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Amasia, or, The Works of the Muses

A Collection of Poems. In Three Volumes. By Mr John Hopkins

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 I. 
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 III. 
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Coronis and Neptune.
  
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Coronis and Neptune.

From Royal Blood the fair Coronis came.
As great by Beauty, as by Birth in fame.
From both alike she has a Pow'r to move,
From both alike she draws Spectators Love.
Her awful Charms make suppliant Princes Kneel,
And quit their Crowns to shew the Pangs they feel.
Belov'd by all, none dare her Laws oppose,
Sure still to Triumph, and enslave her foes.
The Neighb'uring Kings, who by their Arms might rise,
Dread less—her Father's Scepter, than her Conqu'ring Eyes.

80

While now the Maid walks on the nearer shore,
To view the Floods, and hear the Billows roar.
While now she steps upon the Sandy Bay,
And seems another Venus of the Sea.
The Am'rous Fish approach the harder strand,
Most now delighted on the Happy land.
No scaly Armour from her Beauties Saves.
With their short Wings they cut the brighter Waves.
The Sea Nymphs float upon the swelling Flood,
Like Fancy seated on a moving Cloud.
Now Neptune too thro' Waters feels a Flame.
And owns Love's Mother from the Ocean came.
At first he sees the Maid, Serene, and fair,
And tells his suff'rings with a Lover's care.
But now more rough with swelling Passions grown,
When she, his Heav'n, pour'd angry Tempests down.
Like his own Waves, he does to ruine move,
And, all inrag'd, chafes with the storms of Love.
The frighted Virgin from the Ocean flew,
And, swift as Winds, he does in hast pursue.
Tir'd in the Sands, the God approaching near,
She Cries for aid, and Begs the Heav'ns to hear.
As to the Skies her trembling Arms she threw.
On their chang'd skin Black Plumes of Feathers grew.

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Turn'd to a Crow, she cuts the upper Air
And leaves her Lover, who stands wond'ring there.