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  • Nov. 1, 1798
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Nov. 1, 1798: Page 64

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Page 64

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Poetry.

POETRY .

OCTOBER . BY T ) R . PERFECT . ' Those virgin leaves of purest vivid green , ' Which charm'd ere yet they trembled on the trees ,

' Now cheer the sober landscape in decay . ' THOMSON . Or visage deep-wrinkled with care , Whose temples oak garlands surround , With haws and with acorns his hair , 'Mid starwort and saffron is bound ; The damson her purple bestows ,

A sash round his shoulder to throw , In negligence easy it flows , Commingled with spots of the sloe . His right hand a scorpion retains , High-lifted it writhes in the air ; His left a rush basket sustains , Replete with . the cheanut and pear ;' Whose franchise it is to invoke

Thick fogs of blue mist on the hill , Ascending like columns of smoke , Exhal'd from the vale-loving rill . He comes!—shall my muse wake the reed ? Ah I where are the notes of the bough ? So late where the beech in the mead Attested the villager's vows ;

when Philomel ' s evening lay Prorlaim'd her melodious pain ; The . kids with the lambkins in piay , Skipt frolicksome over the plain . She flies from the yellow-leav'd grove , Nor sings of past pleasure serene , When zephyrs invited to love , And Delia was Extacy ' s queen : When

near the smooth lapse of the brook I sought , thro' the whispering vale , The roses , which painting her crook , Compar ' tl to her blushes , were pale . No more to the brook must 1 stray , From the whispering vallies exil'd , Nor longer fond zephyrs shall play Round Delia that lingei'd and smil'd

. Farewell to the boweri / ig hop , riie garden so fair to the sight , i et woodbine now blooming I'll crop , Convey to my fair with delight . I'll seek for autumnal perfume , i he suckle rejects not her sweets , Lonvolvules offer their bloom

, j J ' o decorate Delia ' s retreats , - " je pheasant I'd bear to my maid , « ut shrink from the present with fear , i-est into soft sorrow betrav'd , "er eyes be suffus'd with a tear .

To Earth s fost ' nng bosom the swam , Tenacious of Nature's command , Consigns with attention the grain So grateful to Industry ' s hand . The martin the cave ., has forsook . The woodcock re-visits the glen , The mallard repairs to the brook , The wild-goose abandons the fen . Shall ine with murder be join'd ?

rap O , spare from perdition the hive ! Some process , by far less unkind , To plunder its treasures contrive ! Now hear the loud pack o'er the field , In trace of the fugitive hare ; No longer in safety ronceal'd , She trusts to the brake or the tare . But what is this envoy of woes , Who wakes with

Aurora ' s first ray , His tuneful complaints to disclose , From suckle or jessamine spray : He sings desolations to come , Stern Winter predicts from aloof ? My shed , social bird , be thy home , In safety perch under my roof . Dost grieve that the Summer is past , The trees their

green ornaments shed . That omens of Winter so fast Impending press over thy head ? Prolong , gentle red-breast , thy strain . Contagious shall usher thy moan , My sympathies share in thv pain , Thy sorrows , poor bird , ' be my own . Pomonain stra-v-colour'd vest

, . , With berry-strung black solitaire . The gossamer's gauze on her breast , And marigold ' s beams in her hair , October had met in the close , Paid court to her presence and shape ; Vertumnus in jealousy rose , Suspecting the god of the grape .

But he was deiang'd in the vale , Whilst Satyrs his orgies sustain , My paths from his feasts I'll curtail , And fly his incontinent train . Yet , Bacchus , lo honour thy sway . The fig and the vine let me bring ; Tho' the muse , for the present , delay The games of thy vintage to sing . Now mid-day is silent around

, The gloom of the ag'd cypress I'll seek-Yon turf , by the osier fresh bound . My heartfelt dejection shall speak . Leander , my much-valued friend , The muse in remembrance essavs , From friendship , in .-adtiess lo send What elegy weaves into lays .

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1798-11-01, Page 64” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01111798/page/64/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
LONDON: Article 1
TO CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 2
PRICES OF BINDING PER VOLUME. Article 2
Untitled Article 3
THE LIFE OF OF THE RIGHT HONOURABLE BARON NELSON OF THE NILE, &c. &c. &c. Article 4
ON RELIGION, MORALITY, AND GOVERNMENT. Article 6
OBSERVATIONS ON THE CAUSE OF OUR LATE NAVAL VICTORIES. Article 7
REVIEW OF THE THEATRICAL POWERS OF THE LATE MR. JOHN PALMER. Article 10
MONODY. Article 11
THE LIFE OF BISHOP WARBURTON. Article 16
CURIOUS ACCOUNT GIVEN BY THE DUMB PHILOSOPHER. Article 19
THE LIFE OF PRINCE POTEMKIN. Article 25
OPTIMISM: A DREAM. Article 32
THE MIRROR OF THESPIS. Article 34
NARRATIVE OF THE EXPEDITION OF BUONAPARTE. Article 38
MEMOIR AND TRIAL OF THE CELEBRATED THEOBALD WOLFE TONE, Article 44
THE FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY. Article 51
SCIENTIFIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 55
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS . Article 58
POETRY. Article 64
BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 66
PARLIAMENT OF IRELAND. Article 69
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 73
OBITUARY. Article 74
Untitled Article 78
LONDON: Article 78
TO CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 79
PRICES OF BINDING PER VOLUME. Article 79
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Page 64

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Poetry.

POETRY .

OCTOBER . BY T ) R . PERFECT . ' Those virgin leaves of purest vivid green , ' Which charm'd ere yet they trembled on the trees ,

' Now cheer the sober landscape in decay . ' THOMSON . Or visage deep-wrinkled with care , Whose temples oak garlands surround , With haws and with acorns his hair , 'Mid starwort and saffron is bound ; The damson her purple bestows ,

A sash round his shoulder to throw , In negligence easy it flows , Commingled with spots of the sloe . His right hand a scorpion retains , High-lifted it writhes in the air ; His left a rush basket sustains , Replete with . the cheanut and pear ;' Whose franchise it is to invoke

Thick fogs of blue mist on the hill , Ascending like columns of smoke , Exhal'd from the vale-loving rill . He comes!—shall my muse wake the reed ? Ah I where are the notes of the bough ? So late where the beech in the mead Attested the villager's vows ;

when Philomel ' s evening lay Prorlaim'd her melodious pain ; The . kids with the lambkins in piay , Skipt frolicksome over the plain . She flies from the yellow-leav'd grove , Nor sings of past pleasure serene , When zephyrs invited to love , And Delia was Extacy ' s queen : When

near the smooth lapse of the brook I sought , thro' the whispering vale , The roses , which painting her crook , Compar ' tl to her blushes , were pale . No more to the brook must 1 stray , From the whispering vallies exil'd , Nor longer fond zephyrs shall play Round Delia that lingei'd and smil'd

. Farewell to the boweri / ig hop , riie garden so fair to the sight , i et woodbine now blooming I'll crop , Convey to my fair with delight . I'll seek for autumnal perfume , i he suckle rejects not her sweets , Lonvolvules offer their bloom

, j J ' o decorate Delia ' s retreats , - " je pheasant I'd bear to my maid , « ut shrink from the present with fear , i-est into soft sorrow betrav'd , "er eyes be suffus'd with a tear .

To Earth s fost ' nng bosom the swam , Tenacious of Nature's command , Consigns with attention the grain So grateful to Industry ' s hand . The martin the cave ., has forsook . The woodcock re-visits the glen , The mallard repairs to the brook , The wild-goose abandons the fen . Shall ine with murder be join'd ?

rap O , spare from perdition the hive ! Some process , by far less unkind , To plunder its treasures contrive ! Now hear the loud pack o'er the field , In trace of the fugitive hare ; No longer in safety ronceal'd , She trusts to the brake or the tare . But what is this envoy of woes , Who wakes with

Aurora ' s first ray , His tuneful complaints to disclose , From suckle or jessamine spray : He sings desolations to come , Stern Winter predicts from aloof ? My shed , social bird , be thy home , In safety perch under my roof . Dost grieve that the Summer is past , The trees their

green ornaments shed . That omens of Winter so fast Impending press over thy head ? Prolong , gentle red-breast , thy strain . Contagious shall usher thy moan , My sympathies share in thv pain , Thy sorrows , poor bird , ' be my own . Pomonain stra-v-colour'd vest

, . , With berry-strung black solitaire . The gossamer's gauze on her breast , And marigold ' s beams in her hair , October had met in the close , Paid court to her presence and shape ; Vertumnus in jealousy rose , Suspecting the god of the grape .

But he was deiang'd in the vale , Whilst Satyrs his orgies sustain , My paths from his feasts I'll curtail , And fly his incontinent train . Yet , Bacchus , lo honour thy sway . The fig and the vine let me bring ; Tho' the muse , for the present , delay The games of thy vintage to sing . Now mid-day is silent around

, The gloom of the ag'd cypress I'll seek-Yon turf , by the osier fresh bound . My heartfelt dejection shall speak . Leander , my much-valued friend , The muse in remembrance essavs , From friendship , in .-adtiess lo send What elegy weaves into lays .

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