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The Poetical Works of Addison; Gay's Fables; and Somerville's Chase / With Memoirs and Critical Dissertations, by the Rev. George Gilfillan cover

The Poetical Works of Addison; Gay's Fables; and Somerville's Chase / With Memoirs and Critical Dissertations, by the Rev. George Gilfillan

Chapter 12: CHORUS.
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About This Book

This volume gathers poems by Joseph Addison, a series of animal fables by John Gay, and a long chase-poem by William Somerville, accompanied by memoirs and critical dissertations by George Gilfillan. Addison's contributions range from occasional pieces, odes, translations of Latin classics, and dramatic prologues and epilogues that blend neoclassical forms with moral reflection. Gay's fables present brief allegorical tales using animals to illustrate human follies and social lessons. Somerville's chase offers an extended descriptive narrative of a hunt. The editorial apparatus provides biographical sketching and critical commentary situating the pieces within stylistic and thematic traditions.

  And draw the reader on from sea to sea?
_180
  Else who could Ormond's godlike acts refuse,
  Ormond the theme of every Oxford Muse?
  Fain would I here his mighty worth proclaim,
  Attend him in the noble chase of fame,
  Through all the noise and hurry of the fight,
  Observe each blow, and keep him still in sight.
  Oh, did our British peers thus court renown,
  And grace the coats their great forefathers won,
  Our arms would then triumphantly advance,
  Nor Henry be the last that conquered France!
_190
  What might not England hope, if such abroad
  Purchased their country's honour with their blood:
  When such, detained at home, support our state
  In William's stead, and bear a kingdom's weight,
  The schemes of Gallic policy o'erthrow,
  And blast the counsels of the common foe;
  Direct our armies, and distribute right,
  And render our Maria's loss more light.
     But stop, my Muse, the ungrateful sound forbear,
  Maria's name still wounds each British ear:
_200
  Each British heart Maria still does wound,
  And tears burst out unbidden at the sound;
  Maria still our rising mirth destroys,
  Darkens our triumphs, and forbids our joys.
     But see, at length, the British ships appear!
  Our Nassau comes! and, as his fleet draws near,
  The rising masts advance, the sails grow white,
  And all his pompous navy floats in sight.
  Come, mighty prince, desired of Britain, come!
  May heaven's propitious gales attend thee home!
_210
  Come, and let longing crowds behold that look
  Which such confusion and amazement strook
  Through Gallic hosts: but, oh! let us descry
  Mirth in thy brow, and pleasure in thy eye;
  Let nothing dreadful in thy face be found;
  But for awhile forget the trumpet's sound;
  Well-pleased, thy people's loyalty approve,
  Accept their duty, and enjoy their love.
  For as, when lately moved with fierce delight,
  You plunged amidst the tumult of the fight,
_220
  Whole heaps of dead encompassed you around,
  And steeds o'erturned lay foaming on the ground:
  So crowned with laurels now, where'er you go,
  Around you blooming joys and peaceful blessings flow.

A TRANSLATION OF ALL

VIRGIL'S FOURTH GEORGIC,
EXCEPT THE STORY OF ARISTÆUS.

  Ethereal sweets shall next my Muse engage,
  And this, Maecenas, claims your patronage.
  Of little creatures' wondrous acts I treat,
  The ranks and mighty leaders of their state,
  Their laws, employments, and their wars relate.
  A trifling theme provokes my humble lays.
  Trifling the theme, not so the poet's praise,
  If great Apollo and the tuneful Nine
     First, for your bees a proper station find,
_10
  That's fenced about, and sheltered from the wind;
  For winds divert them in their flight, and drive
  The swarms, when loaden homeward, from their hive.
  Nor sheep, nor goats, must pasture near their stores,
  To trample underfoot the springing flowers;
  Nor frisking heifers bound about the place,
  To spurn the dew-drops off, and bruise the rising grass;
  Nor must the lizard's painted brood appear,
  Nor wood-pecks, nor the swallow, harbour near.
  They waste the swarms, and, as they fly along,
_20
  Convey the tender morsels to their young.
     Let purling streams, and fountains edged with moss,
  And shallow rills run trickling through the grass;
  Let branching olives o'er the fountain grow;
  Or palms shoot up, and shade the streams below;
  That when the youth, led by their princes, shun
  The crowded hive and sport it in the sun,
  Refreshing springs may tempt them from the heat,
  And shady coverts yield a cool retreat.
     Whether the neighbouring water stands or runs,
_30
  Lay twigs across and bridge it o'er with stones
  That if rough storms, or sudden blasts of wind,
  Should dip or scatter those that lag behind,
  Here they may settle on the friendly stone,
  And dry their reeking pinions at the sun.
  Plant all the flowery banks with lavender,
  With store of savory scent the fragrant air;
  Let running betony the field o'erspread,
  And fountains soak the violet's dewy bed.
     Though barks or plaited willows make your hive,
_40
  A narrow inlet to their cells contrive;
  For colds congeal and freeze the liquors up,
  And, melted down with heat, the waxen buildings drop.
  The bees, of both extremes alike afraid,
  Their wax around the whistling crannies spread,
  And suck out clammy dews from herbs and flowers,
  To smear the chinks, and plaster up the pores;
  For this they hoard up glue, whose clinging drops,
  Like pitch or bird-lime, hang in stringy ropes.
  They oft, 'tis said, in dark retirements dwell,
_50
  And work in subterraneous caves their cell;
  At other times the industrious insects live
  In hollow rocks, or make a tree their hive.
     Point all their chinky lodgings round with mud,
  And leaves must thinly on your work be strow'd;
  But let no baleful yew-tree flourish near,
  Nor rotten marshes send out steams of mire;
  Nor burning crabs grow red, and crackle in the fire:
  Nor neighbouring caves return the dying sound,
  Nor echoing rocks the doubled voice rebound.
_60
  Things thus prepared——
  When the under-world is seized with cold and night,
  And summer here descends in streams of light,
  The bees through woods and forests take their flight.
  They rifle every flower, and lightly skim
  The crystal brook, and sip the running stream;
  And thus they feed their young with strange delight,
  And knead the yielding wax, and work the slimy sweet.
  But when on high you see the bees repair,
  Borne on the winds through distant tracts of air,
_70
  And view the winged cloud all blackening from afar;
  While shady coverts and fresh streams they choose,
  Milfoil and common honeysuckles bruise,
  And sprinkle on their hives the fragrant juice.
  On brazen vessels beat a tinkling sound,
  And shake the cymbals of the goddess round;
  Then all will hastily retreat, and fill
  The warm resounding hollow of their cell.
     If once two rival kings their right debate,
  And factions and cabals embroil the state,
_80
  The people's actions will their thoughts declare;
  All their hearts tremble, and beat thick with war;
  Hoarse, broken sounds, like trumpets' harsh alarms,
  Run through the hive, and call them to their arms;
  All in a hurry spread their shivering wings,
  And fit their claws, and point their angry stings:
  In crowds before the king's pavilion meet,
  And boldly challenge out the foe to fight:
  At last, when all the heavens are warm and fair,
  They rush together out, and join; the air
_90
  Swarms thick, and echoes with the humming war.
  All in a firm round cluster mix, and strow
  With heaps of little corps the earth below,
  As thick as hailstones from the floor rebound,
  Or shaken acorns rattle on the ground.
  No sense of danger can their kings control,
  Their little bodies lodge a mighty soul:
  Each obstinate in arms pursues his blow,
  Till shameful flight secures the routed foe.
  This hot dispute and all this mighty fray
_100
  A little dust flung upward will allay.
     But when both kings are settled in their hive,
  Mark him who looks the worst, and, lest he live
  Idle at home in ease and luxury,
  The lazy monarch must be doomed to die;
  So let the royal insect rule alone,
  And reign without a rival in his throne.
     The kings are different; one of better note,
  All speck'd with gold, and many a shining spot,
  Looks gay, and glistens in a gilded coat;
_110
  But love of ease, and sloth, in one prevails,
  That scarce his hanging paunch behind him trails:
  The people's looks are different as their kings',
  Some sparkle bright, and glitter in their wings;
  Others look loathsome and diseased with sloth,
  Like a faint traveller, whose dusty mouth
  Grows dry with heat, and spits a mawkish froth.
  The first are best——
  From their o'erflowing combs you'll often press
  Pure luscious sweets, that mingling in the glass
_120
  Correct the harshness of the racy juice,
  And a rich flavour through the wine diffuse.
  But when they sport abroad, and rove from home,
  And leave the cooling hive, and quit the unfinished comb,
  Their airy ramblings are with ease confined,
  Clip their king's wings, and if they stay behind
  No bold usurper dares invade their right,
  Nor sound a march, nor give the sign for flight.
  Let flowery banks entice them to their cells,
  And gardens all perfumed with native smells;
_130
  Where carved Priapus has his fixed abode,
  The robber's terror, and the scarecrow god.
  Wild thyme and pine-trees from their barren hill
  Transplant, and nurse them in the neighbouring soil,
  Set fruit-trees round, nor e'er indulge thy sloth,
  But water them, and urge their shady growth.
     And here, perhaps, were not I giving o'er,
  And striking sail, and making to the shore,
  I'd show what art the gardener's toils require,
  Why rosy pæstum blushes twice a year;
_140
  What streams the verdant succory supply,
  And how the thirsty plant drinks rivers dry;
  With what a cheerful green does parsley grace,
  And writhes the bellying cucumber along the twisted grass;
  Nor would I pass the soft acanthus o'er,
  Ivy nor myrtle-trees that love the shore;
  Nor daffodils, that late from earth's slow womb
  Unrumple their swoln buds, and show their yellow bloom.
     For once I saw in the Tarentine vale,
  Where slow Galesus drenched the washy soil,
_150
  An old Corician yeoman, who had got
  A few neglected acres to his lot,
  Where neither corn nor pasture graced the field,
  Nor would the vine her purple harvest yield;
  But savoury herbs among the thorns were found,
  Vervain and poppy-flowers his garden crown'd,
  And drooping lilies whitened all the ground.
  Blest with these riches he could empires slight,
  And when he rested from his toils at night,
  The earth unpurchased dainties would afford,
_160
  And his own garden furnished out his board:
  The spring did first his opening roses blow,
  First ripening autumn bent his fruitful bough.
  When piercing colds had burst the brittle stone,
  And freezing rivers stiffened as they run,
  He then would prune the tenderest of his trees,
  Chide the late spring, and lingering western breeze:
  His bees first swarmed, and made his vessels foam
  With the rich squeezing of the juicy comb.
  Here lindens and the sappy pine increased;
_170
  Here, when gay flowers his smiling orchard dressed,
  As many blossoms as the spring could show,
  So many dangling apples mellowed on the bough.
  In rows his elms and knotty pear-trees bloom,
  And thorns ennobled now to bear a plum,
  And spreading plane-trees, where, supinely laid,
  He now enjoys the cool, and quaffs beneath the shade.
  But these for want of room I must omit,
  And leave for future poets to recite.
     Now I'll proceed their natures to declare,
_180
  Which Jove himself did on the bees confer
  Because, invited by the timbrel's sound,
  Lodged in a cave, the almighty babe they found,
  And the young god nursed kindly under-ground.
     Of all the winged inhabitants of air,
  These only make their young the public care;
  In well-disposed societies they live,
  And laws and statutes regulate their hive;
  Nor stray like others unconfined abroad,
  But know set stations, and a fixed abode:
_190
  Each provident of cold in summer flies
  Through fields and woods, to seek for new supplies,
  And in the common stock unlades his thighs.
  Some watch the food, some in the meadows ply,
  Taste every bud, and suck each blossom dry;
  Whilst others, labouring in their cells at home,
  Temper Narcissus' clammy tears with gum,
  For the first groundwork of the golden comb;
  On this they found their waxen works, and raise
  The yellow fabric on its gluey base.
_200
  Some educate the young, or hatch the seed
  With vital warmth, and future nations breed;
  Whilst others thicken all the slimy dews,
  And into purest honey work the juice;
  Then fill the hollows of the comb, and swell
  With luscious nectar every flowing cell.
  By turns they watch, by turns with curious eyes
  Survey the heavens, and search the clouded skies,
  To find out breeding storms, and tell what tempests rise.
  By turns they ease the loaden swarms, or drive
_210
  The drone, a lazy insect, from their hive.
  The work is warmly plied through all the cells,
  And strong with thyme the new-made honey smells.
     So in their caves the brawny Cyclops sweat,
  When with huge strokes the stubborn wedge they beat,
  And all the unshapen thunderbolt complete;
  Alternately their hammers rise and fall;
  Whilst griping tongs turn round the glowing ball.
  With puffing bellows some the flames increase,
  And some in waters dip the hissing mass;
_220
  Their beaten anvils dreadfully resound,
  And Ætna shakes all o'er, and thunders under-ground.
     Thus, if great things we may with small compare,
  The busy swarms their different labours share.
  Desire of profit urges all degrees;
  The aged insects, by experience wise,
  Attend the comb, and fashion every part,
  And shape the waxen fret-work out with art:
  The young at night, returning from their toils,
  Bring home their thighs clogged with the meadows' spoils.
_230
  On lavender and saffron buds they feed,
  On bending osiers and the balmy reed,
  From purple violets and the teile they bring
  Their gathered sweets, and rifle all the spring.
     All work together, all together rest,
  The morning still renews their labours past;
  Then all rush out, their different tasks pursue,
  Sit on the bloom, and suck the ripening dew;
  Again, when evening warns them to their home,
  With weary wings and heavy thighs they come,
_240
  And crowd about the chink, and mix a drowsy hum.
  Into their cells at length they gently creep,
  There all the night their peaceful station keep,
  Wrapt up in silence, and dissolved in sleep.
  None range abroad when winds and storms are nigh,
  Nor trust their bodies to a faithless sky,
  But make small journeys with a careful wing,
  And fly to water at a neighbouring spring;
  And lest their airy bodies should be cast
  In restless whirls, the sport of every blast,
_250
  They carry stones to poise them in their flight,
  As ballast keeps the unsteady vessel right.
     But, of all customs that the bees can boast,
  'Tis this may challenge admiration most;
  That none will Hymen's softer joys approve,
  Nor waste their spirits in luxurious love,
  But all a long virginity maintain,
  And bring forth young without a mother's pain:
  From herbs and flowers they pick each tender bee,
  And cull from plants a buzzing progeny;
_260
  From these they choose out subjects, and create
  A little monarch of the rising state;
  Then build wax kingdoms for the infant prince,
  And form a palace for his residence.
     But often in their journeys, as they fly,
  On flints they tear their silken wings, or lie
  Grovelling beneath their flowery load, and die.
  Thus love of honey can an insect fire,
  And in a fly such generous thoughts inspire.
  Yet by repeopling their decaying state,
_270
  Though seven short springs conclude their vital date,
  Their ancient stocks eternally remain,
  And in an endless race their children's children reign.
     No prostrate vassal of the East can more
  With slavish fear his haughty prince adore;
  His life unites them all; but, when he dies,
  All in loud tumults and distractions rise;
  They waste their honey and their combs deface,
  And wild confusion reigns in every place.
  Him all admire, all the great guardian own,
_280
  And crowd about his courts, and buzz about his throne.
  Oft on their backs their weary prince they bear,
  Oft in his cause, embattled in the air,
  Pursue a glorious death, in wounds and war.
     Some, from such instances as these, have taught,
  'The bees' extract is heavenly; for they thought
  The universe alive; and that a soul,
  Diffused throughout the matter of the whole,
  To all the vast unbounded frame was given,
  And ran through earth, and air, and sea, and all the deep of heaven;
_290
  That this first kindled life in man and beast,
  Life, that again flows into this at last.
  That no compounded animal could die,
  But when dissolved, the spirit mounted high,
  Dwelt in a star, and settled in the sky.'
     Whene'er their balmy sweets you mean to seize,
  And take the liquid labours of the bees,
  Spurt draughts of water from your mouth, and drive
  A loathsome cloud of smoke amidst their hive,
     Twice in the year their flowery toils begin,
_300
  And twice they fetch their dewy harvest in;
  Once, when the lovely Pleiades arise,
  And add fresh lustre to the summer skies;
  And once, when hastening from the watery sign,
  They quit their station, and forbear to shine.
     The bees are prone to rage, and often found
  To perish for revenge, and die upon the wound
  Their venomed sting produces aching pains,
  And swells the flesh, and shoots among the veins.
  When first a cold hard winter's storms arrive,
_310
  And threaten death or famine to their hive,
  If now their sinking state and low affairs
  Can move your pity, and provoke your cares,
  Fresh burning thyme before their cells convey,
  And cut their dry and husky wax away;
  For often lizards seize the luscious spoils,
  Or drones, that riot on another's toils:
  Oft broods of moths infest the hungry swarms,
  And oft the furious wasp their hive alarms
  With louder hums, and with unequal arms;
_320
  Or else the spider at their entrance sets.
  Her snares, and spins her bowels into nets.
     When sickness reigns, for they as well as we
  Feel all the effects of frail mortality,
  By certain marks the new disease is seen,
  Their colour changes, and their looks are thin;
  Their funeral rites are formed, and every bee
  With grief attends the sad solemnity;
  The few diseased survivors hang before
  Their sickly cells, and droop about the door,
_330
  Or slowly in their hives their limbs unfold,
  Shrunk up with hunger, and benumbed with cold;
  In drawling hums the feeble insects grieve,
  And doleful buzzes echo through the hive,
  Like winds that softly murmur through the trees,
  Like flames pent up, or like retiring seas.
  Now lay fresh honey near their empty rooms,
  In troughs of hollow reeds, whilst frying gums
  Cast round a fragrant mist of spicy fumes.
  Thus kindly tempt the famished swarm to eat,
_340
  And gently reconcile them to their meat.
  Mix juice of galls, and wine, that grow in time
  Condensed by fire, and thicken to a slime;
  To these, dried roses, thyme, and ccntaury join,
  And raisins, ripened on the Psythian vine.
     Besides, there grows a flower in marshy ground,
  Its name amellus, easy to be found;
  A mighty spring works in its root, and cleaves
  The sprouting stalk, and shows itself in leaves:
  The flower itself is of a golden hue,
_350
  The leaves inclining to a darker blue;
  The leaves shoot thick about the flower, and grow
  Into a bush, and shade the turf below:
  The plant in holy garlands often twines
  The altars' posts, and beautifies the shrines;
  Its taste is sharp, in vales new-shorn it grows,
  Where Mella's stream in watery mazes flows.
  Take plenty of its roots, and boil them well
  In wine, and heap them up before the cell.
     But if the whole stock fail, and none survive;
_360
  To raise new people, and recruit the hive,
  I'll here the great experiment declare,
  That spread the Arcadian shepherd's name so far.
  How bees from blood of slaughtered bulls have fled,
  And swarms amidst the red corruption bred.
     For where the Egyptians yearly see their bounds
  Refreshed with floods, and sail about their grounds,
  Where Persia borders, and the rolling Nile
  Drives swiftly down the swarthy Indian's soil,
  Till into seven it multiplies its stream,
_370
  And fattens Egypt with a fruitful slime:
  In this last practice all their hope remains,
  And long experience justifies their pains.
     First, then, a close contracted space of ground,
  With straitened walls and low-built roof, they found;
  A narrow shelving light is next assign'd
  To all the quarters, one to every wind;
  Through these the glancing rays obliquely pierce:
  Hither they lead a bull that's young and fierce,
  When two years' growth of horn he proudly shows,
_380
  And shakes the comely terrors of his brows:
  His nose and mouth, the avenues of breath,
  They muzzle up, and beat his limbs to death;
  With violence to life and stifling pain
  He flings and spurns, and tries to snort in vain,
  Loud heavy blows fall thick on every side,
  Till his bruised bowels burst within the hide;
  When dead, they leave him rotting on the ground,
  With branches, thyme, and cassia, strowed around.
  All this is done, when first the western breeze
_390
  Becalms the year, and smooths the troubled seas;
  Before the chattering swallow builds her nest,
  Or fields in spring's embroidery are dress'd.
  Meanwhile the tainted juice ferments within,
  And quickens as its works: and now are seen
  A wondrous swarm, that o'er the carcase crawls,
  Of shapeless, rude, unfinished animals.
  No legs at first the insect's weight sustain,
  At length it moves its new-made limbs with pain;
  Now strikes the air with quivering wings, and tries
_400
  To lift its body up, and learns to rise;
  Now bending thighs and gilded wings it wears
  Full grown, and all the bee at length appears;
  From every side the fruitful carcase pours
  Its swarming brood, as thick as summer showers,
  Or flights of arrows from the Parthian bows,
  When twanging strings first shoot them on the foes.
     Thus have I sung the nature of the bee;
  While Cæsar, towering to divinity,
  The frighted Indians with his thunder awed,
_410
  And claimed their homage, and commenced a god;
  I flourished all the while in arts of peace,
  Retired and sheltered in inglorious ease;
  I who before the songs of shepherds made,
  When gay and young my rural lays I play'd,
  And set my Tityrus beneath his shade.

A SONG FOR ST CECILIA'S DAY,

AT OXFORD.
I.

        Cecilia, whose exalted hymns
           With joy and wonder fill the blest,
        In choirs of warbling seraphims,
           Known and distinguished from the rest,
        Attend, harmonious saint, and see
        Thy vocal sons of harmony;
  Attend, harmonious saint, and hear our prayers;
           Enliven all our earthly airs,
  And, as thou sing'st thy God, teach us to sing of thee;
           Tune every string and every tongue,
        Be thou the Muse and subject of our song.

II.

        Let all Cecilia's praise proclaim,
        Employ the echo in her name,
        Hark how the flutes and trumpets raise,
        At bright Cecilia's name, their lays;
        The organ labours in her praise.
  Cecilia's name does all our numbers grace,
      From every voice the tuneful accents fly,
      In soaring trebles now it rises high,
  And now it sinks, and dwells upon the base.
      Cecilia's name through all the notes we sing,
          The work of every skilful tongue,
          The sound of every trembling string,
          The sound and triumph of our song.

III.

          For ever consecrate the day,
          To music and Cecilia;
      Music, the greatest good that mortals know,
      And all of heaven we have below.
         Music can noble hints impart,
  Engender fury, kindle love;
  With unsuspected eloquence can move,
         And manage all the man with secret art.
         When Orpheus strikes the trembling lyre,
         The streams stand still, the stones admire;
         The listening savages advance,
            The wolf and lamb around him trip,
            The bears in awkward measures leap,
         And tigers mingle in the dance.
  The moving woods attended, as he play'd,
  And Rhodope was left without a shade.

IV.

         Music religious heats inspires,
             It wakes the soul, and lifts it high,
         And wings it with sublime desires,
             And fits it to bespeak the Deity.
         The Almighty listens to a tuneful tongue,
         And seems well-pleased and courted with a song.
  Soft moving sounds and heavenly airs
  Give force to every word, and recommend our prayers.
         When time itself shall be no more,
  And all things in confusion hurled,
         Music shall then exert its power,
  And sound survive the ruins of the world:
         Then saints and angels shall agree
         In one eternal jubilee:
  All heaven shall echo with their hymns divine,
         And God himself with pleasure see
  The whole creation in a chorus join.

CHORUS.

             Consecrate the place and day,
             To music and Cecilia.
         Let no rough winds approach, nor dare
            Invade the hallowed bounds,
         Nor rudely shake the tuneful air,
            Nor spoil the fleeting sounds.
         Nor mournful sigh nor groan be heard,
            But gladness dwell on every tongue;
         Whilst all, with voice and strings prepared,
            Keep up the loud harmonious song,
               And imitate the blest above,
               In joy, and harmony, and love.

AN ODE FOR ST CECILIA'S DAY.

SET TO MUSIC BY MR DANIEL PURCELL. PERFORMED AT OXFORD 1699.

  Prepare the hallowed strain, my Muse,
  Thy softest sounds and sweetest numbers choose;
  The bright Cecilia's praise rehearse,
  In warbling words, and gliding verse,
  That smoothly run into a song,
  And gently die away, and melt upon the tongue.
  First let the sprightly violin
  The joyful melody begin,
     And none of all her strings be mute;

  While the sharp sound and shriller lay
_10
  In sweet harmonious notes decay,
     Softened and mellowed by the flute.
         'The flute that sweetly can complain,
         Dissolve the frozen nymph's disdain;
         Panting sympathy impart,
         Till she partake her lover's smart.'[4]

CHORUS.

  Next, let the solemn organ join
  Religious airs, and strains divine,
  Such as may lift us to the skies,
  And set all Heaven before our eyes:
_20
          'Such as may lift us to the skies;
          So far at least till they
          Descend with kind surprise,
       And meet our pious harmony half-way.'

  Let then the trumpet's piercing sound
  Our ravished ears with pleasure wound.
       The soul o'erpowering with delight,
  As, with a quick uncommon ray,
  A streak of lightning clears the day,
       And flashes on the sight.
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  Let Echo too perform her part,
  Prolonging every note with art,
       And in a low expiring strain
       Play all the concert o'er again.

  Such were the tuneful notes that hung
  On bright Cecilia's charming tongue:
  Notes that sacred heats inspired,
  And with religious ardour fired:
  The love-sick youth, that long suppress'd
  His smothered passion in his breast,
_40
  No sooner heard the warbling dame,
     But, by the secret influence turn'd,
  He felt a new diviner flame,
     And with devotion burn'd.

  With ravished soul, and looks amazed,
  Upon her beauteous face he gazed;
     Nor made his amorous complaint:
  In vain her eyes his heart had charm'd,
  Her heavenly voice her eyes disarm'd,
     And changed the lover to a saint.
_50

GRAND CHORUS.

  And now the choir complete rejoices,
  With trembling strings and melting voices.
         The tuneful ferment rises high,
         And works with mingled melody:
  Quick divisions run their rounds,
  A thousand trills and quivering sounds
     In airy circles o'er us fly,
  Till, wafted by a gentle breeze,
  They faint and languish by degrees,
     And at a distance die.
_60

AN ACCOUNT OF THE GREATEST ENGLISH POETS

TO MR HENRY SACHEVERELL. APRIL 3, 1694.

  Since, dearest Harry, you will needs request
  A short account of all the Muse-possess'd,
  That, down from Chaucer's days to Dryden's times,
  Have spent their noble rage in British rhymes;
  Without more preface, writ in formal length,
  To speak the undertaker's want of strength,
  I'll try to make their several beauties known,
  And show their verses' worth, though not my own.

     Long had our dull forefathers slept supine,
  Nor felt the raptures of the tuneful Nine;
_10
  Till Chaucer first, the merry bard, arose,
  And many a story told in rhyme and prose.
  But age has rusted what the poet writ,
  Worn out his language, and obscured his wit;
  In vain he jests in his unpolished strain,
  And tries to make his readers laugh in vain.
     Old Spenser next, warmed with poetic rage,
  In ancient tales amused a barbarous age;
  An age that yet uncultivate and rude,
  Where'er the poet's fancy led, pursued
_20
  Through pathless fields, and unfrequented floods,
  To dens of dragons and enchanted woods.
  But now the mystic tale, that pleased of yore,
  Can charm an understanding age no more;
  The long-spun allegories fulsome grow,
  While the dull moral lies too plain below.
  We view well-pleased at distance all the sights
  Of arms and palfreys, battles, fields, and fights,
  And damsels in distress, and courteous knights;
  But when we look too near, the shades decay,
_30
  And all the pleasing landscape fades away.
     Great Cowley then (a mighty genius) wrote,
  O'errun with wit, and lavish of his thought:
  His turns too closely on the reader press;
  He more had pleased us, had he pleased us less.
  One glittering thought no sooner strikes our eyes
  With silent wonder, but new wonders rise.
  As in the milky-way a shining white
  O'erflows the heavens with one continued light;
  That not a single star can show his rays,
_40
  Whilst jointly all promote the common blaze.
  Pardon, great poet, that I dare to name
  The unnumbered beauties of thy verse with blame;
  Thy fault is only wit in its excess,
  But wit like thine in any shape will please.
  What Muse but thine can equal hints inspire,
  And fit the deep-mouthed Pindar to thy lyre;
  Pindar, whom others, in a laboured strain
  And forced expression, imitate in vain?
  Well-pleased in thee he soars with new delight,
_50
  And plays in more unbounded verse, and takes a nobler flight.
     Blest man! whose spotless life and charming lays
  Employed the tuneful prelate in thy praise:
  Blest man! who now shalt be for ever known
  In Sprat's successful labours and thy own.
     But Milton next, with high and haughty stalks,
  Unfettered in majestic numbers walks;
  No vulgar hero can his Muse engage;
  Nor earth's wide scene confine his hallowed rage.
  See! see! he upward springs, and towering high,
_60
  Spurns the dull province of mortality,
  Shakes heaven's eternal throne with dire alarms,
  And sets the Almighty thunderer in arms.
  Whate'er his pen describes I more than see,
  Whilst every verse arrayed in majesty,
  Bold, and sublime, my whole attention draws,
  And seems above the critic's nicer laws.
  How are you struck with terror and delight,
  When angel with archangel copes in fight!
  When great Messiah's outspread banner shines,
_70
  How does the chariot rattle in his lines!
  What sounds of brazen wheels, what thunder, scare,
  And stun the reader with the din of war!
  With fear my spirits and my blood retire,
  To see the seraphs sunk in clouds of fire;
  But when, with eager steps, from hence I rise,
  And view the first gay scenes of Paradise,
  What tongue, what words of rapture, can express
  A vision so profuse of pleasantness!
  Oh, had the poet ne'er profaned his pen,
_80
  To varnish o'er the guilt of faithless men,
  His other works might have deserved applause;
  But now the language can't support the cause;
  While the clean current, though serene and bright,
  Betrays a bottom odious to the sight.
     But now, my Muse, a softer strain rehearse,
  Turn every line with art, and smooth thy verse;
  The courtly Waller next commands thy lays:
  Muse, tune thy verse with art to Waller's praise.
  While tender airs and lovely dames inspire
_90
  Soft melting thoughts, and propagate desire;
  So long shall Waller's strains our passion move,
  And Sacharissa's beauties kindle love.
  Thy verse, harmonious bard, and flattering song,
  Can make the vanquished great, the coward strong.
  Thy verse can show even Cromwell's innocence,
  And compliment the storms that bore him hence.
  Oh, had thy Muse not come an age too soon,
  But seen great Nassau on the British throne,
  How had his triumphs glittered in thy page,
_100
  And warmed thee to a more exalted rage!
  What scenes of death and horror had we view'd,
  And how had Boyne's wide current reeked in blood!
  Or, if Maria's charms thou wouldst rehearse,
  In smoother numbers and a softer verse,
  Thy pen had well described her graceful air,
  And Gloriana would have seemed more fair.
     Nor must Roscommon pass neglected by,
  That makes even rules a noble poetry:
  Rules, whose deep sense and heavenly numbers show
_110
  The best of critics, and of poets too.
  Nor, Denham, must we e'er forget thy strains,
  While Cooper's Hill commands the neighbouring plains.
     But see where artful Dryden next appears,
  Grown old in rhyme, but charming even in years.
  Great Dryden next, whose tuneful Muse affords
  The sweetest numbers, and the fittest words.
  Whether in comic sounds or tragic airs
  She forms her voice, she moves our smiles or tears.
  If satire or heroic strains she writes,
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  Her hero pleases and her satire bites.
  From her no harsh unartful numbers fall,
  She wears all dresses, and she charms in all.
  How might we fear our English poetry,
  That long has flourished, should decay with thee;
  Did not the Muses' other hope appear,
  Harmonious Congreve, and forbid our fear:
  Congreve! whose fancy's unexhausted store
  Has given already much, and promised more.
  Congreve shall still preserve thy fame alive,
_130
  And Dryden's Muse shall in his friend survive.
     I'm tired with rhyming, and would fain give o'er,
  But justice still demands one labour more:
  The noble Montague remains unnamed,
  For wit, for humour, and for judgment famed;
  To Dorset he directs his artful Muse,
  In numbers such as Dorset's self might use.
  How negligently graceful he unreins
  His verse, and writes in loose familiar strains!
  How Nassau's godlike acts adorn his lines,
_140
  And all the hero in full glory shines!
  We see his army set in just array,
  And Boyne's dyed waves run purple to the sea.
  Nor Simois choked with men, and arms, and blood;
  Nor rapid Xanthus' celebrated flood,
  Shall longer be the poet's highest themes,
  Though gods and heroes fought promiscuous in their streams.
  But now, to Nassau's secret councils raised,
  He aids the hero, whom before he praised.
     I've done at length; and now, dear friend, receive
_150
  The last poor present that my Muse can give.
  I leave the arts of poetry and verse
  To them that practise them with more success.
  Of greater truths I'll now prepare to tell,
  And so at once, dear friend and Muse, farewell.

A LETTER FROM ITALY,

TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE CHARLES LORD HALIFAX, IN THE YEAR 1701.

                Salve magna parens frugum Saturnia tellus,
                Magna virûm! tibi res antiquæ laudis et artis
                Aggredior, sanctos ausus recludere fontes.
      VIRG., Geor. ii.

  While you, my lord, the rural shades admire,
  And from Britannia's public posts retire,
  Nor longer, her ungrateful sons to please,
  For their advantage sacrifice your ease;
  Me into foreign realms my fate conveys,
  Through nations fruitful of immortal lays,
  Where the soft season and inviting clime
  Conspire to trouble your repose with rhyme.
     For wheresoe'er I turn my ravished eyes,
  Gay gilded scenes and shining prospects rise,
_10
  Poetic fields encompass me around
  And still I seem to tread on classic ground;
  For here the Muse so oft her harp has strung,
  That not a mountain rears its head unsung,
  Renowned in verse each shady thicket grows,
  And every stream in heavenly numbers flows.
     How am I pleased to search the hills and woods
  For rising springs and celebrated floods!
  To view the Nar, tumultuous in his course,
  And trace the smooth Clitumnus to his source,
_20
  To see the Mincio draw his watery store
  Through the long windings of a fruitful shore,
  And hoary Albula's infected tide
  O'er the warm bed of smoking sulphur glide.
     Fired with a thousand raptures I survey
  Eridanus[5] through flowery meadows stray,
  The king of floods! that, rolling o'er the plains,
  The towering Alps of half their moisture drains,
  And proudly swoln with a whole winter's snows,
  Distributes wealth and plenty where he flows.
_30
     Sometimes, misguided by the tuneful throng
  I look for streams immortalised in song,
  That lost in silence and oblivion lie,
  (Dumb are their fountains and their channels dry,)
  Yet run for ever by the Muse's skill,
  And in the smooth description murmur still.
     Sometimes to gentle Tiber I retire,
  And the famed river's empty shores admire,
  That, destitute of strength, derives its course
  From thrifty urns and an unfruitful source,
_40
  Yet sung so often in poetic lays,
  With scorn the Danube and the Nile surveys;
  So high the deathless Muse exalts her theme!
  Such was the Boyne, a poor inglorious stream,
  That in Hibernian vales obscurely stray'd,
  And unobserved in wild meanders play'd;
  Till by your lines and Nassau's sword renowned,
  Its rising billows through the world resound,
  Where'er the hero's godlike acts can pierce,
  Or where the fame of an immortal verse.
_50
     Oh could the Muse my ravished breast inspire
  With warmth like yours, and raise an equal fire,
  Unnumbered beauties in my verse should shine,
  And Virgil's Italy should yield to mine!
     See how the golden groves around me smile,
  That shun the coast of Britain's stormy isle,
  Or when transplanted and preserved with care,
  Curse the cold clime, and starve in northern air.
  Here kindly warmth their mounting juice ferments
  To nobler tastes, and more exalted scents:
_60
  Even the rough rocks with tender myrtle bloom,
  And trodden weeds send out a rich perfume.
  Bear me, some god, to Baia's gentle seats,
  Or cover me in Umbria's green retreats;
  Where western gales eternally reside,
  And all the seasons lavish all their pride:
  Blossoms, and fruits, and flowers together rise,
  And the whole year in gay confusion lies.
     Immortal glories in my mind revive,
  And in my soul a thousand passions strive,
_70
  When Rome's exalted beauties I descry
  Magnificent in piles of ruin lie.
  An amphitheatre's amazing height
  Here fills my eye with terror and delight,
  That on its public shows unpeopled Rome,
  And held uncrowded nations in its womb;
  Here pillars rough with sculpture pierce the skies;
  And here the proud triumphal arches rise,
  Where the old Romans' deathless acts displayed,
  Their base, degenerate progeny upbraid:
_80
  Whole rivers here forsake the fields below,
  And wondering at their height through airy channels flow.
     Still to new scenes my wandering Muse retires,
  And the dumb show of breathing rocks admires;
  Where the smooth chisel all its force has shown,
  And softened into flesh the rugged stone.
  In solemn silence, a majestic band,
  Heroes, and gods, and Roman consuls stand;
  Stern tyrants, whom their cruelties renown,
  And emperors in Parian marble frown;
_90
  While the bright dames, to whom they humble sued,
  Still show the charms that their proud hearts subdued.
     Fain would I Raphæl's godlike art rehearse,
  And show the immortal labours in my verse,
  Where from the mingled strength of shade and light
  A new creation rises to my sight,
  Such heavenly figures from his pencil flow,
  So warm with life his blended colours glow.
  From theme to theme with secret pleasure toss'd,
  Amidst the soft variety I'm lost:
_100
  Here pleasing airs my ravish'd soul confound
  With circling notes and labyrinths of sound;
  Here domes and temples rise in distant views,
  And opening palaces invite my Muse.
     How has kind Heaven adorned the happy land,
  And scattered blessings with a wasteful hand!
  But what avail her unexhausted stores,
  Her blooming mountains and her sunny shores,
  With all the gifts that heaven and earth impart,
  The smiles of nature, and the charms of art,
_110
  While proud oppression in her valleys reigns,
  And tyranny usurps her happy plains?
  The poor inhabitant beholds in vain
  The reddening orange and the swelling grain:
  Joyless he sees the growing oils and wines,
  And in the myrtle's fragrant shade repines:
  Starves, in the midst of nature's bounty curs'd,
  And in the loaden vineyard dies for thirst.
     O Liberty, thou goddess heavenly bright,
_120
  Profuse of bliss, and pregnant with delight!
  Eternal pleasures in thy presence reign,
  And smiling plenty leads thy wanton train;
  Eased of her load, subjection grows more light,
  And poverty looks cheerful in thy sight;
  Thou mak'st the gloomy face of nature gay,
  Giv'st beauty to the sun, and pleasure to the day.
     Thee, goddess, thee, Britannia's isle adores;
  How has she oft exhausted all her stores,
  How oft in fields of death thy presence sought,
  Nor thinks the mighty prize too dearly bought!
_130
  On foreign mountains may the sun refine
  The grape's soft juice, and mellow it to wine,
  With citron groves adorn a distant soil,
  And the fat olive swell with floods of oil:
  We envy not the warmer clime, that lies
  In ten degrees of more indulgent skies,
  Nor at the coarseness of our heaven repine,
  Though o'er our heads the frozen Pleiads shine:
  'Tis liberty that crowns Britannia's isle,
  And makes her barren rocks and her bleak mountains smile.
_140
     Others with towering piles may please the sight,
  And in their proud aspiring domes delight;
  A nicer touch to the stretched canvas give,
  Or teach their animated rocks to live:
  'Tis Britain's care to watch o'er Europe's fate,
  And hold in balance each contending state,
  To threaten bold presumptuous kings with war,
  And answer her afflicted neighbours' prayer.
  The Dane and Swede, roused up by fierce alarms,
  Bless the wise conduct of her pious arms:
_150
  Soon as her fleets appear, their terrors cease,
  And all the northern world lies hushed in peace.
     The ambitious Gaul beholds with secret dread
  Her thunder aimed at his aspiring head,
  And fain her godlike sons would disunite
  By foreign gold, or by domestic spite;
  But strives in vain to conquer or divide,
  Whom Nassau's arms defend and counsels guide.
     Fired with the name, which I so oft have found
  The distant climes and different tongues resound,
_160
  I bridle in my struggling Muse with pain,
  That longs to launch into a bolder strain.
     But I've already troubled you too long,
  Nor dare attempt a more adventurous song.
  My humble verse demands a softer theme,
  A painted meadow, or a purling stream;
  Unfit for heroes, whom immortal lays,
  And lines like Virgil's, or like yours, should praise.

MILTON'S STYLE IMITATED,

IN A TRANSLATION OF A STORY OUT OF THE THIRD ÆNEID.

  Lost in the gloomy horror of the night,
  We struck upon the coast where Ætna lies,
  Horrid and waste, its entrails fraught with fire,
  That now casts out dark fumes and pitchy clouds,
  Vast showers of ashes hovering in the smoke;
  Now belches molten stones and ruddy flame,
  Incensed, or tears up mountains by the roots,
  Or slings a broken rock aloft in air.
  The bottom works with smothered fire involved
  In pestilential vapours, stench, and smoke.
_10
     'Tis said, that thunder-struck Enceladus
  Groveling beneath the incumbent mountain's weight,
  Lies stretched supine, eternal prey of flames;
  And, when he heaves against the burning load,
  Reluctant, to invert his broiling limbs,
  A sudden earthquake shoots through all the isle,
  And Ætna thunders dreadful under-ground,
  Then pours out smoke in wreathing curls convolved,
  And shades the sun's bright orb, and blots out day.
     Here in the shelter of the woods we lodged,
_20
  And frighted heard strange sounds and dismal yells,
  Nor saw from whence they came; for all the night
  A murky storm deep lowering o'er our heads
  Hung imminent, that with impervious gloom
  Opposed itself to Cynthia's silver ray,
  And shaded all beneath. But now the sun
  With orient beams had chased the dewy night
  From earth and heaven; all nature stood disclosed:
  When, looking on the neighbouring woods, we saw
  The ghastly visage of a man unknown,
_30
  An uncouth feature, meagre, pale, and wild;
  Affliction's foul and terrible dismay
  Sat in his looks, his face, impaired and worn
  With marks of famine, speaking sore distress;
  His locks were tangled, and his shaggy beard
  Matted with filth; in all things else a Greek.
     He first advanced in haste; but, when he saw
  Trojans and Trojan arms, in mid career
  Stopp'd short, he back recoiled as one surprised:
  But soon recovering speed he ran, he flew
  Precipitant, and thus with piteous cries
_40
  Our ears assailed: 'By heaven's eternal fires,
  By every god that sits enthroned on high,
  By this good light, relieve a wretch forlorn,
  And bear me hence to any distant shore,
  So I may shun this savage race accursed.
  'Tis true I fought among the Greeks that late
  With sword and fire o'erturned Neptunian Troy
  And laid the labours of the gods in dust;
  For which, if so the sad offence deserves,
_50
  Plunged in the deep, for ever let me lie
  Whelmed under seas; if death must be my doom,
  Let man inflict it, and I die well-pleased.'
     He ended here, and now profuse to tears
  In suppliant mood fell prostrate at our feet:
  We bade him speak from whence and what he was,
  And how by stress of fortune sunk thus low;
  Anchises too, with friendly aspect mild,
  Gave him his hand, sure pledge of amity;
  When, thus encouraged, he began his tale.
_60
     'I'm one,' says he, 'of poor descent; my name
  Is Achæmenides, my country Greece;
  Ulysses' sad compeer, who, whilst he fled
  The raging Cyclops, left me here behind,
  Disconsolate, forlorn; within the cave
  He left me, giant Polypheme's dark cave;
  A dungeon wide and horrible, the walls
  On all sides furred with mouldy damps, and hung
  With clots of ropy gore, and human limbs,
  His dire repast: himself of mighty size,
_70
  Hoarse in his voice, and in his visage grim,
  Intractable, that riots on the flesh
  Of mortal men, and swills the vital blood.
  Him did I see snatch up with horrid grasp
  Two sprawling Greeks, in either hand a man;
  I saw him when with huge, tempestuous sway
  He dashed and broke them on the grundsil edge;
  The pavement swam in blood, the walls around
  Were spattered o'er with brains. He lapp'd the blood,
  And chewed the tender flesh still warm with life,
_80
  That swelled and heaved itself amidst his teeth
  As sensible of pain. Not less meanwhile
  Our chief, incensed and studious of revenge,
  Plots his destruction, which he thus effects.
  The giant, gorged with flesh, and wine, and blood,
  Lay stretched at length and snoring in his den,
  Belching raw gobbets from his maw, o'ercharged
  With purple wine and cruddled gore confused.
  We gathered round, and to his single eye,
  The single eye that in his forehead glared
_90
  Like a full moon, or a broad burnished shield,
  A forky staff we dexterously applied,
  Which, in the spacious socket turning round,
  Scooped out the big round jelly from its orb.
  But let me not thus interpose delays;
  Fly, mortals, fly this cursed, detested race:
  A hundred of the same stupendous size,
  A hundred Cyclops live among the hills,
  Gigantic brotherhood, that stalk along
  With horrid strides o'er the high mountains' tops,
_100
  Enormous in their gait; I oft have heard
  Their voice and tread, oft seen them as they passed,
  Sculking and cowering down, half dead with fear.
  Thrice has the moon washed all her orb in light,
  Thrice travelled o'er, in her obscure sojourn,
  The realms of night inglorious, since I've lived
  Amidst these woods, gleaning from thorns and shrubs
  A wretched sustenance.' As thus he spoke,
  We saw descending from a neighbouring hill
  Blind Polypheme; by weary steps and slow
_110
  The groping giant with a trunk of pine
  Explored his way; around, his woolly flocks
  Attended grazing; to the well-known shore
  He bent his course, and on the margin stood,
  A hideous monster, terrible, deformed;
  Full in the midst of his high front there gaped
  The spacious hollow where his eye-ball rolled,
  A ghastly orifice: he rinsed the wound,
  And washed away the strings and clotted blood
  That caked within; then, stalking through the deep,
_120
  He fords the ocean, while the topmost wave
  Scarce reaches up his middle side; we stood
  Amazed, be sure; a sudden horror chill
  Ran through each nerve, and thrilled in every vein,
  Till, using all the force of winds and oars,
  We sped away; he heard us in our course,
  And with his outstretched arms around him groped,
  But finding nought within his reach, he raised
  Such hideous shouts that all the ocean shook.
  Even Italy, though many a league remote,
_130
  In distant echoes answered; Ætna roared,
  Through all its inmost winding caverns roared.
     Roused with the sound, the mighty family
  Of one-eyed brothers hasten to the shore,
  And gather round the bellowing Polypheme,
  A dire assembly: we with eager haste
  Work every one, and from afar behold
  A host of giants covering all the shore.
     So stands a forest tall of mountain oaks
  Advanced to mighty growth: the traveller
_140
  Hears from the humble valley where he rides
  The hollow murmurs of the winds that blow
  Amidst the boughs, and at the distance sees
  The shady tops of trees unnumbered rise,
  A stately prospect, waving in the clouds.

THE CAMPAIGN, A POEM.

TO HIS GRACE THE DUKE OF MARLBOROUGH.

                        Rhení pæator et Istri.
  Omnis in hoc uno variis discordia cessit
  Ordinibus; læctatur eques, plauditque senator,
  Votaque patricio certant plebeia favori.
                                               CLAUD. DE LAUD. STILIC.

Esse aliquam in terris gentem quæ suâ impensâ, suo labore ac periculo bella gerat pro libertate aliorum. Nec hoc finitimis, aut propinquæ vicinitatis hominibus, aut terris continenti junctis præstet. Maria trajiciat: ne quod toto orbe terrarum injustum imperium sit, et ubique jus, fas, lex, potentissima sint. LIV. HIST. lib. 36.

  While crowds of princes your deserts proclaim,
  Proud in their number to enrol your name;
  While emperors to you commit their cause,
  And Anna's praises crown the vast applause;
  Accept, great leader, what the Muse recites,
  That in ambitious verse attempts your fights.
  Fired and transported with a theme so new,
  Ten thousand wonders opening to my view
  Shine forth at once; sieges and storms appear,
  And wars and conquests fill the important year,
_10
  Rivers of blood I see, and hills of slain,
  An Iliad rising out of one campaign.
     The haughty Gaul beheld, with towering pride,
  His ancient bounds enlarged on every side,
  Pirene's lofty barriers were subdued,
  And in the midst of his wide empire stood;
  Ausonia's states, the victor to restrain,
  Opposed their Alps and Apennines in vain,
  Nor found themselves, with strength of rocks immured,
  Behind their everlasting hills secured;
_20
  The rising Danube its long race began,
  And half its course through the new conquests ran;
  Amazed and anxious for her sovereign's fates,
  Germania trembled through a hundred states;
  Great Leopold himself was seized with fear;
  He gazed around, but saw no succour near;
  He gazed, and half abandoned to despair
  His hopes on Heaven, and confidence in prayer.
     To Britain's queen the nations turn their eyes,
  On her resolves the Western world relies,
_30
  Confiding still, amidst its dire alarms,
  In Anna's councils and in Churchill's arms.
  Thrice happy Britain, from the kingdoms rent,
  To sit the guardian of the continent!
  That sees her bravest son advanced so high,
  And flourishing so near her prince's eye;
  Thy favourites grow not up by fortune's sport,
  Or from the crimes or follies of a court;
  On the firm basis of desert they rise,
  From long-tried, faith, and friendship's holy ties:
_40
  Their sovereign's well-distinguished smiles they share,
  Her ornaments in peace, her strength in war;
  The nation thanks them with a public voice,
  By showers of blessings Heaven approves their choice;
  Envy itself is dumb, in wonder lost,
  And factions strive who shall applaud them most.
     Soon as soft vernal breezes warm the sky,
  Britannia's colours in the zephyrs fly;
  Her chief already has his march begun,
  Crossing the provinces himself had won,
_50
  Till the Moselle, appearing from afar,
  Retards the progress of the moving war.
  Delightful stream, had Nature bid her fall
  In distant climes, far from the perjured Gaul;
  But now a purchase to the sword she lies,
  Her harvests for uncertain owners rise,
  Each vineyard doubtful of its master grows,
  And to the victor's bowl each vintage flows.
  The discontented shades of slaughtered hosts,
  That wandered on her banks, her heroes' ghosts,
_60
  Hoped, when they saw Britannia's arms appear,
  The vengeance due to their great deaths was near.
     Our godlike leader, ere the stream he passed,
  The mighty scheme of all his labours cast,
  Forming the wondrous year within his thought;
  His bosom glowed with battles yet unfought.
  The long, laborious march he first surveys,
  And joins the distant Danube to the Mæse,
  Between whose floods such pathless forests grow,
  Such mountains rise, so many rivers flow:
_70
  The toil looks lovely in the hero's eyes,
  And danger serves but to enhance the prize.
     Big with the fate of Europe, he renews
  His dreadful course, and the proud foe pursues:
  Infected by the burning Scorpion's heat,
  The sultry gales round his chafed temples beat,
  Till on the borders of the Maine he finds
  Defensive shadows and refreshing winds.
  Our British youth, with inborn freedom bold,
  Unnumbered scenes of servitude behold,
_80
  Nations of slaves, with tyranny debased,
  (Their Maker's image more than half defaced,)
  Hourly instructed, as they urge their toil,
  To prize their queen, and love their native soil.
     Still to the rising sun they take their way
  Through clouds of dust, and gain upon the clay;
  When now the Neckar on its friendly coast
  With cooling streams revives the fainting host,
  That cheerfully its labours past forgets,
  The midnight watches, and the noonday heats.
_90
     O'er prostrate towns and palaces they pass,
  (Now covered o'er with weeds and hid in grass,)
  Breathing revenge; whilst anger and disdain
  Fire every breast, and boil in every vein:
  Here shattered walls, like broken rocks, from far
  Rise up in hideous views, the guilt of war,
  Whilst here the vine o'er hills of ruin climbs,
  Industrious to conceal great Bourbon's crimes,
     At length the fame of England's hero drew,
  Eugenio to the glorious interview.
_100
  Great souls by instinct to each other turn,
  Demand alliance, and in friendship burn;
  A sudden friendship, while with stretched-out rays
  They meet each other, mingling blaze with blaze.
  Polished in courts, and hardened in the field,
  Renowned for conquest, and in council skilled,
  Their courage dwells not in a troubled flood
  Of mounting spirits, and fermenting blood:
  Lodged in the soul, with virtue overruled,
  Inflamed by reason, and by reason cooled,
_110
  In hours of peace content to be unknown,
  And only in the field of battle shown:
  To souls like these, in mutual friendship joined,
  Heaven dares intrust the cause of humankind.
     Britannia's graceful sons appear in arms,
  Her harassed troops the hero's presence warms,
  Whilst the high hills and rivers all around
  With thundering peals of British shouts resound:
  Doubling their speed, they march with fresh delight,
  Eager for glory, and require the fight.
_120
  So the staunch hound the trembling deer pursues,
  And smells his footsteps in the tainted dews,
  The tedious track unravelling by degrees:
  But when the scent comes warm in every breeze,
  Fired at the near approach, he shoots away
  On his full stretch, and bears upon his prey.
     The march concludes, the various realms are past,
  The immortal Schellenberg appears at last:
  Like hills the aspiring ramparts rise on high,
  Like valleys at their feet the trenches lie;
_130
  Batteries on batteries guard each fatal pass,
  Threatening destruction; rows of hollow brass,
  Tube behind tube, the dreadful entrance keep,
  Whilst in their wombs ten thousand thunders sleep:
  Great Churchill owns, charmed with the glorious sight,
  His march o'erpaid by such a promised fight.
     The western sun now shot a feeble ray,
  And faintly scattered the remains of day;
  Evening approached; but, oh! what hosts of foes
  Were never to behold that evening close!
_140
  Thickening their ranks, and wedged in firm array,
  The close-compacted Britons win their way:
  In vain the cannon their thronged war defaced
  With tracts of death, and laid the battle waste;
  Still pressing forward to the fight, they broke
  Through flames of sulphur, and a night of smoke,
  Till slaughtered legions filled the trench below,
  And bore their fierce avengers to the foe.
     High on the works the mingling hosts engage;
  The battle, kindled into tenfold rage
_150
  With showers of bullets and with storms of fire,
  Burns in full fury; heaps on heaps expire;
  Nations with nations mixed confus'dly die,
  And lost in one promiscuous carnage lie.
     How many generous Britons meet their doom,
  New to the field, and heroes in the bloom!
  The illustrious youths, that left their native shore
  To march where Britons never marched before,
  (O fatal love of fame! O glorious heat,
  Only destructive to the brave and great!)
_160
  After such toils o'ercome, such dangers past,
  Stretched on Bavarian ramparts breathe their last.
  But hold, my Muse, may no complaints appear,
  Nor blot the day with an ungrateful tear:
  While Marlborough lives, Britannia's stars dispense
  A friendly light, and shine in innocence.
  Plunging through seas of blood his fiery steed
  Where'er his friends retire, or foes succeed;
  Those he supports, these drives to sudden flight,
  And turns the various fortune of the fight.
_170
     Forbear, great man, renowned in arms, forbear
  To brave the thickest terrors of the war,
  Nor hazard thus, confused in crowds of foes,
  Britannia's safety, and the world's repose;
  Let nations, anxious for thy life, abate
  This scorn of danger and contempt of fate:
  Thou liv'st not for thyself; thy queen demands
  Conquest and peace from thy victorious hands;
  Kingdoms and empires in thy fortune join,
  And Europe's destiny depends on thine.
_180
     At length the long-disputed pass they gain,
  By crowded armies fortified in vain;
  The war breaks in, the fierce Bavarians yield,
  And see their camp with British legions filled.
  So Belgian mounds bear on their shattered sides
  The sea's whole weight, increased with swelling tides;
  But if the rushing wave a passage finds,
  Enraged by watery moons, and warring winds,
  The trembling peasant sees his country round
  Covered with tempests, and in oceans drowned.
_190
     The few surviving foes dispersed in flight,
  (Refuse of swords, and gleanings of a fight,)
  In every rustling wind the victor hear,
  And Marlborough's form in every shadow fear,
  Till the dark cope of night with kind embrace
  Befriends the rout, and covers their disgrace.
     To Donawert, with unresisted force,
  The gay, victorious army bends its course.
  The growth of meadows, and the pride of fields,
  Whatever spoils Bavaria's summer yields,
_200
  (The Danube's great increase,) Britannia shares,
  The food of armies, and support of wars:
  With magazines of death, destructive balls,
  And cannons doomed to batter Landau's walls,
  The victor finds each hidden cavern stored,
  And turns their fury on their guilty lord.
     Deluded prince! how is thy greatness crossed,
  And all the gaudy dream of empire lost,
  That proudly set thee on a fancied throne,
  And made imaginary realms thy own!
_210
  Thy troops that now behind the Danube join,
  Shall shortly seek for shelter from the Rhine,
  Nor find it there: surrounded with alarms,
  Thou hopest the assistance of the Gallic arms;
  The Gallic arms in safety shall advance,
  And crowd thy standards with the power of France,
  While to exalt thy doom, the aspiring Gaul
  Shares thy destruction, and adorns thy fall.
     Unbounded courage and compassion joined,
  Tempering each other in the victor's mind,
_220
  Alternately proclaim him good and great,
  And make the hero and the man complete.
  Long did he strive the obdurate foe to gain
  By proffered grace, but long he strove in vain;
  Till fired at length, he thinks it vain to spare
  His rising wrath, and gives a loose to war.
  In vengeance roused, the soldier fills his hand
  With sword and fire, and ravages the land,
  A thousand villages to ashes turns,
  In crackling flames a thousand harvests burns.
_230
  To the thick woods the woolly flocks retreat,
  And mixed with bellowing herds confus'dly bleat;
  Their trembling lords the common shade partake,
  And cries of infants sound in every brake:
  The listening soldier fixed in sorrow stands,
  Loth to obey his leader's just commands;
  The leader grieves, by generous pity swayed,
  To see his just commands so well obeyed.
     But now the trumpet, terrible from far,
  In shriller clangors animates the war,
_240
  Confederate drums in fuller consort beat,
  And echoing hills the loud alarm repeat:
  Gallia's proud standards, to Bavaria's joined,
  Unfurl their gilded lilies in the wind;
  The daring prince his blasted hopes renews,
  And while the thick embattled host he views
  Stretched out in deep array, and dreadful length,
  His heart dilates, and glories in his strength.
     The fatal day its mighty course began,
  That the grieved world had long desired in vain:
_250
  States that their new captivity bemoaned,
  Armies of martyrs that in exile groaned,
  Sighs from the depth of gloomy dungeons heard,
  And prayers in bitterness of soul preferred,
  Europe's loud cries, that Providence assailed,
  And Anna's ardent vows, at length prevailed;
  The day was come when heaven designed to show
  His care and conduct of the world below.
     Behold, in awful march and dread array
  The long-expected squadrons shape their way!
_260
  Death, in approaching terrible, imparts
  An anxious horror to the bravest hearts;
  Yet do their beating breasts demand the strife,
  And thirst of glory quells the love of life.
  No vulgar fears can British minds control:
  Heat of revenge and noble pride of soul
  O'erlook the foe, advantaged by his post,
  Lessen his numbers, and contract his host.
  Though fens and floods possessed the middle space,
  That unprovoked they would have feared to pass,
_270
  Nor fens nor floods can stop Britannia's bands,
  When her proud foe ranged on their borders stands.
     But, O my Muse, what numbers wilt thou find
  To sing the furious troops in battle joined!
  Methinks I hear the drum's tumultuous sound
  The victor's shouts and dying groans confound,
  The dreadful burst of cannon rend the skies,
  And all the thunder of the battle rise.
  'Twas then great Marlborough's mighty soul was proved,
  That, in the shock of charging hosts unmoved,
_280
  Amidst confusion, horror, and despair,
  Examined all the dreadful scenes of war;
  In peaceful thought the field of death surveyed,
  To fainting squadrons sent the timely aid,
  Inspired repulsed battalions to engage,
  And taught the doubtful battle where to rage.
  So when an angel by divine command
  With rising tempests shakes a guilty land,
  Such as of late o'er pale Britannia passed,[6]
  Calm and serene he drives the furious blast;
_290
  And, pleased the Almighty's orders to perform,
  Hides in the whirlwind, and directs the storm.
     But see the haughty household-troops advance!
  The dread of Europe, and the pride of France.
  The war's whole art each private soldier knows,
  And with a general's love of conquest glows;
  Proudly he marches on, and, void of fear,
  Laughs at the shaking of the British spear:
  Vain insolence! with native freedom brave,
  The meanest Briton scorns the highest slave;
_300
  Contempt and fury fire their souls by turns,
  Each nation's glory in each warrior burns,
  Each fights, as in his arm the important day
  And all the fate of his great monarch lay:
  A thousand glorious actions, that might claim
  Triumphant laurels, and immortal fame,
  Confused in clouds of glorious actions lie,
  And troops of heroes undistinguished die.
  O Dormer, how can I behold thy fate,
  And not the wonders of thy youth relate!
_310
  How can I see the gay, the brave, the young,
  Fall in the cloud of war and lie unsung!
  In joys of conquest he resigns his breath,
  And, filled with England's glory, smiles in death.
     The rout begins, the Gallic squadrons run,
  Compelled in crowds to meet the fate they shun;
  Thousands of fiery steeds with wounds transfixed
  Floating in gore, with their dead masters mixed,
  Midst heaps of spears and standards driven around,
  Lie in the Danube's bloody whirlpools drowned,
_320
  Troops of bold youths, born on the distant Soane,
  Or sounding borders of the rapid Rhône,
  Or where the Seine her flowery fields divides,
  Or where the Loire through winding vineyards glides;
  In heaps the rolling billows sweep away,
  And into Scythian seas their bloated corps convey.
  From Blenheim's towers the Gaul, with wild affright,
  Beholds the various havoc of the fight;
  His waving banners, that so oft had stood,
  Planted in fields of death, and streams of blood,
_330
  So wont the guarded enemy to reach,
  And rise triumphant in the fatal breach,
  Or pierce the broken foe's remotest lines,
  The hardy veteran with tears resigns.
     Unfortunate Tallard![7] Oh, who can name
  The pangs of rage, of sorrow, and of shame,
  That with mixed tumult in thy bosom swelled!
  When first thou saw'st thy bravest troops repelled,
  Thine only son pierced with a deadly wound,
  Choked in his blood, and gasping on the ground,
_340
  Thyself in bondage by the victor kept!
  The chief, the father, and the captive wept.
  An English Muse is touched with generous woe,
  And in the unhappy man forgets the foe.
  Greatly distressed! thy loud complaints forbear,
  Blame not the turns of fate, and chance of war;
  Give thy brave foes their due, nor blush to own
  The fatal field by such great leaders won,
  The field whence famed Eugenio bore away
  Only the second honours of the day.
_350
     With floods of gore that from the vanquished fell,
  The marshes stagnate, and the rivers swell.
  Mountains of slain lie heaped upon the ground,
  Or 'midst the roarings of the Danube drowned;
  Whole captive hosts the conqueror detains
  In painful bondage and inglorious chains;
  Even those who'scape the fetters and the sword,
  Nor seek the fortunes of a happier lord,
  Their raging king dishonours, to complete
  Marlborough's great work, and finish the defeat.
_360
     From Memminghen's high domes, and Augsburg's walls,
  The distant battle drives the insulting Gauls;
  Freed by the terror of the victor's name,
  The rescued states his great protection claim;
  Whilst Ulm the approach of her deliverer waits,
  And longs to open her obsequious gates.
     The hero's breast still swells with great designs,
  In every thought the towering genius shines:
  If to the foe his dreadful course he bends,
  O'er the wide continent his march extends;
_370
  If sieges in his labouring thoughts are formed,
  Camps are assaulted, and an army stormed;
  If to the fight his active soul is bent,
  The fate of Europe turns on its event.
  What distant land, what region, can afford
  An action worthy his victorious sword?
  Where will he next the flying Gaul defeat,
  To make the series of his toils complete?
     Where the swoln Rhine, rushing with all its force,
  Divides the hostile nations in its course,
_380
  While each contracts its bounds, or wider grows,
  Enlarged or straitened as the river flows,
  On Gallia's side a mighty bulwark stands,
  That all the wide extended plain commands;
  Twice, since the war was kindled, has it tried
  The victor's rage, and twice has changed its side;
  As oft whole armies, with the prize o'erjoyed,
  Have the long summer on its walls employed.
  Hither our mighty chief his arms directs,
  Hence future triumphs from the war expects;
_390
  And though the dog-star had its course begun,
  Carries his arms still nearer to the sun:
  Fixed on the glorious action, he forgets
  The change of seasons, and increase of heats:
  No toils are painful that can danger show,
  No climes unlovely that contain a foe.
     The roving Gaul, to his own bounds restrained,
  Learns to encamp within his native land,
  But soon as the victorious host he spies,
  From hill to hill, from stream to stream he flies:
_400
  Such dire impressions in his heart remain
  Of Marlborough's sword, and Hochstet's fatal plain:
  In vain Britannia's mighty chief besets
  Their shady coverts, and obscure retreats;
  They fly the conqueror's approaching fame,
  That bears the force of armies in his name,
     Austria's young monarch, whose imperial sway
  Sceptres and thrones are destined to obey,
  Whose boasted ancestry so high extends
  That in the pagan gods his lineage ends,
_410
  Comes from afar, in gratitude to own
  The great supporter of his father's throne;
  What tides of glory to his bosom ran,
  Clasped in the embraces of the godlike man!
  How were his eyes with pleasing wonder fixed
  To see such fire with so much sweetness mixed,
  Such easy greatness, such a graceful port,
  So turned and finished for the camp or court!
  Achilles thus was formed with every grace,
  And Nireus shone but in the second place;
_420
  Thus the great father of almighty Rome
  (Divinely flushed with an immortal bloom,
  That Cytherea's fragrant breath bestowed)
  In all the charms of his bright mother glowed.
  The royal youth by Marlborough's presence charmed,
  Taught by his counsels, by his actions warmed,
  On Landau with redoubled fury falls,
  Discharges all his thunder on its walls,
  O'er mines and caves of death provokes the fight,
  And learns to conquer in the hero's sight.
_430
     The British chief, for mighty toils renowned,
  Increased in titles, and with conquests crowned,
  To Belgian coasts his tedious march renews,
  And the long windings of the Rhine pursues,
  Clearing its borders from usurping foes,
  And blessed by rescued nations as he goes.
  Treves fears no more, freed from its dire alarms;
  And Trærbach feels the terror of his arms,
  Seated on rocks her proud foundations shake,
  While Marlborough presses to the bold attack,
_440
  Plants all his batteries, bids his cannon roar,
  And shows how Landau might have fallen before.
  Scared at his near approach, great Louis fears
  Vengeance reserved for his declining years,
  Forgets his thirst of universal sway,
  And scarce can teach his subjects to obey;
  His arms he finds on vain attempts employed,
  The ambitious projects for his race destroyed,
  The work of ages sunk in one campaign,
  And lives of millions sacrificed in vain.
_450
     Such are the effects of Anna's royal cares:
  By her, Britannia, great in foreign wars,
  Ranges through nations, wheresoo'er disjoined,
  Without the wonted aid of sea and wind.
  By her the unfettered Ister's states are free,
  And taste the sweets of English liberty:
  But who can tell the joys of those that lie
  Beneath the constant influence of her eye!
  Whilst in diffusive showers her bounties fall,
  Like heaven's indulgence, and descend on all,
_460
  Secure the happy, succour the distressed,
  Make every subject glad, and a whole people blessed.
     Thus would I fain Britannia's wars rehearse,
  In the smooth records of a faithful verse;
  That, if such numbers can o'er time prevail,
  May tell posterity the wondrous tale.
  When actions, unadorned, are faint and weak,
  Cities and countries must be taught to speak;
  Gods may descend in factions from the skies,
  And rivers from their oozy beds arise;
_470
  Fiction may deck the truth with spurious rays,
  And round the hero cast a borrowed blaze.
  Marlborough's exploits appear divinely bright,
  And proudly shine in their own native light;
  Raised of themselves, their genuine charms they boast,
  And those who paint them truest praise them most.

COWLEY'S EPITAPH ON HIMSELF.

TRANSLATED BY MR ADDISON.