Miscellanies in Prose and Verse By Mrs. Catherine Jemmat |
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A FRAGMENT, from a polite Poetical Assembly.
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![]() | Miscellanies in Prose and Verse | ![]() |
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A FRAGMENT, from a polite Poetical Assembly.
To make the villa more delightful,
Planted has been a pleasant grove;
Let then the envious and the spiteful,
Shew less of hatred, more of love.
Planted has been a pleasant grove;
Let then the envious and the spiteful,
Shew less of hatred, more of love.
There both Apollo and the nine,
And nymphs and swains, their charms display;
Cameleon-like, together dine,
And drink and sing, and nothing pay.
And nymphs and swains, their charms display;
Cameleon-like, together dine,
And drink and sing, and nothing pay.
Such is the sweet refreshing air,
And such the Heliconian spring,
That all are welcome, who repair,
To share kind nature's offering.
And such the Heliconian spring,
That all are welcome, who repair,
To share kind nature's offering.
![]() | Miscellanies in Prose and Verse | ![]() |