AN HYMN TO MAY.
BY WILLIAM THOMPSON, M.A. LATE FELLOW OF QUEEN'S COLLEGE, OXON.
Nunc ſormoſiſſimus annus.
VIRG.
ARGUMENT.
Subject propoſed. Invocation of May. Deſcrip⯑tion of her: Her operations on nature. Bounty recommended; in particular at this ſeaſon. Vernal apoſtrophe. Love the ruling paſſion in May. The celebration of Venus her birth-day in this month. Rural retirement in Spring. Concluſion.
ETherial daughter of the luſty Spring,
And ſweet Favonius, ever-gentle May!
Shall I, unblam'd, preſume of thee to ſing,
And with thy living colours gild my lay?
[2]Thy genial ſpirit mantles in my brain;
My numbers languiſh in a ſofter vein:
I pant, too emulous, to flow in Spenſer's ſtrain.
Say, mild Aurora of the blooming year,
With ſtorms when winter blackens Nature's face;
When whirling winds the howling foreſt tear,
And ſhake the ſolid mountains to their baſe:
Say, what refulgent chambers of the ſky
Veil thy beloved glories from the eye,
For which the nations pine, and earth's fair children die?
Where
(a)Leda's twins, forth from their diamond-tower,
Alternate, o'er the night their beams divide,
In light emboſom'd, happy and ſecure
From winter-rage, thou chuſeſt to abide;
Bleſt reſidence! for there, as poets tell,
(b)The powers of Poetry and Wiſdom dwell;
Apollo wakes the Arts, the Muſes ſtrike the ſhell.
(c)Certes o'er
(d)Rhedicyna's laurel'd mead,
(For ever ſpread, ye laurels, green and new!)
The brother-ſtars their gracious nurture ſhed,
And ſecret bleſſings of poetic-dew:
[3]They bathe their horſes in the learned flood,
With flame recruited for th' etherial road;
And deem
(e)fair Iſis' ſwans fair as their father-god.
No ſooner April, trim'd with girlands gay,
Rains fragrance o'er the world, and kindly ſhowers;
But, in the eaſtern-pride of beauty, May,
To gladden earth, forſakes her heavenly bowers,
Reſtoring Nature from her palſied ſtate.
April, retire;
(f)ne longer, Nature, wait:
Soon may ſhe iſſue from the morning's golden gate.
Come, bounteous May! in fulneſs of thy might,
Lead briſkly on the mirth-infuſing hours,
All-recent from the boſom of delight,
With nectar nurtur'd, and involv'd in flowers:
By Spring's ſweet bluſh, by Nature's teeming womb;
By Hebe's dimply ſmile, by Flora's bloom;
By Venus-ſelf (for Venus-ſelf demands thee) come!
By the warm ſighs, in dewy even-tide,
Of melting maidens, in the wood-bine-groves,
To pity looſen'd, ſoften'd down from pride;
By billing turtles, and by cooing doves;
[4]By the youths' plainings ſtealing on the air,
(For youths will plain, tho' yielding be the fair)
Hither, to bleſs the maidens and the youths, repair.
With dew beſpangled, by the hawthorn-buds,
With freſhneſs breathing, by the daiſied plains;
By the mix'd muſic of the warbling woods,
And jovial roundelays of nymphs and ſwains;
In thy full energy, and rich array,
Delight of earth and heaven! O bleſſed May!
From heaven deſcend to earth: on earth vouchſafe to ſtay.
She comes!—A ſilken
(g)camus, emral'd-green,
Gracefully looſe, adown her ſhoulders flows,
(Fit to enfold the limbs of Paphos' queen)
And with the labours of the needle glows,
(h)Purfled by Nature's hand! the amorous air
And muſky-weſtern breezes faſt repair,
Her mantle proud to ſwell, and wanton with her hair:
Her hair (but rather threads of light it ſeems)
With the gay honours of the Spring entwin'd,
Copious, unbound, in nectar'd ringlets ſtreams,
Floats glittering on the ſun, and ſcents the wind
[5]Loveſick with odours!—now to order roll'd,
It melts upon her boſom's dainty mould,
Or, curling round her waiſt, diſparts its wavy gold.
Young-circling roſes, bluſhing, round them throw
The ſweet abundance of their purple rays,
And lillies, dip'd in fragrance, freſhly blow,
With blended beauties, in her angel-face:
The humid radiance beaming from her eyes
The air and ſeas illumes, the earth and ſkies,
And open, where ſhe ſmiles, the ſweets of Paradiſe.
On Zephyr's wing the laughing Goddeſs view
Diſtilling balm: ſhe cleaves the buxom air,
Attended by the ſilver-footed dew,
The ravages of winter to repair:
She gives her naked boſom to the gales,
Her naked boſom down the ether ſails;
Her boſom breathes delight; her breath the ſpring exhales.
All as the Phoenix, in Arabian ſkies,
New-burniſh'd from his ſpicy funeral pyres,
At large,
(i)in roſeal undulation, flies;
His plumage dazzles, and the gazer tires:
[6]Around their King the plumy nations wait,
Attend his triumph, and augment his ſtate:
He towering claps his wings, and wins th' etherial height.
So round this Phoenix of the gaudy year
A thouſand, nay ten thouſand Sports and Smiles,
Fluttering in gold along the hemiſphere,
Her praiſes chant; her praiſes glad the iſles:
Conſcious of her approach (to deck her bowers)
Earth from her fruitful lap and boſom pours
A waſte of ſpringing ſweets, and voluntary flowers.
Narciſſus fair, in ſnowy velvet gown'd;
Ah fooliſh! ſtill to love the fountain-brim:
Sweet Hyacinth, by Phoebus erſt bemoan'd;
And tulip, flaring in her powder'd trim:
Whate'er, Armida, in thy gardens blew;
Whate'er the ſun inhales, or ſips the dew;
Whate'er compoſe the chaplet on Ianthe's brow.
[7]He who
(k)undaz'd can wander o'er her face,
May gain upon the ſolar-blaze at noon!—
What more than female ſweetneſs, and a grace
Peculiar! ſave, Ianthe, thine alone,
Ineffable effuſion of the day!
So very much the ſame, that lovers ſay,
May is Ianthe; or the dear Ianthe May.
So far as doth the harbinger of day
The leſſer lamps of night in
(l)ſheen excell;
So far in ſweetneſs and in beauty May
Above all other months doth bear the bell:
So far as May doth other months exceed,
So far in virtue and in
(m)goodlihead,
Above all other nymphs Ianthe bears the
(n)meed.
Welcome! as to a youthful poet wine,
To fire his fancy, and enlarge his ſoul:
He weaves the laurel-chaplet with the vine,
And grows immortal as he drains the bowl:
Welcome! as beauty to the loveſick ſwain,
For which he long had ſigh'd, but ſigh'd in vain;
He darts into her arms; ſhe ſmiles away his pain.
[8]The drowzy elements, arouz'd by thee,
Roll to harmonious meaſures, active all!
Earth, water, air, and fire, with feeling glee,
Exult to celebrate thy feſtival:
Fire burns intenſer; ſofter breathes the air;
More ſmooth the waters flow; earth ſmiles more fair:
Earth, water, air and fire, thy gladdening impulſe ſhare.
What boundleſs tides of ſplendor o'er the ſkies,
O'erflowing brightneſs, ſtream their golden rays!
Heaven's azure kindles with the varying dies,
Reflects the glory, and returns the blaze:
Air whitens; wide the tracts of ether
(o)been
With colours damaſk'd rich, and goodly ſheen,
And all above is blue, and all below is green.
At thy approach the wild waves' loud uproar,
And foamy ſurges of the maddening main,
Forget to heave their mountains to the ſhore,
Diffus'd into the level of the plain:
For thee the Halcyon builds her ſummer's neſt;
For thee the Ocean ſmooths her troubled breaſt,
Gay from thy placid ſmiles, in thy own purple dreſt.
[9]Have ye not ſeen, in gentle even-tide,
When Jupiter the earth hath richly ſhower'd,
Striding the clouds, a bow
(p)diſpredden wide,
As if with light inwove, and gayly flower'd
With bright variety of blending dies?
White, purple, yellow melt along the ſkies,
Alternate colours ſink, alternate colours riſe.
The earth's embroidery then have ye eyed,
And ſmile of bloſſoms, yellow, purple, white;
Their vernal-tinctur'd leaves, luxurious, died
In Flora's livery, painted by the Light:
Light's painted children in the breezes play,
Unfold their dewy boſoms to the ray,
Their ſoft enamel ſpread, and beautify the day.
From the wide altar of the foodful earth
The flowers, the herbs, the plants their incenſe roll;
The orchards ſwell the ruby-tinctur'd birth;
The vermil-gardens breathe the ſpicy ſoul:
Grateful to May the nectar-ſpirit flies,
The wafted clouds of laviſh'd odours riſe,
The Zephyr's balmy load, perfuming all the ſkies.
[10]The bee, the golden daughter of the Spring,
From mead to mead, in wanton labour, roves,
And loads its little thigh, or gilds its wing
With all the eſſence of the fluſhing groves:
Extracts the aromatic ſoul of flowers,
And, humming in delight, its waxen bowers
Fills with the luſcious ſpoil, and lives ambroſial hours.
Touch'd by thee, May, the flocks and luſty droves,
That low in paſtures, or on mountains bleat,
Revive their frolics and renew their loves,
Stung to the marrow with thy generous heat:
The ſtately courſer, bounding o'er the plain,
Shakes to the winds the honours of his mane,
(High arch'd his neck) and ſnuffing, hopes the dappled train.
Th' aerial ſongſters ſooth the liſtening groves:
The mellow thruſh, the
(q)ouzle ſweetly ſhrill,
And little linnets celebrate their loves
In hawthorn valley, or on tufted hill:
The ſoaring lark; the lowly nightingale,
A thorn her pillow, trills her doleful tale,
And melancholy muſic dies along the dale.
[11]This gay exuberance of the gorgeous ſpring,
The gilded mountain, and the herbag'd vale;
The woods that bloſſom, and the birds that ſing,
The murmuring fountain, and the breathing dale:
The dale, the fountains, birds and woods delight,
The vales, the mountains, and the ſpring invite,
Yet, unadorn'd by May, no longer charm the ſight.
When Nature laughs around, ſhall man alone,
Thy image, hang (ah me!) the ſickly head?
When Nature ſings, ſhall Nature's glory groan,
And languiſh for the pittance poor of bread?
O may the man that ſhall his image ſcorn,
Alive, be ground with hunger, moſt forlorn,
Die
(r)unanell'd, and dead, by dogs and kites be torn.
Curs'd may he be (as if he were not ſo)
Nay doubly curs'd be ſuch a breaſt of ſteel,
Which never melted at another's woe,
Nor tenderneſs of bowels knew to feel:
His heart is black as hell, in flowing ſtore
Who hears the needy crying at his door,
Who hears them cry,
(s)ne recks; but ſuffers them be poor.
[12]But bleſt, O more than doubly bleſt be he!
Let honour crown him and eternal reſt,
Whoſe boſom, the ſweet fount of charity,
Flows out to
(t)nourſle Innocence diſtreſt:
His ear is open to the widow's cries,
His hand the orphan's cheek of ſorrow dries;
Like mercy's ſelf he looks on want with pity's eyes.
In this bleſt ſeaſon, pregnant with delight,
Ne may the boading owl with ſcreeches wound
The ſolemn ſilence of the quiet night,
Ne croaking raven, with unhallow'd ſound,
Ne damned ghoſt
(u)affray with deadly yell
The waking lover, rais'd by mighty ſpell,
To pale the ſtars, till Heſper ſhine it back to hell.
Ne Witches rifle gibbets, by the moon,
(With horror winking, trembling all with fear)
Of many a clinking chain, and canker'd bone:
Nor Imp in viſionary ſhape, appear,
To blaſt the thriving verdure of the plain;
Ne let Hobgoblin, ne the Ponk profane
With ſhadowy glare the light, and mad the burſting brain.
[13]Yet fairy-elves
(x)(ſo antient cuſtom's will)
The green-gown'd fairy-elves, by ſtarry ſheen,
May gambol or in valley or on hill,
And leave your footſteps on the circled green:
Full lightly trip it, dapper Mab, around;
Full featly, Ob'ron, thou, o'er graſs-turf bound:
Mab bruſhes off no dew-drops, Ob'ron prints no ground.
Ne bloody rumours violate the ear
Of cities ſack'd, and kingdoms deſolate,
With plague or ſword, with peſtilence or war;
Ne rueful murder ſtain thy aera-date;
Ne ſhameleſs calumny, for fell deſpight,
The fouleſt fiend that e'er blaſphem'd the light,
At lovely lady rail, nor grin at courteous knight.
Ne wailing in our ſtreets nor fields be heard,
Ne voice of miſery aſſault the heart;
Ne fatherleſs from table be debarr'd;
Ne piteous tear from eye of ſorrow ſtart:
But Plenty, pour thyſelf into the bowl
Of bounty-head; may never want controul
That good, good honeſt man, who feeds the famiſh'd ſoul.
[14]Now let the trumpet's martial thunders ſleep;
The viol wake alone, and tender flute:
The Phrygian lyre with ſprightly fingers ſweep,
And, Erato, diſſolve the Lydian lute:
Yet Clio frets and burns, with honeſt pain,
To rouze and animate the martial ſtrain,
Since William charg'd the foe on fam'd Culloden's plain.
The trumpet ſleeps, but ſoon for thee ſhall wake,
Illuſtrious Chief! to ſound thy mighty name,
(Snatch'd from the malice of Lethean lake)
Triumphant-ſwelling from the mouth of Fame:
Mean-while, diſdain not (ſo the virgins pray)
This roſy crown, with myrtle wove and bay,
(Too humble crown I ween) the offering of May.
And while the virgins hail thee with their voice,
Heaping thy crouded way with greens and flowers,
And in the fondneſs of their heart rejoice
To ſooth, with dance and ſong, thy gentler hours:
Indulge the ſeaſon, and with ſweet repair
Embay thy limbs, the vernal bleſſing ſhare:
Then blaze in arms again, renew'd for future war.
[15]Britannia's happy iſle derives from May
The choiceſt bleſſings Liberty beſtows,
When royal Charles (for ever hail the day!)
In mercy triumph'd o'er ignoble foes:
Reſtor'd with him, the Arts their drooping head
Gaily again uprear'd; the Muſes ſhade
With freſher honours bloom'd, in greener trim ar⯑ray'd.
And thou, the goodlieſt bloſſom of our iſles!
Great Frederick's and his Auguſta's joy,
Thy native month approv'd with infant ſmiles,
Sweet as the ſmiling May, Imperial Boy!
Britannia hopes thee for her future Lord,
Lov'd as thy Parents, only not ador'd!
When-e'er a George is born, Charles is again re⯑ſtor'd.
O may his Father's pant for finer fame,
And boundleſs bountyhead to human kind;
His Grandſire's glory, and his Uncle's name,
Renown'd in war! inflame his ardent mind!
So arts ſhall flouriſh 'neath his equal ſway,
So arms the hoſtile nations wide affray;
The laurel Victory, Apollo wear the bay.
Thro' kind infuſion of celeſtial power
The dullard earth May quickeneth with delight:
Full ſuddenly the ſeeds of joy
(y)recure
Elaſtic ſpring, and force within
(z)empight:
[16]If ſenſeleſs elements invigorate prove
By genial May, and heavy matter move,
Shall ſhepherdeſſes ceaſe, ſhall ſhepherds fail to love?
Ye ſhepherdeſſes, in a goodly round,
Purpled with health, as in the greenwood-ſhade,
Incontinent ye thump the echoing ground,
And
(a)defftly lead the dance along the glade;
(O may no ſhowers your merry-makes affray!)
Hail at the opening, at the cloſing day,
All hail, ye
(b)Bonnibels, to your own ſeaſon, May.
Nor ye abſent yourſelves, ye ſhepherd-ſwains,
But lend to dance and ſong the liberal May,
And while in jocund ranks you beat the plains,
Your flocks ſhall nibble and your lambkins play,
Friſking in glee. To May your girlands bring,
And ever and anon her praiſes ſing:
The woods ſhall echo May, with May the vallies ring.
Your may-pole deck with flowery coronal;
Sprinkle the flowery coronal with wine;
And, in the nimble-footed galliard, all,
Shepherds and ſhepherdeſſes lively join:
[17]Hither from village ſweet and hamlet fair,
From bordering cot and diſtant
(c)glenne repair:
Let youth indulge its ſport, to
(d)Eld bequeathe its care.
Ye wanton Dryads, and light-tripping Fawns,
Ye jolly Satyrs, full of
(e)luſty-head,
And ye that haunt the hills, the brooks, the lawns;
O come with rural chaplets gay diſpread!
With heel ſo nimble wear the ſpringing graſs;
To ſhrilling bagpipe, or to tinkling braſs,
Or foot it to the reed: Pan pipes himſelf apace.
In this ſoft ſeaſon, when creation ſmil'd,
A quivering ſplendor on the ocean hung,
And from the fruitful froth, his faireſt child,
The queen of bliſs and beauty, Venus ſprung.
The Dolphins gambol o'er the watery way,
Carol the Naiads, while the Tritons play,
And all the ſea-green ſiſters bleſs the Holy-day.
In honour of her natal-month, the queen
Of bliſs and beauty conſecrates her hours,
Freſh as her cheek, and as her brow ſerene,
To buxom ladies, and their paramours.
[18]Love tips with golden alchimy his dart;
With rapturous anguiſh, with an honey'd ſmart
Eye languiſhes on eye, and heart diſſolves on heart.
A ſoftly-ſwelling hill, with myrtles crown'd,
(Myrtles to Venus
(f)algates ſacred been)
Hight Acidale, the faireſt ſpot on ground,
For ever fragrant and for ever green,
O'erlooks the windings of a ſhady vale,
By beauty form'd for amorous regale:
Was ever hill ſo ſweet as ſweeteſt Acidale?
All down the ſides, the ſides profuſe of flowers,
An hundred rills, in ſhining mazes, flow
Thro' moſſy grottoes, amaranthine bowers,
And form a laughing flood in vale below:
Where oft their limbs the Loves and Graces
(g)bay,
(When Summer ſheds inſufferable day)
And ſport, and dive, and flounce in wantonneſs of play.
No noiſe o'ercomes the ſilence of the ſhades,
Save ſhort-breath'd vows, the dear exceſs of joy;
Or harmleſs giggle of the youths and maids,
Who yield obeyſance to the Cyprian boy:
[19]Or lute, ſoft-ſighing in the paſſing gale;
Or fountain, gurgling down the ſacred vale,
Or hymn to Beauty's queen, or lover's tender tale.
Here Venus revels, here maintains her court
In light feſtivity and gladſome game:
The young and gay in frolic troops reſort,
Withouten cenſure, and withouten blame.
In pleaſure ſteep'd, and dancing in delight,
Night ſteals upon the day, the day on night:
Each knight his lady loves, each lady loves her knight.
Where lives the man (if ſuch a man there be)
In idle wilderneſs or deſert drear,
To beauty's ſacred power an enemy?
Let foul fiends
(h)harrow him; I'll drop no tear.
I deem that
(i)carl, by Beauty's power unmov'd,
Hated of heaven, of none but hell approv'd:
O may he never love! O never be belov'd!
Hard is his heart, unmelted by thee, May!
Unconſcious of Love's nectar-tickling ſting,
And, unrelenting, cold to Beauty's ray;
Beauty the mother and the child of Spring!
[20]Beauty and Wit declare the ſexes even;
Beauty to woman, Wit to man is given;
Neither the ſlime of earth, but each the fire of heaven.
Alliance ſweet! let Beauty, Wit approve,
As flowers to ſunſhine ope the ready breaſt:
Wit Beauty loves, and nothing elſe can love:
The beſt alone is grateful to the beſt.
Perfection has no other parallel:
Can light with darkneſs, doves with ravens dwell?
As ſoon,
(k)perdie, ſhall heaven communion hold with hell.
I ſing to you, who love alone for love:
For gold the beauteous fools (O fools beſure!)
Can win; tho' brighter wit ſhall never move:
But folly is to wit the certain cure.
Curs'd be the men, (or be they young or old)
Curs'd be the women, who themſelves have ſold
To the deteſted bed for lucre baſe of gold.
Not Julia ſuch: ſhe higher honour deem'd
To languiſh in the Sulmo-Poet's arms,
Than, by the potentates of earth eſteem'd,
To give to ſceptres and to crowns her charms.
[21]Not Laura ſuch: in ſweet Vaucluſa's vale
She liſtened to her Petrarch's amorous tale:
But did poor
(l)Colin Clout o'er Roſalind prevail?
Howe'er that be;
(m)in Acidalian ſhade,
Embracing Julia, Ovid melts the day:
No dreams of baniſhment his loves invade;
Encircled in eternity of May.
Here Petrarch with his Laura, ſoft reclin'd
On violets, gives ſorrow to the wind:
And Colin Clout pipes to the yielding Roſalind.
[22]Pipe on, thou ſweeteſt of th' Arcadian train,
That e'er with tuneful breath inform'd the quill:
Pipe on, of lovers the moſt loving ſwain!
Of bliſs and melody O take thy fill!
Ne envy I, if dear Ianthe ſmile,
Tho' low my numbers, and tho' rude my ſtile;
Ne quit for Acidale fair Albion's happy iſle.
Come then, Ianthe! milder than the Spring,
And grateful as the roſy month of May,
O come; the birds the hymn of Nature ſing,
Inchanting-wild, from every buſh and ſpray:
Swell the green gems, and teem along the vine,
A fragrant promiſe of the future wine,
The ſpirits to exalt, the genius to refine!
Let us our ſteps direct where Father-Thames
In ſilver windings draws his humid train,
And pours, where-e'er he rolls his naval-ſtreams,
Pomp on the city, plenty o'er the plain.
Or by the banks of Iſis ſhall we ſtray?
(Ah why ſo long from Iſis banks away!)
Where thouſand damſels dance, and thouſand ſhep⯑herds play.
Or chuſe you rather Theron's calm retreat,
Emboſom'd, Surry, in thy verdant vale,
At once the Muſes and the Graces ſeat!
There gently liſten to my faithful tale.
[23]Along the dew-bright parterres let us rove,
Or taſte the odours of the mazy grove:
Hark how the turtles coo: I languiſh too with love.
Amid the pleaſaunce of Arcadian ſcenes,
Love ſteals his ſilent arrows on my breaſt;
Nor falls of water, nor enamell'd greens,
Can ſooth my anguiſh, or invite to reſt.
You, dear Ianthe, you alone impart
Balm to my wounds, and cordial to my ſmart:
The apple of my eye, the life-blood of my heart.
With line of ſilk, with hook of barbed ſteel,
Beneath this oaken umbrage let us lay,
And from the water's cryſtal-boſom ſteal
Upon the graſſy bank the finny prey:
The Perch, with purple ſpeckled manifold;
The Eel, in ſilver labyrinth ſelf-roll'd,
And Carp, all-burniſh'd o'er with drops of ſcaly gold.
Or ſhall the meads invite, with Iris-hues
And nature's pencil gay-diverſified,
(For now the ſun has lick'd away the dews)
Fair-fluſhing and bedeck'd like virgin-bride?
Thither (for they invite us) we'll repair,
Collect and weave (whate'er is ſweet and fair)
A poſy for thy breaſt, a garland for thy hair.
[24]Fair is the lilly, clad in balmy ſnow;
Sweet is the roſe, of ſpring the ſmiling eye;
Nipt by the winds, their heads the lillies bow;
Cropt by the hand, the roſes fade and die.
Tho' now in pride of youth and beauty dreſt,
O think, Ianthe, cruel time lays waſte
The roſes of the cheek, the lillies of the breaſt.
Weep not; but, rather taught by this, improve
The preſent freſhneſs of thy ſpringing prime:
Beſtow thy graces on the god of Love,
Too precious for the wither'd arms of Time.
In chaſte endearments, innocently gay,
Ianthe! now, now love thy ſpring away;
Ere cold October-blaſts deſpoil the bloom of May.
Now up the chalky mazes of yon hill,
With grateful diligence we wind our way;
What opening ſcenes our raviſh'd ſenſes fill,
And wide their rural luxury diſplay!
Woods, dales, and flocks, and herds, and cots and ſpires,
Villas of learned clerks, and gentle ſquires;
The villa of a friend the eye-ſight never tires.
If e'er to thee and Venus, May, I ſtrung
The gladſome lyre, when
(n)livelood ſwell'd my veins,
And Eden's nymphs and Iſis' damſels ſung
In tender elegy, and paſtoral ſtrains;
[25]Collect and ſhed thyſelf on Theron's bowers,
O green his gardens! O perfume his flowers!
O bleſs his morning walks, and ſooth his evening hours!
Long, Theron, with thy Annabell enjoy
The walks of nature, ſtill to virtue kind,
For ſacred ſolitude can never cloy
The wiſdom of an uncorrupted mind!
O very long may Hymen's golden chain
To earth confine you and the rural-reign;
Then ſoar, at length, to heaven! nor pray, O muſe, in vain!
Where-e'er the muſes haunt, or poets muſe,
In ſolitary ſilence ſweetly tir'd,
Unlooſe thy boſom, May! thy ſtores effuſe,
Thy vernal ſtores, by poets moſt deſir'd,
Of living fountain, of the woodbine-ſhade,
Of Philomel, ſweet warbling from the glade:
Thy bounty, in his verſe, ſhall certes be repaid.
On Twit'nam bowers (Aonian-Twit'nam bowers!)
Thy ſofteſt plenitude of beauties ſhed,
Thick as the winter ſtars, or ſummer flowers;
(o)Albè the tuneful maſter (ah!) be dead.
[26]To Colin next he taught my youth to ſing,
My reed to warble, to reſound my ſtring:
The king of ſhepherds he, of poets he the king.
Hail, happy ſcenes, where joy would chuſe to dwell;
Hail, golden days, which Saturn deems his own;
Hail muſic, which the Muſes
(p)ſcant excell;
Hail flowrets, not unworthy Venus' crown.
Ye linnets, larks, ye thruſhes, nightingales,
Ye hills, ye plains, ye groves, ye ſtreams, ye gales,
Ye ever-happy ſcenes! all you, your poet hails.
All hail to thee, O May! the crown of all!
The recompence and glory of my ſong:
Ne ſmall the recompence, ne glory ſmall,
If gentle ladies, and the tuneful throng,
With lover's myrtle, and with poet's bay May!
Fairly
(q)bedight, approve the ſimple lay,
And think on Thomalin whene'er they hail thee,
THE MOONLIGHT NIGHT.
[32]Nox erat, et coelo fulgebat Luna ſereno,
Inter minora Sidera.
HOR.
HAil! empreſs of the ſtar-beſpangled ſky!
At thy benign approach night throws aſide
Her raven-colour'd veſt, and from her cave
Starts forth to viſibility. And now
With thy bright edging burniſh'd, on the eye
The tree-tops glitter. Hills, and vales, and plains,
Thy ſofteſt influence feel. The weary ox,
Forgetful of the labours of the day,
Slumbers at eaſe beneath thy kindly beam.
Tho' now the lamp, that late illum'd the day,
Its blaze withdraws, to light up other worlds,
I cannot weep its abſence, while this ſcene
Invites to ſpeculation more refin'd.
Witneſs this canopy of cluſter'd ſtars,
In dazzling order ſpread, immenſely bright!
Witneſs yon glittering mounts and valley ſtreams
Dancing beneath thy ſilver-ſhedding orb.
Mute are the choral warblers of the day;
Yet, tho' the choral warblers of the day
No more ſymphonious lull attention's ear;
And tho' nor linnet ſings, nor laughing finch
Shrill twittles from the ſpray—O ſmiling night,
[33]Still, ſtill thou haſt thy charms, while Philomel
Is thine. Ah! let me hear th' extatic ſwells
By echo's voice return'd—ſo ſweet's the ſtrain,
The nymph enamour'd doubles every note,
Save ever and anon thy ſofteſt trill
In imperfection dies upon her tongue.
If aught of ſound the troubled breaſt can ſooth,
And from its courſe avert the tide of grief,
'Tis thine, thou ſweet muſician. Tho' thy dirge
Be querulous, yet does it fill the mind
With ſolemn muſing and celeſtial wonder.
Nor yet I ſcorn, O night, thy loving bird,
As on her ivy-ſlaunting turret perch'd,
Wooing thy browneſt ſolitude, ſhe hoots
To ſome diſcordant—yet again, ere morn
Affright thine eye, and rob me of thy note!
Oh! 'tis a pleaſing melancholy air,
Which fancy well may melodize. How oft
From jarring ſtrings harmonious ſounds are drawn:
Turn upwards, eyes! and ſee yon flaming arch,
Behold—there view the Deity immenſe;
How glows each ſacred light! yon falling ſtar!
'Tis he who ſhines in all; th' eternal One
Who form'd and rules with awe the wonderous whole.
Here let the atheiſt tremble as he looks,
And bluſh into belief.—But can there live
[34]A monſter ſo abſurd?—Where art thou, then,
Oh conſcience?—What, aſleep?—Then muſt thou wake
In torments wrapt, when death diſturbs thy dream.
For know (poor crawling worm of little faith)
Thou canſt not die the wretch that thou haſt liv'd.
Here let me gaze, and, in the trance of thought,
Forget that I am mortal.—But behold,
Alas! the proſpect leſſens, and each ſtar
From the fair face of ſun retires, eclipſed
With luſtre more predominant. Farewell,
Sweet nurſe of virtue, contemplation ſage!
For I muſt leave thee now. The buſy day
My lingering chides. I go, till night return,
To plunge into that ſea of ſin, a buſtling world.
A FAREWELL HYMNE TO THE COUNTRY.
ATTEMPTED IN THE MANNER OF SPENSER'S EPITHALAMION.
[51]BY MR. POTTER.
SWeet poplar ſhade, whoſe trembling leaves emong
The cheerefull birds delight to chaunt their laies;
Where oft the linnet powres the dulcet ſong,
And oft the thrilling thruſh deſcanting plaies;
Their tunes attempring to the ſilver Yare,
Which gently murmurs here,
A babbling brook; but ſwelling in his pride
Sees two fam'd towns upon his bankes appeare,
And the tall ſhips on his faire boſom ride;
Indignant then rolls his prowde waves away,
And ſomes ore half the ſea:
Sweet ſtream, with ſhade refreſht, orehung with bowres
Entrailed with the honied woodbine faire;
Where breathes the gentleſt, ſofteſt, ſimpleſt aire
Stealing freſh odors from the riſing flowres,
Joy of my calmer howres,
O ſooth me with thy murmurs whiles I ſing;
The hills, the dales, the woods, the fountaines ring.
[52]With pleaſance oft two ſilver ſwannes I view
Pranking their ſilken plumes with conſcious pride,
A comely couplement of goodly hew,
Come ſoftly ſwimming down the cryſtal tide;
The cryſtal tide, reſplendent as it may,
Looks not ſo faire as they,
Whether their ſnowie necks they love to lave,
Or pluck with jettie bill in wanton play
The yellow flowres that flote upon the wave;
Orſdeigne to tinge their plumage, leſt they might
Soyle their pure beauties bright;
But with ſlow pomp on the clear ſurface move.
Sweet cygnets, whiter than the new-faln ſnow
That ſilvers ore Theſſalian Pindus brow;
Purer than thoſe that draw the queen of love,
Fayrer than Laeda's Jove,
Tune your melodious voices whiles I ſing;
The hills, the dales, the woods, the fountaines ring.
Oft when the modeſt morn in purple dreſt,
Wak'd by the lively larke's love-learned laye,
Unbarrs the golden light-gate of the eaſt,
And as a bridemaid leads the bluſhing daye;
The ſunnes bright harbinger before her goes
Scattring violet, ſcattring roſe;
The jolly ſunne, upriſt with luſty pride,
Shakes his fair amber locks, and round him throws
His glitterand beams to wellcome up his bride;
[53]Then bids his livery'd clouds before him flie,
And daunces up the ſkie.
Sweet is the breath of heaven with day-ſpring born;
Sweet are the flowres, that ore the damaſkt meads
To the new ſunne unfold their velvet heads;
Sweet is the dewe, the ſpangled child of morn,
That does the leaves adorn;
Sweet is the matin hymne the glad birds ſing;
The hills, the dales, the woods, the fountaines ring.
With early ſtep yon verdant ſlope I tread
Crown'd with the floriſht bowre of cremoſin health;
Whence auntient Norwic rears her towred head,
Norwic, fair nurſe of induſtrie and wealth!
Down in the dale my lowly hamlet lies,
Where truth without diſguiſe,
Where dove-like peace, and virgin virtue where.
Hence Bacon's villa greets my pleaſur'd eyes;
Bacon to Phoebus and the Muſes deare,
Seeking, uncombred with the toyles of ſtate,
This grove-emboſom'd ſeate.
The tufted hill, the valley flowre-bedight,
The ſilver ſhinings of my winding Yare,
The corn green-ſpringing, and the fallows ſeare,
The lambkins ſporting round, rural delight,
From hence enchaunt the ſight,
And wake the rural pipe, and tempt to ſing;
The hills, the dales, the woods, the fountaines ring.
[54]Oft when the eve demure with dewy eye,
Clad in a lengthned ſtole of raven-gray,
Aſſumes the ſober empire of the ſkye,
The ſtreakt weſt glimmering to the parting day;
When golden Heſperus, forth-ſtreaming bright,
The leader of the night,
Marſhals his radiant troopes, and gives command
In heaven's hie arch their lovely lamps to light;
Shouting he walks the Gideon of the band:
When firſt the youthfull moon begins to ſhow
New-bent her bleſſed bow;
When, or upriſing from her eaſtern bowre
Full-orb'd ſhe ſtrives her glowing face to ſhroud,
Gorgeouſly mantled in a lucid cloud;
Or all her beaming brightneſs deignes to powre
The ſilver'd landſkip o'er;
And ſhepherd ſwains their evening carrols ſing;
The hills, the dales, the woods, the fountaines ring,
Ore the new-ſhaven level green I rove,
Where the freſh haycock breathes along the mead,
Or wander thro' th' uncertain-ſhaded grove,
Or the trim margent of the river tread;
Where the ſoft murmurs of the poplars tall,
To the ſtreames liquid fall
Attempred ſweet, the muſeful mind delight;
Where the lone partridge to her mate does call,
Reſponſive in his homeward-haſting flight;
[55]Where the lowe quail with modulation bland
Runnes piping ore the land;
Where, as I ſtray along the upland ground,
The farre-off clock juſt trembles to my ear;
Where the mad citties louder mirth I hear,
When ſwinging in full peal, a feſtive ſound,
The deep bells roar around:
In mute attention huſh'd I ceaſe to ſing;
Nor hills, nor dales, nor woods, nor fountaines ring.
Now night's pale fires a peacefull influence ſhed,
The flockes forget to bleat, the herds to low,
Looſely along the graſſie green diſpred:
The ſlumbring trees ſeem their tall tops to bow,
Rocking the careleſs birds that on them neſt
To gentle, gentle reſt;
Silent each one, ſave the lone nightingale;
Of all the tuneful ſiſters ſweeteſt, beſt;
She, ſoft muſitian, thro' th' encharmed dale
Powres dainty-dittied warblings to delight
The ſtillneſs of the night.
'Tis ſacred thus to tread the dewy glade;
In the calme ſolitude of that ſtill howre
To nature's God the gratefull ſoul to powre
Or in the ſilvery ſhine, or doubtfull ſhade
By quivering branches made:
Rapt with the aweful thought I ceaſe to ſing;
Nor hills, nor dales, nor woods, nor fountaines ring.
[56]When flaming in the zenith of his powre,
Darting directly down his fiery ray,
The hotte ſunne, leaving his meridian bowre,
Enfevers with his beams the cloudleſſe day;
The gadding herd from ſuch a fervent ſkie
To the cool thicket flie,
Tormented with the bryzes teazefull ſting;
Th' enduring ſheep in th' hot ſands panting lie;
The graſshoppers, blithe inſects, daunce and ſing;
The mower ſwart his ſweeping ſcythe forſakes,
The damzels quit their rakes,
And ſeated where the freſhing ſhade is found
With joyous jolliment the daye beguile;
Sweet is the quaver'd laugh, the ſimper'd ſmile,
When, as the tale or gameſome ſong goes round,
The vocal vales reſound;
Nor leſs to me, whiles I eſſay to ſing,
The hills, the dales, the woods, the fountaines ring.
Ye lordings great, that in prowde citties wonne,
Which gently-cooling breezes never bleſſe;
In gorgeous palaces with heat foredonne,
Come here and envy at my littleneſſe.
All on a hanging hill, a ſimple home,
For its ſmall tenant roome,
Safe-neſted in the boſom of a grove,
Where pride, and ſtrife, and envie never come,
Nor any cares, ſave the ſweet cares of love:
[57]A little garden gives a cool retreat
From the daies powrefull heat;
Where flowes my gentle Yare, whoſe bankes along
Th' inwoven branches, like a girlond made,
With wanton wreathing decke a daintie ſhade;
While the ſmooth watry glaſs, reflecting ſtrong,
With bending bankes, and ſhades reſpondent vies,
Pointing to downward ſkies:
Here in this ſoft encloſure whiles I ſing,
The hills, the dales, the woods, the fountaines ring.
Here bountious nature, like a virgin faire,
Whoſe ladie fingers deck the velvet green
With cunning colourings of broidery rare
Sweetly enterchang'd the varied ſhades atween,
The graſſie groundſoil, as a lovely bride,
Hath richly beautifide,
Strowing the primroſe pale, the violet blew,
The ſilver'd ſnow-drop, and the daiſie pied,
The crocus gliſtering in its golden hew,
The cowſlip drops of Amber weeping ſtill,
The flaunting daffodil,
The virgin lillie, and the modeſt roſe,
The prettie pink, the red and white yfere;
Flowres of all hewes that paint the various yeare;
And the mild zephyr, that emong them blows,
Around ſweet odors throws,
Scenting the ſoft encloſure where I ſing,
The hills, the dales, the woods, the fountaines ring.
[58]The chemiſt bee with buſy murmurings
Extracts the ſoul of ſweetneſs from each flowre,
Such as the Syracoſian Thyrſis ſings,
All in the ſhadow of the ſhepherd's bowre;
The ſtock-doves, darlings of the Mantuan ſwaine,
In melting murmurs plaine;
Sweet birds of ſuch a ſwaine to be the care,
The ſooteſt he that ever chaunted ſtraine,
Or with the gladfull pipe enthrald the ear;
Him, as he ſung, the graces dauncing round,
With their own girlonds crown'd ;
The nymphes that haunt the river and the grove,
Whether his ſkilfull reed he ſweetly charms,
Or ſtrikes the ſounding lyre, and ſings of arms,
Apollo him, and him the Muſes love
Their own bleſt quire above:
Ah! would they deigne their viſits whiles I ſing;
The hills, the dales, the woods, the fountaines ring.
Here the poetic birds no fear moleſts:
Did I, ſweet tenants of my garden, ſay,
With ruthleſſe hand ere marre your prettie neſts,
Or ſteal th' unfeather'd innocence away?
For you my trees the ſpring's gay livery wear;
For you the ripening year
Purples the plum, in the deep cherrie glows,
And tempers the rich honie of the pear;
For you the laughing vine with nectar flows;
[59]For you the permain, comely to behold,
Glows with irradiate gold,
The burniſht bough vermilioning; for you
The mellow'd fruit beyond its time has hung;
Well have you paid me, for you well have ſung.
On nature's muſic ſhall we not beſtowe
Gifts we to nature owe?
Fond of our fellow poets while they ſing,
The hills, the dales, the woods, the fountaines ring.
An academic leiſure here I find
With learning's lore to diſcipline my youth;
By virtue's wholeſome rules to form my mind,
To ſeek and love the wiſe man's treaſure, truth.
Oft too thy hallow'd ſons enthroned hie,
O peerleſſe poeſie!
Sounding great thoughts my raptur'd mind delight;
He firſt, the glorious child of libertie,
Maeonian Milton, beaming heavenly bright;
He who full fetouſly the tale ytold,
The Kentiſh Tityrus old;
And he above the pride of greatneſs great,
Sweet Cowley, with the gentleſt ſpirit bleſt
That ever breath'd a calme in humane breſt;
Who the poor muſes richeſt manor ſeat
The garden's mild retreat,
Wrapt in the arms of quiet lov'd to ſing;
The hills, the dales, the woods, the fountaines ring.
[60]And he, forth-beaming thro' the myſtic ſhade
In all the might of magic ſweetly ſtrong;
Who ſteep'd in teares the pitious lines he made,
The tendreſt bard that ere empaſſion'd ſong:
Or when of love's delights he caſt to play,
Couth deftly dight the lay;
And with gay girlonds goodly beautifide,
Bound trew-love-wiſe to grace his bridale day,
With dainty carrols hymn'd his happy bride;
Lov'd Spenſer, of trew verſe the well-ſpring ſweet!
The footing of whoſe feet
I, painefull follower, aſſay to trace.
Bring fayreſt flowres, the pureſt lillies bring,
With all the purple pride of all the ſpring;
And make great ſtore of poſes trim, to grace
The prince of poets race;
And hymen, hymen, io hymen ſing;
The hills, the dales, the woods, the fountaines ring.
Witneſs ye hills, and dales, and woods, and plains,
Th' unmoved quiet of my ſilver daies,
Free here from all the cares, and all the pains,
Whoſe ſtorms do threat the citties dangerous waies:
There falſing forgery, and foule defame,
And luſt of ſclanderous blame;
There cancred tongues, ſchool'd in th' ungratious art
To blaſt the blooſme of a well-deemed name;
There malice wonneth deep in hollow hart;
[61]Ambition there and pride, the lies of life,
Sleek guile, and carled ſtrife:
Away plain honeſtie of ſimple eye,
And dove-like peace that calms the ſhepherd's day;
Away each ſcience, and each muſe away,
And ſingle truth, and ſunne-bright honour flie:
And lovely libertie:
Here then, ſweet ſhade, O ſhield me, whiles I ſing;
The hills, the dales, the woods, the fountaines ring.
Thus on his ruſtic reed the reckleſſe ſwaine,
Smit with the peacefull joys of lowly life,
The world's gay ſhows forgiving, charm'd the plaine,
Withouten envie, and withouten ſtrife:
All on a knot-graſs bank, ore-arched hie
With ivy-canopie,
And with wild roſes richly well inwove,
He lay, and tun'd his rural minſtrelſie;
When, lo! the favouring genius of the grove,
Fair Phyſis nam'd, to his entranced ſight
Appeared heavenly bright;
Looſe her fine treſſes flow'd, like golden wire,
With budding flowrets perled all atween,
And ſhaded with a daintie girlond green;
And aye in green ſhe did herſelf attire:
Beneath her feet in youthful rich array
A voluntary May
Threw ſweets, threw flowres; the birds more joyous ſing;
The hills, the dales, the woods, the fountaines ring.
[62]Then with a ſmile that brighten'd all the ſhade,
Mild ſhe beſpake, and deign'd to preſs his hand,
Enough, fond youth, to Phyſis has been paid,
Break then thy rural pipe at her command:
Theſe woodnotes wild, this flowre-perfumed aire,
And thy ſweet-ſtreaming yare
Muſt charm no more; no more the hallow'd cell,
Where white-rob'd peace, and free-born fancy faire
With ſacred ſolitude delight to dwell.
Wake then the ſpark of glorious great intent,
In action excellent
Thot fires the noble-paſſion'd ſoul to ſhine:
In all the depths of uſeful lore ingage,
To grace thy youth, and dignifie thine age:
Ne ween that Phyſis bids thoſe paths decline,
For all thoſe paths are mine.
Change then the ſtraine; to hill, to valley tell
Farewell, ſweet ſhade: ſweet poplar ſhade, farewell.
But, ah! beware; for in this goodly chace
A vile enchauntreſs ſpreds her vaine delights;
With guilefull ſemblants charming all that paſs,
Till ſhe enſlaved hath their feeble ſprights:
And ſooth ſhe is to view a lady faire,
Of beauty paſt compare:
And aye around her crowd a gorgeous throng,
Skill'd in the mincing ſtep, the veſtment rare,
And the fine ſqueaking of an eunuch's ſong;
[63]But ſacred ſcience, tender love, trew fame,
And honour's heaven-born flame
They know not; yet the pompous name vertù
To th' idle pageant give: ſhe cruel prowd
Deals magic charms emong the careleſſe crowd,
And does them all to hideous apes tranſmew.
But fear not thou the minion's magic pride,
For Phyſis is thy guide:
Come then; to hill, to dale this burden tell,
Farewell, ſweet ſhade: ſweet poplar ſhade, farewell.
To Coſme's poliſh'd court thy ſteps I'll lead,
My ſiſter ſhe, tho' eft we ſtrangers ſeem;
Far otherwiſe of us the wiſe aread,
But follies feeble eyes of things miſdeem.
The ſtraw-roof'd cott, the paſtur'd mead I love,
The mavis-haunted grove,
The moſs-clad mountaine hoar, a rugged ſcene;
Along the ſtreamlet's mazy margent rove,
That ſweetly ſteals the broken rocks atween:
She thro' the manner'd cittie powres the flame
Of high atchieved fame,
The ſtar-bright guerdon of the great and good;
And breathes her vivid ſpirit in the mind
Whoſe generous aimes extend to all mankind,
And vindicate the worth of noble blood;
Such as, in bowre Lycaean holding place,
The man of Spargrove grace:
[64]Come then; to hill, to dale this burden tell,
Farewell, ſweet ſhade: ſweet poplar ſhade, farewell.
Als like a girlond her enring around
The ſphere-born muſes lyring heavenly ſtrains;
The graces eke with boſoms all unzon'd,
A trinal band that concord ſweet maintains;
And who is ſhe that, placed them atween,
Seems a fourth grace I ween?
So looks the rubie pretious rare, enchaced
In the bright crownet of a maiden queen.
Each ſcience too with verdant bay-leaves graced,
With honour brought from Attic land again,
Adorns the radiant train.
Come then, let nobler aimes thy ſoul inſpire:
But bring the cherub Innocence along,
And Contemplation ſage, on pineon ſtrong
High-ſoaring ore yon lamping orb of fire—
Thus pip'd the Doric oate, while echoes ſhrill,
To fountaine, dale, and hill
Reſyllabling the notes, this burden tell,
Farewell, ſweet ſhade: ſweet poplar ſhade, farewell.
THE RIVAL BEAUTIES.
[98]BY J.E.W.
—Tantaene animis coeleſtibus irae;
VIRG.
FRom gay St. James's Myra was return'd,
Within her breaſt the flames of envy burn'd,
Reclin'd upon the couch ſhe ſought relief,
But the ſoft plumage added to her grief;
Now to the citron cordial ſhe applies,
The cordial too its uſual balm denies;
Will not kind Morpheus one ſhort nap beſtow?
He never perches on a breaſt of woe.
What! has her peerleſs face betray'd ſome flaws?
Or does ſome mighty loſs the conflict cauſe?
Has ſome dire pimple, to diſturb her eye,
Made an irruption where the lillies lie?
Smokes there leſs incenſe at her virgin ſhrine?
Or crowns ſome rival-toaſt th' enamour'd wine?
What can ſhe dread, whoſe every charm ſubdues
The garter'd noble—and invites the muſe?
Not one of thoſe, nor all of them conjoin'd
Have ruffled the compoſure of her mind;
But at the court ſhe ſaw, what tongue can tell!
Worſe than Quevedo's viſionary hell—
[99]A female implement! and at the ſight
Her ſpirit ſunk—ſhe ſwoon'd away for ſpite!
Clarinda's hand the glittering pageant grac'd,
With which ſhe led the beaux, and men of taſte;
Diſcarded Myra ſaw the envied prize;
She ſaw—and curſt it with her heart and eyes.
So, even at church, if ſome new dreſs arrive,
The blazing meteor galls the female hive;
Each eye, arreſted, on the faſhion glotes,
And every woman imprecates, and doats;
The clerk's proud wife neglects her huſband's ſong,
And comminations fly from every tongue.
A fan! the mighty cauſe of Myra's care,
For beauties envy trifles light as air!
The faſhion dawn'd from madam Pompadour,
Newly imported to the Britiſh ſhore:
Clarinda, to improve her magazine
Of charms—had lately at the toyſhop been,
Searching for trinkets, ſhe the bawble found,
And ſeiz'd the product of a foreign ground,
Reſolving to tranſplant it to the court,
She bought, and paid a hundred guineas for't;
Arm'd with this bright umbrella ſhe appear'd,
And, wafted by its gales, to conqueſt ſteer'd;
A hecatomb of hearts were ſoon reſign'd
To young Clarinda's eyes intrench'd behind;
[100]While ſtars and garters emulating ſtrove
Which ſhould croud foremoſt to preſent his love,
His vows thro' this gay medium to enhance;
Such are thy faſhionable tools—oh France!
While thus Clarinda's innovating pride
From Myra's charms drew dukes and lords aſide,
Like a diſcarded ſtateſman, in diſgrace
The fair one to the victor left the place;
Thus, like a beaten general, forc'd to yield,
She quits the glories of the long-fought field:
In ſullen diſcontent ſhe ſeeks the gloom
To meditate revenge within her room.
At length to Venus with uplifted eyes,
And fervent prayer, the baffled maid applies:
" Oh! Venus, by thy myrtles and thy doves,
" And every ſymbol of the Paphian groves,
" By all thy bright regalia I implore,
" Oh! grant one favour to thy Myra more;
" Let not Clarinda ſuch a conqueſt boaſt,
" Nor lead of nobles, thus, her ſhining hoſt:
" For lo! what ſtars, like ſilver Cynthia's train,
" Attend her triumph, and ſupport her reign!
" See, how each garter, like the Zodiac, vies
" To grace the blue horizon of her eyes!
" Debaſe her trinket, her new-fangled toy,
" And cruſh the infant dawning of her joy,
[101]" Give me, by ſome rich implement, to win
" The men—tho' 'twere a diamond—headed pin:
" Then ſhall a thouſand hearts, a thouſand days,
" With ſweeteſt incenſe on thy altars blaze.
" Then, for each lover which thy gift imparts,
" A hymn ſhall carol to the God of Hearts."
Propitious Venus heard the maiden's prayer,
And ſent a pleaſing dream to ſooth her care:
Fair to her raptur'd fancy there aroſe
A crimſon orb, but richer far than thoſe
Which ſtately cardinals in triumph wear,
The boon and earneſt of the papal chair;
Its ample brim three rows of ſapphires grac'd,
The ceſtus, as a ribband, gave it taſte:
A thouſand brilliants, here and there diſplay'd,
With bluſhing rubies, lent it light and ſhade.
In emerald cut, a king imperial ſate
Beneath a golden canopy of ſtate,
Powder'd with hieroglyphics of his reign,
As undiſputed monarch of the main.
The conſort of his throne was ſeated nigh
In pearl, and cleareſt cryſtal form'd each eye;
Attending nobles the regalia bore,
The crown and ſceptre both of maſſy ore.
In ſolemn order the proceſſion moves,
A prelate waits to crown their happy loves.
[102]Why ſhould we here deſcribe, what all have ſeen,
The coronation of a king and queen?
Or why attempt in colours to diſplay
That ſtate, when George and Charlotte bleſt the day.
Dazzled with luſtre, Myra now awakes,
And from the viſionary model takes
A hat, which ſoon eclips'd Clarinda's fan,
Nor left the fair competitor a man.
With this ſhe claims Love's empire as her own,
Reigns abſolute, nor envies George his throne.
THE BREACH OF THE RIVERS.
[105]BY THE SAME.
Quae vos dementia cepit?
VIRG.
THE rivers once their union broke,
For reaſons, like us Engliſh folk,
Becauſe they knew not why;
The gentry took it in their head
To run no more, but keep their bed,
And let the ſea go dry;
For why, forſooth, ſhould they be always going
To keep him full, and humour his o'erflowing?
They would ſupport no more, not they,
His royal tidings twice a day,
His tides of ebb and flood;
The Danube ſwore it; and the Rhine
Made oath, upon his richeſt wine,
To make the compact good.
No—no—he, truly, did not underſtand
Why his imperial ſtreams ſhould brook command.
And next appear'd the Ohio,
With caſtles laden was his brow,
[106]By which he ſolemn ſwore,
That if the Miſſiſippi join'd,
And was as well as he inclin'd,
He'd go to ſea no more;
The Miſſiſippi gave his oath, that he
Would be as true, and to the league agree.
Next ſpoke the Severn's ſtately tide;
" Sirs—I will curb old Ocean's pride—
" Here do I daily pour
" Millions of tons for Ocean's uſe,
" And truly, he'll have no excuſe,
" He'll have 'em at the hour:
" Now, by the river gods, and nymphs, not I,
" Let him draw bills on ſight upon the ſky.
" Yes, let the ſurly-mouthed main
" Draw on his magazines of rain—
" What ſay you, brother Trent?
" What ſays the Thames to this propoſal?
" Are we at this proud king's diſpoſal,
" To pay a high rack-rent
" Whene'er he pleaſes to demand our treaſure,
" And lord it o'er us at his tyrant pleaſure?"
The flames are kindled—Critics, hold—
You'll ſay th' alluſion is too bold;
[107]Can flames in rivers burn?
O! yes—Sedition's voice can change
The blood and juices, like the mange,
And to corruption turn
The ſweet and wholſome craſis of the blood—
And ſo far, Critics, the alluſion's good.
Th' aſſembly fills—Northumbrian Tyne
Swore by his ſalmon, he would join,
And by his ſooty gods,
That tho' all England ſtarv'd with cold,
He'd waft the coals no more for gold,
He matter'd not the odds:
What was't to him, or his, if he muſt creep,
And cringe to do obeiſance to the Deep?
There was not even a tench, or carp,
That did not on the topic harp;
No—nor a trout, or eel,
The meaneſt native of the ſtream
Could dwell upon the pleaſing theme
To ſave the common-weal:
The public good was now the general cry,
Even in the mouths of the ſmall ſalmon-fry.
Vox Populi, Vox Dei, loud
Was heard thro' all the finny croud;
[108]And all the rivers ſwore,
By their reſpective nymphs, that they
Would henceforth go no more to ſea,
Nor make a voyage more;
The motion was unanimous agreed
From ſmooth-wav'd Medway to the northern Tweed.
What was the dreadful conſequence?
The waters broke o'er mound and fence,
And overflow'd their banks:
An inundation, ſays my fable,
O'erflow'd each farmer's barn and ſtable,
And play'd a thouſand pranks;
A diſmal ſight, indeed, it was to ſee
The mad uproar of this wild anarchy.
But ſoon the comedy was o'er,
'Twas now a deſolated ſhore,
And every bed was dry;
Too ſoon their dread miſtake they found,
For all the fiſh were run aground,
Their ſpawn and progeny;
They and their helpleſs families were left
To ſtarve,—of Ocean's uſual ſtores bereft.
For, unſupplied, he muſt deny
His rich reciprocal ſupply,
[109]Whoſe wealth was what they gave;
And ſince they ſtopt the natural ſource,
He could make no return of courſe,
Nor ſend his briny wave
To purify and cheer their gelid ſtreams;
Such is the fatal end of harſh extremes!
How ſweet the notes of treaſon ſound
To faction's ear! how quick are found
Smooth reaſons to withdraw
Our due allegiance from the throne!
We threaten, while our heads are on,
And ſet at nought the law;
We curſe this ceſs, and damn that tax,
But never dream of Tyburn, or the axe.
THE ACCIDENT. A PASTORAL ELEGY.
[112]FRom roſy ſingers Morning ſhook the dew,
From Nature's charms the veil of Night ſhe drew;
Reviving colour glow'd with broken light;
The varied landſcape dawn'd upon the ſight;
The lark's firſt ſong melodious floats on air;
And Damon riſes, wak'd by Love and Care,
Unpens the fold, and o'er the glittering mead,
With thoughtful ſteps, conducts his fleecy breed.
Near, in rude majeſty, a mountain ſtood
Projecting far, and brow'd with pendant wood;
The foliage, trembling as the breezes blow,
Inverted, trembled in a brook below.
The mountain echoed every plaintive ſtrain,
The ſighing breeze return'd his ſighs again,
The gliding brook re-murmur'd to his grief,
As thus from ſong the ſhepherd ſought relief:
" When late in rural ſports I took my ſhare,
" Blithe as the blitheſt in the crouded fair,
" What tho' from ten, contending in the race,
" I ſnatch'd the prize, with yet unrivall'd pace?
" What tho', in wreſtling, arduous to excell,
" I ſtood the victor, when each rival fell?
" What tho', when Colin, oft in combat crown'd,
" The cudgel ſeiz'd, and aw'd the circle round,
[113]" I boldly dar'd the champion of the green,
" And from his head the trickling blood was ſeen?
" What tho', in ſofter ſtrife, my rural ſong
" Won the loud plaudit of the liſtening throng?
" Tho' every prize, by every voice, was mine,
" And rival hands for me the chaplet twine,
" On Robin's ſhoulders thro' the croud convey'd
" Of maids that bluſh'd, and ſhepherds that huzza'd;
" Vain all my ſtrength, activity and ſpeed,
" Vain all my ſkill to tune the vocal reed,
" No joy the chaplet, or the prize could give,
" For Phillis frown'd, the nymph for whom I live;
" Phillis! whoſe charms alone my wiſhes fir'd,
" Whoſe charms, ambition not my own inſpir'd;
" Who made my feet more ſwift, my arm more ſtrong,
" My heart more dauntleſs, and more ſweet my ſong.
" Love gave me conqueſt, but denied me bliſs,
" When from her lips ſhe wip'd the raviſh'd kiſs;
" Cruel and coy ſhe blaſted all my pride,
" And 'midſt the tranſports of my friends I ſigh'd;
" Denied her love, I'm poor with all the reſt,
" Indulg'd with that, of more than all poſſeſs'd.
" What giddy caprice rules a woman's mind,
" As fate relentleſs, and as fortune blind!
" On vanquiſh'd Colin Phillis ſhed her ſmiles,
" And all his ſorrows, and his pain beguiles;
[114]" She, from the wound I gave, with lenient care
" Waſh'd the ſtiff gore, and clipp'd the clotted hair;
" The healing ſimples with ſoft touch applied,
" Own'd and careſs'd him ſpite of female pride,
" Mourn'd his diſgrace, and now from future harms,
" Perhaps ſhe hides him in her circling arms.
" O! had kind heaven to me transferr'd his blow,
" O! had I own'd him a ſuperior foe,
" Fled from the general hiſs, with ſhame depreſt,
" To hide my bluſhes in her downy breaſt!
" To him, with rapture, every prize I'd yield,
" And all the taſteleſs honours of the field,
" For each gay trifle with her love o'erpaid,
" Bleſt, tho' forgotten, in the ſecret ſhade!
" Vain wiſh! to Colin is that bliſs decreed—
" Diſtracting thoughts diſtracting thoughts ſuc⯑ceed—
" May ſwift deſtruction ſeize the hated pair,
" Or, worſe than ſwift deſtruction, my deſpair!
" No—may the fruitleſs curſe leave Phillis free,
" But doubled, Colin! be fulfill'd in thee."
High on the neighbouring mountain's airy head
His browzing goats as happy Colin led,
Pronounc'd with haſty rage, he heard his name,
And near the brow with ſtill attention came;
Too near—the treacherous brink gives way, and lo!
He ſhrieks, and plunges in the brook below;
[115]The ſounding waters, whitening as they roſe,
Now with ſubſiding murmurs round him cloſe.
Damon, alarm'd, his falling rival knew,
And, ſwift as lightning, to his aid he flew;
Prevailing virtue triumph'd in his breaſt,
And pity love and enmity ſuppreſt;
He ſaw him gaſp emerging from the brook,
And reach'd, with generous haſte, his ſaving crook,
Caught by the drowning wretch with both his hands,
And grateful, trembling, on the bank he ſtands.
Short recollection ſerv'd him, thus to ſhow
How much a friend he roſe, who fell a foe;
" Born to ſubdue me, and ſubdued to ſave,
" Thine from this moment is the life you gave;
" Here, by the gods who ſent thee to my aid,
" I ſwear no more to ſee thy favourite maid,
" By partial favour, not by merit mine,
" To thee, more worthy, Phillis I reſign;
" Go, and my falſhood to thy miſtreſs plead,
" Go, and may heaven and love thy ſuit ſucceed.
Thus ſoon with ardent looks, with honeſt pride,
And juſt diſdain, the kindling ſwain replied:
' What Damon's faithful love eſſay'd in vain,
' He ſcorns by Colin's broken vows to gain;
' Be thine the maid, ſince fate ordains it ſo,
' And time and abſence ſhall allay my woe;
[116]' Friends, from this hour forever, let us live,
' My friendſhip's pledge, this ſpotleſs ewe I give;'
" And I, yon kid than falling ſnow more white,"
Glad Colin cried, and mutual faith they plight.
Thus buſied, Phillis, unperceiv'd, drew near,
Foredoom'd, her love now twice renounc'd, to hear;
" Take, Damon," thus the bluſhing maid begins,
" The hand, the heart, thy generous virtue wins;
" Not Colin's broken vows, but Damon's truth,
" Now blends my fate with thine, deſerving youth!
" To try thee, O! forgive if tried too far,
" Was all I meant, whate'er my actions were."
Her hand, with ſudden rapture, Damon preſt,
The joyful pair conſenting Colin bleſt;
To Damon's cot they take the flowery way,
With guiltleſs mirth to crown the happy day.
END OF VOL. V.