Come, gentle muse, and once more lend thine aid, | |
O bring thy succor to a humble maid! | |
How often dost thou liberally dispense | |
To our dull breast thy quick’ning influence! | |
By thee inspired, I ’ll cheerful tune my voice, | 5 |
And love and sacred friendship make my choice. | |
In my pleased bosom you can freely pour, | |
A greater treasure than Jove’s golden shower. | |
Come now, fair muse, and fill my empty mind, | |
With rich ideas, great and unconfin’d. | 10 |
Instruct me in those secret arts that lie | |
Unseen to all but to a poet’s eye. | |
O let me burn with Sappho’s noble fire, | |
But not like her for faithless man expire. | |
And let me rival great Orinda’s fame, | 15 |
Or like sweet Philomela’s 1 be my name. | |
Go lead the way, my muse, nor must you stop | |
Till we have gain’d Parnassus’ shady top: | |
Till I have view’d those fragrant soft retreats, | |
Those fields of bliss, the muses’ sacred seats. | 20 |
I ’ll then devote thee to fair virtue’s fame, | |
And so be worthy of a poet’s name. | |