I found the following in some old files, which I apparently wrote in June of 2020.
The Search
After Happiness
The following hymn is an excerpt from A Search After
Happiness: A Pastoral in Three Dialogues, written by “A Young Lady”
(Hannah More), in 1762/1773.[1] In the second edition, the title was changed to The Search After
Happiness: A Pastoral Drama, and this portion of the poem was expanded to
seven 4-line stanzas.[2] The
poem/hymn as used in The Sacred Harp and
other shape-note books has some word changes, and only six stanzas (the third
stanza is not used).
In later printings, the “Preface” explains the
purpose of the “Pastoral Drama”:
The object of the
following Poem, which was written in very early youth, was an earnest wish to
furnish a substitute for the very improper custom, which then prevailed, of
allowing plays, and those not always of the purest kind, to be acted by young
Ladies in boarding schools. And it has afforded a serious satisfaction to the
Author to learn that this little Poem, and likewise the Sacred Dramas, have
very frequently been adopted to supply the place of those more dangerous
amusements. If it may be still happily instrumental in promoting a regard to
Religion and Virtue in the minds of young persons, and afford them an innocent,
and perhaps not altogether unuseful, amusement in the exercise of recitation,
the end for which it was originally composed, and the author’s utmost wish in
its re-publication, will be fully answered.
In the drama this portion is sung by the character
Florella, a young shepherdess.
1. While beauty and youth are in their full prime,
And folly and fashion affect our whole time;
O let not the phantom our wishes engage,
Let us live so in youth that we blush not in age.
2. The vain and the young may attend us a while,
But let not their flattery our prudence beguile;
Let us covet those charms that shall never decay
Nor listen to all that deceivers can say.
3. I sigh not for beauty, nor languish for wealth,
But grant me, kind Providence, virtue and health;
Then richer than kings, and far happier than they,
My days shall pass swiftly and sweetly away.
4. For when age steals on me, and youth is no
more,
And the moralist Time shakes his glass at my door,
What pleasure in beauty or wealth can I find?
My beauty, my wealth, is a sweet peace of mind.
5. That peace! I’ll preserve it as pure as ’twas
given
Shall last in my bosom an earnest of heaven;
For Virtue and Wisdom can warm the cold scene,
And sixty can flourish as gay as sixteen.
6. And when I the burden of life shall have borne,
And death with his sickle shall cut the ripe corn,
Reascend to my God without murmur or sigh,
I’ll bless the kind summons, and lie down and die.
The third stanza that Florella sings is:
How the tints of the
rose, and the jess’mine’s perfume,[3]
The eglantine’s fragrance, the lilac’s gay bloom,
Tho’ fair and tho’ fragrant, unheeded may lie,
For that neither is sweet when Florella is by.
This is the stanza not used in songbooks. The
other six stanzas are used with the tune Morality, number
136 in The
Sacred Harp. It is in other shape-note tune books as well, such
as The Southern
Harmony. It can be found on YouTube sung at Waycross Primitive Baptist
Church.
Hannah More was
born February 2, 1745 in the village of Fishponds in Gloucestershire. She was a
daughter of Jacob and Mary Grace More. He was a schoolmaster. She was taught by
her father, then attended a girls’ school of her oldest sister Mary. Hannah
later taught at the school, and wrote A Search After Happiness circa
1762.[4] She left teaching and earned most of
her living through writing. After a religious conversion she became close
friends of John
Newton and& William
Wilberforce. She was one of the most successful writers of her time. She
died September 7, 1833 and is buried at All Saints
Churchyard in Somerset, England.
[1] A Search After
Happiness: A Pastoral in Three Dialogues, A Young Lady, Bristol: S. Farley,
1773, pp. 30-31. The “Advertisement” in the Google version purported to be
printed in 1773 strongly suggests that this is the first printed/book version
of A Search After Happiness.
[2] The
first printed version had 26 lines rather than 28 lines.
[3] The first version appears
to have jessamine (jess’mine’s), while later versions change this to “jasmine.” [4] The scan of the book at Google Books does not have a date printed, but it is believed to be from around 1762. However, Google Books dates it as 1766.