OFTEN wished I had a farm,
A decent dwelling snug and warm, A garden, and a spring as pure As crystal running by my door, Besides a little ancient grove, Where at my leisure I might rove.
The gracious gods, to crown my bliss, Have granted this, and more than this; I have enough in my possessing;
"T is well I ask no greater blessing, O Hermes! thau remote from strife To have and hold them for my life. If I was never known to raise My fortune by dishonest ways, Nor, like the spendthrifts of the times, Shall ever sink it by my crimes: If thus I neither pray nor ponder, O, might I have that angle yonder, Which disproportions now my field, What satisfaction it would yield! O that some lucky chance but threw A pot of silver in my view, As lately to the man, who bought The very land in which he wrought! If I am pleased with my condition,
O, hear, and grant this last petition: Indulgent, let my cattle batten,
Let all things, but my fancy, fatten, And thou continue still to guard, As thou art wont, thy suppliant bard. Whenever, therefore, I retreat From Rome into my Sabine seat, By mountains fenced on either side, And in my castle fortified,
What can I write with greater pleasure, Than satires in familiar measure? Nor mad ambition there destroys, Nor sickly wind my health annoys; Nor noxious autumn gives me pain, The ruthless undertaker's gain.
Thus, in this giddy, busy maze I lose the sunshine of my days, And oft, with fervent wish repeat, "When shall I see my sweet retreat? O, when with books of sages deep, Sequestered ease, and gentle sleep, In sweet oblivion, blissful balm! The busy cares of life becalm? O, when shall I enrich my veins, Spite of Pythagoras, with beans? Or live luxurious in my cottage, On bacon ham and savory pottage? O joyous nights! delicious feasts! At which the gods might be my guests."
My friends and I regaled, my slaves Enjoy what their rich master leaves. There every guest may drink and fill As much or little as he will, Exempted from the bedlam-rules Of roaring prodigals and fools: Whether, in merry mood or whim, He fills his bumper to the brim, Or, better pleased to let it pass, Grows mellow with a moderate glass. Nor this man's house, nor that's estate, Becomes the subject of debate; Nor whether Lepos, the buffoon, Can dance, or not, a rigadoon;
But what concerns us more, I trow, And were a scandal not to know: Whether our bliss consist in store Of riches, or in virtue's lore; Whether esteem, or private ends, Should guide us in the choice of friends; Or what, if rightly understood, Man's real bliss, and sovereign good.
Horace. Tr. Philip Francis.
ANDUSIAN fountain, crystal-bright, With duly offered flowers and wine To-morrow shall a kid be thine,
Whose front, with sprouting horns bedight,
Foretokens love and battle-shock:
Vain token; for thy chilling flood Must take the crimson of his blood, Young promise of the wanton flock.
In sultry dog-day's hottest noon, Unsunned, a cool repose art thou To oxen from the toilsome plough, To wandering sheep a welcome boon.
Henceforth run on, patrician spring, Made noble by my verse, that gave To fame that ilex-sheltered cave Whereon thy babbling waters ring.
Horace. Tr. R. M. Hovenden.
HE barren rocks themselves beneath my foot, Relenting bloomed on the Ligurian shore. Thick swarming people there, like emmets, seized Amid surrounding cliffs, the scattered spots Which Nature left in her destroying rage, Made their own fields, nor sighed for other lands. There, in white prospect from the rocky hill Gradual descending to the sheltered shore, By me proud Genoa's marble turrets rose.
And while my genuine spirit warmed her sous, Beneath her Dorias, not unworthy, she Vied for the trident of the narrow seas, Ere Britain had yet opened all the main.
EYOND the rugged Apennines, that roll
Far through Italian bounds their wavy tops, My path, too, I with public blessings strowed; Free states and cities, where the Lombard plain, In spite of culture negligent and gross, From her deep bosom pours unbidden joys, And green o'er all the land a garden spreads.
"" THE SANTA CASA" AT LORETTO.
POET'S, not a pilgrim's, vow was mine ;
And with unworthy eyes, though pleased, I scanned That house walled round with sculptured forms divine, Labor illustrious of a Tuscan hand:
If angels hither from earth's holiest strand
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