Your flock with mine shall on yon mountain feed, Cheer'd by the warbling of your tuneful reed: No more shall Delia's ever-fretful sire Against your hopes and ardent love conspire. Rous'd by her smiles you'll tune the happy lay, While hills responsive waft your songs away. Cor. May plenteous crops your irksome la bour crown, May hoodwink'd fortune cease her envious frown; May riches still increase with growing years; Your flocks be numerous as your silver hairs. Tim. But lo! the heat invites us at our ease To court the twining shades and cooling breeze; Our languid joints we'll peaceably recline, And midst the flow'rs and op'ning blossoms dine. PASTORAL III. NIGHT. AMYNTAS. FLORELLUS. AMYNTAS. WHILE yet grey twilight does his empire hold, Drive all our heifers to the peaceful fold; With sullied wing grim darkness soars along, And larks to nightingales resign the song: The weary ploughman flies the waving fields, To taste what fare his humble cottage yields: As bees that daily thro' the meadows roam : Feed on the sweets they had prepar'd at home. Flor. The grassy meads that smil❜d serene ly gay, Cheer'd by the ever-burning lamp of day; The peaceful olive bends his drooping head; Flor. The west yet ting'd with SOL's effulgent ray, With feeble light illumes our homeward way; The glowing stars with keener lustre burn, While round the earth their glowing axles turn. Am. What mighty power conducts the stars on high! Who bids these comets thro' our system fly! The earth, the sun, and all that fiery maze Am. That righteous pow'r before whose heav'nly eye The stars are nothing and the planets die; Whose breath divine supports our mortal frame, Who made the lion wild and lambkin tame. Flor. At his command the bounteous spring returns ; Hot summer, raging o'er th' Atlantic burns; The yellow autumn crowns our sultry toil; And winter's snows prepare the cumb'rous soil. Am. By him the morning darts his purple ray; To him the birds their early homage pay; With vocal harmony the meadows ring, And growing pastures to the moisture bend; ers. Am. For man, the object of his chiefest care, Fowls he hath form'd to wing the ambient air, For him the steer his lusty neck doth bend; Fishes for him their scaly fins extend. Flor. Wide o'er the orient sky the moon appears, A foe to darkness and his idle fears; On downy couch they sleep their hours away; Hail, balmy Sleep, that sooths the troubled mind! Lock'd in thy arms our cares a refuge find. Asleep the lover with his mistress strays But when pale Cynthia's sable empire's fled, And hov'ring slumbers shun the morning bed, Rous'd by the Dawn, he wakes with frequent sigh, And all his flattering visions quickly fly. Flor. Now owls and bats infest the midnight scene, Dire snakes invenom'd twine along the green; Forsook by man the rivers mourning glide, And groaning echoes swell the noisy tide, Straight to our cottage let us bend our way; My drowsy pow'rs confess sleep's magic sway. Fasy and calm upon our couch we'll lie, While sweet reviving slumbers round our pillows fly. |