Be envied, wretched—and be flatter'd, poor; praise ; A PASTORAL ELEGY, ON THE DEATII OF JACKSON, THE MUSICAL COMPOSER: O SHEPHERDS! 't is CORYDON's kneli, That, sounding, now saddens the wind:: When he bade us for ever farewell, . He left not an equal:behind. How often ye dwelt on his strain, That fill’d with sweet echoes the grove! Ilow:happy the nymphs of the plain, When he soften’d the bosom to love! Our garlands his tomb shall adorn; His shade shall our praises receive ; The lark shall salute him at morn, And Philomel soothe him at eve. Near his ashes the myrtle shall bloom, Which Pity will plant with a sigh, And, oft as she visits his tomb, Lament that such merit should die. He sought not false fame to obtain: To the SHEPHERD no art did belong : SIMPLICITY taught him her strain ; SIMPLICITY govern'd his song. Lo! his reed that lies mute on the ground, For with him its sweet sorrows depart! For like him, none can give it a sound, That tells a fond tale of the HEART! ANACREONTIC. SYLVIA, a kiss or two I stole, That thrill'd me to the very soul: But, sooner than thou shalt complain, THE FIRE-SIDE. BY DR. COTTON. DEAR CHLOE, while the busy crowd, The vain, the wealthy, and the proud, In Folly's maze advance; Tho' singularity and pride Be callid our choice, we ’ll step aside, Nor join the giddy dance. From the gay world we ’ll oft retire Where love our hours employs ; To spoil our heart-felt joys. If solid happiness we prize, And they are fools who roam: The world has nothing to bestow; And that dear hut, our home. Of rest was Noah's dove bereft, That safe retreat, the ark; Explor'd the sacred bark. Tho' fools spurn HYMEN's gentle pow'rs, We, who improve his golden hours, By sweet experience know, That marriage, rightly understood, Gives to the tender and the good A Paradise below, Our babes shall richest comforts bring; If tutor's right, they'll prove a spring Whence pleasures ever rise : D |