ページの画像
PDF
ePub

The DYING KID.

Optima quæque dies miferis mortalibus ævi
Prima fugit-

A

Tear bedews my DELIA'S eye,

VIRG.

To think yon playful kid must die; From crystal spring, and flowery mead, Muft, in his prime of life, recede !

Erewhile, in sportive circles round

She saw him wheel, and frisk, and bound;
From rock to rock purfue his way,

And, on the fearful margin, play.

Pleas'd on his various freaks to dwell,
She faw him climb my ruftic cell;
Thence eye my lawns with verdure bright,
And seem all ravish'd at the fight.

She tells, with what delight he ftood,
To trace his features in the flood:
Then skip'd aloof with quaint amaze;
And then drew near again to gaze.

She tells me how with eager speed
He flew, to hear my vocal reed;
And how, with critic face profound,
And stedfast ear, devour'd the found.

[blocks in formation]
[ocr errors]

His every frolic, light as air,
Deferves the gentle DELIA's care;
And tears bedew her tender eye,
To think the playful kid must die.

But knows my DELIA, timely wife,
How foon this blameless æra flies?
While violence and craft fucceed;
Unfair defign, and ruthless deed!

Soon would the vine his wounds deplore,
And yield her purple gifts no more;
Ah foon, eras'd from every grove

Were DELIA's name, and STREPHON'S love.

No more those bow'rs might STREPHON fee,
Where first he fondly gaz'd on thee;
No more those beds of flow'rets find,
Which for thy charming brows he twin'd.

Each wayward passion foon would tear
His bofom, now fo void of care;
And, when they left his ebbing vein,
What, but infipid age, remain?

Then mourn not the decrees of fate,
That
gave his life fo fhort a date;
And I will join thy tendereft fighs,
To think that youth fo fwiftly flies!

SONGS,

[ 149 ]

SONGS, written chiefly between the Year 1737 and 1742.

I

[blocks in formation]

Told my nymph, I told her true,

My fields were small, my flocks were few;
While faultering accents fpoke my fear,
That FLAVIA might not prove fincere.

Of crops deftroy'd by vernal cold,
And vagrant fheep that left my fold:
Of these she heard, yet bore to hear;
And is not FLAVIA then fincere?

How chang'd by fortune's fickle wind,
The friends I lov'd became unkind,
She heard, and fhed a generous tear;
And is not FLAVIA then fincere?

How, if fhe deign'd my love to bless,
My FLAVIA must not hope for dress;
This too she heard, and finil'd to hear;
And FLAVIA fure must be fincere.

Go fhear your flocks, ye jovial swains,
Go
reap the plenty of your plains;
Defpoil'd of all which you revere,
I know my FLAVIA's loye fincere.

[blocks in formation]

SONG II. The LANDS KIP.

H Erewhile I pafs'd the day!

OW pleas'd within my native bowers

Was ever scene fo deck'd with flowers?
Were ever flowers fo gay ?

How sweetly fmil'd the hill, the vale,
And all the landskip round!
The river gliding down the dale!
The hill with beeches crown'd!

But now, when urg'd by tender woes
I speed to meet my dear,
That hill and stream my zeal oppofe,
And check my fond career.

No more, fince DAPHNE was my theme,
Their wonted charms I fee:

That verdant hill, and filver stream,

Divide my love and me.

SONG

[ 151 ]

SONG III.

E gentle nymphs and generous dames,

YE

That rule o'er every British mind; Be fure ye foothe their amorous flames, Be sure your laws are not unkind.

For hard it is to wear their bloom
In unremitting fighs away:

To mourn the night's oppreffive gloom,
And faintly bless the rising day.

And cruel 'twere a free-born swain,
A British youth should vainly moan;
Who fcornful of a tyrant's chain,

Submits to yours, and yours alone,

Nor pointed spear, nor links of steel,
Could e'er those gallant minds fubdue,
Who beauty's wounds with pleasure feel,
And boast the fetters wrought by you.

[blocks in formation]
« 前へ次へ »