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 I. 
ODE I. TO LEISURE.
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165

ODE I. TO LEISURE.

Gentle Leisure, whom of yore
To Wealth the fair Contentment bore,
When Peace with them her dwelling made,
And Health her kind attendance paid;
As wandering o'er the sunny plains
They fed their herds and fleecy trains:—
O Thou! who country scenes and air
Preferr'st to courts and crowds and care;
With Thee I've often pass'd the day,
To Thee I wake the grateful lay.
With Thee on Chadwell's thymy brow ,
Beneath the hazel's bending bough,

166

I've sat to breathe the fragrance cool
Exhaling from the glassy pool;
Where, thro' th' unsullied chrystal seen,
The bottom show'd its shining green:
As, all-attentive, these I view'd,
And many a pleasing thought pursued,
Whate'er of pleasure they bestow'd,
Still I to Thee that pleasure ow'd!
With Thee, on Mussla's corn-clad height
The landscape oft has charm'd my sight;
Delightful hills, and vales and woods,
And dusty roads, and winding floods;
And towns, that thro' thin groups of shade
Their roofs of varied form display'd:
As, all-attentive, these I view'd,
And many a pleasing thought pursued,
Whate'er of pleasure they bestow'd,
Still I to Thee that pleasure ow'd!

167

With Thee, where Easna's hornbeam-grove
Its foliage o'er me interwove,
Along the lonely path I've stray'd,
By banks in hoary moss array'd;
Where tufts of azure orpine grew,
And branchy fern of brighter hue:
As, all-attentive, these I view'd,
And many a pleasing thought pursued,
Whate'er of pleasure they bestow'd,
Still I to Thee that pleasure ow'd!
With Thee, by Stansted's farms inclos'd,
With aged elms in rows dispos'd;
Or where her chapel's walls appear,
The silver winding river near,
Beneath the broad-leav'd sycamore,
I've linger'd on the shady shore:

168

As, all-attentive, these I view'd,
And many a pleasing thought pursued,
Whate'er of pleasure they bestow'd,
Still I to Thee that pleasure ow'd!
With Thee, where Thames his waters leads
Round Poplar's Isle of verdant meads,
Along the undulating tide,
I've seen the white-sail'd vessels glide;
Or gaz'd on London's lofty towers,
Or Dulwich hills, or Greenwich bowers:
As, all-attentive, these I view'd,
And many a pleasing thought pursued,
Whate'er of pleasure they bestow'd,
Still I to Thee that pleasure ow'd!
O gentle Leisure!—absent long—
I woo thee with this tuneful song:

169

If e'er, allur'd by grateful change,
O'er scenes yet unbeheld I range,
And Albion's east or western shore
For rural solitudes explore:
As, all-attentive, these I view,
And many a pleasing thought pursue,
Whate'er of pleasure they bestow,
To Thee that pleasure I must owe!
 

Chadwell: The New River Head, near Ware.

Mussla: a hill on the north side of Ware.

Easna: a pleasant wood, east of Ware.

Stansted: a village in the same neighbourhood.

Poplar's Isle; commonly called The Isle of Dogs, opposite Greenwich.