Where boundless Oroonoko fills Should Nature's simple beauties fail, And Art's gay structures more prevail, Here too the polish'd dome is plac’d, With each Vitruvian beauty grac’d: Or wouldst thou at the early dawn Transport thee to the dew-clad lawn: Or from the mid-day fervor rove Beneath the silent plantane grove : Or with the fairy elves be seen In dances on the level green: Should baleful War, 'mid loud alarms, 'Mid vanquish'd foes, and conquering arms, 'Mid hosts o'erthrown, and myriads slain, On Britain fix his iron reign: Should Jove's fair daughter, oliv'd Peace, Bid the wild battle's tumult cease; In polish'd ease you still shall share Thy kind protector's fostering care; His faithful love shall still appear, Thou too shalt all his toils repay, Vol. XIII. ODE XLIX. TO WISDOM. BY MRS. CARTER. The solitary Bird of Night And quits the time-shook tow'r: Beneath his ivy bow'r. With joy I hear the solemn sound, And sighing gales repeat: At Wisdom's awful seat. She loves the cool, the silent eve, Beneath the lunar ray: As in the glare of day. O Pallas! queen of ev'ry art Blest source of purer joys: With pleasure and surprise ! That breathes no wild desires; To nobler views aspires. Not Fortune's Gem, Ambition's plume, Be objects of my pray’r: The dull rewards of care. To me thy better gifts impart, By studious thought refin'd: An empire o'er my mind. And wither in the tomb: Unchang'd is thy immortal prize, In undecaying bloom. By thee protected I defy Of ignorance and spite : Of undiscerning wit. In thy retreat I rest : In all thy graces drest. He bid Ilyssus' tuneful stream Of perfect, fair, and good: Attentive Athens caught the sound, And all her list’ning sons around, In awful silence stood. Reclaim'd her wild licentious youth, Confest the potent voice of truth, And felt its just controul: The passions ceas'd their loud alarms, And Virtue's soft persuasive charms O'er all their senses stole. |