Analysis of The Borough. Letter XVII: The Hospital And

George Crabbe 1754 (Aldborough) – 1832 (Trowbridge)



Govenors
AN ardent spirit dwells with Christian love,
The eagle's vigour in the pitying dove;
'Tis not enough that we with sorrow sigh,
That we the wants of pleading man supply,
That we in sympathy with sufferers feel,
Nor hear a grief without a wish to heal;
Not these suffice--to sickness, pain, and woe,
The Christian spirit loves with aid to go;
Will not be sought, waits not for want to plead,
But seeks the duty--nay, prevents the need;
Her utmost aid to every ill applies,
And plans relief for coining miseries.
Hence yonder Building rose: on either side
Far stretch'd the wards, all airy, warm, and wide;
And every ward has beds by comfort spread,
And smooth'd for him who suffers on the bed:
There all have kindness, most relief,--for some
Is cure complete,--it is the sufferer's home:
Fevers and chronic ills, corroding pains,
Each accidental mischief man sustains;
Fractures and wounds, and wither'd limbs and lame,
With all that, slow or sudden, vex our frame,
Have here attendance--here the sufferers lie,
(Where love and science every aid apply,)
And heal'd with rapture live, or soothed by comfort

die.
See! one relieved from anguish, and to-day
Allow'd to walk and look an hour away;
Two months confined by fever, frenzy, pain,
He comes abroad and is himself again:
'Twas in the spring, when carried to the place,
The snow fell down and melted in his face.
'Tis summer now; all objects gay and new,
Smiling alike the viewer and the view:
He stops as one unwilling to advance,
Without another and another glance;
With what a pure and simple joy he sees
Those sheep and cattle browsing at their ease;
Easy himself, there's nothing breathes or moves,
But he would cherish--all that lives he loves:
Observing every ward as round he goes,
He thinks what pain, what danger they inclose;
Warm in his wish for all who suffer there,
At every view he meditates a prayer:
No evil counsels in his breast abide,
There joy, and love, and gratitude reside.
The wish that Roman necks in one were found,
That he who form'd the wish might deal the wound,
This man had never heard; but of the kind,
Is that desire which rises in his mind;
He'd have all English hands (for further he
Cannot conceive extends our charity),
All but his own, in one right-hand to grow,
And then what hearty shake would he bestow.
'How rose the Building?'--Piety first laid
A strong foundation, but she wanted aid;
To Wealth unwieldy was her prayer address'd,
Who largely gave, and she the donor bless'd:
Unwieldy Wealth then to his couch withdrew,
And took the sweetest sleep he ever knew.
Then busy Vanity sustained her part,
'And much,' she said, 'it moved her tender heart;
To her all kinds of man's distress were known,
And all her heart adopted as its own.'
Then Science came--his talents he display'd,
And Charity with joy the dome survey'd;
Skill, Wealth, and Vanity, obtain the fame,
And Piety, the joy that makes no claim.
Patrons there are, and Governors, from, whom
The greater aid and guiding orders come;
Who voluntary cares and labours take,
The sufferers' servants for the service' sake;
Of these a, part I give you--but a part, -
Some hearts are hidden, some have not a heart.
First let me praise--for so I best shall paint
That pious moralist, that reasoning saint!
Can I of worth like thine, Eusebius, speak?
The man is willing, but the Muse is weak; -
'Tis thine to wait on woe! to soothe! to heal!
With learning social, and polite with zeal:
In thy pure breast although the passions dwell,
They're train'd by virtue, and no more rebel;
But have so long been active on her side,
That passion now might be itself the guide.
Law, conscience, honour, all obey'd; all give
Th' approving voice, and make it bliss to live;
While faith, when life can nothing more supply,
Shall strengthen hope, and make it bliss to die.
He preaches, speaks, and writes with manly

sense,
No weak neglect, no labour'd eloquence;
Goodness and wisdom are in all his ways,
The rude revere him and the wicked praise.
Upon humility his virtues grow,
And tower so high because so fix'd below;
As wider spreads the oak his boughs around,
When deeper with his roots he digs the solid

ground.
By him, from ward to ward, is every aid
The sufferer needs, with every care convey'd:
Like the good tree he brings his treasure forth,
And, like the tree, unconscious of his worth:
Meek as the poorest Publican is he,
And strict as lives the straitest Pharisee;
Of both, in him unite the better part,<


Scheme ABBCCDDEEFFAAGGHHIXAAJJCCX CKKXXAALLAAAAAAAAMMGGNNOOPPEEQQRRLLSSTTQQJJXIUUSSVVWWDDXXGGXXCCP AAAAEENX NQQXXPAS
Poetic Form
Metre 1 1101011101 0101001001 1101111101 1101110101 11010011001 1101010111 1101110101 0101011111 1111111111 1101010101 0111100101 0101110100 1101011101 1101110101 01001111101 0111110101 1111010111 110111011 10010111 101010101 1001010101 11111101101 11010101001 11010100101 01110111110 1 1101110011 01110111001 1101110101 1101010101 1001110101 0111010011 1101110101 1001010001 1111010101 0101000101 1101010111 1101010111 1001110111 1111011111 01010011111 111111011 1011111101 110011101 1101001101 110101001 0111010101 1111011101 1111011101 11010110011 1111011101 10010110100 1111011111 0111011101 110110011 0101011101 1101010101 1101010101 0101111101 0101011101 1101000101 0111110101 1011110101 0101010111 1101110101 0100110101 1101000101 0100011111 1011010011 0101010101 110001011 01001010101 1101111101 1111011101 1111111111 11010011001 11111111 0111010111 1111111111 1101000111 011110101 1111001110 1111110101 1101110101 110110111 110101011111 1111110101 1101011111 110101110 1 110111100 1001010111 0101100101 0101001101 01011011101 1101011101 11011111010 1 11111111001 010011100101 1011111101 010110111 11010111 0111011 110110101
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 4,352
Words 795
Sentences 21
Stanzas 4
Stanza Lengths 26, 64, 8, 8
Lines Amount 106
Letters per line (avg) 33
Words per line (avg) 7
Letters per stanza (avg) 862
Words per stanza (avg) 197
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

4:04 min read
34

George Crabbe

George Crabbe was an English poet, surgeon, and clergyman. more…

All George Crabbe poems | George Crabbe Books

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