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TO MĘCENAS.
MĘCENAS, you, beneath the myrtle shade,
Read o'er what poets sung, and shepherds play'd.
What felt those poets but you feel the same?
Does not your soul possess the sacred flame?
Their noble strains your equal genius shares
In softer language, and diviner airs.
While
Homer
paints lo! circumfus'd in air,
Celestial Gods in mortal forms appear;
Swift
Swift as they move hear each recess rebound,
Heav'n quakes, earth trembles, and the shores resound,
Great Sire of verse, before my mortal
lightnings blaze across the vaulted skies,
And, as the thunder shakes the heav'nly plains,
A deep-felt horror thrills through all my veins.
When gentler strains demand thy graceful song,
The length'ning line moves languishing along.
When great
Patrocluscourts Acbilles' paid,
The grateful tribute of my tears is paid;
Prone on the shore he feels the pangs of love,
And stern Pelides tend'rest passions move.
Great
Maro's
strain in heav'nly numbers flows, The
Nine
inspire, and all the bosom glows. O could I rival thine and
Virgil's
page, Or claim the
Muses
with the
Mantuan
Sage; Soon the same beauties should my mind adorn,
And the same ardors in my soul should burn:
Then should my song in bolder notes arise,
And all my numbers pleasingly surprize;
But here I sit, and mourn a grov'ling mind. That fain would mount and ride upon the wind.
Not you, my friend, these plaintive strains become,
Not you, whose bosom is the
Muses
home;
When they from tow'ring
Helicon
retire,
They fan in you the bright immortal fire,
But I less happy, cannot raise the song,
The fault'ring music dies upon my toungue.
The happier
Terence
all the choir soul replenish'd,
His soul replenish'd, and his bosom fir'd;
But say, ye
Muses
, why this partial grace,
To one alone of
Afric's
sable race;
From age to age transmitting thus his name
With the first glory in the rolls of fame?
Thy virtues, great
Męcenas!
shall be song
In praise of him, from whom those virtues sprung:
While blooming wreaths around thy temples spread,
I'll snatch a laurel from thine honour'd head,
While you indulgent smile upon the deed.
As long as
Thames
in streams majestic flows,
or
Naiads
in their oozy beds repose,
While
Ph[oelig ]bus
reigns above the starry train,
While bright
Aurora
purples o'er the main,
So long, great Sir, the muse thy praise shall sing,
So long thy praise shall make
Parnassus
ring:
Then grant,
M[oelig ]cenas,
thy paternal rays,
Hear me propitious, and defend my lays.
By
Phyllis Wheatley
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