A Nuptial song

INTENDED TO HAVE BEEN INSERTED IN THE FOURTH ACT OF " SOPHONISBA, " FIRST PRINTED IN 1729.

Come , gentle Venus! and assuage
A warring world, a bleeding age.
For nature lives beneath thy ray;
The wintry tempests haste away,
A lucid calm invests the sea,
Thy native deep is full of thee.
The flowering earth where'er you fly,
Is all o'er spring, all sun the sky;
A genial spirit warms the breeze;
Unseen among the blooming trees,
The feathered lovers tune their throat,
The desert growls a softened note,
Glad o'er the meads the cattle bound,
And love and harmony go round.
But chief into the human heart
You strike the dear delicious dart;
You teach us pleasing pangs to know,
To languish in luxurious woe,
To feel the generous passions rise,
Grow good by gazing, mild by sighs;
Each happy moment to improve,
And fill the perfect year with love.
Come, thou delight of heaven and earth!
To whom all creatures owe their birth:
Oh, come, sweet smiling! tender, come!
And yet prevent our final doom.
For long the furious god of war
Has crush'd us with his iron car,
Has raged along our ruin'd plains,
Has soil'd them with his cruel stains,
Has sunk our youth in endless sleep,
And made the widow'd virgin weep.
Now let him feel thy wonted charms;
Oh, take him to thy twining arms!
And, while thy bosom heaves on his,
While deep he prints the humid kiss,
Ah, then his stormy heart control,
And sigh thyself into his soul.
Thy son too, Cupid, we implore
To leave the green Idalian shore.
Be he, sweet god, our only foe:
Long let him draw the twanging bow
Transfix us with his golden darts,
Pour all his quiver on our hearts,
With gentle anguish make us sigh,
And teach us sweeter deaths to die.

INTENDED TO HAVE BEEN INSERTED IN THE FOURTH ACT OF " SOPHONISBA, " FIRST PRINTED IN 1729.

Come , gentle Venus! and assuage
A warring world, a bleeding age.
For nature lives beneath thy ray;
The wintry tempests haste away,
A lucid calm invests the sea,
Thy native deep is full of thee.
The flowering earth where'er you fly,
Is all o'er spring, all sun the sky;
A genial spirit warms the breeze;
Unseen among the blooming trees,
The feathered lovers tune their throat,
The desert growls a softened note,
Glad o'er the meads the cattle bound,
And love and harmony go round.
But chief into the human heart
You strike the dear delicious dart;
You teach us pleasing pangs to know,
To languish in luxurious woe,
To feel the generous passions rise,
Grow good by gazing, mild by sighs;
Each happy moment to improve,
And fill the perfect year with love.
Come, thou delight of heaven and earth!
To whom all creatures owe their birth:
Oh, come, sweet smiling! tender, come!
And yet prevent our final doom.
For long the furious god of war
Has crush'd us with his iron car,
Has raged along our ruin'd plains,
Has soil'd them with his cruel stains,
Has sunk our youth in endless sleep,
And made the widow'd virgin weep.
Now let him feel thy wonted charms;
Oh, take him to thy twining arms!
And, while thy bosom heaves on his,
While deep he prints the humid kiss,
Ah, then his stormy heart control,
And sigh thyself into his soul.
Thy son too, Cupid, we implore
To leave the green Idalian shore.
Be he, sweet god, our only foe:
Long let him draw the twanging bow
Transfix us with his golden darts,
Pour all his quiver on our hearts,
With gentle anguish make us sigh,
And teach us sweeter deaths to die.
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