Poems on Several Occasions By Mary Masters |
An Imitation of a Poem in Dryden's Collections, entitled Anacreontick.
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Poems on Several Occasions | ||
An Imitation of a Poem in Dryden's Collections, entitled Anacreontick.
Beneath a thick and silent Shade,
That seem'd for sweet Devotion made,
In holy Rapture stretch'd along,
(Urania by to aid my Song)
I tun'd my Voice, and touch'd the Lyre,
While heav'nly Themes the Muse inspire:
I sung the Beauties of the Grove,
I sung th' Almighty Pow'r above.
But, striving more my Notes to raise,
And to my Subject suit my Lays;
A String, o'er strain'd, in Pieces flew,
And sudden from its Place withdrew.
Under my Hand the Chord I found,
But lost, alas! the sprightly Sound.
That seem'd for sweet Devotion made,
In holy Rapture stretch'd along,
(Urania by to aid my Song)
I tun'd my Voice, and touch'd the Lyre,
While heav'nly Themes the Muse inspire:
I sung the Beauties of the Grove,
I sung th' Almighty Pow'r above.
But, striving more my Notes to raise,
And to my Subject suit my Lays;
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And sudden from its Place withdrew.
Under my Hand the Chord I found,
But lost, alas! the sprightly Sound.
So, pierc'd by Death's relentless Dart
We view the lifeless, earthly Part.
The Soul invisible takes wing,
As Sound that leaves the breaking String.
We view the lifeless, earthly Part.
The Soul invisible takes wing,
As Sound that leaves the breaking String.
Poems on Several Occasions | ||