our borrows all her rays from sense.
His father’s acres who enjoys in peace,Or makes his neighbours glad, if he increase:Whose cheerful tenants bless their yearly toil,Yet to their lord owe more than to the soil;Whose ample lawns are not ashamed to feedThe milky heifer and deserving steed;Whose rising forests, not for pride or show,But future buildings, future navies, grow:Let his plantations stretch from down to down,First shade a country, and then raise a town. You too proceed! make falling arts your care,Erect new wonders, and the old repair;Jones and Palladio to themselves restore,And be whate’er Vitruvius was before:’Till kings call forth the ideas of your mind(Proud to accomplish what such hands denied)Bid harbours open, public ways extend,Bid temples, worthier of the god, ascend;Bid the broad arch the dangerous flood contain,The mole projected break the roaring main;Back to his bounds their subject sea command,And roll obedient rivers through the land:These honours peace to happy Britain brings,These are imperial works, and worthy kings.
Epistle V. To Mr. Addison.
Occasioned by his Dialogues on Medals.
See the wild waste of all-devouring years!How Rome her own sad sepulchre appears,With nodding arches, broken temples spread!The very tombs now vanished like their dead!Imperial wonders raised on nations spoiled,Where mixed with slaves the groaning martyr toiled:Huge theatres, that now unpeopled woods,Now drained a distant country of her floods:Fanes, which admiring gods with pride survey,Statues of men, scarce less alive than they!Some felt the silent stroke of mouldering age,Some hostile fury, some religious rage.Barbarian blindness, Christian zeal conspire,And Papal piety, and Gothic fire.Perhaps, by its own ruins saved from flame,Some buried marble half preserves a name;That name the learned with fierce disputes pursue,And give to Titus old Vespasian’s due. Ambition sighed: she found it vain to trustThe faithless column and the crumbling bust:Huge moles, whose shadow stretched from shore to shore,Their ruins perished, and their place no more;Convinced, she now contracts her vast design,And all her triumphs shrink into a coin.A narrow orb each crowded conquest keeps;Beneath her palm here sad Judea weeps;Now scantier limits the proud arch confine,And scarce are seen the prostrate Nile or Rhine;A small Euphrates through the piece is rolled,And little eagles wave their wings in gold.The medal, faithful to its charge of fame,Through climes and ages bears each form and name:In one short view subjected to our eyeGods, emperors, heroes, sages, beauties, lie.With sharpened sight pale antiquaries pore,The inscription value, but the rust adore.This the blue varnish, that the green endears,The sacred rust of twice ten hundred years!To gain Pescennius one employs his schemes,One grasps a Cecrops in ecstatic dreams.Poor Vadius, long with learnéd spleen devoured,Can taste no pleasure since his shield was scoured;And Curio, restless by the fair one’s side,Sighs for an Otho, and neglects his bride. Theirs is the vanity, the learning thine:Touched by thy hand, again Rome’s glories shine;Her gods and god-like heroes rise to view,And all her faded garlands bloom anew.Nor blush, these studies thy regard engage;These pleased the fathers of poetic rage;The verse and sculpture bore an equal part,And art reflected images to art. Oh, when shall Britain, conscious of her claim,Stand emulous of Greek and Roman fame?In living medals see her wars enrolled,And vanquished realms supply recording gold?Here, rising bold, the patriot’s honest face;There warriors frowning in historic brass?Then future ages with delight shall seeHow Plato’s, Bacon’s, Newton’s looks agree;Or in fair series laurelled bards be shown,A Virgil there, and here an Addison.Then shall thy Craggs (and let me call him mine)On the cast ore, another Pollio shine;With aspect open, shall erect his head,And round the orb in lasting notes be read,“Statesmen, yet friend to truth! of soul sincere,In action faithful, and in honour clear;Who broke no promise, served no private end,Who gained no title and who lost no friend;Ennobled by himself, by all approved,And praised, unenvied, by the muse he loved.”