FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   175   176   177   178   179   180   181   182   183   184   185   186   187   188   189   190   >>  
I bid my once-loved muse adieu; You warm old age; my passion burns anew. How sweet your verse! how great your force of mind! What power of words! what skill in dark mankind! Polite the conduct; generous the design; And beauty files, and strength sustains, each line. Thus Mars and Venus are, once more, beset; Your wit has caught them in its golden net. But what strikes home with most exalted grace Is, haughty genius taught to know its place; And, where worth shines, its humbled crest to bend, With zeal devoted to that godlike end. When we discern so rich a vein of sense, Through the smooth flow of purest eloquence; 'Tis like the limpid streams of Tagus roll'd O'er boundless wealth, o'er shining beds of gold. But whence so finish'd, so refin'd a piece? The tongue denies it to old Rome and Greece; The genius bids the moderns doubt their claim, And slowly take possession of the fame. But I nor know, nor care, by whom 'twas writ, Enough for me that 'tis from human wit; That soothes my pride: all glory in the pen Which has done honour to the race of men. But this have others done; a like applause An ancient and a modern Horace draws.(67) But they to glory by degrees arose, Meridian lustre you at once disclose. 'Tis continence of mind, unknown before, To write so well, and yet to write no more. More bright renown can human nature claim, Than to deserve, and fly immortal fame? Next to the godlike praise of writing well, Is on that praise with just delight to dwell. O, for some God my drooping soul to raise! That I might imitate, as well as praise; For all commend: e'en foes your fame confess; Nor would Augustus' age have priz'd it less; An age, which had not held its pride so long, But for the want of so complete a song. A golden period shall from you commence: Peace shall be sign'd 'twixt wit and manly sense; Whether your genius or your rank they view, The muses find their Halifax in you. Like him succeed! nor think my zeal is shown For you; 'tis Britain's interest, not your own; For lofty stations are but golden snares, Which tempt the great to fall in love with cares. I would proceed, but age has chill'd my vein, 'Twas a short fever, and I'm cool again. Though life I hate, methinks I could renew Its tasteless, painful course, to sing of you. When such the subject, who shall curb his f
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   175   176   177   178   179   180   181   182   183   184   185   186   187   188   189   190   >>  



Top keywords:

praise

 

genius

 

golden

 

godlike

 

commend

 

Augustus

 

confess

 

continence

 

unknown

 

writing


renown

 

deserve

 

nature

 
immortal
 

bright

 

delight

 
drooping
 
imitate
 

Though

 

proceed


snares

 

stations

 
subject
 

methinks

 

painful

 

tasteless

 

disclose

 

commence

 

period

 

complete


Whether

 

Britain

 

interest

 

succeed

 

Halifax

 

caught

 

strikes

 

exalted

 

humbled

 

devoted


shines

 

haughty

 

taught

 
sustains
 

strength

 

passion

 

generous

 

conduct

 
design
 
beauty