Major Henry Livingston Jr.
An elegy on the death of MONTGOMERY TAPPEN
who dies at Poughkeepsie on the 20th of Nov. 1784 in the ninth year of his
age.
The sweetest, gentlest, of the youthful train,
Here lies his
clay cold upon the sable bier!
He scarce had started on life's varied
plain,
For dreary death arrested his career.
His cheek might vie with
the expanded rose,
And Genius sparkled in his azure eyes!
A victim so
unblemish'd Heaven chose,
And bore the beauteous lambkin to the skies.
Adieu thou loveliest child! Adieu adieu!
Our wishes fain would follow
thee on high.
What more can friendship - what more fondness do,
But drop
the unbidden tear & heave the sigh?
Ye youths whose ardent bosoms
virtue fires,
Who eager wish applause and pant for fame,
Press round
MONTGOMERY'S hearse, the NAME inspires
And lights in kindred souls its native
flame.
COLUMBIA grateful hails the tender sound
And when MONTGOMERY'S
nam'd still drops a tear,
From shore to shore to earth's remotest
bound
Where LIBERTY is known that NAME is dear.