[5] VERSES Occafioned b Mr. ADDISON'S Treatife OF MEDAL S. S EE the wild waste of all-devouring years! How Rome her own fad fepulchre appears: With nodding arches, broken temples fpread! The very tombs now vanish'd like their dead! Some felt the filent ftroke of mould'ring age; Some, hoftile fury; fome, religious rage: Barbarian blindness, Chriftian zealc onfpire, And Papal piety, and Gothic fire. Perhaps by its own ruins fav'd from flame, Some bury'd marble half preferves a Name; That name, the learn'dwith fierce difputes purfue, And give to Titus old Vefpafian's due. Ambition figh'd. She found it vain to trust The faithlefs Column, and the crumbling Buft A 3 t; Huge [6] Huge Moles whose shadow stretch'd from shore to fhore, Their ruins perifh'd, and their place no more! Theirs is the Vanity, the Learning thine, Oh when shall Britain, confcious of her claim, Stand emulous of Greek and Roman far. e? In [7] In living Medals fee her wars enroll'd, And vanquish'd realms fupply recording Gold? Here, rifing bold, the Patriot's honeft face; There, Warriors frowning in hiftoric brass. Then future ages with delight shall fee, How Plato's, Bacon's, Newton's looks agree: Or in fair Series laurel'd Bards be shown, A Virgil there, and here an Addison. Then fhall Thy Craggs (and let me call him Mine) On the caft Ore, another Pollio, fhine; With aspect open shall erect his head, And round the Orb in lafting notes be read: "Statesman, yet friend to Truth! in foul fincere, "In action faithful, and in honour clear; "Who broke no promife, ferv'd no private end, "Who gain'd no title, and who loft no friend, "Ennobled by Himself, by all approv'd, "And prais'd, unenvy'd, by the Mufe he lov'd." |