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And Chastity her matron step,
And purple Health her rofy lip.
Ah! on the virgin's gentle brow
How Innocence delights to głow!
Unlike the town-dame's haughty air,
The fcornful eye and harlot's ftare;
But bending mild the bafhful front,
As modeft Fear is ever wont :
Shepherdeffes fuch of old,

Doric bards enamour'd told,

While the pleas'd Arcadian vale

Echo'd the enchanting tale.

But chief of Virtue's lovely train,

A penfive exile on the plain,

No longer active now to wield

Th' avenging fword, protecting fhield,
Here thoughtful-walking Liberty
Remembers Britons once were free.
With her would Nobles old converse,

And learn her dictates to rehearse,

Ere yet they grew refin'd to hate

The hofpitable rural feat,

The fpacious hall with tenants ftor'd,

Where Mirth and Plenty crown'd the board;

Ere

Ere

yet

their Lares they forfook,

And loft the genuine British look,
The confcious brow of inward merit,

The rough, unbending, martial spirit,

To clink the chain of Thraldom gay,
And court-idolatry to pay;

To live in city fmoaks obfcure,

Where morn ne'er wakes her breezes pure,
Where darkest midnight reigns at noon,
And fogs eternal blot the fun.

But come, the minutes flit away,
And eager Fancy longs to stray:
Come, friendly Genius! lead me round
Thy fylvan haunts and magic ground;
Point every spot of hill or dale,

And tell me, as we tread the vale,
"Here mighty Dudly once would rove,
"To plan his triumphs in the grove :
"There loofer Waller, ever gay,

"With Saccharifs in dalliance lay;

"And Philip, fide-long yonder fpring, "His lavish carols wont to fing."

Hark! I hear the echoes call,

Hark! the rushing waters fall;

Lead

Lead me to the green retreats,

Guide me to the Mufes' feats,

с

Where ancient bards retirement chofe,
Or ancient lovers wept their woes.
What Genius points to yonder oak?
What rapture does my foul provoke ?
There let me hang a garland high,
There let my Mufe her accents try;

Be there my earliest homage paid,
Be there
my latest vigils made:

For thou waft planted in the earth
The day that shone on Sidney's birth.
That happy time, that glorious day
The Muses came in concert gay;
With harps in tune, and ready fong,
The jolly Chorus tript along;
In honour of th' aufpicious morn,
To hail an infant genius born:

Next came the Fauns in order meet,
The Satyrs next with cloven feet,

An oak in Penfhurft park, planted the day Sir Philip Sidney was born, of which Ben Johnfon speaks in the following manner:

That taller tree, which of a nut was fet,

At his great birth, where all the Muses met.

The

The Dryads swift that roam the woods,
The Naiads green that swim the floods;
Sylvanus left his filent cave,

Medway came dropping from the wave;
Vertumnus led his blushing spouse,

And Ceres fhook her wheaten brows;
And Mars with milder look was there,
And laughing Venus grac'd the rear.
They join'd their hands in festive dance,
And bade the smiling babe advance;
Each gave a gift; Sylvanus laft
Ordain'd, when all the pomp was past,
Memorial meet, a tree to grow
Which might to future ages fhew,
That on felect occafion rare,
A troop of Gods affembled there:
The Naiads water'd well the ground,
And Flora twin'd a wood-bine round:
The tree sprung fast in hallow'd earth,
Co-æval with th' illuftrious birth.

Thus let feet unwearied ftray;

my

Nor fatisfied with one furvey,

When morn returns with doubtful light,
And Phebe pales her lamp of night,

I

Still

Still let me wander forth anew,

And print my footsteps on the dew,

What time the swain with ruddy cheek
Prepares to yoke his oxen meek,
And early dreft in neat array

The milk-maid chanting fhrill her lay,
Comes abroad with milking pail;

And the found of distant flail

Gives the ear a rough good-morrow,
And the lark from out his furrow
Soars upright on matin wings,
And at the gate of heaven fings.

But when the fun with fervid ray
Drives upwards to his noon of day,
And couching oxen lay them down
Beneath the beechen umbrage brown;
Then let me wander in the hall,
Round whofe antique-vifag'd wall

Hangs the armour Britons wore,
Rudely caft in days of yore.

Yon, sword some heroe's arm might wield,
Red in the ranks of Chalgrave's field,
Where ever-glorious Hampden bled,
And Freedom tears of forrow shed.

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