A Second Western Wonder
News from Colchester; or, a proper new Ballad
On Mr. John Fletcher's Works
To Sir Richard Fanfhaw, upon his Tranflation of Paftor Fido
A Dialogue between Sir John Pooley and Mr. Thomas Killigrew
An occafional Imitation of a modern Author upon the Game of Chefs
The Paffion of Dido for Æneas
TO THE HON. EDWARD HOWARD,
7HAT mighty gale hath rais'd a flight fo ftrong? So high above all vulgar eyes? fo long?
One fingle rapture scarce itself confines Within the limits of four thousand lines.. And yet I hope to see this noble heat Continue, till it makes the piece compleat, That to the latter age it may descend, And to the end of time its beams extend. When poefy joins profit with delight, Her images fhould be moft exquifite, Since man to that perfection cannot rise, Of always virtuous, fortunate, and wife; Therefore the patterns man should imitate Above the life our masters should create. Herein, if we confult with Greece and Rome, Greece (as in war) by Rome was overcome; Though mighty raptures we in Homer find, Yet, like himself, his characters were blind Virgil's fublimed eyes not only gaz'd,
But his fublimed thoughts to Heaven were rais'd. 20 Who reads the honours which he paid the gods,
Would think he had beheld their bleft abodes;
And, that his hero might accomplish'd be, From divine blood he draws his pedigree.
From that great judge your judgment takes its law, 25 And by the best original does draw
Bonduca's honour, with those heroes Time Had in oblivion wrapt, his faucy crime; To them and to your nation you are just,
In raising up their glories from the duft;
And to Old England you that right have done, To fhew, no story nobler than her own.
HENRY LORD HASTINGS.. 1650.
RE EADER, preserve thy peace; those busy eyes
Will weep at their own fad discoveries;
When every line they add improves thy lofs, Till, having view'd the whole, they fum a cross; Such as derides thy paffions' best relief, And fcorns the fuccours of thy eafy grief. Yet, left thy ignorance betray thy name
Of man and pious, read and mourn: the shame Of an exemption, from juft fenfe, doth shew Irrational, beyond excefs of woe.
Since reafon, then, can privilege a tear, Mankood, uncenfur'd, pay that tribute here,
ON THE DEATH OF LORD HASTINGS. 145 Upon this noble urn. Here, here remains Duft far more precious than in India's veins: Within these cold embraces, ravish'd, lies That which compleats the age's tyrannies: Who weak to fuch another ill appear, For what destroys our hope, fecures our fear. What fin unexpiated, in this land
Of groans, hath guided fo fevere a hand? The late great victim that your altars knew, Ye angry gods, might have excus'd this new Oblation, and have spar'd one lofty light Of virtue, to inform our fteps aright; By whofe example good, condemned we Might have run on to kinder destiny. But, as the leader of the herd fell first. A facrifice, to quench the raging thirst
Of inflam'd vengeance for paft crimes; fo none
But this white-fatted youngling could atone,
By his untimely fate, that impious smoke,
That fullied earth, and did Heaven's pity choak. Let it fuffice for us, that we have loft
In him, more than the widow'd world can boast In any lump of her remaining clay.
Fair as the grey-ey'd morn he was; the day, Youthful, and climbing upwards still, imparts No haste like that of his increasing parts ; Like the meridian beam, his virtue's light Was seen, as full of comfort, and as bright.
Had his noon been as fix'd as clear-but he, That only wanted immortality
To make him perfect, now submits to night, In the black bosom of whose sable spite, He leaves a cloud of flesh behind, and flies, Refin'd, all ray and glory, to the skies.
Great faint! shine there in an eternal sphere,
And tell those powers to whom thou now draw'st near, That by our trembling sense, in HASTINGS dead,
Their anger and our ugly faults are read;
The short lines of whofe life did to our eyes
Their love and majefty epitomize.
Tell them, whose stern decrees impose our laws, The feafted grave may close her hollow jaws ; Though fin fearch nature, to provide her here A fecond entertainment half fo dear, She'll never meet a plenty like this hearse, Till Time present her with the Universe.
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