
And all the rapid wheels of time admire; 

Or pry with Paley's theologic rays, 
And hail the hand of wisdom as you gaze; 
Up Murray's pleasant hill you strive to climb, 
To gain a golden summit all sublime, 
And plod through conic sections all severe, 
Which to procure is pleasure true and dear. 
The students' pensive mind is often stung, 
Whilst blundering through the Greek and Latin tongue; 
Parsing in grammars which may suit the whole, 
And will the dialect of each control. 
Now let us take a retrospective view, 
And whilst we pause, observe a branch or two. 
Geography and Botany unfold 
Their famous charms like precious seeds of gold; 
Zoology doth all her groups descry, 
And with Astronomy we soar on high; 
But pen and ink and paper all would fail, 
To write one third of this capacious tale. 
Geography presents her flowery train, 
Describes the mountain and surveys the plain, 
Measures the sounding rivers as they grow, 
Unto the trackless deeps to which they flow: 
She measures well her agriculture's stores, 

Which meet her commerce on the golden shore, 
Includes the different seasons of the year, 
And changes which pervade the atmosphere, 
Treats of the dread phenomena which rise 
In different shapes on earth, or issue from the skies; 
She points in truth to Lapland's frozen clime, 
And nicely measures all the steps of time; 
Unfolds the vast equator's burning line, 
Where all the stores of heat dissolve and shine; 
Describes the earth as unperceived she rolls, 
Her well-poised axis placed upon the poles. 
Botany, whose charms her florists well display, 
Whose lavish odours swell the pomp of May, 
Whose curling wreaths the steady box adorn, 
And fill with fragrance all the breeze of morn. 
Through various means her plants are oft applied, 
Improved by art, and well by nature tried; 
Thro' her, the stores of herbage are unroll'd, 
All which compose the vegeta