Mean as I am, yet have the Muses made Me free, a member of the tuneful trade: At least the shepherds seem to like my lays; But I discern their flatt'ry from their praise: I nor to Cinna's ears, nor Varus', dare aspire, But gabble, like a goose amidst the swan-like choir.
'Tis what I have been conning in my mind;
Nor are thy verses of a vulgar kind.
"Come, Galatea! come! the seas forsake?
What pleasures can the tides with their hoarse murmurs make?
See, on the shore inhabits purple spring;
Where nightingales their love-sick ditty sing: See, meads with purling streams, with flow'rs the ground,
The grottos cool with shady poplars crown'd, And creeping vines on arbours weav'd around. Come then, and leave the waves' tumultuous roar; Let the wild surges vainly beat the shore."
Or that sweet song I heard with such delight; The same you sung alone one starry night. The tune I still retain, but not the words.
Why, Daphnis, dost thou search in old records, To know the seasons when the stars arise?
See, Cæsar's lamp is lighted in the skies
The star, whose rays the blushing grapes adorn,
And swell the kindly rip'ning ears of corn. Under this influence graft the tender shoot; Thy children's children shall enjoy the fruit." The rest I have forgot, for cares and time Change all things, and untune my soul to rhym I could have once sung down a summer's sun: But now the chime of poetry is done :
My voice grows hoarse, I feel the notes decay, As if the wolves had seen me first to-day. But these, and more than I to mind can bring, Menalcas hast not yet forgot to sing.
Thy faint excuses but inflame me more: And now the waves roll silent to the shore;
Hush'd winds the topmost branches scarcely bend, 80 As if thy tuneful song they did attend:
Already we have half our way o'ercome;
Here, where the lab'rer's hands have form'd a bow'r
Far off I can discera Bianor's tomb.
Of wreathing trees, in singing waste an hour.
Rest here thy weary limbs; thy kids lay down: We've day before us yet to reach the town; Or if, ere night, the gathering clouds we fear, A song will help the beating storm to bear. And that thou mayst not be too late abroad, Sing, and I'll ease thy shoulders of thy load.
Cease to request me; let us mind our way: Another song requires another day. When good Menalcas comes, if he rejoice, And find a friend at court, I'll find a voice.
Gallus, a great patron of Virgil, and an excellent poet, was very deeply in love with one Cytheris, whom he calls Lycoris, and who had forsaken him for the company of a soldier. The poet therefore supposes his friend Gallus retired, in his height of melancholy, into the solitudes of Arcadia, (the celebrated scene of pastorals,) where he represents him in a very languishing condition, with all the rural deities about him, pitying his hard usage, and condoling his misfortune.
THY sacred succour, Arethusa, bring, To crown my labour, ('tis the last I sing,) Which proud Lycoris may with pity view: The muse is mournful, though the numbers few, Refuse me not a verse, to grief and Gallus due. So may thy silver streams beneath the tide, Unmix'd with briny seas, securely glide. Sing then my Gallus, and his hopeless vows; Sing while my cattle crop the tender browze. The vocal grove shall answer to the sound,
And echo, from the vales, the tuneful voice rebound What lawns or woods withheld you from his aid, Ye nymphs, when Gallus was to love betray'd, To love, unpitied by the cruel maid? Not steepy Pindus could retard your course, Nor cleft Parnassus, nor the Aonian source:
Nothing that owns the Muses, could suspend Your aid to Gallus:-Gallus is their friend. For him the lofty laurel stands in tears,
And hung with humid pearls the lowly shrub appears. Mænalian pines the godlike swain bemoan,
When spread beneath a rock, he sigh'd alone; ` And cold Lycæus wept from ev'ry dropping stone. The sheep surround their shepherd, as he lies Blush not, sweet poet nor the name despise: Along the streams, his flock Adonis fed; And yet the queen of beauty blest his bed. The swains and tardy neatherds came, and last Menalcas, wet with beating winter mast.
Wond'ring they ask'd from whence arose thy flame. 30
Yet more amaz'd, thy own Apollo came.
Flush'd were his cheeks, and glowing were his eyes:
"Is she thy care? is she thy care?" he cries,
Thy false Lycoris flies thy love and thee,
And for thy rival tempts the raging sea,
The forms of horrid war, and heav'n's inclemency."
Silvanus came: his brows a country crown
Of fennel, and of nodding lilies, drown. Great Pan arriv'd; and we beheld him too, His cheeks and temples of vermilion hue. "Why, Gallus, this immod'rate grief?" he cried. "Think'st thou that love with tears is satisfied? The meads are sooner drunk with morning dews, The bees with flow'ry shrubs, the goats with browse." Unmov'd, and with dejected eyes, he mourn'd: He paus'd, and then these broken words return'd: "'Tis past; and pity gives me no relief:
But you, Arcadian swains, shall sing my grief, And on your hills my last complaints renew: So sad a song is only worthy you.
How light would lie the turf upon my breast, If you my suff'rings in your songs exprest! Ah! that your birth and bus'ness had been mine-- To pen the sheep, and press the swelling vine!
Had Phyllis or Amyntas caus'd my pain, Or any nymph or shepherd on the plain, (Tho' Phyllis brown, tho' black Amyntas were, Are violets not sweet, because not fair?) Beneath the sallows and the shady vine,
My loves had mix'd their pliant limbs with mine: Phyllis with myrtle wreaths had crown'd my hair, And soft Amyntas sung away my care.
Come, see what pleasures in our plains abound; The woods, the fountains, and the flow'ry ground. As you are beauteous, were you half so true,
Here could I live, and love, and die with only you. Now I to fighting fields am sent afar,
And strive in winter camps with toils of war;
While you, (alas, that i should find it so!) To shun my sight your native soil forego,
And climb the frozen Alps, and tread th' eternal
Ye frosts and snows, her tender body spare!
Those are not limbs for icicles to tear.
For me, the wilds and deserts are my choice;
The Muses once my care, my once harmonious voice. 75 There will I sing, forsaken and alone:
The rocks and hollow caves shall echo to my moan. The rind of ev'ry plant her name shall know; And, as the rind extends, the love shall grow. Then on Arcadian mountains will I chase
(Mix'd with the woodland nymphs) the savage race; Nor cold shall hinder me, with horns and hounds To tread the thickets, or to leap the mounds. And now methinks o'er steepy rocks I go,
And rush through sounding woods, and bend the Parthian bow;
As if with sports m suff'rings I should ease, Or by my pains the od of love appease. My frenzy changes: I delight no more On mountain tops to chase the tusky boar:
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