His fhips and building; emblems of a heart Large both in magnanimity and art.
While the propitious heavens this work attend, The showers long wanted they forget to fend: As if they meant to make it understood Of more importance than our vital food.
The fun, which rifeth to falute the Quire Already finish'd, fetting shall admire How private bounty cou'd fo far extend: The King built all; but Charles the western-end ; So proud a fabric to devotion giv’n, At once it threatens, and obliges, heaven! Laomedon, that had the Gods in pay, Neptune, with him † that rules the facred day, Could no fuch structure raise: Troy wall'd fo high, Th' Atrides might as well have forc'd the sky. Glad, though amazed, are our neighbour Kings, To fee fuch power employ'd in peaceful things: They lift not urge it to the dreadful field; The task is easier to destroy, than build.
Pieriis tentata modis. ***
To the QUEEN, occasioned upon fight of Her Majesty's
ELL fare the hand! which to our humble fight Prefents that beauty, which the dazzling light
Of Royal splendor hides from weaker eyes : And all accefs, fave by this art, denies. Here only we have courage to behold This beam of glory: here we dare unfold In numbers thus the wonders we conceive : The gracious image, feeming to give leave, Propitious ftands, vouchfafing to be feen; And by our Mufe faluted, Mighty Queen : In whom th' extremes of power and beauty move, The Queen of Britain, and the Queen of Love! As the bright fun (to which we owe no fight Of equal glory to your beauty's light) Is wifely plac'd in fo fublime a feat,
T'extend his light, and moderate his heat : So, happy 'tis you move in fuch a sphere, As your high Majesty with awful fear In human breasts might qualify that fire, Which kindled by those eyes had flamed higher, Than when the fcorched world like hazard run, By the approach of the ill-guided fun.
No other nymphs have title to men's hearts, But as their meannefs larger hope imparts: Your beauty more the fondest lover moves With admiration, than his private loves;
With admiration! for a pitch fo high (Save facred Charles's) never love durft fly. Heaven, that prefer'd a scepter to your hand, Favor'd our freedom more than your command: Beauty had crown'd must have been The whole world's mistress, other than a Queen. All had been rivals, and you might have spar'd, Or kill'd, and tyranniz'd, without a guard. No power atchiev'd, either by arms or birth, Equals Love's empire, both in heaven and earth: Such eyes as yours, on Jove himself have thrown As bright and fierce a lightning as his own: Witness our Jove, prevented by their flame In his fwift paffage to th' Hefperian Dame : When, like a lion, finding in his way To fome intended spoil, a fairer prey; The Royal Youth, pursuing the report Of beauty, found it in the Gallic Court: There public care with private paffion fought A doubtful combat in his noble thought: Should he confefs his greatness and his love, And the free faith of your + Great Brother prove❤ With his Achates, breaking through the cloud Of that disguise which did their Graces shroud; And mixing with those Gallants at the Ball, Dance with the Ladies, and outshine them all? Or on his journey o'er the mountains ride?- So, when the fair Leucothoë he espy'd,
+ Lewis XIII. K. of France. D. of Buckingham.
To check his fteeds impatient Phoebus yearn'd, Though all the world was in his courfe concern'd. What may hereafter her meridian do,
Whose dawning beauty warm'd his bosom so ? Not fo divine a flame, fince deathlefs Gods Forbore to vifit the defil'd abodes
Of men, in any mortal breast did burn ; Nor fhall, till Piety and They return.
OF THE QUEEN.
HE lark, that shuns on lofty boughs to build Her humble neft, lies filent in the field:
But if (the promise of a cloudless Day)
Aurora fmiling bids her rise and play;
Then ftrait fhe fhews, 'twas not for want of voice, Or power to climb, the made fo low a choice: Singing the mounts, her airy wings are stretch'd Tow'rds heaven, as if from heaven her note the fetch'd. So we, retiring from the bufy throng,
Ufe to restrain th' ambition of our fong;
But fince the light which now informs our age, Breaks from the Court, indulgent to her rage; Thither my Mufe, like bold Prometheus, flies, To light her torch at Gloriana's eyes.
Those fovereign beams, which heal the wounded foul, And all our cares, but once beheld, control ! There the poor lover that has long endur'd Some proud nymph's fcorn, of his fond paffion cur'd, Fares like the man who firft upon the ground A glow-worm spy'd; fuppofing he had found
A moving diamond, a breathing stone;
For life it had, and like those jewels fhone: He held it dear, till, by the springing day Inform'd, he threw the worthlefs worm away. She faves the lover, as we gangrenes stay, By cutting hope, like a lopt limb, away: This makes her bleeding patients to accuse High Heaven, and these expoftulations use. "Could nature then no private woman grace, "Whom we might dare to love, with fuch a face, "Such a complexion, and fo radiant eyes, "Such lovely motion, and fuch sharp replies?
Beyond our reach, and yet within our fight,
"What envious Power has plac'd this glorious light?" Thus, in a starry night fond children cry For the rich spangles that adorn the sky; Which, though they fhine for ever fixed there, With light and influence relieve us here. All her affections are to one inclin'd;
Her bounty and compaffion, to mankind: To whom, while fhe fo far extends her grace, She makes but good the promise of her face: For mercy has, could mercy's felf be seen, No sweeter look than this propitious Queen. Such guard, and comfort, the diftreffed find From her large power, and from her larger mind, That whom ill fate would ruin, it prefers;
For all the miferable are made her's.
So the fair tree, whereon the eagle builds,
Poor sheep from tempefts, and their fhepherds, fhields:
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