The Poetical Works of Addison; Gay's Fables; and Somerville's Chase. John Gay

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The Poetical Works of Addison; Gay's Fables; and Somerville's Chase - John Gay

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Shrunk up with hunger, and benumbed with cold;

       In drawling hums the feeble insects grieve,

       And doleful buzzes echo through the hive,

       Like winds that softly murmur through the trees,

       Like flames pent up, or like retiring seas.

       Now lay fresh honey near their empty rooms,

       In troughs of hollow reeds, whilst frying gums

       Cast round a fragrant mist of spicy fumes.

       Thus kindly tempt the famished swarm to eat,

       _340

       And gently reconcile them to their meat.

       Mix juice of galls, and wine, that grow in time

       Condensed by fire, and thicken to a slime;

       To these, dried roses, thyme, and ccntaury join,

       And raisins, ripened on the Psythian vine.

       Besides, there grows a flower in marshy ground,

       Its name amellus, easy to be found;

       A mighty spring works in its root, and cleaves

       The sprouting stalk, and shows itself in leaves:

       The flower itself is of a golden hue,

       _350

       The leaves inclining to a darker blue;

       The leaves shoot thick about the flower, and grow

       Into a bush, and shade the turf below:

       The plant in holy garlands often twines

       The altars' posts, and beautifies the shrines;

       Its taste is sharp, in vales new-shorn it grows,

       Where Mella's stream in watery mazes flows.

       Take plenty of its roots, and boil them well

       In wine, and heap them up before the cell.

       But if the whole stock fail, and none survive;

       _360

       To raise new people, and recruit the hive,

       I'll here the great experiment declare,

       That spread the Arcadian shepherd's name so far.

       How bees from blood of slaughtered bulls have fled,

       And swarms amidst the red corruption bred.

       For where the Egyptians yearly see their bounds

       Refreshed with floods, and sail about their grounds,

       Where Persia borders, and the rolling Nile

       Drives swiftly down the swarthy Indian's soil,

       Till into seven it multiplies its stream,

       _370

       And fattens Egypt with a fruitful slime:

       In this last practice all their hope remains,

       And long experience justifies their pains.

       First, then, a close contracted space of ground,

       With straitened walls and low-built roof, they found;

       A narrow shelving light is next assign'd

       To all the quarters, one to every wind;

       Through these the glancing rays obliquely pierce:

       Hither they lead a bull that's young and fierce,

       When two years' growth of horn he proudly shows,

       _380

       And shakes the comely terrors of his brows:

       His nose and mouth, the avenues of breath,

       They muzzle up, and beat his limbs to death;

       With violence to life and stifling pain

       He flings and spurns, and tries to snort in vain,

       Loud heavy blows fall thick on every side,

       Till his bruised bowels burst within the hide;

       When dead, they leave him rotting on the ground,

       With branches, thyme, and cassia, strowed around.

       All this is done, when first the western breeze

       _390

       Becalms the year, and smooths the troubled seas;

       Before the chattering swallow builds her nest,

       Or fields in spring's embroidery are dress'd.

       Meanwhile the tainted juice ferments within,

       And quickens as its works: and now are seen

       A wondrous swarm, that o'er the carcase crawls,

       Of shapeless, rude, unfinished animals.

       No legs at first the insect's weight sustain,

       At length it moves its new-made limbs with pain;

       Now strikes the air with quivering wings, and tries

       _400

       To lift its body up, and learns to rise;

       Now bending thighs and gilded wings it wears

       Full grown, and all the bee at length appears;

       From every side the fruitful carcase pours

       Its swarming brood, as thick as summer showers,

       Or flights of arrows from the Parthian bows,

       When twanging strings first shoot them on the foes.

       Thus have I sung the nature of the bee;

       While Cæsar, towering to divinity,

       The frighted Indians with his thunder awed,

       _410

       And claimed their homage, and commenced a god;

       I flourished all the while in arts of peace,

       Retired and sheltered in inglorious ease;

       I who before the songs of shepherds made,

       When gay and young my rural lays I play'd,

      

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