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"Erring like them, with appetite deprav'd, "This hour, by thee, I have a fon conceiv'd; "Whom hid beneath my zone, I must conceal, “Till Time his being and my fhame reveal.

"Him fhall the nymphs who these fair woods adorn "In their deep bofoms nurse, as foon as born ; "They nor of mortal nor immortal feed "Are faid to fpring, yet on Ambrosia feed, "And long they live, and oft in chorus join "With gods and goddeffes in dance divine. "These the Sileni court; thefe Hermes loves, "And their embraces feeks in fhady groves. "Their origin and birth these nymphs deduce "From common parent earth's prolific juice; "With lofty firs which grace the mountain's brow, "Or ample-spreading oaks at once they grow; "All have their trees allotted to their care, "Whofe growth, duration, and decrease they share. "But holy are these groves by mortals held, "And therefore by the ax are never fell'd. "But when the fate of fome fair tree draws nigh, "It firft appears to droop, and then grows dry; "The bark to crack and perish next is feen,

And laft the boughs it fheds, no longer green: "And thus the nymphs expire by like degrees,

"And live and die coæval with their trees.

"Thefe gentle nymphs, by my perfuafion won, "Shall in their fweet receffes nurfe my fon; "And when his cheeks with youth's first blushes glow, "To thee the facred maids the boy fhall show.

"More

"More to inftruct thee, when five years shall end, "I will again to vifit thee defcend,

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Bringing thy beauteous fon to charm thy fight, "Whofe godlike form fhall fill thee with delight; "Him will I leave thenceforward to thy care, "And will that with him thou to Troy repair: "There, if enquiry fhall be made, to know "To whom thou doft fo bright an offspring owe; “Be sure thou nothing.of the truth detect, "But ready answer make as I direct.

"Say of a fylvan nymph the fair youth came, "And Calycopis call his mother's name.

"For fhould'ft thou boast the truth, and madly own "That thou in blifs hadft Cytherea known, "Jove would his anger pour upon thy head, "And with avenging thunder ftrike thee dead. "Now all is told thee, and just caution given, "Be fecret thou, and dread the wrath of heaven." She faid, and fudden foar'd above his fight, Cutting through liquid air her heavenward flight. All hail, bright Cyprian Queen! thee firft I praise, Then to fome other power transfer my lays.

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The Mourning Mufe of Alexis. A Pastoral, lamenting the Death of Queen Mary

To the King, on the taking of Namur

The Birth of the Mufe. To the Right Honour

able Charles Lord Halifax

On Mrs. Arabella Hunt finging

Priam's Lamentation and Petition to Achilles for
the Body of his Son Hector

The Lamentations of Hecuba, Andromache, and
Helen, over the dead Body of Hector
Paraphrase upon Horace, Ode 19. Lib. 1.

Stanzas in Imitation of Horace, Lib. 2.

In Imitation of Horace, Ode 9. Lib. 1.
Song

The Reconciliation

Abfence

Song

Song in Dialogue, for two Women

Song

The Petition

Ode

5

13

20

29

33

37

44

14. -45

48

51

52

53

ibid.

54

55

ibid.

Song

Song

Song

56

ibid.

Occafioned by a Lady's having writ Verfes in Com-
mendation of a Poem which was written in Praise
of another Lady
Epigram written after the Deceafe of Mrs. Arabella
Hunt, under her Picture drawn playing on a
Lute

Song

Hymn to Harmony, in Honour of St. Cecilia's
Day, 1701

57

ibid.

58

ibid.

Verfes to the Memory of Grace Lady Gethin, occafioned by reading her Book, intituled Reliquiæ Gethinianæ

Epitaph upon Robert Huntingdon, of Stanton Har-
court, Efq. and Robert his Son

To Mr. Dryden on his Tranflation of Perfius
The Eleventh Satire of Juvenal

Prologue to Queen Mary, upon her Majesty's coming
to fee the Old Batchelor, after having seen the
Double Dealer

Epilogue at the Opening of the Queen's Theatre in
the Hay-market with an Italian Paftoral
Prologue to Pyrrhus King of Epirus

Epilogue to Oroonoko

Prologue to the Husband his own Cuckold
Prologue to A very good Wife, 1693

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Prologue to the Court, on the Queen's Birth-day,

1704

89

91

The

The Tears of Amaryllis for Amyntas. A Pastoral, lamenting the Death of the late Lord Marquis of Blandford

93

To Cynthia, weeping, and not speaking. Elegy. 99 Amoret

Lesbia

Doris

102

103

ibid.

To Sleep. Elegy

106

To Sir Godfrey Kneller, occafioned by L--- Y---'s

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Of Pleafing; an Epistle to Sir Richard Temple
A Letter to the Right Honourable the Lord Viscount
Cobham, 1729

142

146

On Mifs Temple, afterwards Lady of Sir Thomas
Lyttelton

A Pindaric Ode, humbly offered to the Queen, on
the victorious Progrefs of her Majesty's Arms
under the Conduct of the Duke of Marlborough.
To which is prefixed a Discourse on the Pindaric
Ode

149

151

To the Right Honourable the Earl of Godolphin, Lord High Treafurer of Great Britain. Pindaric Ode

164

An Impoffible Thing. A Tale

169

The Peafant in Search of his Heifer. A Tale,

after Mr. De la Fontaine

176

Homer's Hymn to Venus: Tranflated into English

Verse

177

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