By Death, alas, here Conquer'd lies,She who from All late bore the PrizeIn Beauty, Wit, Vertue Divine:In whom those Graces did combine,Which we admir'd in others see,When they but singly scatter'd be!Who her,so Great, can paint beside,The Pencil her own Hand did guide?What Verse can celebrate her Fame,But such as She herself did frame?Though much Excellence she did show,And many Qualities did know,Yet this, alone, she could not tell,To wit,How much she did excel.Or if her Worth she rightly knew,More to her Modesty was due,}That Parts in her no Pride could raise}Desirous still to merit Praise,}But fled, as she deserv'd, the Bays.Contented always to retire,Court Glory she did not admire;Although it lay so neer and faire,It's Grace to none more open were:But with the World how should she close,WhoChristin her first Childhood chose?So with her Parents she did live,That they to Her did Honour give,As she to them. In a Num'rous RaceAnd Vertuous, the highest PlaceNone envy'd her: Sisters, BrothersHer Admirers were and Lovers:She was to all s'obliging sweet,All in One Love to her did meet.A Virgin-Life not only led,But it's Example might be said.The Ages Ornament, the NameThat gave her Sex and Country Fame.Those who her Person never knew,Will hardly think these things are true:But those that did, will More believe,And higher things of her conceive.Thy Eyes in tears now, Reader, steep:For Her if't lawful be to weep,Whose blessed and Seraphique EndAngels in Triumph did attend.
By Death, alas, here Conquer'd lies,She who from All late bore the PrizeIn Beauty, Wit, Vertue Divine:In whom those Graces did combine,Which we admir'd in others see,When they but singly scatter'd be!
Who her,so Great, can paint beside,The Pencil her own Hand did guide?What Verse can celebrate her Fame,But such as She herself did frame?
Though much Excellence she did show,And many Qualities did know,Yet this, alone, she could not tell,To wit,How much she did excel.Or if her Worth she rightly knew,More to her Modesty was due,}That Parts in her no Pride could raise}Desirous still to merit Praise,}But fled, as she deserv'd, the Bays.Contented always to retire,Court Glory she did not admire;Although it lay so neer and faire,It's Grace to none more open were:But with the World how should she close,WhoChristin her first Childhood chose?
So with her Parents she did live,That they to Her did Honour give,As she to them. In a Num'rous RaceAnd Vertuous, the highest PlaceNone envy'd her: Sisters, BrothersHer Admirers were and Lovers:She was to all s'obliging sweet,All in One Love to her did meet.A Virgin-Life not only led,But it's Example might be said.The Ages Ornament, the NameThat gave her Sex and Country Fame.
Those who her Person never knew,Will hardly think these things are true:But those that did, will More believe,And higher things of her conceive.
Thy Eyes in tears now, Reader, steep:For Her if't lawful be to weep,Whose blessed and Seraphique EndAngels in Triumph did attend.
I Sing the Man that never Equal knew,Whose Mighty Arms allAsiadid subdue,Whose Conquests through the spacious World do ring,That City-Raser, King-destroying King,Who o're the WarlikeMacedonsdid Reign,And worthily the Name ofGreatdid gain.This is the Prince (if Fame you will believe,To ancient Story any credit give.)Who when the Globe of Earth he had subdu'd,With Tears the easie Victory pursu'd;Because that no more Worlds there were to win,No further Scene to act his Glorys in.Ah that some pityingMusewould now inspireMy frozen style with a Poetique fire,And Raptures worthy of his Matchless Fame,Whose Deeds I sing, whose never fading NameLong as the world shall fresh and deathless last,No less to future Ages, then the past.Great my presumption is, I must confess,But if I thrive, my Glory's ne're the less;Nor will it from his Conquests derogateA Female Pen his Acts did celebrate.If thou OMusewilt thy assistance give,Such as madeNasoand greatMarolive,With him whomMelasfertile Banks did bear,Live, though their Bodies dust and ashes are;Whose Laurels were not fresher, than their FameIs now, and will for ever be the same.If the like favour thou wilt grant to me,O Queen of Verse, I'll not ungrateful be,My choicest hours to thee I'll Dedicate,'Tis thou shalt rule, 'tis thou shalt be my Fate.But if Coy Goddess thou shalt this deny,And from my humble suit disdaining fly,I'll stoop and beg no more, since I know this,Writing of him, I cannot write amiss:His lofty Deeds will raise each feeble line,And God-like Acts will make my Verse Divine.'Twas at the time the golden Sun doth rise,And with his Beams enlights the azure skies,When lo a Troop in Silver Arms drew near,The glorious Sun did nere so bright appear;Dire Scarlet Plumes adorn'd their haughty Crests,And crescent Shields did shade their shining Brests;Down from their shoulders hung a Panthers Hide,A Bow and Quiver ratled by their side;Their hands a knotty well try'd Speare did bear,Jocund they seem'd, and quite devoyd of fear.These warlike Virgins were, that do resideNearThermodonssmooth Banks and verdant side,The Plains ofThemiscyretheir Birth do boast,Thalestrisnow did head the beauteous Host;She emulating that Illustrious Dame,Who to the aid ofTroyandPriamcame,And her who theRetulianPrince did aid,Though dearly both for their Assistance paid.But fear she scorn'd, nor the like fate did dread,Her Host she often to the field had lead,As oft in Triumph had return'd again,Glory she only sought for all her pain.This Martial Queen had heard how lowdly fame,Eccho'd our Conquerors redoubted Name,Her Soul his Conduct and his Courage fir'd,To see the Heroe she so much admir'd;And toHyrcaniafor this cause she went,WhereAlexander(wholly then intentOn Triumphs and such Military sport)At Truce with War held both his Camp and Court.And while before the Town she did attendHer Messengers return, she saw ascendA cloud of Dust, that cover'd all the skie,And still at every pause there stroke her eye.The interrupted Beams of Burnisht Gold,As dust the Splendour hid, or did unfold;Loud Neighings of the Steeds, and Trumpets soundFill'd all the Air, and eccho'd from the ground:The gallantGreekswith a brisk March drew near,And their great Chief did at their Head appear.And now come up to th'AmazonianBand,They made a Hault and a respectful Stand:And both the Troops (with like amazement strook)Did each on other with deep silence look.Th'Heroick Queen (whose high pretence to WarCancell'd the bashful Laws and nicer BarOf Modesty, which did her Sex restrain)First boldly did advance before her Train,And thus she spake. All but a God in Name,And that a debt Time owes unto thy Fame.
I Sing the Man that never Equal knew,Whose Mighty Arms allAsiadid subdue,Whose Conquests through the spacious World do ring,That City-Raser, King-destroying King,Who o're the WarlikeMacedonsdid Reign,And worthily the Name ofGreatdid gain.This is the Prince (if Fame you will believe,To ancient Story any credit give.)Who when the Globe of Earth he had subdu'd,With Tears the easie Victory pursu'd;Because that no more Worlds there were to win,No further Scene to act his Glorys in.
Ah that some pityingMusewould now inspireMy frozen style with a Poetique fire,And Raptures worthy of his Matchless Fame,Whose Deeds I sing, whose never fading NameLong as the world shall fresh and deathless last,No less to future Ages, then the past.Great my presumption is, I must confess,But if I thrive, my Glory's ne're the less;Nor will it from his Conquests derogateA Female Pen his Acts did celebrate.If thou OMusewilt thy assistance give,Such as madeNasoand greatMarolive,With him whomMelasfertile Banks did bear,Live, though their Bodies dust and ashes are;Whose Laurels were not fresher, than their FameIs now, and will for ever be the same.If the like favour thou wilt grant to me,O Queen of Verse, I'll not ungrateful be,My choicest hours to thee I'll Dedicate,'Tis thou shalt rule, 'tis thou shalt be my Fate.But if Coy Goddess thou shalt this deny,And from my humble suit disdaining fly,I'll stoop and beg no more, since I know this,Writing of him, I cannot write amiss:His lofty Deeds will raise each feeble line,And God-like Acts will make my Verse Divine.
'Twas at the time the golden Sun doth rise,And with his Beams enlights the azure skies,When lo a Troop in Silver Arms drew near,The glorious Sun did nere so bright appear;Dire Scarlet Plumes adorn'd their haughty Crests,And crescent Shields did shade their shining Brests;Down from their shoulders hung a Panthers Hide,A Bow and Quiver ratled by their side;Their hands a knotty well try'd Speare did bear,Jocund they seem'd, and quite devoyd of fear.These warlike Virgins were, that do resideNearThermodonssmooth Banks and verdant side,The Plains ofThemiscyretheir Birth do boast,Thalestrisnow did head the beauteous Host;She emulating that Illustrious Dame,Who to the aid ofTroyandPriamcame,And her who theRetulianPrince did aid,Though dearly both for their Assistance paid.But fear she scorn'd, nor the like fate did dread,Her Host she often to the field had lead,As oft in Triumph had return'd again,Glory she only sought for all her pain.
This Martial Queen had heard how lowdly fame,Eccho'd our Conquerors redoubted Name,Her Soul his Conduct and his Courage fir'd,To see the Heroe she so much admir'd;And toHyrcaniafor this cause she went,WhereAlexander(wholly then intentOn Triumphs and such Military sport)At Truce with War held both his Camp and Court.And while before the Town she did attendHer Messengers return, she saw ascendA cloud of Dust, that cover'd all the skie,And still at every pause there stroke her eye.The interrupted Beams of Burnisht Gold,As dust the Splendour hid, or did unfold;Loud Neighings of the Steeds, and Trumpets soundFill'd all the Air, and eccho'd from the ground:The gallantGreekswith a brisk March drew near,And their great Chief did at their Head appear.And now come up to th'AmazonianBand,They made a Hault and a respectful Stand:And both the Troops (with like amazement strook)Did each on other with deep silence look.Th'Heroick Queen (whose high pretence to WarCancell'd the bashful Laws and nicer BarOf Modesty, which did her Sex restrain)First boldly did advance before her Train,And thus she spake. All but a God in Name,And that a debt Time owes unto thy Fame.
This was the first Essay of this young Lady in Poetry, but finding the Task she had undertaken hard, she laid it by till Practice and more time should make her equal to so great a Work.
As those who pass theAlpsdo say,The Rocks which first oppose their way,And so amazing-High do show,By fresh Ascents appear but low,And when they come unto the last,They scorn the dwarfish Hills th'ave past.So though myMuseat her first flight,Thought she had chose the greatest height,And (imp'd withAlexander's Name)Believ'd there was no further Fame:Behold an Eye wholly DivineVouchsaf'd upon my Verse to Shine!And from that time I'gan to treatWith Pitty him the World call'dGreat;To smile at his exalted Fate,Unequal (though Gigantick) State.I saw that Pitch was not sublime,Compar'd with this which now I climb;His Glories sunk, and were unseen,When once appear'd the Heav'n-born Queen:Victories, Laurels, Conquer'd Kings,Took place among inferiour things.Now surely I shall reach the Clouds,For none besides such Vertue shrouds:Having scal'd this with holy Strains,Nought higher but the Heaven remains!No more I'll Praise on them bestow,Who to ill Deeds their Glories owe;Who build theirBabelsof Renown,Upon the poor oppressed Crown,Whole Kingdoms do depopulate,To raise a Proud and short-Liv'd State:I prize no more such Frantick Might,Than his that did with Wind-Mills Fight:No, give me Prowess, that with CharmsOf Grace and Goodness, not with Harms,Erects a Throne i'th' inward Parts,And Rules mens Wills, but with their Hearts;Who with Piety and Vertue thusPropitiates God, and Conquers us.O that now likeAraunahhere,Altars of Praises I could rear,Suiting her worth, which might be seenLike a Queens Present, to a Queen!'Alone she stands for Vertues Cause,When all decry, upholds her Laws:When to Banish her is the Strife,Keeps her unexil'd in her Life;Guarding her matchless InnocenceFrom Storms of boldest Impudence;In spight of all the Scoffs and Rage,And Persecutions of the Age,Owns Vertues Altar, feeds the Flame,Adores her much-derided Name;While impiously her hands they tie,Loves her in her Captivity;LikePerseussaves her, when she standsExpos'd to theLeviathans.So did bright Lamps once live in Urns,So Camphire in the water burns,SoÆtna'sFlames do ne'er go out,Though Snows do freeze her head without.'How dares bold Vice unmasked walk,And like a Giant proudly stalk?When Vertue's so exalted seen,Arm'd and Triumphant in the Queen?How dares its Ulcerous Face appear,When Heavenly Beauty is so near?But so when God was close at hand,And the bright Cloud did threatning stand(In sight ofIsrael) on the Tent,They on in their Rebellion went.O that I once so happy were,To find a nearer Shelter there!Till then poor Dove, I wandering flyBetween the Deluge and the Skie:Till then I Mourn, but do not sing,And oft shall plunge my wearied wing:If her bless'd hand vouchsafe the Grace,I'th'Ark with her to give a place,I safe from danger shall be found,When Vice and Folly others drown'd.
As those who pass theAlpsdo say,The Rocks which first oppose their way,And so amazing-High do show,By fresh Ascents appear but low,And when they come unto the last,They scorn the dwarfish Hills th'ave past.
So though myMuseat her first flight,Thought she had chose the greatest height,And (imp'd withAlexander's Name)Believ'd there was no further Fame:Behold an Eye wholly DivineVouchsaf'd upon my Verse to Shine!And from that time I'gan to treatWith Pitty him the World call'dGreat;To smile at his exalted Fate,Unequal (though Gigantick) State.I saw that Pitch was not sublime,Compar'd with this which now I climb;His Glories sunk, and were unseen,When once appear'd the Heav'n-born Queen:Victories, Laurels, Conquer'd Kings,Took place among inferiour things.
Now surely I shall reach the Clouds,For none besides such Vertue shrouds:Having scal'd this with holy Strains,Nought higher but the Heaven remains!No more I'll Praise on them bestow,Who to ill Deeds their Glories owe;Who build theirBabelsof Renown,Upon the poor oppressed Crown,Whole Kingdoms do depopulate,To raise a Proud and short-Liv'd State:I prize no more such Frantick Might,Than his that did with Wind-Mills Fight:No, give me Prowess, that with CharmsOf Grace and Goodness, not with Harms,Erects a Throne i'th' inward Parts,And Rules mens Wills, but with their Hearts;Who with Piety and Vertue thusPropitiates God, and Conquers us.O that now likeAraunahhere,Altars of Praises I could rear,Suiting her worth, which might be seenLike a Queens Present, to a Queen!
'Alone she stands for Vertues Cause,When all decry, upholds her Laws:When to Banish her is the Strife,Keeps her unexil'd in her Life;Guarding her matchless InnocenceFrom Storms of boldest Impudence;In spight of all the Scoffs and Rage,And Persecutions of the Age,Owns Vertues Altar, feeds the Flame,Adores her much-derided Name;While impiously her hands they tie,Loves her in her Captivity;LikePerseussaves her, when she standsExpos'd to theLeviathans.So did bright Lamps once live in Urns,So Camphire in the water burns,SoÆtna'sFlames do ne'er go out,Though Snows do freeze her head without.'
How dares bold Vice unmasked walk,And like a Giant proudly stalk?When Vertue's so exalted seen,Arm'd and Triumphant in the Queen?How dares its Ulcerous Face appear,When Heavenly Beauty is so near?But so when God was close at hand,And the bright Cloud did threatning stand(In sight ofIsrael) on the Tent,They on in their Rebellion went.
O that I once so happy were,To find a nearer Shelter there!Till then poor Dove, I wandering flyBetween the Deluge and the Skie:Till then I Mourn, but do not sing,And oft shall plunge my wearied wing:If her bless'd hand vouchsafe the Grace,I'th'Ark with her to give a place,I safe from danger shall be found,When Vice and Folly others drown'd.
Dorinda.SabæanPerfumes fragrant Roses bring,With all the Flowers that Paint the gaudy Spring:Scatter them all in youngAlexis's way,With all that's sweet and (like himself) that's Gay.Alexis.Immortal Laurels and as Lasting Praise,Crown the DivineDorinda's matchless Laies:May all Hearts stoop, where mine would gladly yield,Had notLycorisprepossest the Field.Dor.Would myAlexismeet my noble Flame,In allAusonianeither Youth nor Dame,Should so renown'd in Deathless Numbers shine,As thy exalted Name should do in mine.Alex.He'll need no Trophie nor ambitious Hearse,Who shall be honour'd byDorinda's Verse;But where it is inscrib'd,That here doth lieLycoris'sLove. That Fame can never die.Dor.OnTyber's Bank IThyrsisdid espie,And by his side did brightLycorislie;She Crown'd his Head, and Kist his amorous Brow,Ah PoorAlexis! Ah then where wer't thou?Alex.When thou saw'st that, I ne'r had seen my Fair,And what pass'd then ought not to be my Care;I liv'd not then, but first began to be,When ILycorisLov'd, and she Lov'd me.Dor.Ah choose a Faith, a Faith that's like thine own,A Virgin Love, a Love that's newly blown:'Tis not enough a Maidens Heart is chast,It must be Single, and not once mis-plac't.Alex.Thus do our Priests of Heavenly Pastures tell,Eternal Groves, all Earthly, that excel:And think to wean us from our Loves below,By dazling Objects which we cannot know.
Dorinda.SabæanPerfumes fragrant Roses bring,With all the Flowers that Paint the gaudy Spring:Scatter them all in youngAlexis's way,With all that's sweet and (like himself) that's Gay.
Alexis.Immortal Laurels and as Lasting Praise,Crown the DivineDorinda's matchless Laies:May all Hearts stoop, where mine would gladly yield,Had notLycorisprepossest the Field.
Dor.Would myAlexismeet my noble Flame,In allAusonianeither Youth nor Dame,Should so renown'd in Deathless Numbers shine,As thy exalted Name should do in mine.
Alex.He'll need no Trophie nor ambitious Hearse,Who shall be honour'd byDorinda's Verse;But where it is inscrib'd,That here doth lieLycoris'sLove. That Fame can never die.
Dor.OnTyber's Bank IThyrsisdid espie,And by his side did brightLycorislie;She Crown'd his Head, and Kist his amorous Brow,Ah PoorAlexis! Ah then where wer't thou?
Alex.When thou saw'st that, I ne'r had seen my Fair,And what pass'd then ought not to be my Care;I liv'd not then, but first began to be,When ILycorisLov'd, and she Lov'd me.
Dor.Ah choose a Faith, a Faith that's like thine own,A Virgin Love, a Love that's newly blown:'Tis not enough a Maidens Heart is chast,It must be Single, and not once mis-plac't.
Alex.Thus do our Priests of Heavenly Pastures tell,Eternal Groves, all Earthly, that excel:And think to wean us from our Loves below,By dazling Objects which we cannot know.
Tell me thou safest End of all our Woe,Why wreched Mortals do avoid thee so:Thou gentle drier o'th' afflicteds Tears,Thou noble ender of the Cowards Fears;Thou sweet Repose to Lovers sad dispaire,Thou Calm t'Ambitions rough Tempestuous Care.If in regard of Bliss thou wert a Curse,And then the Joys of Paradise art worse;Yet after Man from his first Station fell,And God fromEdenAdamdid expel,Thou wert no more an Evil, but Relief;The Balm and Cure to ev'ry Humane Grief:Through thee (what Man had forfeited before)He now enjoys, and ne'r can loose it more.No subtile Serpents in the Grave betray,Worms on the Body there, not Soul do prey;No Vice there Tempts, no Terrors there afright,No Coz'ning Sin affords a false delight:No vain Contentions do that Peace annoy,No feirce Alarms break the lasting Joy.Ah since from thee so many Blessings flow,Such real Good as Life can never know;Come when thou wilt, in thy afrighting'st Dress,Thy Shape shall never make thy Welcome less.Thou mayst to Joy, but ne'er to fear give Birth,Thou Best, as well as Certain'st thing on Earth.Fly thee? May Travellers then fly their Rest,And hungry Infants fly the profer'd Brest.No, those that faint and tremble at thy Name,Fly from their Good on a mistaken Fame.Thus Childish fear didIsraelof oldFrom Plenty and the Promis'd Land with-hold;They fancy'd Giants, and refus'd to go,WhenCanaandid with Milk and Honey flow.
Tell me thou safest End of all our Woe,Why wreched Mortals do avoid thee so:Thou gentle drier o'th' afflicteds Tears,Thou noble ender of the Cowards Fears;Thou sweet Repose to Lovers sad dispaire,Thou Calm t'Ambitions rough Tempestuous Care.If in regard of Bliss thou wert a Curse,And then the Joys of Paradise art worse;Yet after Man from his first Station fell,And God fromEdenAdamdid expel,Thou wert no more an Evil, but Relief;The Balm and Cure to ev'ry Humane Grief:Through thee (what Man had forfeited before)He now enjoys, and ne'r can loose it more.No subtile Serpents in the Grave betray,Worms on the Body there, not Soul do prey;No Vice there Tempts, no Terrors there afright,No Coz'ning Sin affords a false delight:No vain Contentions do that Peace annoy,No feirce Alarms break the lasting Joy.
Ah since from thee so many Blessings flow,Such real Good as Life can never know;Come when thou wilt, in thy afrighting'st Dress,Thy Shape shall never make thy Welcome less.Thou mayst to Joy, but ne'er to fear give Birth,Thou Best, as well as Certain'st thing on Earth.Fly thee? May Travellers then fly their Rest,And hungry Infants fly the profer'd Brest.No, those that faint and tremble at thy Name,Fly from their Good on a mistaken Fame.Thus Childish fear didIsraelof oldFrom Plenty and the Promis'd Land with-hold;They fancy'd Giants, and refus'd to go,WhenCanaandid with Milk and Honey flow.
Upon being Contented with a Little.
We deem them moderate, butEnoughimplore,What barely will suffice, and ask no more:Who say, (O Jove)a competency give,Neither in Luxury, or Want we'd live.But what is that, which theseEnoughdo call?If both theIndiesunto some should fall,Such Wealth would yetEnoughbut onely be,And what they'd term not Want, or Luxury.Among the Suits,O Jove, my humbler take;A little give, I that Enough will make.
We deem them moderate, butEnoughimplore,What barely will suffice, and ask no more:Who say, (O Jove)a competency give,Neither in Luxury, or Want we'd live.But what is that, which theseEnoughdo call?If both theIndiesunto some should fall,Such Wealth would yetEnoughbut onely be,And what they'd term not Want, or Luxury.Among the Suits,O Jove, my humbler take;A little give, I that Enough will make.
WantonBillindaloudly does complain,I've chang'd my Love of late into disdain:Calls me unconstant, cause I now adoreThe chastMarcella, that lov'd her before.Sin or Dishonour, me as well may blame,That I repent, or do avoid a shame.
WantonBillindaloudly does complain,I've chang'd my Love of late into disdain:Calls me unconstant, cause I now adoreThe chastMarcella, that lov'd her before.Sin or Dishonour, me as well may blame,That I repent, or do avoid a shame.
Posthumusboasts he does not Thunder fear,And for this cause would Innocent appear;That in his Soul no Terrour he does feel,At threatn'd Vultures, orIxion's Wheel,Which fright the Guilty: But whenFabiustoldWhat Acts 'gainst Murder lately were enrol'd,'Gainst Incest, Rapine,——straight upon the TaleHis Colour chang'd, andPosthumusgrew pale.His Impious Courage had no other Root,But that the Villaine, Atheist was to boot.
Posthumusboasts he does not Thunder fear,And for this cause would Innocent appear;That in his Soul no Terrour he does feel,At threatn'd Vultures, orIxion's Wheel,Which fright the Guilty: But whenFabiustoldWhat Acts 'gainst Murder lately were enrol'd,'Gainst Incest, Rapine,——straight upon the TaleHis Colour chang'd, andPosthumusgrew pale.His Impious Courage had no other Root,But that the Villaine, Atheist was to boot.
Now liquid Streams by the fierce Cold do growAs solid as the Rocks from whence they flow;NowTibersBanks with Ice united meet,And it's firm Stream may well be term'd its Street;Now Vot'ries 'fore the Shrines like Statues show,And scarce the Men from Images we know;Now Winters Palsey seizes ev'ry Age,And none's so warm, but feels the Seasons Rage;Even the bright Lillies and triumphant RedWhich o'reCorinna's youthful cheeks are spred,Look pale and bleak, and shew a purple hew,And Violets staine, where Roses lately grew.Gallaalone, with wonder we behold,Maintain her Spring, and still out-brave the Cold;Her constant white does not to Frost give place,Nor fresh Vermillion fade upon her face:Sure Divine beauty in this Dame does shine?Not Humane, one reply'd, yet not Divine.
Now liquid Streams by the fierce Cold do growAs solid as the Rocks from whence they flow;NowTibersBanks with Ice united meet,And it's firm Stream may well be term'd its Street;Now Vot'ries 'fore the Shrines like Statues show,And scarce the Men from Images we know;Now Winters Palsey seizes ev'ry Age,And none's so warm, but feels the Seasons Rage;Even the bright Lillies and triumphant RedWhich o'reCorinna's youthful cheeks are spred,Look pale and bleak, and shew a purple hew,And Violets staine, where Roses lately grew.Gallaalone, with wonder we behold,Maintain her Spring, and still out-brave the Cold;Her constant white does not to Frost give place,Nor fresh Vermillion fade upon her face:Sure Divine beauty in this Dame does shine?Not Humane, one reply'd, yet not Divine.
Farewel ye Unsubstantial Joyes,Ye Gilded Nothings, Gaudy Toyes,Too long ye have my Soul misled,Too long with Aiery Diet fed:But now my Heart ye shall no moreDeceive, as you have heretofore:For when I hear suchSirenssing,LikeIthacas's fore-warned King,With prudent Resolution IWill so my Will and Fancy tye,That stronger to the Mast not he,Than I to Reason bound will be:And though your Witchcrafts strike my Ear,Unhurt, like him, your Charms I'll hear.
Farewel ye Unsubstantial Joyes,Ye Gilded Nothings, Gaudy Toyes,Too long ye have my Soul misled,Too long with Aiery Diet fed:But now my Heart ye shall no moreDeceive, as you have heretofore:For when I hear suchSirenssing,LikeIthacas's fore-warned King,With prudent Resolution IWill so my Will and Fancy tye,That stronger to the Mast not he,Than I to Reason bound will be:And though your Witchcrafts strike my Ear,Unhurt, like him, your Charms I'll hear.
Seest thou younder craggy Rock,Whose Head o'er-looks the swelling Main,Where never Shepherd fed his Flock,Or careful Peasant sow'd his Grain.No wholesome Herb grows on the same,Or Bird of Day will on it rest;'Tis Barren as the Hopeless Flame,That scortches my tormented Breast.Deep underneath a Cave does lie,Th'entrance hid with dismal Yew,WherePhebusnever shew'd his Eye,Or cheerful Day yet pierced through.In that dark Melancholy Cell,(Retreate and Sollace to my Woe)Love, sad Dispair, and I, do dwell,The Springs from whence my Griefs do flow.Treacherous Love that did appear,(When he at first approach't my Heart)Drest in a Garb far from severe,Or threatning ought of future smart.So Innocent those Charms then seem'd,WhenRosalindafirst I spy'd,Ah! Who would them have deadly deem'd?But Flowrs do often Serpents hide.Beneath those sweets conceal'd lay,To Love the cruel Foe, Disdain,With which (alas) she does repayMy Constant and Deserving Pain.When I in Tears have spent the Night,With Sighs I usher in the Sun,Who never saw a sadder sight,In all the Courses he has run.Sleep, which to others Ease does prove,Comes unto me, alas, in vain:For in my Dreams I am in Love,And in them too she does Disdain.Some times t'Amuse my Sorrow, IUnto the hollow Rocks repair,And loudly to theEcchocry,Ah! gentle Nimph come ease my Care.Thou who, times past, a Lover wer't,Ah! pity me, who now am so,And by a sense of thine own smart,Alleviate my Mighty Woe.Come Flatter then, or Chide my Grief;Catch my last Words, and call me Fool;Or say, she Loves, for my Relief;My Passion either sooth, or School.
Seest thou younder craggy Rock,Whose Head o'er-looks the swelling Main,Where never Shepherd fed his Flock,Or careful Peasant sow'd his Grain.
No wholesome Herb grows on the same,Or Bird of Day will on it rest;'Tis Barren as the Hopeless Flame,That scortches my tormented Breast.
Deep underneath a Cave does lie,Th'entrance hid with dismal Yew,WherePhebusnever shew'd his Eye,Or cheerful Day yet pierced through.
In that dark Melancholy Cell,(Retreate and Sollace to my Woe)Love, sad Dispair, and I, do dwell,The Springs from whence my Griefs do flow.
Treacherous Love that did appear,(When he at first approach't my Heart)Drest in a Garb far from severe,Or threatning ought of future smart.
So Innocent those Charms then seem'd,WhenRosalindafirst I spy'd,Ah! Who would them have deadly deem'd?But Flowrs do often Serpents hide.
Beneath those sweets conceal'd lay,To Love the cruel Foe, Disdain,With which (alas) she does repayMy Constant and Deserving Pain.
When I in Tears have spent the Night,With Sighs I usher in the Sun,Who never saw a sadder sight,In all the Courses he has run.
Sleep, which to others Ease does prove,Comes unto me, alas, in vain:For in my Dreams I am in Love,And in them too she does Disdain.
Some times t'Amuse my Sorrow, IUnto the hollow Rocks repair,And loudly to theEcchocry,Ah! gentle Nimph come ease my Care.
Thou who, times past, a Lover wer't,Ah! pity me, who now am so,And by a sense of thine own smart,Alleviate my Mighty Woe.
Come Flatter then, or Chide my Grief;Catch my last Words, and call me Fool;Or say, she Loves, for my Relief;My Passion either sooth, or School.
When firstAlexisdid in Verse delight,His Muse in Low, but Graceful Numbers walk't,And now and then a little Proudly stalk't;But never aim'd at any noble Flight:The Herds, the Groves, the gentle purling Streams,Adorn'd his Song, and were his highest Theams.But Love these Thoughts, like Mists, did soon disperse,Enlarg'd his Fancy, and set free his Muse,Biding him more Illustrious Subjects choose;The Acts of Gods, and God-like Men reherse.From thence new Raptures did his Breast inspire,His scarce Warm-Heart converted was to Fire.Th' exalted Poet rais'd by this new Flame,With Vigor flys, where late he crept along,And Acts Divine, in a Diviner Song,Commits to the eternal Trompe of Fame.And thusAlexisdoes prove Love to be,As the Worlds Soul, the Soul of Poetry.
When firstAlexisdid in Verse delight,His Muse in Low, but Graceful Numbers walk't,And now and then a little Proudly stalk't;But never aim'd at any noble Flight:The Herds, the Groves, the gentle purling Streams,Adorn'd his Song, and were his highest Theams.
But Love these Thoughts, like Mists, did soon disperse,Enlarg'd his Fancy, and set free his Muse,Biding him more Illustrious Subjects choose;The Acts of Gods, and God-like Men reherse.From thence new Raptures did his Breast inspire,His scarce Warm-Heart converted was to Fire.
Th' exalted Poet rais'd by this new Flame,With Vigor flys, where late he crept along,And Acts Divine, in a Diviner Song,Commits to the eternal Trompe of Fame.And thusAlexisdoes prove Love to be,As the Worlds Soul, the Soul of Poetry.
So the renown'dIthacensianQueenIn Tears for herTelemachuswas seen,When leaving Home, he did attempt the IreOf rageing Seas, to seek his absent Sire:Such bitter Sighs her tender Breast did rend;But had she known a God did him attend,And would with Glory bring him safe again,Bright Thoughts would then have dispossess't her Pain.Ah Noblest Lady! You that her excelIn every Vertue, may in Prudence wellSuspend your Care; knowing what power befriendsYour Hopes, and what on Vertue still attends.In bloody Conflicts he will Armour find,In strongest Tempests he will rule the Wind,He will through Thousand Dangers force a way,And still Triumphant will his Charge convey.And the All-ruling power that can act thus,Will safe return your DearTelemachus.Alas, he was not born to live in Peace,Souls of his Temper were not made for Ease,Th'Ignoble only live secure from Harms,The Generous tempt, and seek out fierce Alarms.Huge Labours were forHerculesdesign'd,Jason, to fetch the Golden Fleece, enjoyn'd,TheMinotaureby NobleTheseusdy'd,In vain were Valour, if it were not try'd,Should the admir'd and far-sought Diamond lye,As in its Bed, unpolisht to the Eye,It would be slighted like a common stone,It's Value would be small, its Glory none.But when't has pass'd the Wheel and Cutters hand,Then it is meet in Monarchs Crowns to stand.Upon the Noble Object of your CareHeaven has bestow'd, of Worth, so large a share,That unastonisht none can him behold,Or credit all the Wonders of him told!When others, at his Years were turning o're,The Acts of Heroes that had liv'd before,Their Valour to excite, when time should fit,He then did Things, were Worthy to be writ!Stayd not for Time, his Courage that out-ranIn Actions, far before in Years, a Man.TwoFrenchCampagnes he boldly courted Fame,While his Face more the Maid, than Youth becameAdde then to these a Soul so truly Mild,Though more than Man, Obedient as a Child.And (ah) should one Small Isle all these confine,Vertues created through the World to shine?Heaven that forbids, and Madam so should you;Remember he but bravely does pursueHis Noble Fathers steps; with your own HandThen Gird his Armour on, like him he'll stand,His Countries Champion, and Worthy beOf your High Vertue, and his Memory.
So the renown'dIthacensianQueenIn Tears for herTelemachuswas seen,When leaving Home, he did attempt the IreOf rageing Seas, to seek his absent Sire:Such bitter Sighs her tender Breast did rend;But had she known a God did him attend,And would with Glory bring him safe again,Bright Thoughts would then have dispossess't her Pain.
Ah Noblest Lady! You that her excelIn every Vertue, may in Prudence wellSuspend your Care; knowing what power befriendsYour Hopes, and what on Vertue still attends.In bloody Conflicts he will Armour find,In strongest Tempests he will rule the Wind,He will through Thousand Dangers force a way,And still Triumphant will his Charge convey.And the All-ruling power that can act thus,Will safe return your DearTelemachus.
Alas, he was not born to live in Peace,Souls of his Temper were not made for Ease,Th'Ignoble only live secure from Harms,The Generous tempt, and seek out fierce Alarms.Huge Labours were forHerculesdesign'd,Jason, to fetch the Golden Fleece, enjoyn'd,TheMinotaureby NobleTheseusdy'd,In vain were Valour, if it were not try'd,Should the admir'd and far-sought Diamond lye,As in its Bed, unpolisht to the Eye,It would be slighted like a common stone,It's Value would be small, its Glory none.But when't has pass'd the Wheel and Cutters hand,Then it is meet in Monarchs Crowns to stand.
Upon the Noble Object of your CareHeaven has bestow'd, of Worth, so large a share,That unastonisht none can him behold,Or credit all the Wonders of him told!When others, at his Years were turning o're,The Acts of Heroes that had liv'd before,Their Valour to excite, when time should fit,He then did Things, were Worthy to be writ!Stayd not for Time, his Courage that out-ranIn Actions, far before in Years, a Man.TwoFrenchCampagnes he boldly courted Fame,While his Face more the Maid, than Youth becameAdde then to these a Soul so truly Mild,Though more than Man, Obedient as a Child.And (ah) should one Small Isle all these confine,Vertues created through the World to shine?Heaven that forbids, and Madam so should you;Remember he but bravely does pursueHis Noble Fathers steps; with your own HandThen Gird his Armour on, like him he'll stand,His Countries Champion, and Worthy beOf your High Vertue, and his Memory.
The Sun's my Fire, when it does shine,The hollow Spring's my Cave of Wine,The Rocks and Woods afford me Meat;This Lamb and I on one Dish eat:The neighbouring Herds my Garments send,My Pallet the kind Earth doth lend:Excess and Grandure I decline,M'Associates onely are Divine.
The Sun's my Fire, when it does shine,The hollow Spring's my Cave of Wine,The Rocks and Woods afford me Meat;This Lamb and I on one Dish eat:The neighbouring Herds my Garments send,My Pallet the kind Earth doth lend:Excess and Grandure I decline,M'Associates onely are Divine.
Behold, dear Mother, who was late our Fear,Disarm'd and Harmless, I present you here;The Tongue ty'd up, that made allJuryquake,And which so often did our Greatness shake;No Terror sits upon his Awful Brow,Where Fierceness reign'd, there Calmness triumphs now;As Lovers use, he gazes on my Face,With Eyes that languish, as they sued for Grace;Wholly subdu'd by my Victorious Charms,See how his Head reposes in my Arms.Come, joyn then with me in my just Transport,Who thus have brought the Hermite to the Court.
Behold, dear Mother, who was late our Fear,Disarm'd and Harmless, I present you here;The Tongue ty'd up, that made allJuryquake,And which so often did our Greatness shake;No Terror sits upon his Awful Brow,Where Fierceness reign'd, there Calmness triumphs now;As Lovers use, he gazes on my Face,With Eyes that languish, as they sued for Grace;Wholly subdu'd by my Victorious Charms,See how his Head reposes in my Arms.Come, joyn then with me in my just Transport,Who thus have brought the Hermite to the Court.
We areDiana's Virgin-Train,Descended of no Mortal Strain;Our Bows and Arrows are our Goods,Our Pallaces, the lofty Woods,The Hills and Dales, at early Morn,Resound and Eccho with our Horn;We chase the Hinde and Fallow-Deer,The Wolf and Boar both dread our Spear;In Swiftness we out-strip the Wind,An Eye and Thought we leave behind;WeFawnsand ShaggySatyrsawe;ToSylvan Pow'rswe give the Law:Whatever does provoke our Hate,Our Javelins strike, as sure asFate;We Bathe in Springs, to cleanse the Soil,Contracted by our eager Toil;In which we shine like glittering Beams,Or Christal in the Christal Streams;ThoughVenuswe transcend in Form,No wanton Flames our Bosomes warm!}If you ask where such Wights do dwell,}In what Bless't Clime, that so excel?}The Poets onely that can tell.
We areDiana's Virgin-Train,Descended of no Mortal Strain;Our Bows and Arrows are our Goods,Our Pallaces, the lofty Woods,The Hills and Dales, at early Morn,Resound and Eccho with our Horn;We chase the Hinde and Fallow-Deer,The Wolf and Boar both dread our Spear;In Swiftness we out-strip the Wind,An Eye and Thought we leave behind;WeFawnsand ShaggySatyrsawe;ToSylvan Pow'rswe give the Law:Whatever does provoke our Hate,Our Javelins strike, as sure asFate;We Bathe in Springs, to cleanse the Soil,Contracted by our eager Toil;In which we shine like glittering Beams,Or Christal in the Christal Streams;ThoughVenuswe transcend in Form,No wanton Flames our Bosomes warm!}If you ask where such Wights do dwell,}In what Bless't Clime, that so excel?}The Poets onely that can tell.
Of all the Poisons that the fruitful EarthE'er yet brought forth, or Monsters she gave Birth,Nought to Mankind has e'er so fatal been,As thou, accursed Gold, their Care and Sin.Methinks I the Advent'rous Merchant see,Ploughing the faithless Seas, in search of thee,His dearest Wife and Children left behind,(His real Wealth) while he, a Slave to th' Wind,Sometimes becalm'd, the Shore with longing EyesWishes to see, and what he wishes, Spies:For a rude Tempest wakes him from his Dream,And Strands his Bark by a more sad Extream.Thus, hopless Wretch, is his whole Life-time spent,And though thrice Wreck't, 's no Wiser than he went.Again, I see, the Heavenly Fair despis'd,A Hagg like Hell, with Gold, more highly priz'd;Mens Faith betray'd, their Prince and Country Sold,Their God deny'd, all for the Idol Gold.Unhappy Wretch, who first found out the Oar,What kind of Vengeance rests for thee in store?IfNebatsSon, thatIsraelled astray,Meet a severe Reward at the last Day?Some strange unheard-of Judgement thou wilt find,Who thus hast caus'd to Sin all Humane Kind.
Of all the Poisons that the fruitful EarthE'er yet brought forth, or Monsters she gave Birth,Nought to Mankind has e'er so fatal been,As thou, accursed Gold, their Care and Sin.
Methinks I the Advent'rous Merchant see,Ploughing the faithless Seas, in search of thee,His dearest Wife and Children left behind,(His real Wealth) while he, a Slave to th' Wind,Sometimes becalm'd, the Shore with longing EyesWishes to see, and what he wishes, Spies:For a rude Tempest wakes him from his Dream,And Strands his Bark by a more sad Extream.Thus, hopless Wretch, is his whole Life-time spent,And though thrice Wreck't, 's no Wiser than he went.
Again, I see, the Heavenly Fair despis'd,A Hagg like Hell, with Gold, more highly priz'd;Mens Faith betray'd, their Prince and Country Sold,Their God deny'd, all for the Idol Gold.
Unhappy Wretch, who first found out the Oar,What kind of Vengeance rests for thee in store?IfNebatsSon, thatIsraelled astray,Meet a severe Reward at the last Day?Some strange unheard-of Judgement thou wilt find,Who thus hast caus'd to Sin all Humane Kind.
In that so temperate SoilArcadianam'd,For fertile Pasturage by Poets fam'd;Stands a steep Hill, whose lofty jetting Crown,Casts o'er the neighbouring Plains, a seeming Frown;Close at its mossie Foot an aged Wood,Compos'd of various Trees, there long has stood,Whose thick united Tops scorn the Sun's Ray,And hardly will admit the Eye of Day.By oblique windings through this gloomy Shade,Has a clear purling Stream its Passage made,TheNimph, as discontented seem'd t'ave choseThis sad Recess to murmur forth her Woes.To this Retreat, urg'd by tormenting Care,The melanchollyClorisdid repair,As a fit Place to take the sad ReliefOf Sighs and Tears, to ease oppressing Grief.Near to the MourningNimphshe chose a Seat,And these Complaints did to the Shades repeat.Ah wretched, truly wretched Humane Race!Your Woes from what Beginning shall I trace,Where End, from your first feeble New-born Cryes,To the last Tears that wet your dying Eyes?Man, Common Foe, assail'd on ev'ry hand,Finds that no Ill does Neuter by him stand,Inexorable Death, Lean Poverty,Pale Sickness, ever sad Captivity.Can I, alas, the sev'ral Parties name,Which, muster'd up, the Dreadful Army frame?And sometimes in One Body all Unite,Sometimes again do separately fight:While sure Success on either Way does waite,Either a Swift, or else a Ling'ring Fate.But why 'gainst thee, ODeath!should I inveigh,That to our Quiet art the only way?And yet I would (could I thy Dart command)Crie, Here O strike! and there O hold thy Hand!The Lov'd, the Happy, and the Youthful spare,And end the Sad, the Sick, the Poor Mans Care.But whether thou or Blind, or Cruel art,Whether 'tis Chance, or Malice, guides thy Dart,Thou from the Parents Arms dost pull awayThe hopeful Child, their Ages only stay:The Two, whom Friendship in dear Bands has ty'd,Thou dost with a remorseless hand devide;Friendship, the Cement, that does faster twineTwo Souls, than that which Soul and Body joyn:Thousands have been, who their own Blood did spill,But never any yet his Friend did kill.Then 'gainst thy Dart what Armour can be found,Who, where thou do'st not strike, do'st deepest wound?Thy Pitty, than thy Wrath's more bitter far,Most cruel, where 'twould seem the most to spare:Yet thou of many Evils art but One,Though thou by much too many art alone.What shall I say ofPoverty, whence flows?To miserable Man so many Woes?Rediculous Evil which too oft we prove,Does Laughter cause, where it should Pitty move;Solitary Ill, into which no Eye,Though ne're so Curious, ever cares to pry,And were there, 'mong such plenty, onely OnePoor Man, he certainly would live alone.YetPovertydoes leave the Man entire,ButSicknessnearer Mischiefs does conspire;Invades the Body with a loath'd Embrace,Prides both its Strength, and Beauty to deface;Nor does its Malice in these bounds restrain,But shakes the Throne of Sacred Wit, the Brain,And with a ne're enough detested ForceReason disturbs, and turns out of its Course.Again, when Nature some Rare Piece has made,On which her Utmost Skill she seems t'ave laid,Polish't, adorn'd the Work with moving Grace,And in the Beauteous Frame a Soul doth place,So perfectly compos'd, it makes DivineEach Motion, Word, and Look from thence does shine;This Goodly Composition, the DelightOf ev'ry Heart, and Joy of ev'ry sight,Its peevish Malice has the Power to spoyle,And with a Sully'd Hand its Lusture soyle.The Grief were Endless, that should all bewaile,Against whose sweet Repose thou dost prevail:Some freeze with Agues, some with Feavers burn,Whose Lives thou half out of their Holds dost turn;And of whose Sufferings it may be said,They living feel the very State o'th' Dead.Thou in a thousand sev'ral Forms are drest,And in them all dost Wretched Man infest.And yet as if these Evils were too few,Mentheir own Kind with hostile Aims pursue;Not Heavens fierce Wrath, nor yet the Hate of Hell,Not any Plague that e're the World befel,Not Inundations, Famines, Fires blind rage,Did ever Mortals equally engage,As Man does Man, more skilful to annoy,Both Mischievous and Witty to destroy.The bloody Wolf, the Wolf does not pursue;The Boar, though fierce, his Tusk will not embrueIn his own Kind, Bares, not on Bares do prey:Then art thou, Man, more savage far than they.And now, methinks, I present do beholdThe Bloudy Fields that are in Fame enroll'd,I see, I see thousands in Battle slain,The Dead and Dying cover all the Plain,Confused Noises hear, each way sent out,The Vanquishts Cries joyn'd with the Victors shout;Their Sighs and Groans who draw a painful Breath,And feel the Pangs of slow approaching Death:Yet happier these, far happier are the Dead,Than who into Captivity are led:What by their Chains, and by the Victors Pride,We pity these, and envy those that dy'd.And who can say, when Thousands are betray'd,To Widdowhood, Orphants or Childless made.Whither the Day does draw more Tears or Blood,A greater Chrystal, or a Crimson Floud.The faithful Wife, who late her Lord did Arm,And hop'd to shield, by holy Vows, from Harm,Follow'd his parting-steps with Love and Care,Sent after weeping Eyes, while he afarRod heated on, born by a brave Disdain,May now go seek him, lying 'mong the Slain:Low on the Earth she'l find his lofty Crest,And those refulgent Arms which late his Breast}Did guard, by rough Encounters broke and tore,}His Face and Hair, with Brains all clotted ore.}And Warlike Weeds besmeer'd with Dust and Gore.And will the Suffering World never bestowUpon th'Accursed Causers of such Woe,A vengeance that may parallel their Loss,Fix Publick Thieves and Robbers on the Cross?Such as call Ruine, Conquest, in their Pride,And having plagu'd Mankind, in Triumph ride.Like that renounced Murderer who stainesIn these our daysAlsatiasfertile Plains,Only to fill the future Tromp of Fame,Though greater Crimes, than Glory it proclame.Alcides, Scourge of Thieves, return to Earth,Which uncontrolled gives such Monsters birth;OnScepter'd-Cacuslet thy Power be shown,Pull him not from his Den, but from his Throne.Clouds of black Thoughts her further Speech here broke,Her swelling Grief too great was to be spoke,Which strugl'd long in her tormented Mind,Till it some Vent by Sighs and Tears did find.And when her Sorrow something was subdu'd,She thus again her sad Complaint renewed.Most Wretched Man, were th'Ills I nam'd beforeAll which I could in thy sad State deplore,Did Things without alone 'gainst thee prevail,My Tongue I'de chide, that them I did bewaile:But, Shame to Reason, thou art seen to beUnto thy self the fatall'st Enemy,Within thy Breast the Greatest Plagues to bear,First them to breed, and then to cherish there;Unmanag'd Passions which the Reins have brokeOf Reason, and refuse to bear its Yoke.But hurry thee, uncurb'd, from place to place,A wild, unruly, and an Uncouth Chace.Now cursed Gold does lead the Man astray,False flatt'ring Honours do anon betray,Then Beauty does as dang'rously delude,Beauty, that vanishes, while 'tis pursu'd,That, while we do behold it, fades away,And even a Long Encomium will not stay.Each one of these can the Whole Man employ,Nor knows he anger, sorrow, fear, or joy,But what to these relate; no Thought does startAside, but tends to its appointed Part,No Respite to himself from Cares he gives,But on the Rack of Expectation lives.If crost, the Torment cannot be exprest,Which boyles within his agitated Breast.Musick is harsh, all Mirth is an offence,The Choicest Meats cannot delight his Sense,Hard as the Earth he feels his Downy Bed,His Pillow stufft with Thornes, that bears his Head,He rolls from side to side, in vain seeks Rest;For if sleep comes at last to the Distrest;His Troubles then cease not to vex him too,But Dreams present, what he does waking do.On th'other side, if he obtains the Prey,And Fate to his impetuous Sute gives way,Be he or Rich, or Amorous, or Great,He'll find this Riddle still of a Defeat,That only Care, for Bliss, he home has brought,Or else Contempt of what he so much sought.So that on each Event if we reflect,The Joys and Sufferings of both sides collect,We cannot say where lies the greatest Pain,In the fond Pursuit, Loss, or Empty Gain.And can it be, Lord of the Sea and Earth,Off-spring of Heaven, that to thy State and BirthThings so incompatible should be joyn'd,Passions should thee confound, to Heaven assign'd?Passions that do the Soul unguarded lay,And to the strokes of Fortune ope' a way.Were't not that these thy Force did from thee take,How bold, how brave Resistance would'st thou make?Defie the Strength and Malice of thy Foes,Unmoved stand the Worlds United Blows?For what is't, Man, unto thy Better Part,That thou or Sick, or Poor, or Captive art?Since no Material Stroke the Soul can feel,The smart of Fire, or yet the Edge of Steel.As little can it Worldly Joys partake,Though it the Body does its Agent make,And joyntly with it Servile Labour bear,For Things, alas, in which it cannot share.Surveigh the Land and Sea by Heavens embrac't,Thou'lt find no sweet th'Immortal Soul can tast:Why dost thou then, O Man! thy self tormentGood here to gain, or Evils to prevent?Who only Miserable or Happy art,As thou neglects, or wisely act'st thy Part.For shame then rouse thy self as from a Sleep,The long neglected Reins let Reason keep,The Charret mount, and use both Lash and Bit,Nobly resolve, and thou wilt firmly sit:Fierce Anger, boggling Fear, Pride prauncing still,Bounds-hating Hope, Desire which nought can fill,Are stubborn all, but thou may'st give them Law;Th'are hard-Mouth'd Horses, but they well can draw.Lash on, and the well govern'd Charret drive,Till thou a Victor at the Goal arrive,Where the free Soul does all her burden leave,And Joys commensurate to her self receive.
In that so temperate SoilArcadianam'd,For fertile Pasturage by Poets fam'd;Stands a steep Hill, whose lofty jetting Crown,Casts o'er the neighbouring Plains, a seeming Frown;Close at its mossie Foot an aged Wood,Compos'd of various Trees, there long has stood,Whose thick united Tops scorn the Sun's Ray,And hardly will admit the Eye of Day.By oblique windings through this gloomy Shade,Has a clear purling Stream its Passage made,TheNimph, as discontented seem'd t'ave choseThis sad Recess to murmur forth her Woes.
To this Retreat, urg'd by tormenting Care,The melanchollyClorisdid repair,As a fit Place to take the sad ReliefOf Sighs and Tears, to ease oppressing Grief.Near to the MourningNimphshe chose a Seat,And these Complaints did to the Shades repeat.
Ah wretched, truly wretched Humane Race!Your Woes from what Beginning shall I trace,Where End, from your first feeble New-born Cryes,To the last Tears that wet your dying Eyes?Man, Common Foe, assail'd on ev'ry hand,Finds that no Ill does Neuter by him stand,Inexorable Death, Lean Poverty,Pale Sickness, ever sad Captivity.Can I, alas, the sev'ral Parties name,Which, muster'd up, the Dreadful Army frame?And sometimes in One Body all Unite,Sometimes again do separately fight:While sure Success on either Way does waite,Either a Swift, or else a Ling'ring Fate.
But why 'gainst thee, ODeath!should I inveigh,That to our Quiet art the only way?And yet I would (could I thy Dart command)Crie, Here O strike! and there O hold thy Hand!The Lov'd, the Happy, and the Youthful spare,And end the Sad, the Sick, the Poor Mans Care.But whether thou or Blind, or Cruel art,Whether 'tis Chance, or Malice, guides thy Dart,Thou from the Parents Arms dost pull awayThe hopeful Child, their Ages only stay:The Two, whom Friendship in dear Bands has ty'd,Thou dost with a remorseless hand devide;Friendship, the Cement, that does faster twineTwo Souls, than that which Soul and Body joyn:Thousands have been, who their own Blood did spill,But never any yet his Friend did kill.Then 'gainst thy Dart what Armour can be found,Who, where thou do'st not strike, do'st deepest wound?Thy Pitty, than thy Wrath's more bitter far,Most cruel, where 'twould seem the most to spare:Yet thou of many Evils art but One,Though thou by much too many art alone.
What shall I say ofPoverty, whence flows?To miserable Man so many Woes?Rediculous Evil which too oft we prove,Does Laughter cause, where it should Pitty move;Solitary Ill, into which no Eye,Though ne're so Curious, ever cares to pry,And were there, 'mong such plenty, onely OnePoor Man, he certainly would live alone.
YetPovertydoes leave the Man entire,ButSicknessnearer Mischiefs does conspire;Invades the Body with a loath'd Embrace,Prides both its Strength, and Beauty to deface;Nor does its Malice in these bounds restrain,But shakes the Throne of Sacred Wit, the Brain,And with a ne're enough detested ForceReason disturbs, and turns out of its Course.Again, when Nature some Rare Piece has made,On which her Utmost Skill she seems t'ave laid,Polish't, adorn'd the Work with moving Grace,And in the Beauteous Frame a Soul doth place,So perfectly compos'd, it makes DivineEach Motion, Word, and Look from thence does shine;This Goodly Composition, the DelightOf ev'ry Heart, and Joy of ev'ry sight,Its peevish Malice has the Power to spoyle,And with a Sully'd Hand its Lusture soyle.The Grief were Endless, that should all bewaile,Against whose sweet Repose thou dost prevail:Some freeze with Agues, some with Feavers burn,Whose Lives thou half out of their Holds dost turn;And of whose Sufferings it may be said,They living feel the very State o'th' Dead.Thou in a thousand sev'ral Forms are drest,And in them all dost Wretched Man infest.
And yet as if these Evils were too few,Mentheir own Kind with hostile Aims pursue;Not Heavens fierce Wrath, nor yet the Hate of Hell,Not any Plague that e're the World befel,Not Inundations, Famines, Fires blind rage,Did ever Mortals equally engage,As Man does Man, more skilful to annoy,Both Mischievous and Witty to destroy.The bloody Wolf, the Wolf does not pursue;The Boar, though fierce, his Tusk will not embrueIn his own Kind, Bares, not on Bares do prey:Then art thou, Man, more savage far than they.
And now, methinks, I present do beholdThe Bloudy Fields that are in Fame enroll'd,I see, I see thousands in Battle slain,The Dead and Dying cover all the Plain,Confused Noises hear, each way sent out,The Vanquishts Cries joyn'd with the Victors shout;Their Sighs and Groans who draw a painful Breath,And feel the Pangs of slow approaching Death:Yet happier these, far happier are the Dead,Than who into Captivity are led:What by their Chains, and by the Victors Pride,We pity these, and envy those that dy'd.And who can say, when Thousands are betray'd,To Widdowhood, Orphants or Childless made.Whither the Day does draw more Tears or Blood,A greater Chrystal, or a Crimson Floud.The faithful Wife, who late her Lord did Arm,And hop'd to shield, by holy Vows, from Harm,Follow'd his parting-steps with Love and Care,Sent after weeping Eyes, while he afarRod heated on, born by a brave Disdain,May now go seek him, lying 'mong the Slain:Low on the Earth she'l find his lofty Crest,And those refulgent Arms which late his Breast}Did guard, by rough Encounters broke and tore,}His Face and Hair, with Brains all clotted ore.}And Warlike Weeds besmeer'd with Dust and Gore.
And will the Suffering World never bestowUpon th'Accursed Causers of such Woe,A vengeance that may parallel their Loss,Fix Publick Thieves and Robbers on the Cross?Such as call Ruine, Conquest, in their Pride,And having plagu'd Mankind, in Triumph ride.Like that renounced Murderer who stainesIn these our daysAlsatiasfertile Plains,Only to fill the future Tromp of Fame,Though greater Crimes, than Glory it proclame.Alcides, Scourge of Thieves, return to Earth,Which uncontrolled gives such Monsters birth;OnScepter'd-Cacuslet thy Power be shown,Pull him not from his Den, but from his Throne.
Clouds of black Thoughts her further Speech here broke,Her swelling Grief too great was to be spoke,Which strugl'd long in her tormented Mind,Till it some Vent by Sighs and Tears did find.And when her Sorrow something was subdu'd,She thus again her sad Complaint renewed.
Most Wretched Man, were th'Ills I nam'd beforeAll which I could in thy sad State deplore,Did Things without alone 'gainst thee prevail,My Tongue I'de chide, that them I did bewaile:But, Shame to Reason, thou art seen to beUnto thy self the fatall'st Enemy,Within thy Breast the Greatest Plagues to bear,First them to breed, and then to cherish there;Unmanag'd Passions which the Reins have brokeOf Reason, and refuse to bear its Yoke.But hurry thee, uncurb'd, from place to place,A wild, unruly, and an Uncouth Chace.Now cursed Gold does lead the Man astray,False flatt'ring Honours do anon betray,Then Beauty does as dang'rously delude,Beauty, that vanishes, while 'tis pursu'd,That, while we do behold it, fades away,And even a Long Encomium will not stay.
Each one of these can the Whole Man employ,Nor knows he anger, sorrow, fear, or joy,But what to these relate; no Thought does startAside, but tends to its appointed Part,No Respite to himself from Cares he gives,But on the Rack of Expectation lives.If crost, the Torment cannot be exprest,Which boyles within his agitated Breast.Musick is harsh, all Mirth is an offence,The Choicest Meats cannot delight his Sense,Hard as the Earth he feels his Downy Bed,His Pillow stufft with Thornes, that bears his Head,He rolls from side to side, in vain seeks Rest;For if sleep comes at last to the Distrest;His Troubles then cease not to vex him too,But Dreams present, what he does waking do.On th'other side, if he obtains the Prey,And Fate to his impetuous Sute gives way,Be he or Rich, or Amorous, or Great,He'll find this Riddle still of a Defeat,That only Care, for Bliss, he home has brought,Or else Contempt of what he so much sought.So that on each Event if we reflect,The Joys and Sufferings of both sides collect,We cannot say where lies the greatest Pain,In the fond Pursuit, Loss, or Empty Gain.
And can it be, Lord of the Sea and Earth,Off-spring of Heaven, that to thy State and BirthThings so incompatible should be joyn'd,Passions should thee confound, to Heaven assign'd?Passions that do the Soul unguarded lay,And to the strokes of Fortune ope' a way.Were't not that these thy Force did from thee take,How bold, how brave Resistance would'st thou make?Defie the Strength and Malice of thy Foes,Unmoved stand the Worlds United Blows?For what is't, Man, unto thy Better Part,That thou or Sick, or Poor, or Captive art?Since no Material Stroke the Soul can feel,The smart of Fire, or yet the Edge of Steel.As little can it Worldly Joys partake,Though it the Body does its Agent make,And joyntly with it Servile Labour bear,For Things, alas, in which it cannot share.Surveigh the Land and Sea by Heavens embrac't,Thou'lt find no sweet th'Immortal Soul can tast:Why dost thou then, O Man! thy self tormentGood here to gain, or Evils to prevent?Who only Miserable or Happy art,As thou neglects, or wisely act'st thy Part.
For shame then rouse thy self as from a Sleep,The long neglected Reins let Reason keep,The Charret mount, and use both Lash and Bit,Nobly resolve, and thou wilt firmly sit:Fierce Anger, boggling Fear, Pride prauncing still,Bounds-hating Hope, Desire which nought can fill,Are stubborn all, but thou may'st give them Law;Th'are hard-Mouth'd Horses, but they well can draw.Lash on, and the well govern'd Charret drive,Till thou a Victor at the Goal arrive,Where the free Soul does all her burden leave,And Joys commensurate to her self receive.