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Poems on Several Occasions

With some Select Essays in Prose. In Two Volumes. By John Hughes; Adorn'd with Sculptures

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TO MOLINDA.
  
  
  
  
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TO MOLINDA.

Th' inspiring Muses and the God of Love,
Which most shou'd grace the fair Molinda strove;
Love arm'd her with his Bow and keenest Darts,
The Muses more enrich'd her Mind with Arts.
Tho' Greece in shining Temples heretofore
Did Venus and Minerva's Pow'rs adore,
The Antients thought no single Goddess fit
To reign at once o'er Beauty and o'er Wit;
Each was a separate Claim; till now we find
The different Titles in Molinda join'd.
From hence, when at the Court, the Park, the Play,
She gilds the Evening, or improves the Day,
All Eyes regard her with transporting Fire,
One Sex with Envy burns, and one with fierce Desire:
But when, withdrawn from Publick Show and Noise,
In silent Works her Fancy she employs,

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A smiling Train of Arts around her stand,
And court Improvement from her curious Hand.
She, their bright Patroness, o'er all presides,
And with like Skill the Pen and Needle guides;
By this we see gay silken Landskips wrought,
By that the Landskip of a beauteous Thought:
Whether her Voice in tuneful Airs she moves,
Or cuts dissembled Flow'rs and paper Groves,
Her Voice transports the Ear with soft Delight,
Her Flow'rs and Groves surprize the ravish'd Sight;
Which e'en to Nature's Wonders we prefer,
All but that Wonder Nature form'd in Her.