The spacious defert, bright'ning in the fun, Proud and more proud, in their auguft approach; High o'er irriguous vales and woods and towns, Glide the foft whispering waters in the wind, And here united pour their filver ftreams Among the figur'd rocks, in murm'ring falls, Thefe thy beauteous works:
And what befide felicity could tell
Of human benefit: more late the reft;
At various times their turrets chanc'd to rise, When impious tyranny vouchfaf'd to smile.
Behold by Tiber's flood, where modern Rome & Couches beneath the ruins: there of old
With arms and trophies gleam'd the field of Mars: There to their daily sports the noble youth Rufh'd emulous; to fling the pointed lance; To vault the fteed; or with the kindling wheel In dufty whirlwinds fweep the trembling goal; Or wrestling, cope with adverse swelling breasts, Strong, grappling arms, clos'd heads, and distant feet; Or clash the lifted gauntlets: there they form'd Their ardent virtues : lo the boffy piles, The proud triumphal arches; all their wars, Their conquests, honours, in the sculptures live. And fee from every gate those ancient roads,
Modern Rome ftands chiefly on the old Campus Martius.
With tombs high-verg'd, the folemn paths of Fame: Deserve they not regard? O'er whose broad flints Such crowds have roll'd, so many storms of war ; Such trains of confuls, tribunes, fages, kings; So many pomps; fo many wond'ring realms : Yet ftill through mountains pierc'd, o'er vallies rais'd, In even ftate, to distant seas around,
They stretch their pavements. Lo the fane of Peace, Built by that prince, who to the trust of pow'r h Was honeft, the delight of human kind. Three nodding ifles remain; the reft an heap
Of fand and weeds; her fhrines, her radiant roofs And columns proud, that from her spacious floor, As from a fhining fea, majestick rose
An hundred foot aloft, like stately beech Around the brim of Dion's glaffy lake, Charming the mimick painter: on the walls Hung Salem's facred fpoils; the golden board, And golden trumpets, now conceal'd, entomb'd By the funk roof.-O'er which in diftant view Th' Etrufcan mountains fwell, with ruins crown'd Of ancient towns; and blue Soracte fpires, Wrapping his fides in tempefts. Eaftward hence, Nigh where the Ceftian pyramid divides i
Begun by Vefpafian, and finished by Titus.
The tomb of Ceftius, partly within, and partly without the walls.
The mould'ring wall, behold yon fabrick huge, Whofe duft the folemn antiquarian turns, And thence in broken fculptures caft abroad, Like Sybil's leaves, collects the builder's name Rejoic'd, and the green medals frequent found Doom Caracalla to perpetual fame :
The stately pines, that spread their branches-wide In the dun ruins of its ample halls, k
Appear but tufts; as may whate'er is high Sink in comparison, minute and vile.
These, and unnumber'd, yet their brows uplift,
Rent of their graces; as Britannia's oaks
On Merlin's mount, or Snowden's rugged fides, Stand in the clouds, their branches fcatter'd round, After the tempeft; Maufoleums, Cirques, Naumachios, Forums; Trajan's column tall, From whofe low bafe the fculptures wind aloft, And lead through various toils, up the rough steep, Its hero to the skies: and his dark tow'r!
Whofe execrable hand the city fir'd,
And while the dreadful conflagration blaz'd, Play'd to the flames; and Phoebus' letter'd dome; And the rough reliques of Carinæ's street,
Where now the shepherd to his nibbling sheep Sits piping with his oaten reed; as erft
The baths of Caracalla, a vaft ruin.
There pip'd the shepherd to his nibbling sheep, When th' humble roof Anchifes' fon explor'd Of good Evander, wealth-defpifing king, Amid the thickets: fo revolves the scene; So time ordains, who rolls the things of pride From duft again to duft. Behold that heap Of mould'ring urns (their ashes blown away, Duft of the mighty) the fame story tell; And at its base, from whence the ferpent glides Down the green desert street, yon hoary monk Laments the fame, the vifion as he views, The folitary, filent, folemn scene,
Where Cæfars, heroes, peasants, hermits lie, Blended in duft together; where the slave Refts from his labours; where th' infulting proud Refigns his pow'r; the mifer drops his hoard; Where human folly fleeps.-There is a mood, (I fing not to the vacant and the young) There is a kindly mood of melancholy,
That wings the foul, and points her to the skies; When tribulation cloaths the child of man,
When age defcends with forrow to the grave, ''Tis fweetly-foothing fympathy to pain, A gently wak'ning call to health and ease. How mufical! when all-devouring Time, Here fitting on his throne of ruins hoar, While winds and tempefts fweep his various lyre, How fweet thy diapafon, Melancholy !
Cool ev'ning comes; the setting fun displays His vifible great round between yon tow❜rs, As through two fhady cliffs; away, my Mufe, Though yet the prospect pleases, ever new In vast variety, and yet delight
The many-figur'd fculptures of the path Half beauteous, half effac'd; the traveller Such antique marbles to his native land Oft hence conveys; and ev'ry realm and state With Rome's auguft remains, heroes and gods, Deck their long galleries and winding groves; Yet mifs we not th' innumerable thefts, Yet ftill profufe of graces teems the waste. Suffice it now th' Efquilian mount to reach With weary wing, and feek the facred refts Of Maro's humble tenement; a low Plain wall remains; a little fun-gilt heap, Grotefque and wild; the gourd and olive brown Weave the light roof; the gourd and olive fan Their am'rous foliage, mingling with the vine, Who drops her purple clusters through the green. Here let me lie, with pleafing fancy footh'd: Here flow'd his fountain; here his laurels grew; Here oft the meek good man, the lofty bard Fram'd the celeftial fong, or focial walk'd With Horace and the ruler of the world; Happy Auguftus! who fo well infpir'd Could't throw thy pomps and royalties afide,
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