FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   59   60   61   62   63   64   65   66   67   68   69   70   71   72   73   74   75   >>  
And green the trees luxuriant tresses shoot, And, in their daisied banks, the shrinking rivers glide. Beauty, and Love, the blissful change have hail'd, While, in smooth mazes, o'er the painted mead, [1]Aglaia ventures, with her limbs unveil'd, Light thro' the dance each Sister-Grace to lead. But O! reflect, that Sport, and Beauty, wing Th' unpausing Hour!--if Winter, cold and pale, Flies from the soft, and violet-mantled Spring, Summer, with sultry breath, absorbs the vernal gale. Reflect, that Summer-glories pass away When mellow Autumn shakes her golden sheaves; While she, as Winter reassumes his sway, Speeds, with disorder'd vest, thro' rustling leaves. But a short space the Moon illumes the skies; Yet she repairs her wanings, and again Silvers the vault of Night;--but no supplies, To feed their wasting fires, the lamps of Life obtain. When our pale Form shall pensive vigils keep Where COLLINS, AKENSIDE, and SHENSTONE roam, Or quiet with the Despot, JOHNSON, sleep, In that murk cell, the Body's final home, To senseless dust, and to a fleeting shade Changes the life-warm Being!--Ah! who knows If the next dawn our eye-lids may pervade? Darken'd and seal'd, perchance, in long, and last repose! When vivid Thought's unceasing force assails, It shakes, from Life's frail glass, the ebbing sands; Their course run out, ah! what to us avails Our fame's high note, tho' swelling it expands! Reflect, that each convivial joy we share Amid encircling Friends, with grace benign, Escapes the grasp of our rapacious Heir;-- Pile then the steaming board, and quaff the rosy wine! Illustrious HAYLEY!--in that cruel hour, When o'er thee Fate the sable flag shall wave, Not thy keen wit, thy fancy's splendid power, Knowledge, or worth, shall snatch thee from the grave. Not to his MASON's grief, from Death's dim plains Was honor'd GRAY's departed form resign'd; No tears dissolve the cold Lethean chains, That, far from busy Life, the mortal semblance bind. Then, for the bright creations of the brain, O! do not thou from health's gay leisure turn, Lest we, like tuneful MASON, sigh in vain, And grasp a timeless, tho' a LAUREL'D URN! 1: Aglaia, the eldest of the Graces. TO LIGURIA. BOOK THE FOURTH, ODE THE TENTH. O thou! exulting in the charms, Nature, with lavish bounty, showers, When youth no mor
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   59   60   61   62   63   64   65   66   67   68   69   70   71   72   73   74   75   >>  



Top keywords:

Winter

 

Summer

 

shakes

 
Reflect
 
Aglaia
 

Beauty

 

steaming

 
benign
 

Friends

 

Escapes


bounty

 

rapacious

 

HAYLEY

 
exulting
 

charms

 

Nature

 

Illustrious

 
lavish
 

assails

 
ebbing

avails

 
convivial
 

showers

 

expands

 
swelling
 

encircling

 

eldest

 

creations

 

bright

 

semblance


mortal

 

Graces

 

chains

 

timeless

 
LAUREL
 

leisure

 
health
 
Lethean
 
dissolve
 

snatch


Knowledge

 

FOURTH

 

tuneful

 
splendid
 

resign

 

unceasing

 

departed

 
plains
 

LIGURIA

 
breath