CLASS THE FIRST CONTINUED. ODE XXXVIII. · TO PLEASURE. Sister of Youth and laughing Joy, Sweet Pleasure, sorrow-soothing queen, Daughter of Venus, ever-young, And Bacchus wreath'd with ivy green; Whom on their laps the rosy-bosom'd Hours, And all the Graces nurst beneath Idalian bowers. O lead me to thy blissful vale ! Where Hope and Health in sprightly round, Leisure, with Freedom hand in hand, In dance fantastic beat the ground ; Where'er they tread the fairest flowers arise, Embroidering all the green with ever-varying dies. Let the stern pedant love to waste In studious search the tedious night, By musing taper's glimmering light, B Whose pensive ear no wakeful sounds alarm, charm. Me let the cheerful dance engage, Swift urg'd along the lighted dome; While with new warmth the virgin glows, Her cheek all flush'd with fresher bloom : Motion and music tenderest thoughts inspire, And all her yielding soul relents to soft desire. Let the sage Hermit shun mankind, With pale-eyed Penitence to dwell, To freeze at midnight hours of prayer Within a solitary cell; Penurious on the verdant herb to sup, And of the chilling stream to drain his beechen cup. Be mine, amidst the social band, The raptures of champaign to taste, Whose vigorous juice new relish gives To mutual converse, Reason's feast; While old Anacreon seems to rise, and say, “ Begone, ye toils of life, busy cares, away!" ODE XXXIX. TO POVERTY. BY THE REV. THOMAS PENROSE. Hie thee hence! thou spectre foul, Fiend of misery extreme; Hence! nor o'er yon dwelling scowl Hence!—from the artless bard keep wide aloof Fly rather to his hated roof, Can steel with rugged edge the soul : pass him by, the wooer mild Of Genius, friend to all, Nature's ingenuous child. Constant toil, and coarsest fare, In silent apathy may bear, |