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O lovely maid! propitious hear,

Nor think thy Damon infincere.

Pity my wild delufive flame :

For though the flowers are still the same,
To me they languish, or improve,

And plainly tell me that I love.

SONG XIX. Imitated from the French.

ES, thefe are the scenes where with Iris I ftray'd

YES,

But short was her fway for fo lovely a maid!
In the bloom of her youth to a cloyster the run;
In the bloom of her graces too fair for a nun!
Ill-grounded, no doubt, a devotion must prove
So fatal to beauty, fo killing to love!

Yes, thefe are the meadows, the fhrubs, and the plains;
Once the scene of my pleasures, the fcene of my pains;
How many foft moments I spent in this grove!

How fair was my nymph! and how fervent my love!
Be ftill though, my heart! thine emotion give o'er;
Remember, the feafon of love is no more.

With her how I stray'd amid fountains and bowers,
Or loiter'd behind and collected the flowers!

Then breathlefs with ardor my fair-one purfued,
And to think with what kindness my garland the view'd'
But be still, my fond heart! this emotion give o'er!
Fain would't thou forget thou must love her no more.

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A PARODY.

WHEN firft, Philander, first I came

Where Avon rolls his winding stream,

The nymphs-how brifk! the swains-how gay! To fee Afteria, Queen of May!-

The parfons round, her praises fung!
The steeples, with her praifes rung!-
I thought-no fight, that e'er was seen,
Could match the fight of Barel's-green!

But now, fince old Eugenio dy'd-
The chief of poets, and the pride-
Now, meaner bards in vain aspire
To raise their voice, to tune their lyre!
Their lovely feason, now, is o'er!
Thy notes, Florelio, please no more!
No more Afteria's fmiles are seen!-
Adieu!-the fweets of Barel's-green!

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THE HALCYON.

WHY o'er the verdant banks of Ooze

Does yonder halcyon speed so fast ?

'Tis all because fhe would not lofe
Her favourite calm that will not last.

The fun with azure paints the skies,
The stream reflects each flowery spray:
And frugal of her time the flies
To take her fill of love and play.

See

See her, when rugged Boreas blows,
Warm in fome rocky cell remain ;
To feek for pleafure, well fhe knows,
Would only then enhance the pain.
Defcend, the cries, thou hated fhower,
Deform my limpid waves to-day,
For I have chofe a fairer hour

To take my fill of love and play.
You too, my Silvia, fure will own
Life's azure feafons fwiftly roll:
And when our youth or health is flown,
To think of love but fhocks the foul.
Could Damon but deferve thy charms,
As thou art Damon's only theme;
He'd fly as quick to Delia's arms,
As yonder halcyon fkims the ftream.

O D E.

O dear my Lucio is to me,

So well our minds and tempers blend;

That feafons may for ever flee,

And ne'er divide me from my friend;

But let the favour'd boy forbear
To tempt with love my only fair.

O Lycon, born when every Mufe,
When every Grace benignant fmil'd,
With all a parent's breaft could chufe
To blefs her lov'd, her only child :

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'Tis thine, fo richly grac❜d to prove More noble cares, than cares of love. Together we from early youth

Have trod the flowery tracks of time, 'Together mus'd in search of truth,

O'er learned fage, or bard fublime;
And well thy cultur'd breast I know,
What wonderous treafure it can show.

Come then, refume thy charming lyre,
And fing fome patriot's worth fublime,
Whilft I in fields of foft defire

Confume my fair and fruitless prime;
Whofe reed afpires but to display
The flame that burns me night and day.
O come! the dryads of the woods

Shall daily foothe thy ftudious mind,
The blue-ey'd nymphs of yonder floods
Shall meet and court thee to be kind;
And Fame fits liftening for thy lays
To fwell her trump with Lucio's praife.
Like me, the plover fondly tries

To lure the fportfimen from her neft,
And fluttering on with anxious cries,
Too plainly fhews her tortur'd breast :
O let him, confcious of her care,
Pity her pains, and learn to fpare.

A PAS

A PASTORAL ODE,

To the Honourable Sir RICHARD LYTTELTON.

T

HE morn difpens'd a dubious light,

A fullen mift had stol'n from fight
Each pleafing vale and hill;

When Damon left his humble bowers,

To guard his flocks, to fence his flowers,
Or check his wandering rill.

Though school'd from fortune's paths to fly,
The fwain beneath each lowering sky,
Would oft his fate bemoan;

That he in fylvan fhades, forlorn!
Muft waste his chearless ev'n and morn,
Nor prais'd nor lov'd, nor known.

No friend to fame's obftreperous noife, -
Yet to the whispers of her voice,
Soft murmuring, not a foe:

The pleasures he through choice declin'd, a
When gloomy fogs depress'd his mind,
It griev'd him to forego.

Griev'd him to lurk the lakes befide,
Where coots in ruthy dingles hide,
And moorcocks fhun the day;
While caitiff bitterns, undifmay'd,
Remark the fwain's familiar fhade,.
And fcorn to quit their prey,

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