The Bard, with many an artful fi Had in imagination fenc'd him Disprov'd the arguments of Squi And all that Groom () could But soon his rhetoric forsook hin When he the solemn hall had A sudden fit of ague shook him, He stood as mute as poor Mad Yet something he was heard to n "How in the Park beneath an "(Without design to hurt the b Or any malice to the poultr (0) Groom of the Chamber. (p) The Steward. (1) A famous highwayman hanged th L 2 The ghostly prudes with hagged face "Jesu-Maria! Madam Bridget, "Why, what can the Viscountess mean? (Cried the square-hoods in woeful fidget) "The times are alter'd quite and clean! "Decorum's turn'd to mere civility; [Here 500 Stanzas are lost.] ith hagged face emn'd the sinner. with a grace d him come to dinner. m Bridget, ods in woeful fidget) o mere civility; r affability' anzas are lost.] [These were in compliment to Mr. Bentley, who drew a set of D for Mr. Gray's Poems, particularly a Head-piece to The Long Sto IN silent gaze the tuneful choir among, Half pleas'd, half blushing let the muse admi While Bentley leads her sister art along, And bids the pencil answer to the lyre.. See, in their course, each transitory thought Fix'd by his touch a lasting essence take; Each dream, in Fancy's airy colouring wroug To local symmetry and life awake! The tardy rhymes that us'd to linger on, And catch a lustre from his genuine flame. |