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His voice was lessen'd, as he tried to speak,
* And issued through a long extended neck;
His hair transforms to down, his fingers meet
In skinny films, and shape his oary feet;
From both his sides the wings and feathers break;
And from his mouth proceeds a blunted beak:
All Cycnus now into a swan was turn'd,
Who, still rememb'ring how his kinsman burn'd,
To solitary pools and lakes retires,

And loves the waters as oppos'd to fires.

Meanwhile Apollo in a gloomy shade
(The native lustre of his brows decay'd)
Indulging sorrow, sickens at the sight
Of his own sunshine, and abhors the light:
The hidden griefs that in his bosom rise,
Sadden his looks, and overcast his eyes,
As when some dusky orb obstructs his ray,
And sullies, in a dim eclipse, the day.

Now secretly with inward griefs he pin'd,
Now warm resentments to his griefs he join'd,
And now renounc'd his office to mankind.

"E'er since the birth of time," said he, "I've borne "A long ungrateful toil without return;

"Let now some other manage, if he dare,

"The fi'ry steeds, and mount the burning car;

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Or, if none else, let Jove his fortune try,

"And learn to lay his murd'ring thunder by; “Then will he own, perhaps, but own too late, "My son deserv'd not so severe a fate."

The gods stand round him, as he mourns, and pray He would resume the conduct of the day,

Nor let the world be lost in endless night:
Jove too himself, descending from his height,
Excuses what had happen'd, and intreats,
Majestically mixing prayers and threats.
Prevail'd upon at length, again he took

The harness'd steeds, that still with horror shook,
And plies them with the lash, and whips them on,
And, as he whips, upbraids them with his son.

THE STORY OF CALISTO.

THE day was settled in its course; and Jove
Walk'd the wide circuit of the heav'ns above,
To search if any cracks or flaws were made;
But all was safe; the earth he then survey'd,
And cast an eye on every different coast,
And every land; but on Arcadia most.

Her fields he cloth'd and cheer'd her blasted face
With running fountains, and with springing grass.
No tracks of heaven's destructive fire remain,
The fields and woods revive, and nature smiles again.
But as the god walk'd to and fro the earth,

And rais'd the plants, and gave the spring its birth,
By chance a fair Arcadian nymph he view'd,
And felt the lovely charmer in his blood.
The nymph nor spun, nor dress'd with artful pride;
Her vest was gather'd up, her hair was tied ;
Now in her hand a slender spear she bore,
Now a light quiver on her shoulders wore;
To chaste Diana from her youth inclin'd,
The sprightly warriors of the wood she join’d.

Diana too the gentle huntress lov'd,

Nor was there one of all the nymphs that rov'd
O'er Mænalus, amid the maiden throng,
More favour'd once: but favour lasts not long.

The sun now shone in all its strength, and drove
The heated virgin panting to a grove;
The grove around a grateful shadow cast:
She dropp'd her arrows, and her bow unbrac'd;
She flung herself on the cool grassy bed:
And on the painted quiver rais'd her head.
Jove saw the charming huntress unprepar'd,
Stretch'd on the verdant turf without a guard.
"Here I am safe," he cries, "from Juno's eye;
"Or should my jealous queen the theft descry,
"Yet would I venture on a theft like this,
"And stand her rage for such, for such a bliss!"
Diana's shape and habit straight he took,
Soften'd his brows, and smooth'd his awful look,

And mildly in a female accent spoke.

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"How fares my girl! How went the morning chase?" To whom the virgin, starting from the

"All hail, bright deity, whom I prefer

grass,

"To Jove himself, though Jove himself were here." The god was nearer than she thought, and heard Well-pleas'd himself before himself preferr❜d.

He then salutes her with a warm embrace:
And, ere she half had told the morning chase,
With love enflam'd, and eager on his bliss,
Smother'd her words, and stopp'd her with a kiss,
His kisses with unwonted ardour glow'd,

Nor could Diana's shape conceal the god.

The virgin did whate'er a virgin could;
(Sure Juno must have pardon'd, had she view'd)
With all her might against his force she strove;
But how can mortal maids contend with Jove!
Possess'd at length of what his heart desir'd,
Back to his heavens th' exulting god retir'd.
The lovely huntress rising from the grass,
With downcast eyes, and with a blushing face,
By shame confounded, and by fear dismay'd,
Flew from the covert of the guilty shade,
And almost, in the tumult of her mind,
Left her forgotten bow and shafts behind.
But now Diana, with a sprightly train
Of quiver'd virgins, bounding o'er the plain,
Call'd to the nymph; the nymph began to fear
A second fraud, a Jove disguis'd in her;
But, when she saw the sister nymphs, supprest
Her rising fears, and mingled with the rest.
How in the look does conscious guilt appear!
Slowly she mov'd, and loiter'd in the rear;
Nor lightly tripp'd, nor by the goddess ran,
As once she us'd, the foremost of the train.
Her looks were flush'd, and sullen was her mien,
That sure the virgin goddess (had she been
Aught but a virgin) must the guilt have seen.
Tis said the nymphs saw all, and guess'd aright:
And now the moon had nine times lost her light,
When Dian, fainting in the mid-day beams,
Found a cool covert, and refreshing streams,
That in soft murmurs through the forest flow'd,
And a smooth bed of shining gravel show'd.

VOL. I.

L

A covert so obscure, and streams so clear,

The goddess prais'd: "And now no spies are near,
"Let's strip, my gentle maids, and wash," she cries.
Pleas'd with the motion, every maid complies;
Only the blushing huntress stood confus'd,
And form'd delays, and her delays excus'd;
In vain excus'd: her fellows round her press'd,
And the reluctant nymph by force undress'd.
The naked huntress all her shame reveal'd,

66

In vain her hands the pregnant womb conceal'd;
Begone!" the goddess cries with stern disdain,
66 Begone! nor dare the hallow'd stream to stain :"
She fled, for ever banish'd from the train.

This Juno heard, who long had watch'd her time

To punish the detested rival's crime;

The time was come: for, to enrage her more,

A lovely boy the teeming rival bore.

The goddess cast a furious look, and cried, "It is enough! I'm fully satisfied!

"This boy shall stand a living mark to prove

66

My husband's baseness and the strumpet's love;

"But vengeance shall awake: those guilty charms, "That drew the thunderer from Juno's arms, "No longer shall their wonted force retain, "Nor please the god, nor make the mortal vain." This said, her hand within her hair she wound, Swung her to earth, and dragg'd her on the ground: The prostrate wretch lifts up her arms in prayer; Her arms grow shaggy, and deform'd with hair, Her nails are sharpen'd into pointed claws, Her hands bear half her weight, and turn to paws;

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