.. .... .. ·. .., . . ' . .. ' f ... ~ ~ ' ~ ~·· t ~ ~ . !' \ f I Cannot hold, my day grows dark and dull ; My tf~ubled-air ~s damp~ - my•. douds ar~ full:– The wt~ds.are fttll, ~ny fiormy·fi~ are fpent; I mufl pour down, my foul muft burfl:, or vent : Noazure dapples my be-dark,ped a,ki(:s ; 1 •• Mypaffion has no .April in her eyes : I Ca!Jnot fpend in mifis : I cannonnizzle : Myfluent brains are too fevere t6 drizzle ' · ) ' Slight drops : 111Y prompted f~Ar.y cannor fhowre . . . ~· .And fhine within an hour. YEt thofe that weep on tiufi:, that feed their ears With fad Reports, and ground their inborn rears On babling fame, \vhofe wifdoms are perplext To draw forth le,uned .Coininenrs from the text Oinnknown wonb, that ufe ·c' emb;dm the dead With drops ofCourfe, and Art'(drops lively fhed from copied paffion) 0 let fuch perfume · .sufpicious lines with skiJl ; w\1ilefi I'prefume On firengtll ofNature; Sorrow can·infttfe .. 3~ A fpirir witl}Gut a Muf~, I Need no Art to fer a needle[s glofs · Upon tru~ g~ief, ?r beaurifie a l?fs With rak'd inventton; mv rude-Pen forbears To bumifh farrow, or to polith tears, No far-fetch'd Metaphor fhall fmooth or flick ]lfy ruffled ftrain, no firi8: review fba11lick . My rugged lines; our flow- pac'd feet fball tread A carelefs garb, and being fadly led, ,ShaJl blunder on, like thof~ whofe fieps '~'e turning ·· · . 4· To the fad houfe of mourning COme Reader, come, Put ofr rhy cqmmon weed, And drefs thY foul in Sables ; come and f~ed . ·Thy lungs wi.rh lib'ral figl}s, and drench ~Qil\~ eyes · }ViFI} holy W'Jter ; let thy four}taip5 rjfe · An4
RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy OTcyMjk=