Amasia, or, The Works of the Muses A Collection of Poems. In Three Volumes. By Mr John Hopkins |
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Amasia, or, The Works of the Muses | ||
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Book II.
Qui non vult fieri desidiosus, amet.
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TO THE Right Honourable THE Countess of Manchester.
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THE MISCELLANY of LOVE.
On Flowers in Amasia's Bosom. In Imitation of Anacreon.
VVhat? tell me, what, should Flow'rs do there,Amasia's sweet, as she is fair.
In her, all blooming Beauties meet;
What Flow'r so fair, as she is sweet?
Not Flora's self, shall proudly dare
With my Amasia to compare.
Flora's Breast, I know it well,
Does not like her Bosom smell.
This, Flora too, her self, does know,
For else, she would not Court her so.
Not Eastern Spices, Indian Gums,
Afford us half so rich Perfumes.
Not the Phœnix boasted Nest
Can Rival my Amasia's Breast.
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For Love's the Phœnix, that dwells there.
There, tender sighs and wishes move,
The Rich, the Od'rous Breath of Love.
Why should those Flow'rs, Amasia, stay?
Pluck them, throw them far, away.
Why should they in thy Bosom live?
They come to Rob thee, not to give.
They could, when growing in the Field,
They could—but common Odours yield.
Throw them, Amasia, throw them by,
Then Mark, how quickly they shall die.
You will not thence the Robbers throw;
Sure they are rooted there, and grow.
O happy they, in such a Bed!
Where nothing withers, nor is dead.
Tho' every other Flow'r you spare,
Let no Narcissus Flourish there.
Whilst thus my Rivals blest I see,
I find, thy Bosom can be free,
To any thing, but Love and me.
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To a Lady asking me a Thousand impertinent Questions, which she would have Answer'd.
Your swarm of Queries one Just Answer draws,I did this, that, and every thing—because.
What, wont that Answer do? Now, Jove forbid;
I did this, that, and all;—because I did.
To the Lady above-mention'd, saying I gave her a very senseless, impudent Answer.
In Mazes of impertinence involv'd,You are not yet, nor can be e'er resolv'd.
I thought,—Because—had fairly play'd it's part;
'Tis very hard, you should more Questions start,
Than your whole Sex can Answer for their Heart.
All the response they practise, won't suffice;
Yes, No;—or shall I Answer you with Why's?
By you, I hope, I shall no more be task'd,
Answer'd, as civilly, as I was ask'd.
Now, since I give you my replies so plain,
Favour me once, and tell me what you mean.
Then, if I yet must Answer you more true,
Start me a thousand Questions all anew.
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Answer me only this—
What 'tis you think, and what you do a Bed.
To the same Lady, saying she would give me a Kiss, if I would tell her what she ask'd me.
I'll take the Bribe, but not my Answers sell;Madam, you know, we must not Kiss, and tell.
Maids, oft e'er now, (yet oft their aim have Mist,)
Have been impertinent, but to be kist.
To the Lady aforesaid, striking me on the Face with her Fan, for my former Answers.
No longer now I must your rage withstand,Who brandish thus your Vengeance in your Hand.
How very stupid must my senses grow!
Which ne'er conceive, or what you say, or do,
But this—and this you beat into me too.
To make returns for this last Favour shown;
Now you have Struck my Face, pray, hide your own.
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To a Lady, who ask'd me why I writ on such trifling Occasions.
These are the fittest subjects I can choose,For trifling business, Suits a trifling Muse.
I make my Verse, at least, my own delight,
And, Madam, when I trifle, then I write.
To a Lady, saying I ought to Marry her, because she Lov'd me.
Thus must I pay, by smarting, for your Wound;If you be Conquer'd, why should I be bound?
O never more to such entreaties move,
You would not have me hate you, if you Love?
To the same Loving Lady, telling me, abuse was an ill requital for soft Passion, but she thank'd her Stars, she was but in Jest.
Such Jugling Tricks I cannot understand;You hold, unhurt, Coals burning in your Hand.
Long may you sport in the false Am'rous fit;
Love is a Jest, I ne'er could laugh at yet.
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For, should I Wed, I might abuse you more.
To a Lady asking my Opinion concerning the Writings of the Ancients and Moderns.
This only I dare positive avow,The Ancients wrote best then, the Moderns now.
To a Lady, making her a present of Straw-Work.
Let Straw no more in slighting Terms be nam'd,What she accepts, grows worthy to be fam'd.
Let lab'rers beat the shining sheaf no more,
'Tis now priz'd higher than the Corn it bore.
From your fair hands I may this Knowledge draw;
Your Eyes attract my Heart, as those the Straw.
O happy product, which the Field has giv'n!
From earth it Sprung, but reaches now to Heaven.
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To the Bookseller desiring my Sculpture before my Book.
Take it, the Wretched, lifeless Figure take;'Tis only giv'n for my Amasia's sake.
With Charms, too bright to be repell'd, you move;
Yet, not thro' vanity I yield, but Love.
Amasia's Name does my Book's Title Crown,
Amasia's Name, which gives my Book Renown.
Hence 'tis I grant, with pleasure, your demand;
Shall I not, Join'd with my Amasia, stand?
Let, with a scoff, the World my form disdain,
The Cens'ring World, unknowing Lovers pain;
On this account, I'm proud of being vain.
My self I gave to the bright Maid before;
How in a Picture can I give her more?
Let the World talk, and rail, and rave aloud;
I never yet for sordid praise have Bow'd;
I'll call Fools envious, while they call me proud.
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To a certain Gentleman, you must know, very Censorious on me, for assenting to my Bookseller's desire.
I understand you, Sir, and now I see,(Tho' now too late, I own;) thou can'st not be
My Picture's Friend, much less a Friend to me.
To a Lady, telling me I should Court applause, if I expected to gain it.
If, like a Virgin I should Fame adore,The more I Court, she would but fly the more.
Courtship for praise, would render me most vain,
For none e'er Courts, but has some hopes to gain.
Fame, if she comes, is welcome; but at worst,
The Poet can't be like the Lover curst.
O'er every sense my Lov'd Amasia Reign'd,
I Courted her, and Courted, she disdain'd.
No other Charmer shall my Mistress be;
For she was Fame, and every thing to me.
Let flatt'ring Fame yield to the flatt'ring Muse;
What I ne'er gain'd, ne'er sought, I cannot lose.
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For 'tis my Fame, that I ne'er sought it yet.
Let others Court her in a tedious Course,
I'll not pursue, but if I meet her, force.
The God of Verse himself, pursuing, fail'd,
Had He woo'd less, he had, perhaps, prevail'd.
My Charming Daphne, my Amasia lost,
I should not much of bending Laurels boast.
From the chang'd Nymph soft sighing Breezes came;
'Tis Breath, meer Air, that gives the Poet Fame,
How would my Raptur'd vanity run high,
Could I, like Phœbus, hear my Charmer sigh!
But here no pains, no Courtship can succeed;
Amasia sigh?—that would be Fame indeed.
To a Lady, saying with a smile, she fear'd I would not perform my Promise.
O doubt it not; or doubt if Truth be true,All promise, is performance, made to you.
He that adores, brings Incense in his Hands;
Who dares withhold whatever Heaven demands?
When o'er the Seas Neptune exerts his sway,
In the struck Rock what rebel Wind shall stay?
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But meets no Rock in a soft Lover's Heart.
When the Soul Acts, what thought shall flag behind,
The Flames you raise, mount swifter than the Wind.
But whilst, thus smiling you impose my task,
Your Eyes give more, than what your Lips can ask.
And yet, your Conqu'ring killing Pow'r's so great,
You Force, and Rob me, while you thus intreat.
All gen'rous grants, from the Heart ravisht flow;
What need you ask, my Heart is yours, you know.
Whilst to obey those smiles the Lover flies,
Grant him but this—the promise of those Eyes.
To a Lady, telling me I writ too fast.
'Twere hard, 'tis true, 'twere very hard indeed,If I should write more fast than you can read.
My Muses Works, thus, to your Summs amount,
Making more Slaves than ev'n the Eyes can Count.
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To the same Lady saying—Sure, I never thought, and Commanding me to write on a Feather.
Now I shall think; what Genius can refuse,When you thus kindly Wing the flying Muse?
No boist'rous Winds my Soul's Emotions bear,
But you know, Madam, Feathers fly with Air.
I think sometimes, (by my best Thoughts,) 'tis true,
On my own wit, and on your Beauty too,
And think them much alike—I think I do.
Strange is your Female sway o'er thoughtful Men,
Strange! That your Feather should Command my Pen.
Rouz'd from a Musing fit, you often Cry,
You think on nothing; why, Just so do I.
Only by chance, for once, one thought I'll write,
Say, is the Feather, or the Fair more Light?
To a Lady saying she imagin'd Poets were all on Fire when they wrote.
When my Amasia Charms my Soul, by turns,The Poet rages, and the Lover burns.
But any other Theam no warmth insures,
My Breast is then, almost as cold as yours.
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To Amasia putting a Paper of my Verses in her Bosom.
Whilst on this Subject you afford, I write,Concealing some, you bring more Works to Light.
Whilst from your Breast my inspiration flows,
Your Charming Breast a new Parnassus grows.
Two Spiring mounts give the fam'd Hill renown.
Two Spiring mounts Amasia's Bosom Crown.
Take care, soft Charmer, of thy Breast take care,
For thro' my Verse, my Soul will enter there.
Whilst thus my lines are in thy Bosom lay'd,
The Poem's happier than the Poet made.
To a Lady with a very Charming Dimple in her Chin, occasion'd by a scar, which, she said, an unaccountable distemper had left there.
That Wounds leave scars, is known to all Mankind;But none e'er knew that scars left Wounds behind.
The dire effect, thus, the dire Cause is grown;
I see your Wounds, and smarting feel my own.
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What are your Pow'rs! When ev'n Desease can Charm!
Shafts at impassive Heaven are shot in vain,
With Vengeance Wing'd, they kill, when turn'd again.
To Salve my Wounds, grant me one Balmy sigh,
For 'tis thro your Desease I pine and die.
Be kind; and perfectly restore me sound,
Where Love heals ill, a rancour'd Scar is found.
To a Lady Dancing at a Ball.
The Muse appears, all Airy, in my view,The Muse appears, and Dances, Bright, like you.
Like you, she fleets, and in my fancy flies,
All Wing'd, and gliding fast thro' azure Skies.
Loe! She descends, and hither darts her way,
Like Sun-beams swiftly bright—
All Lust'rous clear, and flashing on the Day.
With moving Air, like thee she passes now,
Welcome, my Muse—oh! Not the Muse—'tis thou.
Forgive me, Virgin, I mistook the fair,
Only thy self could with thy self compare.
You are my Muse, 'tis you, 'tis you inspire,
While your each motion Fans the kindling Fire.
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At once you Dance, and give the Musick too.
O that my Verse could run on Feet like thine,
My numbers then, would grow, like thee, Divine.
So true you move, yet with such swift surprize,
Tho' rising still, none can perceive you rise.
Stay, British Daphne, 'tis not Sol pursues,
Winning too fast the race, the prize you lose.
My swiftest Thoughts in vain to reach you strive,
Stay, thou hast won the Laurel, yet alive
Take the reward, the Poets Crown's your due,
Both Crowns and Hearts all must submit to you.
O if to thee a fate like Daphne's fell,
How would the Wreath be priz'd—
How would all write, and how would I excel!
To a Lady saying she would Hate me, if I should write Satyr.
Since Satyr, Madam, has her Birth from spight,If you should Hate me, that would make me Write.
My Satyr's Teeth, whene'er she Bites, draws Blood,
Not sharp; but very Blunt; and that's as good.
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Broad Sheets of rage, like light'nings, are unfurl'd,
And I could Flash, and Blast, and Tear the World.
I boast an equal Priviledge with you.
Sat'ring my self, in every thing I do.
To a Gentleman, whose Life was indanger'd by his Endeavouring to aderss a Lady in a Sphere above him.
Go on, and speak your Passion uncontroul'd,For, Love and Fortune both befriend the bold.
Maids are half gain'd, when, once the Suit's begun,
And she deserves to be thro' hazards won.
Storms past at Sea indear the Anchor'd ground;
E'er Drake grew fam'd, he did the World surround.
NEW-YEAR's-DAY, 1699.
Ah! Hapless Day! How thy sad gloom appears!Rolling o'er me twice Twelve revolving Years.
Thou gav'st me Life, thus art thou doubly curst,
For, by thy Light I saw Amasia first.
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Since that sad time I found Amasia gone.
Scarce to compleat thy Circle wouldst thou stay,
You bore in hast, so rich a prize away.
Return, Rapacious, Rival Year! restore
My fair, my Charmer, Charming as before.
O woe Eternal! O Eternal pain!
Nor you, nor she must strike my Eyes again.
My endless Sorrows round thy Circle move;
Twelve fatal Years! Half of my Life was Love.
Love was my Life; and now I plainly see,
That Time and Death are much the same to me.
O Grant me, Phæbus; this is all my Pray'r;
One smiling Sun, let me behold my fair.
For that one Day, Serene I'll bear my doom,
Past Years of Woe, and Ages yet to come.
If, on that Day, I meet Amasia's scorn,
If, on that Day, the Charmer shall not burn,
Never may this, no, never more return.
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Seeing a Lady at a Play call'd A Trip to the Jubilee.
The Scene seems now a Melancholy place,Here gaze, my Eyes, here revel, and Embrace,
And press, and Kiss, at every glance, that Face.
Let both the Author and his Play seek Rome,
Beauty, I'm sure, keeps Jubilee at home.
To a Lady, under the Name of Philomela.
I'm Charm'd, I'm ravish'd with thy tuneful Song;Ne'er may this Philomela lose her Tongue.
Sweet as the first, Harmoniously you move,
By Sorrow she was taught, and you, by Love.
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LOVE in IDEA.
Written to a Friend, who said his Mistress was above Gold, and desir'd my advice in his Suit.
Yes, some there are, sure yet some Nymphs remain,
Some gen'rous Nymphs, despising sordid gain.
If such you find, no suff'rings are too hard,
No Pains are great enough for such reward.
If some such truly noble fair you see,
You meet that fair yet never met by me.
My Art were useless then, nor would I teach
Devices far below her glorious reach.
Exalted Numbers should her worth Proclaim,
She should be every Poet's Charming Theam,
Above the Stars the Muse her name should bear,
Fix her immortal Crown, for ever fixt it there.
Such gen'rous Flames would Paradise restore,
With Flow'ry Pleasures, as at first it bore.
Still should thy Passion kindle, as it soar'd,
And she, the Charming she, should be ador'd.
Still with Obsequious Courtship should'st thou serve,
Thou could'st not Love her, as such Charms deserve.
Let Am'rous Sylvius to that Charmer flee,
The Maid like her should be belov'd by me.
Revolving Days and Nights would I admire,
Gaze on her Eyes, draw thence New Streams of Fire.
At her dear Feet, all Prostrate, Breath my lays,
Sing as she smiles, her every motion Praise,
And look, & look again, revolving nights and days.
In tuneful Numbers every thought express,
And make Immortal Love, and feel no less.
New transports still should from New transports Spring,
Growing my self, all ravisht, as a I Sing.
Angelick Thoughts should my whole Soul employ,
Immortal Love, and as Immortal Joy.
With trem'lous, darting glances would I gaze,
Fixt, like some Statue, in a blest amaze.
My flutt'ring Heart it's motions should improve,
And where for Life but with one stroke 'twould move,
A thousand beat, with quick alarms, for Love.
Then, would I run her Num'rous Beauties o'er,
Creative fancy ever Springing more.
Whilst the Idea feeds on new supplies,
Whilst thro' my Soul her Charming Image flies,
Joy, dancing, smiles in my Extatick Eyes.
Trembling with eager Love would I approach,
And as I rise, Bow Humbly, e'er I touch.
Now like Love's self, with daz'ling sight, behold,
Then, as all Wings, like the Flusht Hero, bold,
Rush on—and clasp her fast, as Misers clasp their Gold.
Seraphick Raptures Charm, while I embrace,
And as more close my Eyes her Features trace,
Fresh glories dawn in her Aerial Face.
Ten thousand, thousand rising presses past,
Still would I press her with such eager hast,
That every close should seem the last of all the last.
Each fainting Nerve new vigour should reserve,
And press, as Jealous of some Rival Nerve.
As light'nings flash on light'nings to each Pole,
So should new presses on new presses roll,
Fly thro' each part at once, dissolving thro' the whole.
Lodg'd on the Fragrant Bosom of the fair,
I spread in hast ten thousand Kisses there.
Charm'd with those Sweets, strait to her Lips aspire,
Breath there my Soul, there revel my desire,
'Tis too, too much for Man—
I tast of Heaven, and in a Trance expire.
Some gen'rous Nymphs, despising sordid gain.
If such you find, no suff'rings are too hard,
No Pains are great enough for such reward.
If some such truly noble fair you see,
You meet that fair yet never met by me.
My Art were useless then, nor would I teach
Devices far below her glorious reach.
Exalted Numbers should her worth Proclaim,
She should be every Poet's Charming Theam,
Above the Stars the Muse her name should bear,
Fix her immortal Crown, for ever fixt it there.
Such gen'rous Flames would Paradise restore,
With Flow'ry Pleasures, as at first it bore.
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And she, the Charming she, should be ador'd.
Still with Obsequious Courtship should'st thou serve,
Thou could'st not Love her, as such Charms deserve.
Let Am'rous Sylvius to that Charmer flee,
The Maid like her should be belov'd by me.
Revolving Days and Nights would I admire,
Gaze on her Eyes, draw thence New Streams of Fire.
At her dear Feet, all Prostrate, Breath my lays,
Sing as she smiles, her every motion Praise,
And look, & look again, revolving nights and days.
In tuneful Numbers every thought express,
And make Immortal Love, and feel no less.
New transports still should from New transports Spring,
Growing my self, all ravisht, as a I Sing.
Angelick Thoughts should my whole Soul employ,
Immortal Love, and as Immortal Joy.
With trem'lous, darting glances would I gaze,
Fixt, like some Statue, in a blest amaze.
My flutt'ring Heart it's motions should improve,
And where for Life but with one stroke 'twould move,
A thousand beat, with quick alarms, for Love.
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Creative fancy ever Springing more.
Whilst the Idea feeds on new supplies,
Whilst thro' my Soul her Charming Image flies,
Joy, dancing, smiles in my Extatick Eyes.
Trembling with eager Love would I approach,
And as I rise, Bow Humbly, e'er I touch.
Now like Love's self, with daz'ling sight, behold,
Then, as all Wings, like the Flusht Hero, bold,
Rush on—and clasp her fast, as Misers clasp their Gold.
Seraphick Raptures Charm, while I embrace,
And as more close my Eyes her Features trace,
Fresh glories dawn in her Aerial Face.
Ten thousand, thousand rising presses past,
Still would I press her with such eager hast,
That every close should seem the last of all the last.
Each fainting Nerve new vigour should reserve,
And press, as Jealous of some Rival Nerve.
As light'nings flash on light'nings to each Pole,
So should new presses on new presses roll,
Fly thro' each part at once, dissolving thro' the whole.
Lodg'd on the Fragrant Bosom of the fair,
I spread in hast ten thousand Kisses there.
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Breath there my Soul, there revel my desire,
'Tis too, too much for Man—
I tast of Heaven, and in a Trance expire.
From my designs how widely do I rove!
Why did my Soul this fancy'd Beauty move?
I Sing of Art, and yet by Nature Love.
Hence may the Youth, whom I instruct, believe,
His Tutour would his utmost pains deceive.
How can he think I'll make the fair his prey;
Who in Idea bear the prize away?
Yet trust me, youth, whilst by Love's Pangs I'm torn,
By me Maids are but in Idea born.
Why did my Soul this fancy'd Beauty move?
I Sing of Art, and yet by Nature Love.
Hence may the Youth, whom I instruct, believe,
His Tutour would his utmost pains deceive.
How can he think I'll make the fair his prey;
Who in Idea bear the prize away?
Yet trust me, youth, whilst by Love's Pangs I'm torn,
By me Maids are but in Idea born.
To a Lady, who seeing me in a Languishing Sickness, call'd me—Poor Shadow of Love.
Wounds got in War to Warriours graceful show,Wounds got in Love, are ridicul'd by you.
But Oh! I acted not the Warriour's part,
They lose their Limbs, but I have lost my Heart.
Like wounded Cowards, I am heartless found,
And every fair, who sees me, now may Wound.
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The best defence of Cowards, is to fly.
In vain, in vain your killing Darts pursue,
I am Love's Shadow, Beauty's substance You.
To a Lady making me a second present of a Lock of her Hair, after I had in an humour return'd the first.
Number thy Hairs, count then my summs of bliss;The Golden Fleece was a mean prize to this.
With Popish Superstition, every day,
To this Lov'd guift, as to some Saint, I'll pray.
Far brighter this, than Ariadne's Hair
Translated to the Gods, and made a Star.
That sprung from earth; e'er to the Skies it flew,
This grew in Paradise, in Heaven it grew.
Thus, tho' the vanquish'd outworks I have won,
Never, Oh! Never must I gain the Town.
Twice ten Years Siege would here successless prove,
War ends in Peace, but can Despair gain Love?
You gave the gift; I did the gift restore,
Again you gave, now to receive no more.
My Heart was yours, you did the toy disdain,
Again 'tis yours, ne'er to return again.
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O may your Hair, fast as you cut it, grow;
But Pray'rs are little, where my self I owe.
See, how the Lock does my blest hands Embrace,
As once it Curl'd about the Charmer's Face.
What is my envy to thy present grown!
How do I envy what is now my own!
O could some God transform my shape to Hair,
And would'st thou me, as once this present, wear,
How were I blest! I would around thee roll,
And Curl, and clasp thy Breasts, and twine about thee whole.
And then, if any Lover should but dare
To Court, and beg the favour of thy Hair.
Up would I start, to Vindicate my right,
And stand an end, with horrour, and affright,
Thy Lovely Hair, where Beauty now is sown,
Should like Medusa's snaky Locks be shown,
And turn the bold beholders stiffen'd into Stone.
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To a Lady Singing.
Musick has Charms no Poetry can raise.That silence, which your Song Commands, is praise.
The Health.
After absence—To a Friend.
An absent Friend, long absent from my Arms,(Long from my Breast, since I felt Love's alarms.
Return'd—last Night, the Prodigal return'd,
With gen'rous, kind, continu'd Friendship burn'd,
And, in the closest folds, his ruin'd Sylvius Mourn'd.
Both Mourn'd, at once in Pleasure and in pain,
Both Mourn'd that loss, which both esteem'd, as gain.
Strange force of Friendship! Vain and indiscreet,
We Mourn our absence most, when now we meet.
Thus, when the Mariner has reacht the shore,
Tho' he deplores not, till the Tempest's o'er,
Yet then he feels the late-past Anguish more.
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Then, he perceives his vanisht dangers most.
Srait, from my Friend a Flood of Questions Springs,
Half Answers made, I ask ten thousand things,
For meeting Friends—
Grow highly ravish'd, as Triumphant Kings.
Our hasty Joys such num'rous Queries Start,
We seem'd not meeting then, but then to part.
We stood, embrac'd, then walk'd, and chang'd the ground,
We lodg'd—the Lov'd Amasia's Health flew round,
Amasia's Health the Golden Goblets Crown'd.
To a Lady, holding her Picture in my Hand, and looking on her Face.
Thus, Ixion like, I have maintain'd the chace,Pursu'd the Goddess, and her Cloud embrace.
O thou, who fly'st with my despairing Heart,
Thou, more a Shadow than thy Picture, art.
Whilst round this Shade my Circling Arms I cast,
Thy Face, which shuns me, holds my Soul as fast.
Here had the fond Narcissus chanc'd to rove,
He and his Shadow too had dy'd for Love.
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Ev'n Nature cannot paint it o'er again.
The Arms.
Written at the request of Amasia.
Suavitate, aut Vi.
'Tis she Commands; then, must her Poet Sing
The first bold Man, from whence his race did Spring.
First of the line, first noted of the Name,
Who his by subtle brav'ry purchas'd Fame,
Atchieving deeds, whence his long honours came.
A Castle stood, impregnable of Old,
Scorning assault, like Danae's Brazen hold;
By Steel unconquer'd, and unbrib'd by Gold.
Long had the British Force besieg'd this Tow'r,
Long had it Mock'd Britain's Enervate Pow'r.
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With some few Troops, attempted, gain'd the Place.
Naked of Martial Pomp, unarm'd in show,
Deckt with Plum'd Casks, defenceless all below,
Forsook the Camp, revolting to the Foe.
As Friends they came, and were, as Friends, let in,
By which false Friendship they the Outworks win.
Gallantly Courteous, Fashionably brave,
Their long Plum'd Casks, as in Salute, they wave.
From which, at once, soon as the Signal's giv'n,
Small Pistols drawn; their Casks are tost to Heav'n.
With a loud shout, charging the Guards, they Fire,
Some Fall, some Fly, and Fighting, some Retire.
At the rais'd Clamour, the Besiegers hast,
Rush in, like Floods, the Gates defenceless past,
And by Join'd Forces, Storm the Fort at last.
Hence are his Honours Blazon'd, hence his Arms,
For his close Valour, and secure Alarms.
A Castle for his Crest the Helmet bore,
Three Pistols added in his Field he wore,
Three Roses only were his Arms before.
I envy not, bold Ancestor! Thy Fame,
Amasia mine, I should despise a Name.
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You Vanquish Castles, let me Vanquish her.
Fam'd much for cunning, not for Courage less,
Yet she's a Fortress thou could'st ne'er possess.
Inspire me, Parent Genius! mild appear,
Useless thy Roses, if they fail me here.
Blushing they fall, her Cheeks more Sweetly Red,
Now, Pale like me, their Sickly leaves they shed,
Behold, they Wither now, and now are Dead.
Degenerate Youth! Thy Arms, thy Honours lost,
What Fame has slothful Sylvius left to boast?
New Arms the Patron of his line had won;
Unworthy thou to be esteem'd a Son,
Losing what long descent had made thy own.
This points the Warriour's, this the Lover's course,
That sweetness always must be Join'd with force.
119
POEMS ON Several Occasions.
The Complaint.
Tir'd of the Town, and the Wild tumults there,Pensive I Walk'd, to Breath the Vernal Air.
Along the Banks of Silver Thames I stray'd;
Alike both wander'd, thro' the grateful Mead.
Only, more Calm the River gilded by,
Shook by no Storm, it murmur'd not, as I.
Beneath a shade, form'd of a Shrubby Wood,
I lay, and look'd on the adjacent Flood.
The Beamy Sky All-lustrous from above,
With wav'ring Light seem'd on the Streams to move.
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Yet Plunging in, I had been ever lost.
Thus to those Wretches whom their Crimes pursue,
Ev'n Heav'n shows false, and Damns them in the view.
Strait, was the Sun o'ercast with sullen Clouds,
And gloomy Mists sat heavy on the Floods.
The Tempest gather'd, and from Pole to Pole,
The light'nings Flash, and the loud Thunders roll.
Whole Heav'n was darken'd—Calm I lay a while,
And with a Pleasing sadness, seem'd to smile.
But now, the Sun forc'd out his Glorious way,
Dispell'd the gloom, and made the Skies look gay,
Clad thick in brightest Beams, and Flashing on the Day.
On Airy Wings the gloomy Mists were fled,
And gladsome Sun-shine glided every Shade,
But that, where Sylvius, where the Wretch was lay'd.
A thick, dark Fog spread horrid, all around,
And dull'd the Springing Beauties of the ground.
On both sides, near, I saw delightful Groves,
And happy Lovers, Whisp'ring tender Loves.
The Odorous Bow'rs, their Scenes of bliss, so nigh
I heard the Swains protest, the Virgins sigh.
121
Gay looks of Pleasure die, when Joys are past.
The Wretch his Courtship needs must purchase hate,
For Beauty yields, but to the rich, and great.
I saw—unenvying saw their rais'd delight,
Blest both their day, and my own gloomy Night,
That grateful Fog, which fenc'd me from their sight.
Hear me, I Cry'd, ye Heavens! Auspicious hear,
Kind Eccho too, part in my Sorrows bear.
In that low Vale try there thy utmost Skill;
Now, if thou can'st, redouble all my ill.
In vain, in vain—alas! What speaks the wrong,
In vain, in vain thou cry'st—'tis all thy Song.
Be dumb—I'll now a new Narcissus be,
Fond of my grief, as of his Beauty he.
More blest than him I shall appear in woe;
In this respect none will my Rival grow.
In all the Crowd of that imperious Town,
Find me that gen'rous Soul, find one alone,
Willing to Join in any other's moan.
Of all the shining Beauties, where's the Maid,
That sells her Love, where only Love is paid.
122
To Mr ---
Written before the Representation of his First Comedy.
Enough—I know thy strength, nor need delay,The dawning Muse fore-shows the Springing Day,
Nor will the rise of her own Phæbus stay.
Let others wait the Glory of the Skies,
I know, I know, the Sun and you must rise.
Strong in thy solid Beams, maintain thy Sphere;
Thy vig'rous Fires will Foggy Vapours rear.
I know thy Orb of Sence to fulness grown,
And by thy kind Reflection, Judge my own.
Thence, all my borrow'd, fainter glimm'rings shine,
I can't be wholly dark, while thou art mine.
In vain, once dampt, to weaker helps I run,
Yet Vesta's Fire was kindl'd by the Sun.
Hard fate of Debt! if I return thee Praise,
I send but smoak, for thy enliv'ning rays.
Languid my heat, void of the Flame of Wit.
Censur'd for what I have, and have not Writ.
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They may excuse me, what I have not done.
Tho' to no haughty Genius will I bend,
My Muse must still her utmost Plumes extend,
And clap her Wings, and soar, to reach my Friend.
She, safe like Danae, from mortal Pow'rs,
Yields but to Jove, in his Celestial show'rs.
Tho' I, the weak born Castor, must decline,
In thee, my stronger, Brother-star, I'll shine.
Go on, Lov'd Youth! And lofty structures raise,
Already founded strong, in solid praise.
Congreve, Vanbrook, and Wicherly must sit,
The great Triumvirate of Comick Wit.
Where can I place my Friend; and sense approve?
Do thou excel thy self, then rise above.
Ascend not proudly, tho' thou can'st not fall,
Be what thou art, thou art already all.
Maintain thy own, nor scorn to Conquer slow,
And Young Octavius shall Augustus grow.
But Oh! Forgive thy undesigning Friend,
I cannot all, tho' all be thine, commend,
For thou, I own, ev'n thou thy self, may'st mend.
Let nought, offending Chastest ears, be told;
Make thy Muse modest, she may still be bold.
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And still be Courted, as you pass, by me.
Shun the Just rage of Collier's sacred Pen,
The truly great, must be the best of Men.
From Heav'n immediate, Flows such Sence as thine
Warm, like the Poet's God, as well as shine.
Let the strong Muse, Divine in Numbers rise,
'Tis then, 'tis only then, she strikes the Skies.
To Mr ---
On his Second Comedy.
All Court the Rising Sun; some, from the morn,Conclude what Lustre shall the Day adorn.
Your earliest dawn, my Friend, was chearful day,
You shone out first with a Meridian ray.
Tho' dusky Clouds some Beams did hov'ring hide,
The Work was Day, 'twas perfect Day descry'd.
This all infer from the succeeding Skies,
After one Day, another Day must Rise.
O may thy Phæbus never set in Night,
For, all the God shines in each Scene you write.
125
'Tis praise enough to say 'tis understood.
Loud are the Clamours which applauses Fire;
You force much more, we silently admire;
When seen, you ravish, but when read, inspire.
All Judge you hence, in the first piece you writ,
Loose, but thro' Fashion, not thro' want of wit.
For now, more new, (tho' Genuine Garbs) you choose,
And deck, with modest Charms, the Comick Muse.
At once such profit, such delight you raise,
Collier himself (if Collier can) should praise.
But hold—
While here to stay the Reader's Eyes I strive,
You of your best Applause, by praising, I deprive.
126
The Petition.
To her Royal, and Illustrious Highness, the Princess.
Written in the Name of Mr. ---, being deny'd to Tread the Stage.
What Theam so greatly glorious can I choose?
My Muse Courts you, 'tis not a fawning Muse.
Thus, may I thank my ills, for this success,
Made greater still, by what would make me less!
Where can I nobler bend? I stoop not low,
When, ev'n by falling, I am rais'd to you,
Yet, Prostrate lie, beneath your Royal Feet,
Where so much Power, and so much goodness meet.
Goodness so Sacred, and a Pow'r so High,
The one alone can with the other vye.
My Muse Courts you, 'tis not a fawning Muse.
Thus, may I thank my ills, for this success,
Made greater still, by what would make me less!
Where can I nobler bend? I stoop not low,
When, ev'n by falling, I am rais'd to you,
Yet, Prostrate lie, beneath your Royal Feet,
Where so much Power, and so much goodness meet.
Goodness so Sacred, and a Pow'r so High,
The one alone can with the other vye.
Yet the mean suppliant dares implore the grant,
Mean tho' the suppliant be, yet good the Saint.
Heroes oppress'd, invoke the Pow'r Divine,
And here, the fancy'd Hero calls on thine.
With all Submissive Worship he implores,
Who serves the Sun, but Bows, and so adores.
But such my Crime, no off'ring can Attone,
Offending all, yet meant offence to none.
Disrob'd of Passions, how would Players show,
Yet, I offended, that I was not so.
Hard fate of Mortals, which impending lies,
Bearing such Tempests, in themselves to rise.
Tempests, and Oceans threaten from afar,
But O do thou protect, thou, the Auspicious Star.
By thee I guide my course, to thee I pray,
The Guardian Venus of our British Sea.
One Breath from thee would soften Storms to Gales,
Calm every Billow, and spread full the Sails.
So with my Pageant Streamers once again,
I shall beneath your Sun-shine Plow the main.
But yet, till you, Propitious Princess, smile,
I Steer, like Vessels, off, which shun the Isle.
You, who to all the height of Goodness live,
Instruct your gen'rous Brittons to forgive.
Ev'n Heav'n, it self, receives affronts from Men,
But, they repenting, it grows Calm again.
So may'st, thou Flourish long, and bless the Age,
So may thy Vertues Crown the future Stage.
So, when great William shall in Heaven be seen,
May you Reign long, the blest Britannia's Queen.
Mean tho' the suppliant be, yet good the Saint.
Heroes oppress'd, invoke the Pow'r Divine,
And here, the fancy'd Hero calls on thine.
With all Submissive Worship he implores,
Who serves the Sun, but Bows, and so adores.
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Offending all, yet meant offence to none.
Disrob'd of Passions, how would Players show,
Yet, I offended, that I was not so.
Hard fate of Mortals, which impending lies,
Bearing such Tempests, in themselves to rise.
Tempests, and Oceans threaten from afar,
But O do thou protect, thou, the Auspicious Star.
By thee I guide my course, to thee I pray,
The Guardian Venus of our British Sea.
One Breath from thee would soften Storms to Gales,
Calm every Billow, and spread full the Sails.
So with my Pageant Streamers once again,
I shall beneath your Sun-shine Plow the main.
But yet, till you, Propitious Princess, smile,
I Steer, like Vessels, off, which shun the Isle.
You, who to all the height of Goodness live,
Instruct your gen'rous Brittons to forgive.
Ev'n Heav'n, it self, receives affronts from Men,
But, they repenting, it grows Calm again.
So may'st, thou Flourish long, and bless the Age,
So may thy Vertues Crown the future Stage.
So, when great William shall in Heaven be seen,
May you Reign long, the blest Britannia's Queen.
128
To a Lady, my Friend's ingrateful Mistress.
Such are your proud, deluding ways to move,
I hate you more, than ev'n my Friend can Love.
A brave revenge inspires my swelling Soul,
While Thoughts of thee in my rais'd Bosom roll.
Be gone, yet Nine, your aid I now refuse,
For, Indignation shall be here my Muse.
Immortal hatred urge me on to think,
And stain thy Name, with everlasting Ink.
My Juster Pen shall Wound your Honour, more
Than e'er it rais'd you, to esteem before.
Gay you appear, where your false Beauties come,
But I shall Rob you of your borrow'd Plume.
My Muse's Wings have soar'd, and born you high,
Blown by my Breath, did the vain bubble fly,
But now I laugh, to see it's glories die.
Tow'ring so lofty, you are giddy grown,
And, of necessity, must tumble down.
Such Fogs of praises have you drawn from all,
In show'rs of Tears the gather'd Mists must fall.
Now, thro' those Clouds, my light'ning fancy flies,
To blast thy Pride, which, when 'tis blasted, dies.
Along the Airy confines of thy Fame,
My Verse shall roll, charg'd with thy Sultry name.
My Hand, now Arm'd, a fatal Pow'r does own,
My Pen's the Thunder-bolt to dash thee down.
My kindling Eyes with Flames so Furious move,
They can't be fancy'd to arise from Love.
My fiercer Satyr cannot so expire,
For, Salamander like, 'tis born, and Lives in Fire.
With waxen Wings to Airy heights you flew,
Which none durst ever yet attempt, but you.
As some skill'd Fowler, who the Lark descrys,
And from his Glass, darts Sun-beams in his Eyes,
Beholds the prey, which he saw Tow'ring, lay'd
In the low Net, which on the ground he spread;
So, in thy fall, I'll see thy weakness try'd,
When I glance, on thee, all thy rays of Pride.
I hate you more, than ev'n my Friend can Love.
A brave revenge inspires my swelling Soul,
While Thoughts of thee in my rais'd Bosom roll.
Be gone, yet Nine, your aid I now refuse,
For, Indignation shall be here my Muse.
Immortal hatred urge me on to think,
And stain thy Name, with everlasting Ink.
My Juster Pen shall Wound your Honour, more
Than e'er it rais'd you, to esteem before.
Gay you appear, where your false Beauties come,
But I shall Rob you of your borrow'd Plume.
My Muse's Wings have soar'd, and born you high,
Blown by my Breath, did the vain bubble fly,
But now I laugh, to see it's glories die.
Tow'ring so lofty, you are giddy grown,
And, of necessity, must tumble down.
Such Fogs of praises have you drawn from all,
In show'rs of Tears the gather'd Mists must fall.
Now, thro' those Clouds, my light'ning fancy flies,
To blast thy Pride, which, when 'tis blasted, dies.
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My Verse shall roll, charg'd with thy Sultry name.
My Hand, now Arm'd, a fatal Pow'r does own,
My Pen's the Thunder-bolt to dash thee down.
My kindling Eyes with Flames so Furious move,
They can't be fancy'd to arise from Love.
My fiercer Satyr cannot so expire,
For, Salamander like, 'tis born, and Lives in Fire.
With waxen Wings to Airy heights you flew,
Which none durst ever yet attempt, but you.
As some skill'd Fowler, who the Lark descrys,
And from his Glass, darts Sun-beams in his Eyes,
Beholds the prey, which he saw Tow'ring, lay'd
In the low Net, which on the ground he spread;
So, in thy fall, I'll see thy weakness try'd,
When I glance, on thee, all thy rays of Pride.
And know, proud she! The Darts your Cupid threw,
Were beardless toys, which my Friend Sporting drew.
Yet still their Poyson swells his Venom'd Mind,
The Hony Passion left a sting behind.
Poor suppliant ways you use with sordid Art,
And Cringe your self, to undermine a Heart.
Yet, there are Nymphs, can with their coldness, move,
More warmth, than you with your feign'd Fires of Love.
Your Flag, all White, does innocent appear,
And the false signs of a surrender bear,
Peace it displays, and wantons with the Air.
But when Besiegers would possess the Town,
You Fire, like thunder, on the Wretches down.
Mean, fawning thing! Who to each Fop would Bow,
And flatter him, that he might flatter you.
Like Popular Knaves, a suppliant Soul you shew,
Cry up the Crowd, to make them Cry up you.
Just so, a Pebble struck on stony ground,
Falls to that place, which makes it higher bound.
'Tis but for praise, you, flatt'ring thing, have Bow'd,
And you are humble that you may be proud.
Thus, when the Cannon's Ball the highest flies,
The Gun bends back, and near the Pavement lies.
But while your baseness, and your Pride I blame,
Your Judgment Justly should be rais'd to Fame.
You know your want of Pow'rful Charms to move,
Your Gold excepted, which Commands our Love.
From Sulph'rous Mines Men still would dig the Oar,
Tho' worse than those, which brought it forth before.
Were beardless toys, which my Friend Sporting drew.
Yet still their Poyson swells his Venom'd Mind,
The Hony Passion left a sting behind.
Poor suppliant ways you use with sordid Art,
And Cringe your self, to undermine a Heart.
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More warmth, than you with your feign'd Fires of Love.
Your Flag, all White, does innocent appear,
And the false signs of a surrender bear,
Peace it displays, and wantons with the Air.
But when Besiegers would possess the Town,
You Fire, like thunder, on the Wretches down.
Mean, fawning thing! Who to each Fop would Bow,
And flatter him, that he might flatter you.
Like Popular Knaves, a suppliant Soul you shew,
Cry up the Crowd, to make them Cry up you.
Just so, a Pebble struck on stony ground,
Falls to that place, which makes it higher bound.
'Tis but for praise, you, flatt'ring thing, have Bow'd,
And you are humble that you may be proud.
Thus, when the Cannon's Ball the highest flies,
The Gun bends back, and near the Pavement lies.
But while your baseness, and your Pride I blame,
Your Judgment Justly should be rais'd to Fame.
You know your want of Pow'rful Charms to move,
Your Gold excepted, which Commands our Love.
From Sulph'rous Mines Men still would dig the Oar,
Tho' worse than those, which brought it forth before.
131
To Dr Gibbons.
Let Gibbons Live, long let Great Gibbons Live,Possest of Health, which he so well can give.
Such strength to sinking Patients you restore,
Scarce Nature's Hand in bounteous Birth gave more.
In Sickness plung'd, like Divers in the Main,
We bring up Health, when we appear again;
Health is the Gemm, which by your Art we find,
Firm in the Body set, and glitt'ring in the Mind.
O Gibbons! Whilst thy Name inspires my Muse,
Thou dost fresh Vigour in her flights infuse.
With Joy she soars to Sing her Patron's praise,
And stretch those Wings, which only you could raise.
Thou gav'st her Life, and whilst she sings thy Name,
Thou giv'st to her, as she to others, Fame.
Fame she returns, given by the Justest Law,
For thou draw'st Fame from every Breath I draw.
What can I give, my gratitude to show?
My Thanks? my Thanks are Poor, my self I owe.
Gen'rous like Heav'n, our Vital heat you give,
And in return, would'st only that we live.
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As if from others Health you drew your own.
O would our God, the Radiant Phæbus shine,
And bless my skill, as he has Cherish'd thine.
Then should thy Art be in my Song Renown'd,
And Verse and Physick should at once be Crown'd.
Then might I Sing the vigour you impart,
But artless Verse can never reach thy Art.
From thee the darkest Black distempers run,
As Shades and Phantoms from the mounting Sun.
Thy Power whole Legions of Diseases fly,
You Cure the Sick, and make the Sickness die.
Nature to thee does all her secrets show,
And all her secrets are improv'd by you.
New Life, new force to Nature you impart,
And Nature's self we find reviv'd by Art.
Wisely to you her choicest seeds she gives,
Nature, who grants all Life, thro' Gibbons Lives.
In vain the Poet boasts Immortal Pow'rs,
Life is Heaven's gift, 'tis only Heaven's, and Yours.
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To a Lady, asking me why I did not apply to Dr. Gibbons to be Cur'd of my Love too.
Phæbus himself, who did the pain endure,In all his Art of Physick found no Cure.
All means I try'd, all means have Fruitless prov'd;
Art only Cures, where Art the Passion mov'd.
Love is like Poyson; by some secret spell,
Poyson does Poyson, Love does Love expel.
But this, ev'n this, should I attempt, were vain;
'Tis Poyson; nay, 'tis Death, and Damning pain,
To think she Lives, and I should Love again.
Love is like Death to me; I will not try,
For I can Love but once, but once can die.
Gibbons has Art, Gibbons has Matchless skill,
Gibbons can save more Lives, than others Kill.
Love's a Disease free from ill-temper'd Air,
And ev'n Great Gibbons self is Artless there.
Life he restor'd, by Neighb'ring Death Annoy'd.
But Life is easier rais'd, than Love Destroy'd.
The cause dies not, till the effect remove,
We know that Life is but the Act of Love.
This too we know from all Conclusions try'd,
Love shall leave me, when you abandon Pride.
134
The Charmer.
Each Love-sick Youth, by partial Passion torn,Thinks that faint Star the brightest Fires adorn,
Beneath whose smiling Reign the Youth was born.
That Planet Clouded, and depriv'd of Light,
He thinks some other, and some other bright.
Amasia thus, shed pointed glories far,
In the first dawn, the Poet's Morning Star.
Yet still new Beams her Charming aspect wears,
Daily ador'd twice six long rolling Years.
First in Hibernia was the Nymph admir'd,
There first her Charms the ravisht Sylvius Fir'd.
Blest Gallia now is with her influence Crown'd,
Not shining still on his sad, Native ground,
What he thought fixt, a wand'ring Star is found.
Tho' long remov'd from my deluded Eyes,
She seems the brightest Planet of the skies,
In France she sets, nor must in Brittain rise.
Whilst Lov'd Amasia's Charms the Poet Sings,
He speaks, admiring Subsolary things.
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Here, none compares, Grafton is Beauty's Sun.
If to her Face our Sick'ning Eyes we move,
Blind grows all Admiration, Blind as Love.
Sight, not Immortal, should not rashly dare
To tempt that Lustrous view it cannot bear.
Conscious of Fires, which by Reflection warm,
I stand at distance, and perceive the Charm.
View Grafton's Face reflected by her Fame,
As Men view Phæbus in the Silver Stream.
This bliss, in pity to our weakness giv'n,
We view the Sun, but gaze not at the Heaven.
Next her, immediate, Shall Amasia shine
In every dazzled sight, as well as mine.
While Grafton's self, first shall the Throne maintain,
Let her, the fairest Fair Vicegerent Reign.
The Poet's Venus, whom his Muse has Sung,
Not from the Sea, but from a Deluge Sprung.
Greatly deriv'd, the Beauteous Charmer Flow'd
From a long line of Royal, old Hibernian Blood.
Her Country delug'd in a fatal War,
Her House's Ark tost on rude Billows far.
Succeeding Wars, to me more fatal bred;
From the curs'd Land this fair Astræa fled.
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The Fruitful Gallia is her Empire now.
Her Eyes their Souls at once inspire and awe,
Imperial grown, spight of their Salick Law.
O'er Spacious France her shining Scepter's hurl'd,
She Reigns o'er France and me, but Grafton o'er the World.
The Vision of the MUSE.
Tell me, false Muse! What Joys can we propose
When Wit, and Fortune, are such Mortal Foes?
All that the most inspir'd can hope to find,
Is to Charm Nymphs, to sordid int'rest Blind.
Whilst others rise, by every vulgar skill;
But only Poets, must be Poets still.
Forgive me, Muse, for I must needs complain;
Sure there's some Pleasure in indulging Pain.
Loe! Where she comes; behold! Unusual bright,
And Flashes on me, with a Flood of Light.
From open'd Heav'n she Posts, and in the sky,
A Train of glitt'ring Thoughts behind her fly.
So when a Comet ceases to appear,
A Thousand little Glories gild the Air.
Ah! I repent; my weak resolves are gone,
The Muse has now put Heav'nly Beauties on.
See, on a Rain-Bow, seated all Divine,
The Angel-Muse in Native Lustre shine.
I can't the Genius of my Soul refuse,
Welcome, O ever welcome, Heaven-Sprung Muse!
Hark, I am Charm'd, she strikes her lyre, and Sings,
See how her Fingers beat the Dancing Strings,
She Tunes, to mighty Heroes, mighty things.
But, loe! She calls me—loe! I mount thro' Air,
Fly to her stand, and am already there.
Most gracious Muse—
When Wit, and Fortune, are such Mortal Foes?
All that the most inspir'd can hope to find,
Is to Charm Nymphs, to sordid int'rest Blind.
Whilst others rise, by every vulgar skill;
But only Poets, must be Poets still.
Forgive me, Muse, for I must needs complain;
Sure there's some Pleasure in indulging Pain.
Loe! Where she comes; behold! Unusual bright,
And Flashes on me, with a Flood of Light.
From open'd Heav'n she Posts, and in the sky,
A Train of glitt'ring Thoughts behind her fly.
137
A Thousand little Glories gild the Air.
Ah! I repent; my weak resolves are gone,
The Muse has now put Heav'nly Beauties on.
See, on a Rain-Bow, seated all Divine,
The Angel-Muse in Native Lustre shine.
I can't the Genius of my Soul refuse,
Welcome, O ever welcome, Heaven-Sprung Muse!
Hark, I am Charm'd, she strikes her lyre, and Sings,
See how her Fingers beat the Dancing Strings,
She Tunes, to mighty Heroes, mighty things.
But, loe! She calls me—loe! I mount thro' Air,
Fly to her stand, and am already there.
Most gracious Muse—
—Rise my Repentant Son,
'Tis done, thy Fate is fixt, 'tis done, 'tis done.
I Pardon all thy mean distrusts, and fears,
Forget the past, no room for new appears.
Thy gen'rous Patron shall at length be free,
From Pompous business, and provide for thee.
Tho' 'tis the Radiant God's to drive the day,
He gilds those Clouds, which wait him in the way.
What can you doubt! He now affords a Theme,
Should wing each Muse, and fire the Sons of Fame.
But here to praise, excels the Poet's skill,
'Tis beyond thought he should grow greater still.
Not unsuccessful was thy latest flight,
But now, my Son, soar to a nobler height.
Sincere, thy grief did his lost Charmer mourn,
Whose Hearse the Laureat did more rich adorn,
Whilst all his willing Wreaths to Cypress turn.
For a lost Wife with Plaints you fill'd the plain,
But now the Hero is espous'd again.
He weds Religion with Immortal Joy,
A Virgin still, still Chast, yet never Coy.
Ambrosial, Balmy, sweets bedew her Wings,
And in great Dowry, the whole Heavens she brings.
Yet, with such Zeal, he makes his Passion known,
He seems to Court her, for her self alone.
O what can equal such exalted State!
So great a Hero!—Yet as good as great!
Well has his Sword made haughty Armies Bow,
Well has he Conquer'd, for he Triumphs now.
Still next his leading Monarch firm he stood,
In things not only great, but greatly good.
Now, with Ambitious Zeal, himself would head,
And ev'n by Nassau, cannot here be led.
Heav'n still the cause, they fought for, did maintain,
And William, ever glorious in his Reign,
With his best chief, espouses Heaven again.
Here praise, my Son, for here all praise is due,
Their glory flies, where never Mortal's flew.
Extol him far—far, as my Wings can soar,
Give almost all to him, to Nassau only, more.
Thus, as thy Fate has fixt, thy Fortune lies,
Assume thou sacred Fires, but dare, and rise.
When Heaven and Nassau raises, who can fall!
And both, with gen'rous Zeal, would Cherish all.
To Camps, to glorious Camps prepare to flee,
Fir'd by thy Patron's Actions may'st thou be,
And grow—
As Godlike great, if possible, as he.
'Tis done, thy Fate is fixt, 'tis done, 'tis done.
I Pardon all thy mean distrusts, and fears,
Forget the past, no room for new appears.
Thy gen'rous Patron shall at length be free,
From Pompous business, and provide for thee.
Tho' 'tis the Radiant God's to drive the day,
He gilds those Clouds, which wait him in the way.
138
Should wing each Muse, and fire the Sons of Fame.
But here to praise, excels the Poet's skill,
'Tis beyond thought he should grow greater still.
Not unsuccessful was thy latest flight,
But now, my Son, soar to a nobler height.
Sincere, thy grief did his lost Charmer mourn,
Whose Hearse the Laureat did more rich adorn,
Whilst all his willing Wreaths to Cypress turn.
For a lost Wife with Plaints you fill'd the plain,
But now the Hero is espous'd again.
He weds Religion with Immortal Joy,
A Virgin still, still Chast, yet never Coy.
Ambrosial, Balmy, sweets bedew her Wings,
And in great Dowry, the whole Heavens she brings.
Yet, with such Zeal, he makes his Passion known,
He seems to Court her, for her self alone.
O what can equal such exalted State!
So great a Hero!—Yet as good as great!
Well has his Sword made haughty Armies Bow,
Well has he Conquer'd, for he Triumphs now.
Still next his leading Monarch firm he stood,
In things not only great, but greatly good.
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And ev'n by Nassau, cannot here be led.
Heav'n still the cause, they fought for, did maintain,
And William, ever glorious in his Reign,
With his best chief, espouses Heaven again.
Here praise, my Son, for here all praise is due,
Their glory flies, where never Mortal's flew.
Extol him far—far, as my Wings can soar,
Give almost all to him, to Nassau only, more.
Thus, as thy Fate has fixt, thy Fortune lies,
Assume thou sacred Fires, but dare, and rise.
When Heaven and Nassau raises, who can fall!
And both, with gen'rous Zeal, would Cherish all.
To Camps, to glorious Camps prepare to flee,
Fir'd by thy Patron's Actions may'st thou be,
And grow—
As Godlike great, if possible, as he.
The End of the Second Book.
Amasia, or, The Works of the Muses | ||