Page images
PDF
EPUB

HORACE, BOOK I. ODE XXIX.

Paraphrased in Pindaric verse, and inscribed to the Right Hon. Laurence Earl of Rochester.

I.

DESCENDED of an ancient line,
That long the Tuscan sceptre sway'd,
Make haste to meet the gen'rous wine,
Whose piercing is for thee delay'd:
The rosy wreath is ready made,
And artful hands prepare

The fragrant Syrian oil that shall perfume thy

hair.

II.

When the wine sparkles from afar,

And the well-natur'd friend cries, Come away, Make haste, and leave thy business and thy care; No mortal int'rest can be worth thy stay.

III.

Leave, for a while, thy costly country-seat;
And, to be great indeed, forget

The nauseous pleasures of the great:

Make haste, and come:

Come, and forsake thy cloying store,

Thy turret, that surveys, from high,

The smoke, and wealth, and noise of Rome,
And all the busy pageantry

That wise men scorn, and fools adore:

Come, give thy soul a loose, and taste the pleasures of the poor.

IV.

Sometimes 'tis grateful to the rich to try
A short vicissitude, and fit of poverty:
A savʼry dish, a homely treat,
Where all is plain, where all is neat,
Without the stately spacious room,
The Persian carpet, or the Tyrian loom,
Clear up the cloudy foreheads of the great.

V.

The sun is in the Lion mounted high;

The Syrian star

Barks from afar,

And with his sultry breath infects the sky;
The ground below is parch'd, the heav'ns above
us fry.

The shepherd drives his fainting flock
Beneath the covert of a rock,

And seeks refreshing rivulets nigh:

The Sylvans to their shades retire,

Those very shades and streams new shades and streams require,

And want a cooling breeze of wind to fan the raging fire.

VI.

Thou, what befits the new lord may'r,
And what the City factions dare,

And what the Gallic arms will do,
And what the quiver-bearing foe,
Art anxiously inquisitive to know;

But God has, wisely, hid from human sight.&
The dark decrees of future fate,

Ard sown their seeds in depth of night;

He laughs at all the giddy turns of state, mil When mortals search too soon, and fear too late.

VII.

Enjoy the present smiling hour,

And put it out of Fortune's pow'r:

[ocr errors][ocr errors]

The tide of business, like the running stream,
Is sometimes high, and sometimes low,

A quiet ebb, or a tempestuous flow,

And always in extreme.

Nor with a noiseless gentle course

It keeps within the middle bed;

Anon it lifts aloft the head,

And bears down all before it with impetuous force; And trunks of trees come, rolling down,

Sheep and their folds together drown;

Both bouse and homested into seas are borne, And rocks are from their old foundations torn, And woods, made thin with winds, their scatter'd honours mourn..

[ocr errors]

VILI.

Happy the man, and happy he alone,

He who can call to-day his owna, zbog of ve
He who, secure within, can say, edib mund-
To-morrow do thy worst, for I have liv'd to-day

[ocr errors]

fair, or foul, or rain, or shine,

[mine.

: joys I have possess'd, in spite of Fate, are : Heav'n itself

upon the past has pow'r; [hour. what has been has been, and I have had my

IX.

rtune that, with malicious joy,
es man, her slave, oppress,
oud of her office to destroy,
seldom pleas'd to bless ;

ill various, and unconstant still,
it with an inclination to be ill,
omotes, degrades, delights in strife,
nd makes a lottery of life.

can enjoy her while she's kind;

ut when she dances in the wind,

And shakes the wings and will not stay, puff the prostitute away:

The little or the much she gave is quietly resign'd: Content with poverty, my soul I arm,

And virtue, though in rags, will keep me warm.,

What is't to me,

X.

Who never sail in her unfaithful sea,
If storms arise, and clouds grow
black,
If the mast split, and threaten wreck?
Then let the greedy merchant fear
For his ill-gotten gain,

And pray to gods that will not hear,
While the debating winds and billows bear
His wealth into the main.

For me, secure from Fortune's blows,
Secure of what I cannot lose,
In my small pinnace I can sail,
Contemning all the blust'ring roar ;
And running with a merry gale,
With friendly stars my safety seek
Within some little winding creek,
And see the storm ashore,

« PreviousContinue »