The Life and Poetical Works of James Woodhouse (1735-1820): Edited by the Rev. R. I. Woodhouse |
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| The Life and Poetical Works of James Woodhouse | ||
ODE TO APOLLO.
What, while my best oblations thus I pay,Shall I request? great God of verse and day!
Not all the golden grain Britannia yields,
Or fleecy flocks that throng her fertile fields;
Not meeds and villas washed by silver Thames,
Or endless wealth that loads his smiling streams:
Let fortune's fav'rites prune their subject vines,
Let merchants quaff in gold the gen'rous wines,
While prospering Gods each wealthy bark sustain,
That frequent plows the wide Atlantic main:
Me, herbs and fruits and simple viands please;
O grant, Latona's son! O grant me Ease,
Content and Health—an ever-tuneful lyre—
Rever'd old age—these bound my full desire.
| The Life and Poetical Works of James Woodhouse | ||