ELIGHT of human kind, and Gods above, Parent of Rome, propitious queen of love,
Whose vital pow'r, air, earth, and sea supplies; And breeds whate'er is born beneath the rowling
For every kind, by thy prolific might, Springs, and beholds the regions of the light. Thee, Goddess, thee the clouds and tempests fear, And at thy pleasing prefence difappear :
For thee the land in fragrant flow'rs is drest; For thee the ocean smiles, and smooths her wavy
And Heav'n itself with more ferene and purer light is blest.
For when the rifing spring adorns the mead, And a new scene of nature stands display'd,
When teeming buds, and chearful greens appear, And western gales unlock the lazy year; The joyous birds thy welcome first express, Whose native songs thy genial fire confefs, Then savage beasts bound o'er their flighted food, Struck with thy darts, and tempt the raging flood. All nature is thy gift; earth, air, and fea: Of all that breathes, the various progeny, Stung with delight, is goaded on by thee. O'er barren mountains, o'er the flow'ry plain, The leafy foreft, and the liquid main, Extends thy uncontrol'd and boundless reign. Through all the living regions dost thou move, And scatter'st, where thou go'st, the kindly feeds
Since then the race of every living thing Obeys thy pow'r; fince nothing new can spring Without thy warmth, without thy influence bear, Or beautiful, or lovesome can appear; Be thou my aid, my tuneful fong inspire, And kindle with thy own productive fire; While all thy province, Nature, I survey, And fing to Memmius an immortal lay Of heav'n and earth, and every where thy won-
To Memmius, under thy sweet influence born, Whom thou with all thy gifts and graces dost adorn. The rather then assist my Muse and me,
Infufing verses worthy him and thee. Mean-time on land and fea let barb'rous difcord
And lull the listning world in universal peace. To thee mankind their soft repose must owe; For thou alone that blessing canst bestow; Because the brutal business of the war
Is manag'd by thy dreadful servant's care; Who oft retires from fighting fields, to prove The pleasing pains of thy eternal love; And, panting on thy breast, supinely lies, While with thy heavenly form he feeds his fa-
Sucks in with open lips thy balmy breath,
By turns restor'd to life, and plung'd in pleasing
There while thy curling limbs about him move, Involv'd and fetter'd in the links of love,
When, wishing all, he nothing can deny, Thy charms in that aufpicious moment try; With winning eloquence our peace implore, And quiet to the weary world restore.
'IS pleasant, safely to behold from shore The rowling ship, and hear the tempeft roar:
Not that another's pain is our delight; But pains unfelt produce the pleasing sight. 'Tis pleasant also to behold from far The moving legions mingled in the war. But much more sweet thy lab'ring steps to guide To virtue's heights, with wisdom well supply'd, And all the magazines of learning fortify'd: From thence to look below on human kind, Bewilder'd in the maze of life, and blind: To see vain fools ambitiously contend For wit and pow'r; their last endeavours bend T' outshine each other, waste their time and health In search of honor, and pursuit of wealth. O wretched man! in what a mist of life, Inclos'd with dangers and with noisy strife, He spends his little span; and overfeeds Hiscramm'd defires, with more than nature needs! For nature wisely stints our appetite, And craves no more than undisturb'd delight : Which minds, unmix'd with cares and fears obtain; A foul serene, a body void of pain. So little this corporeal frame requires ; So bounded are our natural defires, That wanting all, and setting pain afide, With bare privation sense is fatisfy'd. If golden sconces hang not on the walls, To light the costly suppers and the balls; If the proud palace shines not with the state Of burnish'd bowls, and of reflected plate; If well-tun'd harps, nor the more pleasing found Of voices, from the vaulted roofs rebound; Yet on the grafs, beneath a poplar shade, By the cool stream, our careless limbs are lay'd; With cheaper pleasures innocently blest, When the warm spring with gaudy flow'rs is dreft. Nor will the raging fever's fire abate, With golden canopies and beds of state: But the poor patient will as foon be found On the hard mattress, or the mother ground. Then fince our bodies are not eas'd the more By birth, or pow'r, or fortune's wealthy store,
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