The equal lustre of the heavenly mind, LINES SUNG BY DURASTANTI, WHEN SHE TOOK LEAVE OF THE ENGLISH STAGE. GENEROUS, gay, and gallant nation, All but Cupid's gentle darts! From your charms, Oh! who would run? Happy soil, adieu, adieu! Let old charmers yield to new. In arms, in arts, be still more shining; All your joys be still increasing; All your tastes be still refining; All your jars for ever ceasing: But let old charmers yield to new : UPON THE DUKE OF MARLBOROUGH'S HOUSE AT WOODSTOCK SEE, sir, here's the grand approach, This way is for his Grace's coach; There lies the bridge, and here's the clock, Observe the lion and the cock, The spacious court, the colonnade, And mark how wide the hall is made! Thanks, sir, cried I, 'tis very fine, VERSES LEFT BY MR. POPE, ON HIS LYING IN THE SAME BED WHICH WILMOT, THE CELEBRATED EARL OF ROCHESTER, SLEPT IN AT ADDERBURY, THEN BELONGING TO THE Duke of ARGYLE, JULY 9TH, 1739. WITH no poetic ardour fir'd I press the bed where Wilmot lay; That here he lov'd, or here expir'd, Begets no numbers grave or gay. Beneath thy roof, Argyle, are bred Such thoughts as prompt the brave to lie Stretch'd out in honour's nobler bed, Beneath a nobler roof-the sky. Such flames as high in patriots burn, THE CHALLENGE. A COURT BALLAD. TO THE TUNE OF TO ALL YOU LADIES NOW AT LAND,' ETC. To one fair lady out of court, And two fair ladies in, Who think the Turk1 and Pope a sport, And wit and love no sin; Come these soft lines, with nothing stiff in, What passes in the dark third row, 1 Ulrick, the little Turk. 2 The Author. 3 Ladies of the Court of the Princess Caroline. I know the swing of sinful hack, Then why to courts should I repair, Alas! like Schutz I cannot pun, In truth, by what I can discern, Το From court, than Gay or Me: learn Perhaps, in time, you'll leave high diet, • Ireland. • Mentioned before in the verses to Mrs. Howe. At Leicester Fields, a house full high, There may you meet us three to three, But should you catch the prudish itch And thus, fair maids, my ballad ends; With a fa, la, la. This Ballad was written anno 1717. |