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KENSINGTON GARDEN.

-Campus, ubi Troja fuit.

Virg.

WHERE Kensington high o'er the neighbouring lands,
'Midst greens and sweets, a regal fabric! stands,
And sees each spring luxuriant in her bow'rs,
A snow of blossoms and a wild of flow'rs,
The dames of Britain oft in clouds repair

To gravel walks and unpolluted air;

Here, while the Town in damps and darkness lies,
They breathe in sunshine, and see azure skies;
Each walk with robes of various dies bespread
Seems from afar a moving tulip bed,

Where rich brocades and glossy damasks glow,
And chints, the rival of the showery bow.

Here England's daughter, darling of the land! Sometimes surrounded with her virgin band Gleams through the shades; she, towering o'er the rest,

Stands fairest of the fairer kind confest;

Form'd to gain hearts that Brunswick's cause denied, And charm a people to her father's side.

Long have these groves to royal guests been known,

Nor Nassau first prefer'd them to a throne.

Ere Norman banners wav'd in British air,

Ere lordly Hubba with the golden hair

Pour'd in his Danes, ere elder Julius came,
Or Dardan Brutus gave our isle a name,

A prince of Albion's lineage grac'd the wood,
The scene of wars, and stain'd with lover's blood.
You who through gazing crowds, your captive
throng,

Throw pangs and passions, as you move along,
Turn on the left, ye fair! your radiant eyes,
Where all unlevell❜d the gay Garden lies.
If generous anguish for another's pains
Ere heav'd your hearts or shiver'd through your veins,
Look down attentive on the pleasing dale,
And listen to my melancholy tale.

That hollow space, where now in living rows
Line above line the yew's sad verdure grows,
Was, ere the planter's hand its beauty gave,
A common pit, a rude unfashion'd cave:
The landscape now so sweet, we well may praise,
But far, far sweeter in its ancient days,

Far sweeter was it when its peopled ground
With fairy domes and dazzling towers was crown'd!
Where in the midst those verdant pillars spring
Rose the proud palace of the elfin king;
For every hedge of vegetable green

In happier years a crowded street was seen;
Nor all those leaves that now the prospect grace
Could match the numbers of its pigmy race.
What urg'd this mighty empire to its fate,
A tale of woe and wonder I relate.

When Albion rul'd the land, whose lineage came
From Neptune mingling with a mortal dame,
Their midnight pranks the sprightly Fairies play'd
On every hill, and danc'd in every shade;

But, foes to sunshine, most they took delight
In dells and dales conceal'd from human sight;
They hew'd their houses in the arching rock,
Or scoop'd the bosom of the blasted oak,
Or heard, o'ershadow'd by some shelving hill,
The distant murmurs of the falling rill;

They, rich in pilfer'd spoils, indulg'd their mirth,
And pitied the huge wretched sons of earth :
Ev'n now 'tis said, the hinds o'erhear their strain,
And strive to view their airy forms in vain;
They to their cells at man' approach repair,
Like the shy leveret or the mother hare,
The whilst poor mortals startle at the sound
Of unseen footsteps on the haunted ground.
Amid this Garden then with woods o'ergrown
Stood the lov'd seat of royal Oberon :
From every region to his palace gate
Came peers and princes of the fairy state,
Who rank'd in council round the sacred shade
Their monarch's will and great behests obey'd.
From Thames' fair banks, by lofty towers adorn'd,
With loads of plunder oft his chiefs return'd;
Hence in proud robes and colours bright and
gay

Shone every knight and every lovely fay.
Whoe'er on Powell's dazzling stage display'd
Hath fam'd king Pepin and his court survey'd,
May guess, if old by modern things we trace,
The pomp and splendour of the Fairy race.

By magic fenc'd, by spells encompass'd round,
No mortal touch'd this interdicted ground;
No mortal enter'd, those alone who came
Stolen from the couch of some terrestrial dame;

For oft of babes they robb'd the matron's bed,
And left some sickly changeling in their stead.

It chanc'd a youth of Albion's royal blood
Was foster'd here, the wonder of the wood.
Milkah, for wiles above her peers renown'd,
Deep skill'd in charms and many a mystic sound,
As through the regal dome she sought for prey,
Observ'd the infant Albion where he lay,
In mantles broider'd o'er with gorgeous pride,
And stole him from the sleeping mother's side,
Who now but Milkah triumphs in her mind!
Ah, wretched nymph! to future evils blind:
The time shall come when thou shalt dearly pay
The theft hard-hearted of that guilty day:
Thou in thy turn shalt like the queen repine,
And all her sorrows doubled shall be thine.
He who adorns thy house, the lovely boy
Who now adorns it, shall at length destroy.

Two hundred moons in their pale course had seen The gay-rob'd Fairies glimmer on the green, And Albion now had reach'd in youthful prime To nineteen years, as mortals measure time. Flush'd with resistless charms he fir'd to love Each nymph and little dryad of the grove; For skilful Milkah spar'd not to employ Her utmost art to rear the princely boy: Each supple limb she swath'd and tender bone, And to the elfin standard kept him down ; She robb'd dwarf elders of their fragrant fruit, And fed him early with the daisy's root, Whence through his veins the powerful juices rap,

And form'd in beauteous miniature the man ;

Yet still, two inches taller than the rest,

His lofty port his human birth confest:

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A foot in height how stately did he show!
How look superior on the crowd below!

What knight like him could toss the rushy lance?
Who move so graceful in the mazy dance?

A shape so nice, or features half so fair,
What Elf could boast? or such a flow of hair?
Bright Kenna saw, a princess born to reign,
And felt the charmer burn in every vein.
She heiress to this empire's potent lord,
Prais'd like the stars, and next the moon ador'd;
She whom at distance thrones and princedoms
view'd,

To whom proud Oriel and Azuriel sued,
In her high palace languish❜d, void of joy,
And pin'd in secret for a mortal boy.

He too was smitten, and discreetly strove
By courtly deeds to gain the virgin's love.
For her he cull'd the fairest flowers that grew
Ere morning suns had drain'd their fragrant dew;
He chas' the hornet in his mid-day flight,

And brought her glow-worms in the noon of night.
When on ripe fruits she cast a wishing eye
Did ever Albion think the tree too high?
He show'd her where the pregnant goldfinch hung,
And the wren-mother brooding o'er her young;
To her the' inscription on their eggs he read;
(Admire, ye clerks! the youth whom Milkah bred)
To her he show'd each herb of virtuous juice,
Their powers distinguish'd, and describ'd their

use.

All vain their powers, alas! to Kenna prove, And well sung Ovid 'There's no herb for love.' As when a ghost, enlarg'd from realms below, Seeks its old friend to tell some secret woe,

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