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A PASTORAL BETWIXT DAVID, THIRSIS, AND THE ANGEL GABRIEL, UPON THE BIRTH OF OUR SAVIOUR.

DAVID.

WHAT means yon apparition in the sky,
Thirsis, that dazzles every shepherd's eye?
I slumbering was when from yon glorious cloud
Came gliding music, heavenly, sweet, and loud,
With sacred raptures which my bosom fires,
And with celestial joy my soul inspires;

It soothes the native horrors of the night,
And gladdens nature more than dawning light.

THIRSIS.

But hold, see nither through the yie.aing air,
An angel comes: for mighty news prepare.

ANGEL GABRIEL.

Rejoice, ye swains, anticipate the morn

With songs of praise; for lo! a Saviour's born.

With joyful haste to Bethlehem repair,

And you will find the Almighty infant there; Wrapped in a swaddling-band you'll find your king, And in a manger laid; to him your praises bring.

CHORUS OF ANGELS.

To God who in the highest dwells,
Immortal glory be;

Let peace be in the humble cells

Of Adam's progeny.

DAVID.

No more the year shall wintry horrors bring:
Fixed in the indulgence of eternal spring,
Immortal green shall clothe the hills and vales,
And odorous sweets shall load the balmy gales;
The silver brooks shall in soft murmurs tell
The joy that shall their oozy channels swell.
Feed on, my flocks, and crop the tender grass,
Let blooming joy appear on every face;
For lo! this blessed, this propitious morn,
The Saviour of lost mankind is born.

THIRSIS.

Thou fairest morn that ever sprang from night,
Or decked the opening skies with rosy light,
Well mayest thou shine with a distinguished ray,
Since here Emmanuel condescends to stay.
Our fears, our guilt, our darkness to dispel,
And save us from the horrid jaws of hell.
Who from his throne descended, matchless love!
To guide poor mortals to blessed seats above.

THIRSIS AND CORYDON,

But come without delay, let us be gone,
Shepherd, let's go, and humbly kiss the Son.

A PASTORAL BETWEEN THIRSIS AND CORYDON,
UPON THE DEATH OF DAMON, BY WHOM IS MEANT MR.

W. RIDDELL.

THIRSIS.

SAY, tell me true, what is the doleful cause
That Corydon is not the man he was?
Your cheerful presence used to lighten cares,
And from the plains to banish gloomy fears.
Whene'er unto the circling swains you sung,
Our ravished souls upon the music hung;
The gazing, listening flocks forgot their meat,
While vocal grottos did your lays repeat:
But now your gravity our mirth rebukes,
And in your downcast and desponding looks
Appears some fatal and impending woe;
I fear to ask, and yet desire to know.

CORYDON.

The dolefui news how shall I, Thirsis, tell!
In blooming youth the hapless Damon fell:
He's dead, he's dead, and with him all my joy ;
The mournful thought does all gay forms destroy :
This is the cause of my unusual grief,
Which sulleuly admits of no relief.

479

AN

THIRSIS.

Begone all mirth! begone all sports and play, To a deluge of grief and tears give way. Damon the just, the generous, and the young, Must Damon's worth and merit be unsung? No, Corydon, the wondrous youth you knew. How as in years so he in virtue grew ; Embalm his fame in never-dying verse, As a just tribute to his doleful hearse.

CORYDON.

Assist me, mighty grief, my breast inspire
With generous heats, and with thy wildest fire,
While in a solemn and a mournful strain,
Of Damon gone for ever I complain.

Ye muses, weep; your mirth and songs forbear,
And for him sigh and shed a friendly tear;
He was your favourite, and by your aid

In charming verse his witty thoughts arrayed;
He had of knowledge, learning, wit, a store,
To it denied he still pressed after more.
He was a pious and a virtuous soul,

And still pressed forward to the heavenly goal;
He was a faithful, true, and constant friend,
Faithful, and true, and constant to the end.
Ye flowers, hang down and droop your heads,
No more around your grateful odours spread;
Ye leafy trees, your blooming honours shed.
Damon for ever from your shade is fled;
Fled to the mansions of eternal light,

Where endless wonders strike his happy sight.
Ye birds, be mute, as through the trees you fly,
Mute as the grave wherein my
friend does lie.
Ye winds, breathe sighs as through the air ye rove,
And in sad pomp the trembling branches move.
Ye gliding brooks, O weep your channels dry,
My flowing tears them fully shall supply;
You in soft murmurs may your grief express,
And yours, you swains, in mournful songs confess,
I to some dark and gloomy shade will fly,
Dark as the grave wherein my friend does lie;
And for his death to lonely rocks complain,
In mournful accents and a dying strain,
While pining echo answers me again.

A PASTORAL ENTERTAINMENT.

WHILE in heroic numbers some relate
The amazing turns of wise eternal fate;
Exploits of heroes in the dusty field,
That to her name immortal honour yield;
Grant me, ye powers, fast by the limpid spring
The harmless revels of the plain to sing.

At a rich feast, kept each revolving year,

Their fleecy care when joyful shepherds shear,

A wreath of flowers culled from the neighbouring lands

Is all the prize my humble muse demands.

Now blithesome shepherds, by the early dawn,

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