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Ode to Della Crusca

 ENLIGHTEN'D Patron of the sacred Lyre?
Whose ever-varying, ever-witching song
Revibrates on the heart
With magic thrilling touch,
Till ev'ry nerve with quiv'ring throb divine,
In madd'ning tumults, owns thy wondrous pow'r;
For well thy dulcet notes
Can wind the mazy song,
In labyrinth of wild fantastic form;
Or with empassion'd pathos woo the soul
With sounds more sweetly mild,
Than SAPPHO's plaint forlorn,
When bending o'er the wave she sung her woes,
While pitying ECHO hover'd o'er the deep,
Till in their coral caves,
The tuneful NEREIDES wept.
AH! whither art thou flown? where pours thy song? The model and the pride of British bards! Sweet STAR of FANCY's orb, "O, tell me, tell me, where?" Say, dost thou waste it on the viewless air That bears it to the confines of high Heav'n? Or does it court the meed Of proud pre-eminence? Or steals it o'er the glitt'ring Sapphire wave, Calming the tempest with its silver sounds? Or does it charm to love The fond believing maid? Or does it hover o'er the ALPINE steep, Or softly breathing under myrtle shades, With SYMPATHY divine, Solace the child of woe? Where'er thou art, Oh! let thy gentle strain Again with magic pow'r delight mine ear, Untutor'd in the spells, And mysteries of song.
Then, on the margin of the deep I'll muse, And bless the rocking bark ordain'd to bear My sad heart o'er the wave, From this ungrateful isle; When the wan queen of night, with languid eye, Peeps o'er the mountain's head, or thro' the vale Illumes the glassy brook, Or dew-besprinkled heath, Or with her crystal lamp, directs the feet Of the benighted TRAV'LLER, cold, and sad, Thro' the long forest drear, And pathless labyrinth, To the poor PEASANT's hospitable cot, For ever open to the wretch forlorn; O, then I'll think on THEE, And iterate thy strain, And chaunt thy matchless numbers o'er and o'er, And I will court the sullen ear of night, To bear the rapt'rous sound, On her dark shad'wy wing, To where encircled by the sacred NINE, Thy LYRE awakes the never-dying song! Now, BARD admir'd, farwel! The white sail flutters loud, The gaudy streamers lengthen in the gale, Far from my native shore I bend my way; Yet, as my aching eye Shall view the less'ning cliff, 'Till its stupendous head shall scarce appear Above the surface of the swelling deep; I'll snatch a ray of hope, For HOPE's the lamp divine That lights and vivifies the fainting soul, With extacies beyond the pow'rs of song! That ere I reach those banks Where the loud TIBER flows, Or milder ARNO slowly steals along, To the soft music of the summer breeze, The wafting wing of TIME May bear this last ADIEU, This wild untutor'd picture of the heart, To HIM, whose magic verse INSPIR'D THE STRAIN.

Poem by Mary Darby Robinson
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Book: Reflection on the Important Things