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With filver clocks the river gods
Appear'd; and fome will take their oath,
Or lay at least a thousand odds,

The clouds faliving spit white froth.
The youth abash'd thus to furvey

So rude a scene himself outdo,

His fprightly genius to display,

Refolv❜d on fomething odd and new: All things he found were grown genteel, Which made him deem it a-propo,

To be alone in dishabile,

A Forrefter, and not a beau

ON

ON THE WINTER SOLSTICE.

M.D.CC.XL.

BY DR. AKENSIDE.

HE radiant ruler of the year

TH

At length his wint'ry goal attains,
Soon to reverse the long career,

And northward bend his golden reins.
Prone on Potofi's haughty brow
His fiery ftreams inceffant flow,
Ripening the filver's ductile ftores;
While, in the cavern's horrid fhade,
The panting Indian hides his head,
And oft th' approach of eve explores.

But lo, on this deferted coaft

How faint the light! how thick the air!
Lo, arm'd with whirlwind, hail and frost,
Fierce winter defolates the year.

The fields refign their chearful bloom;
No more the breezes waft perfume;
No more the warbling waters roll :
Deserts of fnow fatigue the eye,
Black storms involve the louring sky,
And gloomy damps opprefs the foul.

Now

Now thro' the town promifcuous throngs
Urge the warm bowl and ruddy fire;
Harmonious dances, feftive fongs,

To charm the midnight hours confpire.
While mute and fhrinking with her fears,
Each blast the cottage-matron hears,
As o'er the hearth fhe fits alone :

At morn her bridegroom went abroad,
'The night is dark, and deep the road;
She fighs, and wishes him at home.

But thou, my lyre, awake, arife,
And hail the fun's remoteft ray;
Now, now he climbs the northern skies,
To-morrow nearer than to-day.
Then louder howl the ftormy wafte,
Be land and ocean worfe defac'd,
Yet brighter hours are on the wing;
And fancy thro' the wintry glooms,
All fresh with dews and opening blooms,
Already hails th' emerging spring.

O fountain of the golden day!

Could mortal vows but urge thy fpeed,
How foon before thy vernal ray
Should each unkindly damp recede!
How foon each hovering tempeft fly,
That now fermenting loads the sky,

Prompt

Prompt on our heads to burst amain,
To rend the foreft from the steep,
Or thundering o'er the Baltic deep
To whelm the merchant's hopes of gain!

But let not man's unequal views
Prefume on nature and her laws;
"Tis his with grateful joy to use

Th' indulgence of the fovereign caufe;
Secure that health and beauty springs,
Thro' this majeftic frame of things,
Beyond what he can reach to know,
And that heav'n's all-fubduing will,
With good the progeny of ill,
Attempers every state below.

How pleasing wears the wint'ry night,
Spent with the old illuftrious dead!
While, by the taper's trembling light,
I feem those awful courts to tread
Where chiefs and legiflators lie,
Whose triumphs move before my eye
With every laurel fresh display'd;
While charm'd I taste th' Ionian song,
Or bend to Plato's god-like tongue
Refounding thro' the olive shade.

But

But if the gay, well-natur'd friend
Bids leave the studious page awhile,
Then easier joys the foul unbend,

And teach the brow a fofter smile;
Then while the genial glafs is paid
By each to her, that fairest maid,
Whofe radiant eyes his hopes obey,
What lucky vows his bofom warm!
While abfence heightens every charm,
And love invokes returning May.

May! thou delight of heav'n and earth,
When will thy happy morn arife?
When the dear place which gave her birth
Reftore Lucinda to my eyes ?

grove,

There while fhe walks the wonted
The feat of mufic and of love,
Bright as the one primæval fair,
Thither, ye filver-founding lyres,
Thither, gay fmiles and young defires,
Chafte hope and mutual faith repair.

And if believing love can read

The wonted foftness in her eye,
Then shall my fears, O charming maid,
And every pain of abfence die :

Then

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